The Mockers, The B-Sides

Power-pop fans are sore losers, which is why, facing the ascendancy of Nevermind clones and the fanzine media fixation on the lo-fi underground, they tend to be defensive and arrogant when discussing their passion. The problem is that it’s hard to strictly define power pop — are the whiny brats…

The Strokes

How do you tell whether you like a band that the entire British press, Rolling Stone and your mother say is going to save rock ‘n’ roll and win the war on terrorism? If you’ve heard the hype, you may already know that the Strokes are New Yawkers, barely drinking…

Cretin Hopping

The members of Rocket to Russia are playing a gig in a week, and they just met a few minutes ago. It’s not the kind of timetable most bands follow, but Rocket to Russia is not like most bands. The one-off local supergroup of sorts has gathered on a Wednesday…

Playa’s Paradise

“This is where we do it,” Survivalist’s most garrulous MC, Preacha, welcomes you upon your arrival at Fo’ Life Records, the tiny independent record label from west Phoenix that has somehow produced a Top 5 song on Billboard’s Hot Rap Singles chart, Survivalist’s laid-back, catchy “Bounce.” If there were an…

Tall Poppy

It’s Saturday afternoon during this year’s South by Southwest, and the collection of independent parties known as South by South Congress is in full swing along the main thoroughfare of South Austin, Texas. Musical acts perform at a variety of establishments along the avenue and in the alley behind it.The…

Choo Choo Ch’boogie

No matter what some delusional musicians might spew forth in their diatribes about “art” versus “commercialism,” few bands would call for a ghostbuster if the specter of success actually paid them a visit. Selling a pittance of records to die-hard fans while gigging at endless clubs is not the apex…

Ozomatli

To those who grew up hearing — and watching — the best Brazilian and Afro-Cuban bands on the planet, chances are Ozomatli are L.A.’s most overrated band. When the Ozos go batucada, it seems as if the surdo is being hit with an ax instead of a palo, and when…

Buddy & Julie Miller

When an album opens with a cover of Richard Thompson’s dark and brooding “Keep Your Distance,” you know you’d better fasten your seatbelt: It’s going to be a bumpy ride. On their first official album as a couple, Buddy and Julie Miller take us down love’s lost highway, where trouble’s…

Ben Folds

In a 1999 interview, the lead singer and songwriter of the Ben Folds Five said that the next record he’d write would be the Thriller of modern rock, with eight hit songs on it. Now, two years after the trio’s college-rocker, The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner, Ben Folds has…

The Have Nots

“We paid attention to bringing rock ‘n’ roll back to rock ‘n’ roll, which is a three-minute song with not a bunch of extended guitar leads — what punk rock was about — and we tried to give our side of that and make our contribution.” John Doe, bassist and…

See How They Were

Arizona has an X connection and his name is Michael Hyatt. Known around Tucson as a 14-year veteran deejay at KXCI-FM (he’s also the station’s underwriting director) and nationally for his work compiling Rounder Records’ five-volume series of train and railroad songs, Hyatt’s rock photography recently put him on the…

Nothing but Love

By most people’s estimations, Tim Wiles, a.k.a. Überzone, would never fit the stereotype of a dance music producer. He doesn’t drink or do drugs, and he operates his homegrown breakbeat production enterprise like the thriving business it is. He’s even a practicing Christian. But the way Wiles sees it from…

Prodigal Sons

When Johnny Cash speaks to you in your dreams, you’d better pay heed. That’s exactly what Mark Stuart did after several nocturnal visits from the Man in Black, who spoke to the San Diego musician about, well, stuff, and also about playing country music.”Yeah, they were weird dreams. Don’t ask…

Roots Manuva

Roots Manuva named his first album, 1999’s promising Brand New Second Hand, after a song on Peter Tosh’s landmark effort Legalize It. While Manuva isn’t the first artist to use roots reggae as a hip-hop touchstone, his point of reference is a little left of center, or more accurately a…

Skye Klad, Salamander

The last time we checked in with the lusty psychedelic scene of the Twin Cities, there were such bands as . . . er, uhh . . . well, Prince, and Soul Asylum, and of course those space-rockin’ Replacements . . . whew. In any event, better late than never…

Nick Lowe

Fitting that consummate Englishman Nick Lowe has signed with Yep Roc Records of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, as The Convincer continues his trend of making Southern-sounding records. Lowe’s material is set against a moving panorama of Dixie styles, from Muscle Shoals soul to gospel to honky-tonk, with perhaps Geraint Watkins’…

Rip It Up! Rock ‘n’ Roll Rulebreakers

Denise Sullivan opens Rip It Up! Rock ‘n’ Roll Rulebreakers with a simple anecdote. When she received her first record player at age 6, she took a copy of the Jefferson Airplane’s Surrealistic Pillow into her bedroom and “closed the door for the next 12 years.” “I only ever remember…

Murder City Devils

Perhaps no Sub Pop signing in recent years has undergone a diamond-in-the-rough maturation process as memorable and rewarding as Seattle’s Murder City Devils. Over the course of three long-players, the six-piece (originally a quintet) indulged amped-up Stones-styled R&B, classic mid-’70s proto-punk, metallic-fringed biker rock and full-blown horror-shockadelica — frequently, all…

System of a Down

The New Metal ethos is primal scream therapy. That brawny fella in Drowning Pool yowls, “Let the Bodies Hit the Floor!” — he’s the victim of a harrowing, suburban, latchkey childhood. The problem is, you just can’t trust a maniac who brings his shrink along, and no defense lawyer in…

Boilermaker

A name like “Boilermaker” prods the mad cows of journalistic comparison (he said, inscrutably); as soon as you’ve registered it, you start flipping through the mental file folder marked “Alcohol, metaphors regarding.” But consider the drink in question, that sickly-shaky shot wrapped in the comforting banality of domestic beer. The…

Band Aid

Michael Azerrad’s new book, Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes From the American Indie Underground 1981-1991, will come as a shock to those who believe the terms of VH1’s Bands on the Run are harsh, that its aspiring rock stars are roughing it, that life on the road is…

Hunky Dory

Music, like everything else, came to an uneasy standstill this week in light of the East Coast terrorist attacks. Among the major changes to the local concert calendar were the postponement of Blink 182’s September 13 Mesa Amphitheater show (the concert has been rescheduled for the 20th), while tickets sales…