Neil Young

One of the results of 9/11 (we’ve been told) is a return to the values of yesteryear: decade-old sitcoms, meatloaf and stews, casual sex. So maybe recording Are You Passionate? with Booker T. and the MG’s is Neil Young’s comfort food, a return to his roots for a musician whose…

Beat Floetry

“Welcome to the lab,” says Jamie Keogh, the turntablist known as DJ Immortal, leading a visitor into his garage turned studio at the Coral Springs home he shares with his mother. Six turntables are parked against the wall, which is plastered with several Jimi Hendrix album covers and a Wu-Tang…

The Makers

Previous albums by these Northwest mofos have seen them taking a more knockabout approach, but Strangest Parade, their latest, is a much more dressed-up — and consequently less mundane — affair. A “concept” album that works like a suite in 13 parts, it’s reminiscent of such swirling pop masterpieces as…

‘Fest Up

It’s that time of year again, the beginning of May, when thousands flock to the shores of the Intracoastal in West Palm Beach to hear more bands than you can shake a mic stand at. This year’s SunFest features national acts ranging from blues rockers Bonnie Raitt and Edgar Winter…

Just the Tips

Of course, every call made to the Bandwidth TipLine has the potential to become a monumentally important story. But sometimes, what appears to be a breathless plea for help or evidence of some heinous injustice just doesn’t hold up under scrutiny. For example: A man calls, frantic. It seems a…

Marc Moulin

The subtle thud of electronic bass and the propulsive tap of a brushed high-hat cymbal underpin cool-jazz vibraphone, earthy organ, and sultry soul-diva vocals on “Into the Dark,” the peppy opening cut from Marc Moulin’s Top Secret. The brilliant blend of jazzy noodling and cool electronica is an apt update…

Gomez

With its first two studio albums (Bring It On and Liquid Skin) and an odds and sods collection (Abandoned Shopping Trolley Hotline), Gomez crafted a sound that was rooted in the bluesy and soulful grooves of ’70s pop/rock but powered by a youthful energy and contemporary perspective. This approach helped…

Busy Signals

The improvement in home-recording technology has caused an explosion of material from bedroom auteurs. But a not-so-funny thing often happens on the way to the iBook: Many performers spend so much time polishing their sonic rocket that their finished products sound slick and lifeless, thereby reducing the initial spark of…

Zombie Jamboree

If there’s one thing missing from the 12-page color booklet inside Rob Zombie’s latest CD, The Sinister Urge, it’s teeth. The four band members are all keeping their lips zipped, lest the merest hint of a smile ruin the faux menace Zombie’s crew has working here. And of course, Mr…

Tosca

All you Kruder & Dorfmeister fiends, take heed: Some new shit has arrived from those illustrious Austrians. But don’t get too worked up — this isn’t exactly new new. Each album is a remix of the 1999 album Suzuki by Tosca, a duo made up of Richard Dorfmeister (the “D”…

Bombs Away

Open the bomb-bay doors, Hal! Actually, where Pilot to Gunner is concerned, no one riding in that damn plane would be able to hear any commands being spoken, because the Boston quartet is quite unafraid to play fast and loose with dangerous decibels. But Pilot to Gunner isn’t substituting volume…

Ain’t No Sunrise When He’s Gone

“I guess I’m the last Jew in the building,” sighed Barry Manilow, pulling out a stool so he could get the leverage he’d need to wring out one more maudlin ballad at the tail end of the final concert at Sunrise Musical Theatre on Saturday, April 13. Open for business…

Freestylers

London’s Freestylers are perfectly poised to simultaneously define and defy the multitude of genre tags that surround beat-driven music. The band’s 1998 debut, We Rock Hard, showed Freestylers’ incredible diversity and broad expertise under the basic breakbeat umbrella. With their sophomore release, the raucous and even more ambitious Pressure Point,…

Elvis Costello

Designed partly to pump up the reputation of Costello’s latter-day compositions, these re-releases backfire by facilitating direct comparisons between Declan Patrick McManus at his best and worst. On the “best” side, Aim and Model stand as collectors’ money shots, sporting bonus tracks and demos from as far back as 1977…

Andrew W.K.

Nearly half the song titles on Andrew W.K.’s debut contain the words “party,” “love,” or “puke” — a sure sign that this is the best party metal the ’80s never gave us. Formerly a one-man show, W.K. built I Get Wet into a dual-ax, kick-drum assault chocked with shout-along choruses…

Session Road

The “Do It Yourself ” ethic often espoused by rock-ready kids is too rarely put into practice. When given the choice between putting out their own music or hoping an A&R guy will eventually come around with contracts and cigars, 99 percent choose to wait. After waiting two years to…

Twee Surgery

Textbook contrarians Masters of the Hemisphere, yet another ubiquitous Athens, Georgia, poppy guitar band, regularly delve into the absurd. Look no further than the name, which far more befits an apocalyptic road-warrior assemblage of WWF retirees, when in reality, the band musters less of a threat than a muffled sneeze…

Thack Attack

Since dropping out of the Nighthawks in 1987, unable to take the strain of their admittedly ludicrous 300-night-a-year touring schedule, Jimmy Thackery has offered hard-driving blues rock that appeals to fans of everyone from Stevie Ray Vaughan to Muddy Waters to Bruce Springsteen. His guitar work is on par with…

No Way!

Talk about your lucky breaks: A room full of 300 Jello Biafra acolytes, and Bandwidth’s sitting — accidentally but sorta fortuitously — behind the lone heckler in the place during Biafra’s April 9 visit to Respectable Street in West Palm Beach. Right off the bat, while Jello was still clad…

First Stryke Policy

Still smarting after a long weekend spent playing host to friend and über-producer Josh Wink (in town to perform at South Beach’s Crobar), Greg Chin — a.k.a. DJ Stryke — sits behind a desk in the airy, white-walled SoBe hotel-turned-office-suites headquarters of his Substance Recordings label. The pair met in…

Phaser

Using pastoral English countryside colors to paint a scene of serenity, Washington, D.C.’s Phaser transcends the continental divide, adopting the sparkle of brethren like Suede and Oasis. The resemblance is particularly striking on tracks like “Life and Illusion,” where elevated choruses mesh with the cascading harmonies of brothers/vocalists Boris and…

A Little Water Music

Eight years ago, thinking man’s hardcore act Hot Water Music emerged from the swamps of Gainesville. With a name cribbed from a Charles Bukowski novel and an ever-evolving sound rooted in their love of AC/DC, Fugazi, and Avail, Hot Water Music appeals to indie rockers, musicians, and backpack-toting kids alike…