SXSW 2007 Preview

At press time, the official South by Southwest website listed only four Colorado bands (five, if you count the Apples in Stereo, which, as much as we’d happily claim that act, hasn’t been based here for quite some time) slated to perform at this year’s festival. Those artists — the…

Albert Hammond Jr.

Most assessments of Yours to Keep, the first solo disc by Albert Hammond Jr., have focused more on the singer/guitarist’s main band, the Strokes, than on the recording itself. Hammond isn’t surprised, but neither is he impressed by the level of analysis. “You’ve got to understand the way most people…

Cred Sheet

Stuff you need to know to avoid ostracism: Cred Sheet is a periodic gauge of cultural stimuli for those unwilling or unable to think about this shit for a living 24/7. (Note: These people are often smarter and better compensated than those who are willing and able.) It seeks to…

Ralph Alessi

Ralph Alessi’s latest effort, Look, is his most accessible work to date. A bit of a departure for the trumpeter, the album — which also features Ravi Coltrane (son of John Coltrane) on tenor sax and pianist Andy Milne — exhibits a clarity and focused command in his delivery. Alessi,…

Chk Chk Chk (!!!)

Where !!!’s last release, Louden Up Now, sounded like a Ph.D. student’s disconnected deconstructions of Klymaxx and post-punk, Myth Takes hews much closer to extended, almost mechanical grooves, give or take the occasional overwrought freakout of diarrhetic songs such as “Bend Over Beethoven.” The act’s range on Myth succeeds in…

The Stooges

On “Trollin’,” The Weirdness’s first cut, Iggy Pop declares, “Rock critics wouldn’t like this at all,” and if he’s right, the Stooges’ improbable comeback will collapse on the starting line. In the end, though, most reviewers are apt to view the disc as an honorable miss, not a flat-out disaster…

Oblio Duo

For creative people, being lonely can be a boon or a curse; they tend to either dwell on their isolation or channel their feelings into art. Oblio Duo’s latest effort continues down the trail blazed on its debut release. The Flag is filled with the kind of music you imagine…

The Mercury Project

Many local CDs feel unfinished; they require listeners to imagine what the songs might sound like had they been recorded under optimal conditions, with first-rate production and refined arrangements. But that’s not the case with On to You. The third Mercury Project album is a multi-layered work whose sonics consistently…

Listen Up

Johnny Cash, Ultimate Gospel (Columbia Records). Ultimate Gospel is a great career-spanning collection that shows a side of Johnny Cash’s talent and persona that was often eclipsed by his reputation. Elvis Presley also recorded a lot of gospel tunes, but not even the King can hold a candle to the…

Taking Back Sunday

When Taking Back Sunday debuted in 2002 with Tell All Your Friends, there weren’t a gazillion emo bands competing to express the overheated feelings of the nation’s adolescent populace. Instead, only about half that many existed — but of the new acts that have emerged since, most sound remarkably like…

Malajube

The Canadian invasion continues. As beleaguered United States of Americans feverishly build a wall to protect ourselves from our freeloading, funny-talking neighbors to the north, Malajube amasses an arsenal of prismatic guitar riffs, irrepressible synth licks and infernally catchy tunes that get inside our heads and cause us to smile…

John Digweed

Initially known for his collaborations with Alexander Coe, who performs as Sasha, John Digweed is now firmly established as a mixology superstar in his own right. The reasons for his success include charisma and a keen sense of how to market himself, but his ability to combine accessibility with cool…

Smoke or Fire

The big payoff for most bands comes from touring. Not as a money thing — the majority of small-time outfits come home barely breaking even — but rather in the inimitable experience of plopping into off-the-interstate Waffle Houses, taking in expansive Midwestern landscapes and playing out every night to a…

Kurt Elling

Evidently, seven is Kurt Elling’s lucky number. The jazz singer has seven Grammy nominations under his belt and has earned nods from Downbeat as Male Vocalist of the Year in its annual critics’ poll for the past seven years running. Good fortune, however, really has nothing to with Elling’s accolades…

Pasquini’s

Josh Polk knows a thing or two about punk. As the drummer in Whiskey Kiss, he’s well acquainted with the notion that it takes little more than three chords and the truth to get the job done. Booking punk bands, on the other hand, isn’t so turnkey. But that didn’t…

Vitamins

The ill wind wafting down from Greeley generally serves as a reminder of what it smells like around here when the Stock Show is in full swing. Occasionally, though, the unexpected gusts from the north blow in some great musicians, such as Twice Wilted, Reverend Deadeye and Ian Cooke. The…

The Fame Game

Someday the members of Dork will be remembered as either the hardest-working or the luckiest guys to ever come out of this town. But if you ask me, the band has made much of its luck — from landing on the Vans Warped Tour, to reaching out to high-powered attorney…

OK Go

The proliferation of red-carpet shows, in which faux celebrities criticize costumes worn by the real stars, is bleeding much of the fun out of such pageantry, since attendees who don’t want to spend the next week being ridiculed by cast members of America’s Next Top Model are dressing more conservatively…

Taylor Swift

The Bluebird Cafe is known as something of a kingmaker in Nashville, having hosted and helped launch such country titans as Garth Brooks and Mary Chapin Carpenter. During performances there, patrons are urged to abide by the Cafe’s strict “Shhhh!” policy/slogan by keeping quiet at all times — a testament…

The Secret Chiefs 3

The Secret Chiefs 3 create the most astonishing soundtracks to epic movies never filmed. The brainchild of Mr. Bungle’s Trey Spruance, SC3 features the guitarist/vocalist and his longtime bandmates Trevor Dunn, Danny Heifitz and Bar McKinnon, along with many other renowned musicians. Spruance plugs the various musicians into a framework…

Cold War Kids

The Cold War Kids are among the current scene’s buzziest buzz bands, but this status hasn’t prevented them from being jabbed by the tastemaking folks at Pitchfork. For instance, journalist Nitsuh Abebe, describing the Kids’ appearance at the most recent CMJ showcase, dismissed them as “skinny-jeaned Christians” whose lead singer/pianist,…

Arcade Fire

Lesser bands have crumbled under the weight of critical acclaim and the subsequent expectations that have been heaped upon Montreal’s Arcade Fire since issuing Funeral, its 2004 debut. Heralded as indie-rock saviors, compared to Byrne, Bowie and Botticelli, and thrown into the Colosseum for a to-the-death battle with Broken Social…