The Ponys

Some say The Ponys were too late to the garage rock revival — another me-too gang of half-Strokes, half-Hives hipsters — but anyone who caught the Chicago band in concert last year knows what the real problem was. Lead singer Jered Gummere had a terrible habit of squealing in falsetto…

Team Sleep

Over the years, the thing that’s kept the Deftones from being cast as an also-ran in the nü-metal franchise has been Chino Moreno’s subversive sensibilities. The vocalist’s affinity for all things Smiths (Robert, and the outfit led by Morrissey), which is unmistakable in his breathy delivery, has helped the band…

Opiate for the Masses

A textbook case on how to do everything the suitable way, Opiate is finally coming out with a full-length on its own terms — on its own imprint label that’s part owned by Concrete Management and Vans Warped Tour/Taste of Chaos creator Kevin Lyman — after negotiating with several majors…

Fine China

The first thing you’ll say when you see the band shot on this CD is, “These guys need more sleep and less makeup.” Then you’ll slip on Fine China’s disc and get a solid 44 minutes of first-rate melancholia. It shouldn’t work that singer Robert Withem can evoke such empathy…

Blunt Club’s StreetDreams Pre-Party

If you just can’t wait for this weekend’s big StreetDreams hip-hop festival at the Old Brickhouse Grill, stop in at Hollywood Alley (2610 West Baseline Road in Mesa) Thursday night, May 5, for the Blunt Club’s pre-party, featuring local up-and-comer Kid Vicious alongside the residents, Tricky T, Hyder, and Element,…

Pigface

Martin Atkins, leader of the industrial music collective Pigface, has had a storied career going all the way back to his first big break playing in Public Image Ltd. As a drummer, he lent his talents to Killing Joke, Nine Inch Nails, and Ministry, before coming up with the idea…

Charlie Musselwhite

If only Sam Phillips had said, “If I could find me a white boy who could play harp like Muddy Waters,” rock history might’ve taken a different turn. But rockabilly’s loss is blues’ gain. Charlie Musselwhite grew up in Memphis (and actually ran moonshine, according to his bio), was friends…

Heatstroke

This Phoenix rapper’s all-caps fact sheet states that he’s got “A THREE HUNDRED SONG CATALOG WITH HEATSTROKE CREATING OVER FIFTY OF THOSE HIMSELF,” and I don’t think it’s a coincidence that “OVER FIFTY” is bolded. Despite 50 Cent’s The Massacre becoming a quadruple-platinum album and charting in the Top 5…

Ben Araiza

A former break-dancing teen turned singer-songwriter from Watsonville, California? Can’t wait for the video. Not sure what brings him to the Valley from the Bay Area, but his first album has some likable acoustic rap-rock moments and a particularly angelic female background vocal that makes nearly every number a treat…

Damien Jurado

“I don’t go to singer-songwriter shows anymore because they’re boring,” Seattle alt-folkie Damien Jurado recently told Paste magazine. “I don’t care if you’re Conor Oberst or Nick Drake. Boring. Who wants to stand there? Not me.” While I respect Jurado’s opinion, he’s dead wrong, at least when it comes to…

Rory Block

The wonder of music is its ability to transcend cultural barriers and speak in a booming voice directly to the heart. Rory Block is white and a woman, but she’s a truly gifted “bluesman” who knew and trained with the best. The daughter of a Greenwich Village sandal maker at…

Dramarama

If your short memory of this group begins and ends with its alt-rock-before-it-was-alt-rock hit “Anything Anything (I’ll Give You),” you’re in good company. This Wayne, New Jersey, group relocated to California when “Anything Anything” became the most requested song in KROQ’s history after Rodney Bingenheimer gave it his endorsement (founding…

Puffy AmiYumi

If you haven’t been to Japan or watched the Cartoon Network of late, you might be unaware of the aidorus known as Puffy AmiYumi — the female twosome that’s at least as big, if not bigger, on the streets of Tokyo than even heyday Britney or the Backstreet Boys ever…

Neko Case

Is there any doubt by now that whenever Neko Case opens her mouth, amazing things happen? Through a string of fantastic solo albums beginning in 1997, the flame-haired, 34-year-old Virginia native has established herself as one of the most dynamic country singer-songwriters around. Her pipes are powerful but frayed in…

Artson

Artson enters the game with a pedigree: He was a member of the legendary Rocksteady Crew, and his record boasts guest shots by Tash of Tha Alkaholiks, and Likwit Junkie Wildchild. And on a first pass, he passes muster. The production on songs like the album-opening “Who” and the quasi-Latin…

Quasimoto

A full five years after the landmark The Unseen, producer/MC/chronic chameleon Madlib once more huffs helium and becomes the high-pitched hooligan Quasimoto. But times have changed and so has ‘Lib, because where The Unseen was a mind-warping fusion of space-age samples and hyperspeed rhyming, The Further Adventures of Lord Quas…

Zion I

Like its sonic predecessors — jazz, blues and R&B — hip-hop is undergoing a massive assimilation until everything is tinged with, in one way or another, rap. The sheer amount of gimmickry in producing and presenting “original” hip-hop today is daunting, which is why a record like True & Livin’…

The Jook

The original twist of ’70s glam rock — in its less artsy (and better) form — was the basic contradiction of dudes in outrageously feminine costumes playing aggressive, back-to-basics rock ‘n’ roll. To varying degrees, Slade, T. Rex, and Gary Glitter exemplified this angle of the weirdest chapter of British…

Niyaz

Outside the scope of rock and pop, “supergroups” are less heralded. Besides the acclaimed Masters of Persian Music, Arabic folk mergers remain sparse. Niyaz (NEE-az) easily slips into that category, drawing from a thousand years of Iranian and Indian influence and rebooting it with digital charges. Comprising former Vas vocalist…

Agnostic Front

It’s one of music’s great arguments whether great bands are the product of movements or their creators. Put another way: Had Agnostic Front formed at any other time, would it have been as important? Leader of the mid-’80s NYC hardcore movement, Agnostic Front was one of the first to deliver…

Keane

Around your bros, it’s impossible not to sneer at the mawkish sentimentality of Hopes and Fears, the debut from Brit trio Keane. But get those same guys around their girlfriends and wives, and the record takes on this weird power — it becomes . . . beautiful . . …

Radar Bros.

Rock is like a young Clark Kent still discovering his abilities: sometimes a little immature in the application. Thus rock sometimes feels the need to demonstrate its dominance, slapping its roaring guitar member on the table like a grotesque gavel. But majesty is another form of power, and delicacy can…