Thunderbirds Are Now!

Beards are now! Thrift-store blazers are now! Manchester United warm-up jackets are now! But most of all, Thunderbirds Are Now! Purveying that intoxicating amalgam of punk-rock brat-itude and dance-friendly dervish drums that made sensations of like-minded spaz rockers Hot Hot Heat and We Are Scientists, the quivering Detroit quartet seem…

Darkest Hour

Darkest Hour’s MySpace headline is a life mantra: “Live to thrash/Thrash to live.” The band hails from the nation’s capital and has been brutally thrashing death-metal anthems into hardcore punk fervor for the past decade. Its double-bass pedal insanity antagonized by complicated tech-guitar work has pretty much become the model…

Juana Molina

Ms. Molina’s background is as singular as her music. She’s from Buenos Aires, and made her name in Argentina as the host of Juana y Sus Hermanas (Juana and Her Sisters), a sketch-comedy television show. But instead of devoting her life to laughs, she chose to chuck her previous persona…

John Brown’s Body

Despite the worldwide rise in reggae’s popularity — including the recent mega-success of Matisyahu — it’s still reasonable to be skeptical of a reggae band composed mostly of white guys. Nonetheless, while John Brown’s Body doesn’t have roots in Jamaica (the act is from Ithaca, New York), the members’ hearts…

Nathan & Stephen

The field of atmospheric pop is horribly crowded at the moment. And it only gets worse every time some trendy would-be hipster kid picks up a keyboard and adds it to indie-rock instrumentation. You’d think with the glut of similarly sounding music that nothing new or interesting could emerge. But…

Nuckle Up

P-Nuckle is awesome. Just ask Chris LaPlante. This summer, the frontman made a bold proclamation at the Westword Music Showcase awards ceremony that stirred the ire of a few fellow nominees. When P-Nuckle was announced as the winner in the reggae/ska category, the frontman held up the award and zealously…

Jack of All Trades

A common synonym for “drummer” is “timekeeper” — but Jack DeJohnette, who’s arguably jazz’s greatest living stick man, has no use for the word. In his opinion, the term is unnecessarily limiting. “If you ask what I do with time, I do more than just keep it,” he maintains. “I…

Weird Science

Homicidal men in bear suits, ironic boxing-ring deaths and pets made of porcelain all play key roles in We Are Scientists videos, but there’s more to the Brooklyn-based dance-rock trio than absurdist videos, a laugh-out-loud website and ridiculous album art. On the act’s major-label debut, last year’s With Love and…

Night of the Living Shred

There’s more than one Zombi out there. Down in Texas, there’s a tinker-punk Zombi. Across the ocean, there’s a Finnish black-metal Zombi. And then there is Pittsburgh-based Zombi, whose endless touring has probably logged the most miles on that name. The East Coast two-piece — comprising multi-instrumentalists Steven Moore and…

Janet Jackson

At the outset of her latest disc, the other J.J. from Good Times giggles after saying “I’ve uncovered a lot in my twenty years.” Such overt attempts at post-Super Bowl titillation dominate the songs that follow. But if Jackson thinks nipple obsession will compensate for underwhelming performances, she’s missing the…

The Killers

Judging by the Boss-like quivers and gravitas-filled sentiments on Sam’s Town, Killers vocalist Brandon Flowers wants desperately to be Bruce Springsteen. It’s admirable that Flowers and company want to be taken seriously as musicians and lyricists on their sophomore album, but who asked them to be our moral compass? The…

Ben Kweller

Had Ben Kweller been alive and making music during the ’70s, he would have made a killing writing theme songs for classic television shows. His best tracks feature catchy melodies that build and singsong choruses that just smack of we’re-gonna-make-it-after-all optimism. One minute you want to cry, the next you…

Beck

Since Beck Hansen first dropped “Loser,” it’s been both a pleasure and a pain to watch the eccentric musician evolve. From the album-as-fart-joke aesthetic of 1994’s Stereopathetic Soul Manure to the Berlin Bowie sheen of 1998’s Mutations and the barrio mystique of last year’s Guero, Beck has all but refused…

Listen Up

The Drugstore Cowboys, Chapter 3006 of Dance Moves for the Apocalypse: If the Octamaiden Was a Diabetic Joykill Addict (Lujo Records). Washington, D.C.’s Drugstore Cowboys get surprisingly tasty results by unceremoniously stuffing grindcore, industrial, indie rock and hip-hop into a filthy Cuisinart with a rusty blade. The duo’s mad-scientist electronic…

Joe Thunder & Selector Sam Present

One of the things that’s held local hip-hop back over the years is the scene’s underlying insularity. Cats will only work with MCs who have the same mindset or live on the same side of town rather than experimenting with different styles or collaborating with artists outside their realm. Thankfully,…

A Shoreline Dream

A Shoreline Dream is a hate-’em-or-love-’em proposition. Listeners who prefer music that’s solid and straightforward are likely to see Avoiding the Consequences as wankier than the Ben Stiller pipe-cleaning scene in There’s Something About Mary. But listeners with an affinity for atmospheric vibes should dig the disc, whose release is…

Wooden Wand

So if psychedelic folk is the coming trend in music, then Wooden Wand should be the next Kill Rock Stars fluffer in line to goad the big, fat hard-ons of the industry’s elite tastemakers. Wooden Wand, aka James Toth (who is also sometimes labeled as Wooden Wand Jehovah), carries the…

Insane Clown Posse

Insane Clown Posse’s Violent J and Shaggy 2 Dope speak loudly and carry a big shtick. Although they lost their most recent major-label deal back in 2000, they still draw big numbers as a touring act — hence their two-night run at the Ogden, with Wolfpac. But music ain’t the…

The Prids

The universal pop-music theme of love takes on intensely personal meaning for Portland, Oregon’s Prids. Guitarist/vocalist David Frederickson and bassist/ vocalist Mistina Keith founded the band after meeting, falling in love and wandering around the Midwest in the mid-’90s. They were soon married and — not too much later –…

The Long Winters

When John Roderick was a member of Harvey Danger, few would have predicted that he would go on to do bigger and better things. But after leaving Danger, he did just that by forming the Long Winters, which turned out to be the perfect vehicle for his considerable songwriting talents…

Paul Simon

Of all the great songwriters rock has produced, Paul Simon may be the most self-conscious. Whereas many artists embrace spontaneity, he carefully mulls over every creative decision, and when he commits something to plastic, he does so with tremendous seriousness of purpose. Take “Sure Don’t Feel Like Love,” from his…

Yo La Tengo

More than twenty years and twelve albums into its career, Yo La Tengo remains one of the few vital bands that manage to release brilliant albums on a regular basis. The trio’s material is so richly varied that it defies comparison — even though the act has been known to…