Through the Eyes of the Dead

Through the Eyes of the Dead will sneak up from behind to snap its enemy’s neck. The South Carolina band blends ominous growling with sweet melodies, creating metal (with a touch of grind) that will get stuck in your head. Anthony Gunnels’ vocals express such agony that one can imagine…

Matisyahu

Anyone who’s been subjected to Baha’i ska or Krishna punk can tell you that Christianity is not the problem with Christian rock — it’s the manipulation of secular music with religion. Reggae, on the other hand, is religious music in the first place, with a distinctly Judaic root. No surprise,…

Disturbed

Back in 2000, in the year of ye olde nü-metal, a fledgling Disturbed carried on one of metal’s oldest traditions: self-seriousness, bordering on self-parody. Rather than trying to be street like everybody else, singer Dave Draiman and flanks proffered master’s degrees and philosophical pomp. On the new Ten Thousand Fists,…

American Analog Set

American Analog Set’s albums are kind of like sampling apple pies made by your mom, aunt, and grandmother. Sure, they don’t taste identical. Sure, Aunt Ruth uses too much salt. But in the end, it’s still just apple pie. AmAnSet’s multiple releases are pretty much just that — a decade’s…

The Ditty Bops

Imagine it’s 1925 and you and your special lady or mister have decided to spend Friday night at the club. Onstage is a new female duet with a forward-thinking way of melding jazz, swing, tightly woven harmonies, and vaudeville-era musical theatre. There’s a tall drink o’ water on the mandolin…

Jason Mraz

Admittedly I’m a little bit behind on my Dave Matthews clones — once he quit the Blues Traveler harping of his earlier hits, I couldn’t even tell the DMB from Hootie. Then came that John Mayer guy who performed at the Grammys honoring James Taylor, mumbling his hit “Your Body…

Kool Keith, Esham

Kool Keith is a hip-hop legend going back 20 years to rap’s early beginnings. The onetime Bellevue patient was a member of seminal Bronx group Ultramagnetic MCs before striking out on his own to forge some of the most outlandish rap characters in the pantheon — Doctor Octagon and his…

Barbez

Barbez is a whirlwind of Old World energy, a picture postcard suffused with smoky moods and late-night cabaret. Like Gogol Bordello getting a makeover from the Dresden Dolls, Barbez mixes Eastern European folk styles from gypsy to klezmer with a Weimar/Kurt Weill fascination, and flavors the sound with a theremin…

Kris Johnson Benefit Show

On July 27, Kris Johnson — one of the founders of Bad Stain Records — was leaving O’Brien’s (35th Avenue and Northern) when he was approached by two teenage assailants, a male and a female. Johnson didn’t know these people — had never seen them before — yet without exchanging…

Badi Assad

While receiving high accolades for her quick-fingered guitar work, Brazil’s Badi Assad is equally dangerous behind the microphone. This reigning bossa queen has been applauded heavily on the classical circuit for an innate ability to sidestep styles with mercurial lightness. With a penchant for jazz and traditional soundscapes, Verde is…

Against Me!

Against Me! never ceases to amaze. Searching for a Former Clarity has songs for everyone, while still being the album longtime fans would want to hear. The disc kicks off with a long guitar intro in “Miami,” which is the standard Against Me! song with throaty, gritty vocals over a…

Between the Buried and Me

Between the Buried and Me has solidified its technical metal sound with its new disc, Alaska. It starts off with thick bass lines and quirky guitar riffs on “All Bodies,” which sets the tone for the rest of the album. Also, it’s where we get our first taste of vocalist…

Foreign Affair at Hidden House

Phoenix eating and drinking establishment The Hidden House (607 West Osborn Road) has been making waves in the DJ scene lately, offering up beats several nights of the week. Among its notable offerings is Foreign Affair, a downtempo rhythm celebration that goes down every Monday night. DJs Delikacy and Xtra…

Nine Inch Nails, Queens of the Stone Age

Oh, gracious. These days, hard rock is a most denigrated genre of music, is it not? With all those Mudvaynes and Slipknots besmirching the landscape, how can any self-respecting individual bang his head without feeling a wee bit peevish? Luckily, the clouds occasionally part for such honorable acts as Monday’s…

Broadcast

After a two-year absence, Broadcast returns with Tender Buttons, a searing, minimalist pop record. Seeing how the band has gone from six members to two, Buttons’ theme of “letting go” makes sense. Vocalist Trish Keenan and her only remaining bandmate, James Cargill, have toyed with the Broadcast concept a bit,…

Eazy-E

The seventeen tracks on this CD/DVD combo — combining the 1995 best-of comp Eternal E with all his videos and a new track by his son, Lil E — are charmingly clunky things by today’s standards, all teeth-chattering 808 beats clashing with the sound of things being slapped, rattled, and…

Modern Machines

Modern Machines are hardly the first young band to take early Replacements’ drunk-punk and stumble with it. But while so many others have gotten the fucking-around part down pat, this Milwaukee quartet captures the melody and muscle as well. At eight tracks, Taco Blessing is more densely packed with lilting…

Top 10 selling CDs at Hoodlums Music (ASU Main Campus, Tempe)

1. Kanye West, Late Registration (Roc-a-Fella) 2. Death Cab for Cutie, Plans (Atlantic) 3. Against Me!, Searching for a Former Clarity (Fat Wreck Chords) 4. Between the Buried and Me, Alaska (Victory) 5. Dane Cook, Retaliation (Comedy Central) 6. From Autumn to Ashes, Abandon Your Friends (Vagrant) 7. Common, Be…

Duncan Sheik, and David Poe

Major labels haven’t had a lot of success marketing singer-songwriters (unless they sound like Dave Matthews), and given that their target audience isn’t advertisers’ favored demographic (18 to 25), it might be questioned how much interest they can generate. Duncan Sheik produced the enormous hit “Barely Breathing” (which sounds a…

New Model Army

While it burst from the same U.K. post-punk explosion that produced other such earnest and humorless flag wavers as U2 and The Alarm, New Model Army’s continued to mine the battlefield long after the former dropped politics for messianic introspection and the latter proved to be just an excuse to…

The Posies, and Deathray Davies

The Posies loved Big Star so much that they became the band. Front men Ken Stringfellow and Jon Auer became the backing for Alex Chilton and Jody Stephens when they reunited Big Star for the first time in 1993, and have just finished a new Big Star album with them…

The Seatsniffers

Phew, can you smell that? No, we’re not talking about the stench of decaying pabulum emanating from the Top 40 charts. This particular pleasing aroma wafting its way into our proboscis originates from across the pond, courtesy of the Seatsniffers, a foursome of Belgian hellcats who specialize in blending all…