Archer Prewitt

As a founding member of the Coctails and the Sea and Cake — not to mention his amazing body of work as a cartoonist and a painter — Archer Prewitt has proved himself to be one of Chicago’s finest stalwart indie sons. Sparking the retro-lounge revival long before it became…

Los de Abajo

Mexico City’s Los de Abajo is a good, old-fashioned, ideologically in-your-face punk band. Case in point: “Screw,” in which the downtrodden come with a confrontational politics that exposes the death-squad/drug-dealer thug as the face of the government on the ground. All this is set to a rapid-fire, ska-flavored beat –…

Juanes

When Fíjate Bien, Juanes’s groundbreaking debut, came out, nobody gave a Colombian rat’s ass. Except, that is, for all the critics, who told the law of karma it was time to change history and give this rockero a chance to go toe-to-toe with pop-trash heavyweights. At last year’s Latin Grammys,…

Arlo

Arlo is a band of the kind of back-porch rockers who speed through a 30-minute set on One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer night at your local club, so it makes sense that the group is named for its Tuesday-night soundman back in L.A. Arlo’s second LP, Stab the Unstoppable…

Great Scot

Everything you’d ever want to know about Momus — the effeminate, eye-patched, Scottish-born composer, singer, and essayist — is available for your perusal. Through interviews, pop-culture magazine columns, and a voluminous output of smarmy, hermetically sealed, electronic-pop albums (more than 15 since 1982, with more on the way), Momus has…

Pen Pal Pop

Twenty-one-year-old South Florida singer/songwriter Isaac Lekach, the one-man band known as Poulain, would seem to be a solitary sort, spending lonely hours composing his delicate, cleverly arranged songs. Yet it’s collaboration with contemporaries around the nation that has breathed life into his stylish tunes (glistening wet with Belle and Sebastian…

Come on, Get Happy

There’s something going on in the Rust Belt besides auto-industry layoffs. Along with bands such as the White Stripes and the Greenhornes, the Come Ons are part of a garage-rock revival that has crept slowly across the nation, building speed like an old Camaro. Unlike the more punky Stripes, the…

Butthole Surfers

My landlord once knew a drug dealer. The dealer had a bunch of LSD stashed in his sock on a hot day. His feet got sweaty, and he absorbed most of the acid. A week after being in the emergency room, the guy was still wild-eyed, queasy, and confused –…

Crying Poor

It’s just a tiny big town, and when opportunities dry up, summer doldrums set in. Is it the stifling weather that fuels petty tensions and brings out the worst in the music community? Doubtful. More likely, it’s the fear of diminishing resources that has everyone fighting over the last few…

Kodo

Japanese taiko drumming is an exclamatory art form as visual as it is auditory. Kodo’s army of drummers, sinewy and scantily clad in traditional costume, muscle 900 pounds of drums in choreographed unison while participating in a complex performance-art piece that’s equal parts athletic display and spiritual exercise. Attempting to…

Skinlab

As minitrends go, this nü metal fad’s got legs: Korn’s first album came out in 1994, and it is still rocking adolescent treatment centers across the country. Nü metal is pretty patently the mainstream now; the charts are full of Stainds, Nickelbacks, Disturbeds, and other bands for whom personal torment…

David Bowie

It’s too easy to write him off, though the temptation’s there; has been for damned near two decades, since he asked us to dance and promptly strapped on two left feet. Ah, but what the realist calls “murky ambition” the apologist deems “experimental victory.” So, then, what makes Heathen Bowie’s…

Revolving Door

You know how some bands are great live but not so good on record? Well, some bands need a particular kind of live venue for their sound to flourish. For example, if you were to see Jerrods Door playing at a noisy bar — say, Fort Lauderdale’s Poor House –…

Freestyle Fellowship

Recorded in 1998 and marking the legendary group’s first time together after a four-year hiatus, Shockadoom stands as an amazing document of the sheer creative power that comes about when Freestyle Fellowship’s four emcees are collected in the same room. But given their importance in hip-hop history and their ability…

When One Door Closes…

After Jim Morrison dropped dead in 1971, the remaining Doors issued two more albums before abandoning all hope. But while Robbie Krieger and John Densmore went off to form the Butts Band and go from nice, folksy blues to unadulterated crap in two albums, Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek stuck with…

‘Chunk Style

Sixteen straight days of gray skies and rain. Flooded streets, lightning bolts, thunderclaps menacing enough to send the cats scurrying. The awful, preternaturally darkened mornings and sullen, dreary afternoons — it’s enough to make Bandwidth pray for a respite. By the time we got to Boynton Beach on Tuesday, June…

Tom Waits

The 1992 opera for which Alice was originally written has yet to reach our shores, but it’s hard to believe it could fulfill the promise of a playwright marrying a musician better than the album itself does. Kathleen Brennan has influenced Tom Waits’s music ever since they met in 1980,…

Steroid Maximus

J.G. Thirwell creates a new moniker for each of his musical outings — Foetus for the pioneering, whip-smart industrial urges; Baby Zizanie for the electric and eclectic; Manorexia inadvertently scoring the sequel to They Live, the synopsis of which still resides just behind John Carpenter’s left eye. And now Thirwell’s…

Eminem

With the trying events in his life since The Marshall Mathers LP — multiple lawsuits, criminal trials, acting classes — you might get the impression Eminem was heading for a complete meltdown. You might even expect that the whole ugly thing would be documented on his new release, The Eminem…

Undead Nights

Flash back to the mid-’80s — when Depeche Mode and the Cure were regularly getting commercial airplay. A sea of black-clad gothic clubgoers swept about the dance floor to the slow, morose sounds of Morrissey’s “Suedehead” or picked it up with the harder industrial beats of Front 242’s “Headhunter.” Any…

Bachelor Fad

Arrive at a local show early and you may find the opening act a more compelling listen than any of the headlining groups — especially if that act happens to be a trio of young Miami musicians who call themselves Faller. Faller’s intricate music, which craftily brings together elements from…

Billa-bing Billabong

Aerial photographer by day, drummer and indie-rock impresario by night, 31-year-old Steve Copeletti gains a new perspective on his surroundings when he’s tooling around in a chopper. “It’s a beautiful way to see Florida,” he says. “Looking at it from the sky is a lot different than having to trudge…