Britney Spears

You ever notice that it’s much more fun to talk about Britney Spears than to listen to her? As an artist (and that term is used very loosely), she gives audiences banal, dry, teen pop and gussies it up with a shiny, enticing sheen — the musical equivalent of slathering…

Small World

The sound comes popping and stuttering out of tinny-tiny speakers from all around, and underfoot. Glitchy, itchy beats blare from little HitClips micro boom boxes key-chained to bicycle handlebars and school backpacks. Chunky guitar rhythms and airy, kittenish vocal harmonies ring out on bright translucent pocket CD players, scooter radios…

Big Dreams

In Greek mythology, the Muses were gods and goddesses who were so proficient in the arts and sciences that they would inspire followers to glory by their mere presence. In the modern lexicon, the word “muse” refers to a simple source of inspiration, connoting a creative force that lies beyond…

Tucson Confessions

For a singer-songwriter with a decidedly traditional streak, Mark Insley seems remarkably attuned to contemporary necessities. At 44 — and as a 20-year music veteran — Insley’s hearty demeanor is matched by an uncommon business savvy, as suggested by the following exchange.New Times: Have you ever been so down and…

An Ax to Find

Jim Andreas and Chris Kennedy have played in bands together for nearly a decade.Through all their musical incarnations — namely Trunk Federation (which released two CDs on Alias Records) and the current Down With Buildings — there is one common thread. Andreas (guitar, vocals) and Kennedy (drums) have spent all…

Ghostface Killah

Hip-hop fans and Wu-packers across the world have hogged bandwidth to download the advance release of Bulletproof Wallets, the new album from Ghostface Killah (and featuring Raekwon). Already, many have indulged, digested and waxed poetic on its successes and failures. And as a true testament to the cult status of…

Various Artists

Bob Corritore, according to the booklet accompanying this live set recorded at the Valley’s premier blues hut, the Rhythm Room, is “a native Chicagoan who started a small blues label at the tender age of 21 and who possesses one of the world’s finest blues record collections. Corritore moved to…

Pedro the Lion

There’s something immediately arresting about David Bazan’s vocals, though nothing particularly dramatic is going on. His words are almost always delivered in a slow, off-hand lope. Bazan sounds somewhat congested, as if he barely has the strength to form the words and tap out a somnolent rhythm with one drumstick…

Oto So Far

For Chrissakes, you wouldn’t buy a car without first dialing in the radio. And you wouldn’t rent an apartment without asking if it came with its own indigenous creepy crawlies. These are high-commitment decisions you could be enmeshed in for months, maybe years, depending on your threshold for self-flagellation. In…

Day Break

“This song will become the anthem of your underground.” This first line of “At Your Funeral,” the first track on New Jersey emo quintet Saves the Day’s album Stay What You Are, is proving far more prophetic than its author, eager-voiced Chris Conley, could’ve intended. Though written as a tongue-in-cheek…

Dark Horse

It’s one of the sad ironies of George Harrison’s passing last week to cancer that he was memorialized by the international media as little more than a member of the world’s most exclusive club: the ex-Beatles. Of all the former Fabs, Harrison was always the least comfortable with both his…

Still Rising?

About a year ago, Prince Paul, as part of Handsome Boy Modeling School, opened for Radiohead at the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, segueing playfully behind the turntables from song to song — kitsch tunes, classic jams, whatever in between. And then something truly startling happened.Paul played the opening, ingratiating…

Sugar High

The dreaded word in “local scene” is, of course, the operative one: “local.” In this context, local generally suggests unending mediocrity, the kind of excessive conventionality perpetrated by so many sad-sack groups too busy churning out morbid translations of whatever it is that had a million American kids frothing at…

Nihil

It’s been five years since the aggro-industrial quintet Nihil released its debut album, Drown. In the intervening time, rock music has swung firmly in the band’s stylistic direction, with everyone from Slipknot to System of a Down to Linkin Park mining Nihil-istic territory: bile-spewing, throat-shredding vocals and heavy guitar riffs,…

The Album Leaf

Were there any justice inherent in the world — and there is not — to every 10′ x 15′ poster of the latest Current Flavor in every chain music outlet would be appended a small postcard, via a single tasteful staple, in the bottom-right corner. Gracing this postcard would be…

Charlie Hunter Quartet

In a culture so besieged by the conflict between art and commerce, it’s perhaps natural that the use of pop idioms is disparaged by the critical elite, anxious to protect their canon from dilution. Charlie Hunter has dodged such dismissive darts aimed at his eclectic jazz treatments, which have spanned…

Nicks of Time

When Stevie Nicks returned to her Phoenix home at the tail end of 1994, just a year after quitting what was once the biggest band in rock ‘n’ roll, she figured that her career was all but over. There was lots of wreckage in her wake. Earlier that same year,…

Make Mine Swine

Thickest cranium in rock? Probably Martin Atkins, former drummer for Public Image Ltd., now de facto head of the industrial-rock conglomerate Pigface. Who else would devote insane amounts of time, money and energy to industrial music — a subgenre that had its day bathing in the money hydrant during the…

Famous and Tired

“Success is a wonderful thing but it is very, very tiring.” That was yawnin’ Sir George Martin, recalling how battle-fatigued The Beatles were at the end of 1964. Sure, the Liverpudlians hinted at needing a rest months earlier — you’ll recall the “I’ve been working like a dog/I should be…

Top Jimmy

About halfway into their set at a packed America West Arena on Saturday, November 24, self-proclaimed rock deities Tenacious D launched into a song purporting to tell their story.The ballad, appropriately titled “The History of Tenacious D,” attempts to build an awe-inspiring myth around the musical union of two pudgy…

Mick Jagger

In 1969, Mick Jagger called Jann Wenner, editor-in-chief of Rolling Stone magazine, with a business proposition: Jagger would put up the money for a British version of the magazine, if Wenner would oversee its operations. Wenner took him up on the offer, but after a few months, it proved to…

DMX

Dude, did you know “god” spelled backward is “dog”? Yeah. Well, DMX might actually subscribe to this kind of bong-load theology, because his canine-laden references to himself have made a serious transition throughout his career. The exultant woof-woofs on “Where My Dogs At?” have evolved to the point where, on…