The Blood Brothers

Since the group’s bratty beginnings in 2002, fans and non-fans alike have debated whether a band as noisy and defiant as the Blood Brothers really jibes with the textbook definition of hardcore — or punk, for that matter. Turns out, the point isn’t really worth arguing. Like all of the…

Now It’s Overhead

Taking Pulp’s more orchestral moments and sewing them to the dark, experimental synth pop of Macha, Now It’s Overhead crafts what could be termed “space rock.” That is, if the emphasis of the music were placed on utilizing the space within each song to invoke different textures rather than just…

Habib Koité

With Colorado’s just-passed statewide smoking ban prompting threats of legal challenges, Habib Koité — headliner of Putumayo’s Acoustic Africa tour — may inadvertently add fuel to the debate with his signature song “Cigarette a Bana (No More Cigarette).” Of course, even without the ban, smoking at a West African music…

Cut Chemist

Lucas Macfadden, who goes by Cut Chemist, boasts as impressive a resumé as any turntablist in the history of the art; he’s been a member of both Jurassic 5 and Ozomatli and has pitted his spinning skills against the likes of DJ Shadow and Shortkut, of Invisibl Skratch Piklz fame…

Sound Team

Oftentimes a band waters down its artistic vision by incorporating too many disparate elements into its sound. Although Austin’s Sound Team has absorbed an array of influences — listen closely and you’ll hear splices of Spoon’s frayed edges alongside ABC’s cheesy but earnest pop — it has managed to create…

Del tha Funkee Homosapien

When Del tha Funkee Homosapien burst onto the scene in 1991 with his debut album, I Wish My Brother George Was Here, he was considered a weird, eclectic MC. Since he was Ice Cube’s cousin, however, hip-hop heads gave him the benefit of the doubt. Long before Lupe Fiasco and…

Blue Blooded Girls

Existing somewhere at the crossroads of complete abandon and tightly controlled psychosis, the music of the Blue Blooded Girls jerks the limbs and contorts the face of frontman Jme White. And he doesn’t seem to mind. In fact, he appears to be swept up in the electrifying embrace of a…

Rebels Without a Pause

The amenities are sparse backstage at the Triple Rock Social Club in Minneapolis. There’s a cold plate of half-eaten Tater Tots, a bottle of whiskey and some plastic bins filled with ice and beer — nothing to get too worked up over. The real excitement tonight is waiting on the…

Kids Incorporated

Dave Solzberg has everyone convinced that I used to play with the Rolling Stones. “A lot of people really don’t know this,” he says, “but the Rolling Stones, all throughout the ’70s, had a ukulele player.” It’s a Saturday afternoon in early October. I’m at Dog House Music in Lafayette,…

True Confessional

“I don’t think we’re anybody’s second-favorite band,” says Chris Carrabba, the emo dreamboat who sits behind the wheel of Dashboard Confessional. “We’re either somebody’s most-favorite or least-favorite band” — and those who fit into the former category can get awfully obsessive. “It’s intense, and there’s an inherently scary nature to…

Electric Company

If you head over to the venerable All Music Guide online database and enter the name “Electric Six,” you’ll find the following “themes” attributed to each of the Detroit sextet’s three albums: “Cool & Cocky,” “Guys Night Out,” “TGIF” and, of course, “Party Time” — all fitting descriptions for a…

Stay Gold

Mustangs and Madras are, like, almost a real band now. The past six months have been a whirlwind for the Longmont-based five-piece — recording an album, getting a manager, booking a tour — and the group hasn’t even left the city limits yet. All of this sudden productivity can be…

The Hold Steady

The Hold Steady kicks it up a couple notches on Boys and Girls in America, the followup to last year’s acclaimed Separation Sunday, with sharper riffs and smarter transitions augmenting Craig Finn’s reliably compelling narratives. Finn revisits the hapless misfits who populated Separation Sunday on songs like “First Night” and…

Badly Drawn Boy

No one’s more British than Damon Gough, which may explain why he hasn’t broken through in the States. If his brilliant score for the Hugh Grant film About a Boy failed to entrance Yanks in sizable numbers, the Springsteen nod contained in his new CD’s title probably won’t reverse the…

Scissor Sisters

On their self-titled debut, the Scissor Sisters dipped their hands into a multitude of genres, which is what made the songs fun. In contrast, Ta-Dah overflows with nothing but pop and dance ditties. If the Bee Gees entered the studio with Elton John cohort Bernie Taupin and Beatles producer George…

Money Waters

Money Waters is a natural storyteller who takes his sweet time telling a joke or dropping some hard-earned knowledge. You don’t want to stop him, even if you’ve already heard it. The rapper is strongest when he and his homeboys are venting their Everyman tales of frustration about nagging wives,…

The Nancy Drews

Local feel-good mavens the Nancy Drews are going to rot their teeth on so much sugary pop music. The appropriately titled Fridge Full of Food, self-released on their own label, is like gorging on the stale leftovers of such late-’90s power-pop confections as Superdrag and Nada Surf. But the Nancy…

Januar

The music on Januar’s latest can be hazy, indistinct and difficult to pin down — and that’s generally a good thing. Rather than present their material in straightforward ways, the performers create a series of aural moods in which mystery and merit are joined at the hip. The Januar lineup…

Listen Up

Lindsey Buckingham, Under the Skin (Reprise). Buckingham continues his solo trend of steering clear of Fleetwood Mac-styled numbers for a trippy, deeply layered pop journey. Heavy studio effects fill many of the songs with echo and reverb as Buckingham’s creative instrumentation (he plays everything) meanders across the pop spectrum: haunting,…

Astronautalis

Doing his part to make genres and labels obsolete, Florida’s Andy Bothwell — whose nom de musique is Astronautalis — gleefully rips the indie hip-hop “kick me” sign off his back, folds it into a graceful origami swan and sends it flying into a wastebasket filled with tattered scraps of…

The Willowz

Anaheim, California, seems an unlikely place for one of the country’s better garage-rock revival bands to call home. Fortunately, the saccharine sweetness of Disneyland — the burg’s biggest attraction — hasn’t permeated the Willowz’ earnest brand of youthfully exuberant, stripped-down garage punk. Formed in 2002, when its members were still…

The Chromatics

The trouble with an act like the Chromatics is that they’re really cool. It’s intimidating, really: You can’t listen to Nite, their newest Troubleman release, without second-guessing the hipness of the rest of your record collection. Hailing from Seattle (the land of the too-cool- for-school mindset), the act is an…