Zap Mama

Congo-born Marie Daulne, founder of the beloved female ensemble Zap Mama, isn’t comfortable with being pigeonholed in the category of “world music,” but that doesn’t stop her from stirring the global melting pot on a daily basis. On Zap Mama’s latest effort, Ancestry in Progress, the group’s exotic vocal stylings…

Black Dice

Black Dice makes experimental electronic noise rock that’s been known to draw blood. Infamous for their visceral and assaulting live shows, brothers Eric and Bjorn Copeland — now joined by new drummer Aaron Warren — have produced more than their fair share of jarring, disorienting and disconcerting records in the…

Architecture in Helsinki

The phrase “novelty act” comes with a lot of baggage, but it seems to apply nicely to Architecture in Helsinki. The Australian octet is wont to be wacky, flirty, whiny and twee — sometimes all at the same time. In 2004, four years after forming, the band released its debut…

Franz Ferdinand

The sense of unease was palpable at last year’s Franz Ferdinand performance at the Bluebird Theater. Hipster faces awash in confusion hinted at a deep and troubling inner turmoil. The dilemma? How to avoid shaking that ass, thus losing your resigned and superior mystique. Resistance proved futile. By the time…

Mono

In the tradition of post-rock outfits like Tortoise, Mogwai, Explosions in the Sky and Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Tokyo’s Mono favors the hypnotic applications of tension and release. Combining aching melodies and dark undercurrents of distortion into a slow-building storm of thundering repetition, the formidable noise quartet seems determined to…

Barbez

The six members of Barbez have a collaborative resumé that includes Brian Eno, David Byrne, the Boredoms, Two Foot Yard, Bang on a Can, the Sea and Cake, Guv’ner and Air. During their own highly theatrical performances, however, the Brooklyn-based chamber-punk outfit creates a pan-bohemian sound that pools from Argentine…

Pick of the Week

Say what you want about Cricket on the Hill, but Denver’s red-haired stepchild is still surviving in a town where venue promoters are more apt to go for each other’s throats than join hands in a moment of silence. Ah, the Cricket, where any unwashed, unseasoned and unknown local act…

DJ, Dance and Electronica

Danny Williamson — or LTJ Bukem, as he’s known in the dance world — is one of the few electronic musicians around who can lay legitimate claim to the distinction of being a true innovator. Having gotten his start in London’s hard-core breakbeat scene at the dawn of the ’90s,…

Present Tens

Stuffed into a pair of oversized booths at Mickey Manor, the members of Ten Cent Redemption could pass as a support group for male pattern baldness. And from the sound of it, this isn’t the first time these follicly challenged musicians — vocalist/guitarist Rhett Lee, guitarist John Waggoner, drummer Bill…

The Beatdown

God damn. Mountain air is thin. You already know this, right? Because unlike me — a confirmed city slicker who makes the trek to ski country once every five years, whether I need to or not — most people come to Colorado for the mountains. But this past weekend, I…

Born Again

Less than two years after the takeoff of Get Born, Jet’s debut album, guitarist/vocalist Cameron Muncey is still flying high, and why not? Consider, for example, the impromptu songwriting session the group staged over New Year’s on the Caribbean island of Barbados. “We were there for a photo shoot for…

Good Vibrations

Reed expert Marshall Allen took over as bandleader for the legendary Sun Ra Arkestra in 1995. In its current fourteen-piece road act, the Ark still draws inspiration from ancient Egypt and science fiction. By phone from the late Ra’s house in Philadelphia, Allen, 81, discusses his old boss, space travel…

Critical Fatwa

All hail Doctor Demento, who has carried the torch of the novelty song for many years. For we are not some dour Radiohead fan who requires stone-faced “important” music. But novelty can be taken too far, and Universal Records has abused the idea with its new album, Crazy Frog Presents…

Nashville Pussy

Your biggest concern after listening to Get Some is whether your shower ought to be hot or cold. Kicking up a miasma of filthy noise and musky lust, Nashville Pussy’s fourth disc veers precisely zero degrees from its headlong rush into the depths of Dixie-fried porn punk. Still, the disc…

Princess Superstar

You have to concede a certain amount of praise automatically for the massive imaginative output in Princess Superstar’s My Machine, a dystopic sci-fi hip-hop concept album about a future celebrity who takes over the world with the help of a cloning machine. As in any good epic, apocalyptic replicant war…

The Rolling Stones

For decades, each okay-but-not-great Stones CD has inspired the inevitable Rolling Stone review that declares it to be masterful — hence the mag’s recent four-and-a-half-star rave, in which writer Alan Light said the disc recalled “rough, underrated” albums such as Dirty Work and Emotional Rescue. Both of which were okay…

Teairra Mari

Seventeen-year-old Teairra Mari’s airy but rock-solid soprano and wanton girl-next-door charm have earned her the title “Princess of the Roc” and landed her a spot in Jay-Z’s Midas whip. And for that she can thank her lyricist dudes: They’ve got teen-anxiety zeitgeist down. Teairra tears through juicy jilted-girl anthems, as…

Highland Mountain Boys

Highland Mountain Boys Johnny Crow needs to keep his good gal separate from his side gal. See, Sassy is the sort of jealous six-string who gets uppity and slips out of tune any time Johnny’s eye starts a-rovin’, especially in the direction of Classy, that twelve-string, home-wreckin’ hound bitch. But…

badpenny

Judging by how few of them there are, good rock CDs must be damned hard to create. But Special Racer, whose arrival is being celebrated on Saturday, September 17, at Herman’s Hideaway, makes the process — or at least the results — seem as easy as can be. The badpenny…

Sound Bites

Pilotdrift, Water Sphere (Good Records). Combining cinematic orchestration with the twisted grandiloquence of Queen or Bobby Conn, this extraordinary debut from Texarkana’s Pilotdrift is a surprise a second. Lush and melodic odes to weightlessness (“Bubblecraft”) and illicit love affairs between Napoleon, Einstein and Doris Day (“Late Night in a Wax…

Art of Flying

From its remote base of operations near Questa, New Mexico, thirty miles north of Taos, Art of Flying specializes in a hazy and beautiful sound that thrives off the grid like a wild desert flower. Comprised of San Francisco transplant Dave Costanza, his wife, Anne, and longtime Portland musician Larry…

The Fray

The Fray’s story is as compelling as it is unbelievable. Less than two years ago, the band was completely unknown, playing sparsely attended gigs at places like the Little Bear in Evergreen. Since then, the quartet has inked a major-label deal, toured with Weezer and the Pixies, garnered a three-star…