Dualistics

I’m of two minds about Dualistics’ latest disc. I know — it’s an easy, stupid play on the group’s name, but it’s also the truth. On the one hand, there are some really strong songs and likable elements on the band’s Long Tail EP. On the other, it’s got some…

McRad/Frontside Five

In 1984, Tony Hawk was doing a Frontside 5-0 to Lipslide Revert. Here we have skate punks Frontside Five and McRad reverting back to 1984, with the former inhabiting the thrash of D.R.I. and the latter remembering the Orwellian age through archival live tracks from the era. 50/50 Split (set…

Sound Bites

Bat for Lashes, Fur and Gold (Parlaphone). Ethereal and haunting, Natasha Khan’s songwriting echoes the best moments of Roxy Music, Sinéad and Björk without spiraling into Switchblade Symphony melancholy. Fur’s signature song, “What’s a Girl to Do?” drowns in harpsichord and heavy downbeats before grooving into a pop number worthy…

Cheeky Monk

One of the scummiest dives I ever drank in was the Mars Bar, just around the corner from the now-defunct CBGB on New York’s Lower East Side. It was a tiny, filthy, narrow joint with maybe a dozen stools at the bar and a motley crew of regulars, everyone from…

Thundercade

If rap was the new punk in the late ’80s when Public Enemy, NWA and Boogie Down productions came along to give it a real edge, then the latest incarnation of experimental electronic pop may just be the new indie rock. Thundercade (due at the Meadowlark on Friday, October 12),…

John Creamer and Stephane K.

Vocal house doesn’t always have to be diva-tastic, and John Creamer and Stephane K. have done their best to prove that. After a series of remixes for everyone from Satoshi Tomiie to Sinéad O’Connor pushed the pair into the top strata of remixers, John Digweed recruited them to produce a…

Ken Andrews

Ken Andrews has worked hard to make certain he could never be called a Failure, even though that was the name of his best-known band. Formed in 1990, the group released three well-regarded albums, gigged extensively with Tool and other heavyweights, and even performed on Lollapalooza’s main stage prior to…

Undersea Explosion

Upon moving to Denver from Detroit in the ’90s, Jim Paul joined the Christines. And when that atmospheric power-pop band moved to San Francisco — where, in true Denver fashion, it broke up shortly thereafter — Paul found himself drawn to New York City. He headed to Brooklyn, a place…

Bill Callahan

In a July interview with Pitchfork, Bill Callahan goes on at length about the reasons he decided to start performing under his own name rather than Smog, the handle he’d used throughout his recording career. He speaks about a “transformation of some sort, an upheaval” — one he decided to…

Shout Out Louds

“Tonight I Have to Leave It,” the opening track on the Shout Out Louds’ latest release, Our Ill Wills, sounds like it could have been a B-side from the Cure’s 1985 album The Head on the Door. The buoyant tune bears a striking resemblance to Robert Smith and company’s “In…

Sick of It All

The frenetic pace of hardcore, the combination of outrage and adrenaline, isn’t conducive to longevity. Fact is, most punkers mellow as they age. They take “real” jobs, get married, have kids — in other words, they become the people they hated when they were young and raging. This didn’t happen…

Radiohead In Rainbows Dueling Track-By-Track Instant Review

Okay, we’re not quite as quick as Annie Zaleski, whose early morning review of the new Radiohead recording In Rainbows can be found here. But below, find a couple of additional takes from two regular Backbeat Online contributors, Sean Cronin and yours truly. The rules were simple: Jot down your…

Last Night: The Klaxons and Hot IQs @ The Fox Theater

The Klaxons and Hot IQs Fox Theatre October 4, 2007 Better Than: The Klaxons turning out to be some fucking rave band. There’s something adventurous about going to a band’s show that you know nothing about. I guess adventurous for me qualifies as about anything that doesn’t involve TiVO Boggle…

Bela Karoli Puts Poetry in Motion

“Did you bring it, by the way?” asks Julie Davis, glancing at Brigid McAuliffe. McAuliffe, sitting across from Davis on the Thin Man’s patio, shakes her head no. “Oh, you suck!” McAuliffe, who sings and plays accordion with Davis in Bela Karoli, recently borrowed her digital recorder. She’s had it…

Mute Math Explains Its Equation

New Orleans-based Mute Math has traveled a long road to reach the seemingly sudden success of its major-label debut. Vocalist/keytarist Paul Meany, drummer Darren King and bassist Roy Mitchell-Cárdenas have played together for more than seven years. After the demise of their Christian rock group, Earth Suit, King and Meany…

Anders Trentemller Turns the Tables

Just as his career as DJ and producer was taking off, Denmark’s Anders Trentemøller made the unorthodox decision to stop making music. “I was suddenly not so much inspired anymore,” he says. “I felt I hadn’t found my own sound, really. I could see myself trying to spend more time…

Klaxons Catch a Rave

How easy is it to manipulate popular culture? Ask Klaxons’ Simon Taylor-Davies. Long before the British guitarist and his cohorts, vocalist Jamie Reynolds and keyboardist James Righton, were musically proficient by his standards, they announced that they’d created a sonic style called “new rave” — and the term quickly seized…

Bruce Springsteen

Magic is being hyped as Springsteen’s rocking return to his classic period, and that’s understandable: The album contains lotsa familiar musical totems, not to mention lyrics about driving a highway until the road turns black, and a diner on the edge of town (bet it’s dark there). But while Boss…

will.i.am

Songs About Girls is derivative, repetitive, insipid, insincere and pandering. Oh, and if that weren’t enough, it also has the worst insert booklet in recent memory: seven pages of will.i.am mugging in a checkered suit. Actually, the first song, “Over,” a lover’s lament featuring a sample from Electric Light Orchestra…