I Am the World Trade Center

The interesting thing about I Am the World Trade Center is that the group chose its name long before September 11. Even more intriguing is that the eleventh track on Out of the Loop (released prior to 9/11) is called “September.” Unfortunately, that’s precisely where IATWTC ceases to be interesting…

Jadakiss

Jadakiss has something to prove; his reputation as a fierce lyricist has yet to translate into platinum record sales. On his sophomore release, Jada swings for the fences in hopes of showing that he is worthy of Jay-Z-like stats. And although he hits plenty out of the park, he whiffs…

Michael Franti

Originally released in Australia in 2002, Michael Franti’s much bootlegged and downloaded album, Songs From the Front Porch: An Acoustic Collection, has finally arrived on U.S shores. The ten-song opus from the Spearhead frontman features seven previously released tracks from that band’s acclaimed Stay Human, Everyone Deserves Music and Chocolate…

Retroactive

While some ’80s bands have lost their luster — or act as though they’re ashamed of the hits that made them famous — Twisted Sister frontman Dee Snider shines ever brighter and makes no apologies. Heavily influenced by Alice Cooper and New York’s glam scene, Twisted Sister formed in 1973…

Nique and Vitamin D

Hey, Denver clubs, wanna save some money? Fire your Saturday-night residents and play this set from Nique and Vitamin D instead. From the moment Nique drops the first record, a joint by Denver’s own Floorfillerz, to the second Vitamin D lifts the needle from his own composition, “Solo Contigo,” Audio…

The Pirate Sygnl

Far too many MCs use a lot of syllables to say virtually nothing. Fortunately, Bdbeyond and Yonnas, the Pirate Sygnl’s main mouthpieces, are exceptions to this rule. Their socially conscious, furiously political declarations make Norma(l) a rap album in which the raps actually matter. Neither Bdbeyond nor Yonnas has a…

Caste Aside

You’d think most bands, attention-starved as they are, would jump at the chance to get interviewed by the local paper. But when just such an offer is put to Pariah Caste guitarist Chuck Coffey, the only thing jumping up is his eyebrow. “Why do you want to write an article…

A Clean Break

It’s amazing for a club night to last six months, let alone six years,” says Eric Kozak, better known as DJ D.ecco, as he faces the upcoming final night of Breakdown, a club phenomenon that he and partner Steve Blakley, aka DJ Fury, have helmed since the late ’90s. “You…

Comets on Fire

Revisionist history has painted the original psychedelic era as something sunny, paisley-printed and oozing with love. But really, a lot of the music of the late ’60s bent minds toward the darker realms of cosmic consciousness: confusion, phobia, neurosis and, fuck, even Satan. The members of Comets on Fire –…

The Polyphonic Spree

There’s something downright annoying about two dozen neo-hippies in robes singing “Hail to the sky! The trees wanna grow! Grow! Grow! Grow!” Yet Tim DeLaughter’s eco-minded choir somehow gets away with it. When the former Tripping Daisy frontman isn’t leading his shiny, happy zombies through symphonic ELO-verload, he’s resurrecting the…

The Roots

The Roots’ new record is the result of a collection of jam sessions over a span of several weeks. Gone are the experimentation, the abstract sounds and the neo-soul. Tipping Point is straight-up raw, unadulterated hip-hop. Over the course of the album, the players primarily lie back in the cut…

Fiery Furnaces

The Fiery Furnaces’ Who fixation was hard enough to swallow last year, when the brother/sister duo cited Pete Townshend as an influence on its hotly hyped debut, Gallowsbird’s Bark. Unfortunately, Blueberry Boat drifts even deeper into the desultory waters of rock-opera entropy. Coming across as cute attempts at avant-garde wackiness,…

JoJo

Yeah, yeah, so she’s fourteen years old and has a set of pipes. What else is new? Unfortunately, nothing much. JoJo’s self-titled debut is yet another run-of-the-mill pop album that any would-be alum of American Idol — or in JoJo’s case, America’s Most Talented Kid — would record in order…

Greg Osby

Alto saxophonist Greg Osby is a legitimate rarity in jazz: a major-label artist who makes challenging music. Public was cut live at New York’s Jazz Standard during two nights in January, but it’s no throwaway souvenir. Despite the club setting, the sonics are superb, and the playing by Osby and…

Carrier

Marc Benning earned his name in the underground with 34 Satellite, a band that’s still afloat. But after hooking up with a pair of veterans from the Kansas combo Panel Donor — guitarist Brandon Aikin and drummer Kliph Scurlock, who also keeps time for the Flaming Lips — Benning decided…

Ghost Buffalo

With artwork that bears a vague resemblance to the cover of the Eagles’ One of These Nights, Ghost Buffalo’s six-song debut looks like it might be a throwback to 1970s West Coast country rock. And it is, sort of: Singer/guitarist Marie Litton sounds linked in psychic and sonic empathy with…

The Beatdown

Kid Rock is a tool. But like a broken watch that’s right twice a day, every now and then he displays the wisdom of King Solomon. In one recent television interview, for example, the Kid revealed why he started rockin’ in the first place. “Chicks,” he said, cutting to the…

DJ Quid

When James Sharp moved to Los Angeles last year, Denver lost one of its most creative, colorful and ahead-of-the-curve DJs. Operating for the previous eight years under the alias DJ Quid, Sharp co-founded two Snake Pit residencies, Quid and Shaggy Robot, that introduced new genres such as Brit pop and…

Total Sound Group Direct Action Committee

Long before the members of !!! had even gotten their periods, Tim Kerr, of the legendary punk outfit the Big Boys, was flirting with funk and R&B. Now, after doing time in a steady progression of kick-ass bands across almost three decades, the guitarist has hit upon the quintessential clusterfuck…

Soulfly

Hailing from a corner of the globe better known for the breezy sounds of samba and the bossa nova, Brazilian speed-metal sensation Max Cavalera logged plenty of hard miles fronting Sepultura for twelve years. But following the mysterious death of his beloved stepson Dana Wells in 1996, the dreadlocked showman…

These Arms Are Snakes

Seattle’s These Arms Are Snakes is responsible for one of last year’s most exciting debuts, the blistering and elaborate This Is Meant to Hurt You EP. This fall, Jade Tree will unleash the band’s full-length followup, the enigmatically titled Oxeneers or The Lion Sleeps When Its Antelope Go Home. If…

Camper Van Beethoven

It’s a familiar story. Indie band builds rabid following for its distinctively weird music; popularity leads to a major-label contract; demands for greater accessibility water down the band’s sound; changes piss off longtime supporters, yet fail to entice enough new fans; disillusioned and frustrated, the band breaks up. Camper Van…