A flight attendant's smackdown with the wife of mega-preacher Joel Osteen inspires a whole new set of commandments.
Today Denver, tomorrow the Twin Cities.
A country musician rescues Waylon Jennings' tour bus from the scrap heap.
The provocateur who brought you "Piss Christ" pinches off a new concept.
Various Artists
Soundbombing III
(Rawkus)
More than simply a rap roundup, Soundbombing III is a model for 21st-century hip-hop. The album destroys the fiction that this music is one-dimensional by drawing upon artists as different as Styles P. and Pharoahe Monch, who share "The Life," and Zap Mama, a multi-culti ensemble joined by Common and Talib Kweli on "Yelling Away." But the disc also establishes commonality between generations by pairing Kweli with DJ Quik on "Put It in the Air" and teaming Monche and Kool G Rap on Jonell's "Round & Round Remix." Blending so many elements into a cohesive whole isn't easy, but mixers Mr. Choc and Cipha Sounds make it work, emerging with a CD that's smart and incendiary. -- Roberts
ELECTRONIC/DANCE
Dot Allison
Future Bible Heroes
Eternal Youth
(Instinct)
Nobody writes lyrics like Stephin Merritt, whose work with Magnetic Fields and the 6th's has won him a well-earned following among wry brainiacs, and his latest Heroic effort should add to their number. The wordplay on "I'm a Vampire" ("I am what I am/And I'm impossibly glam") and "Losing Your Affection" ("I would rather be the queen of the guillotine/In a bloody insurrection") is sharper than ever. Adding to the enchantment are the musical backdrops painted by the gifted Christopher Ewen and the singing of Claudia Gonson, whose affectlessness makes her the perfect mouthpiece for Merritt's darkly witty views. Eternal Youth may not live forever, but it will still sound great long after most electro-pop has faded away. -- Roberts
DJ Jazzy Jeff
The Magnificent
(BBE/Rapster)
Another stellar release from BBE's Beat Generation series, The Magnificent places DJ Jazzy Jeff (who teamed up with Will "Fresh Prince" Smith in the '80s) in the role of musical director. Jeff guides his A Touch of Jazz production crew through a soulful sound that recalls the jazzy melodicism of the Native Tongues and the Large Professor. The DJ reunites with Jill Scott, whose career he helped jump-start, on the hometown homage "We Live in Philly," while an impressive array of other guests -- J-Live, Freddie Foxxx and Raheim -- help The Magnificent shine. -- Mayo
Moby
Peaches
The Teaches of Peaches
(XL/Beggars Group)
Merrill Nisker was born in Canada and spent time making music in New York City. But it was the discovery of Berlin, the acquisition of a Groovebox and the awakening of a G-spot that brought to life Peaches, the joyously oversexed, decidedly Germanesque diva of the electro-pop movement. Originally issued by the EFA imprint two years ago, The Teaches of Peaches was re-released by XL in 2002 with a bonus disc. Despite its rebirth, the recording remains a lo-gloss batch of no-wave beats, minimalist bombast, self-love and sleaze. For Peaches, the road to redemption is located squarely between her fuzzy thighs. And because she's funny, furious and almost unbelievably bold, Peaches challenges even the most puritan listener to resist her. -- Bond