Skinny Puppy

The mere mention of Vancouver’s Skinny Puppy elicits images of traumatic soundscapes that often spiral into the chaotic; the band’s output was matched only by its flair for the visually unsettling. It was that combination that put Nivek Ogre, cEvin Key, and the late Dwayne Goettel shoulder to shoulder with…

Hayden

Though he mostly emotes with a morose mumble instead of a caustic croak, Hayden just might be Canada’s answer to Vic Chesnutt: an endearing, love-troubled kook with a penchant for poignant, sometimes darkly humored yarns spun all indie-folk-like. In “Wide Eyes” — a mournful strings ‘n’ piano ballad that opens…

Top 10 sellers at Zia Record Exchange

Top 10 sellers at Zia Record Exchange (1940 West Indian School Road) for May 30 through June 5: 1. Slipknot, Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses) (Roadrunner) 2. Method Man, Tical 0: Prequel (Def Jam) 3. D12, D12 World (Shady) 4. Usher, Confessions (La Face) 5. Avril Lavigne, Under My Skin…

Velvet Revolver

Anyone who has heard interviews with the group Velvet Revolver pretty much knows the members could have named themselves the Rehab All-Stars. Front man Scott Weiland, formerly of Stone Temple Pilots, is notorious for his drug use and surrounding shenanigans. The behavior of his bandmates/Guns n’ Roses expatriates — guitarist…

Califone,and Rebecca Gates

Crawling like a sunrise across a parched desert landscape, Califone’s rootsy folk-blues has all the spacious grace of an Ennio Morricone spaghetti Western soundtrack, ushered into the 21st century by the background clatter and thrum of electronics. Forged from the ashes of Red Red Meat, the Chicago quartet continues to…

The HorrorPops

The HorrorPops may look like the Cramps, but they’re more razor-edged pop than horror. The outfit’s parts fit together like Roger Corman’s Frankenstein — not quite as scary as hoped. The Concrete Blonde head of Siouxsie Sioux is stitched onto the torso of Gwen Stefani. Dick Dale’s arms are added,…

Asylum Street Spankers

If you dig a little digga digga doo, Asylum Street Spankers has a paddle for you. Jazz and swing at the core, the Spankers (a “spanker” is slang for someone who plays an acoustic instrument) will dip into any genre, turning rap songs and television show themes into riotous swing…

Stereotyperider

With VH1’s I Love the ’90s mere weeks away from airing, it’s officially okay to long for the decade when the record industry co-opted college rock and ran it into the ground with predictable noise merchants. But it does seem an odd time for a still-new group of Phoenix punkers…

What’s Selling

Top 10 sellers at Hoodlums (ASU Memorial Union) for May 21 through 27: 1. Modest Mouse, Good News for People Who Love Bad News (Sony) 2. Mission of Burma, Onoffon (Matador) 3. Method Man, Tical 0: Prequel (Def Jam) 4. Gift of Gab, Fourth Dimensional Rocket Ships Going Up (Quannum…

Plea for Peace Tour 2004

Oh, you can count on plenty of blue-hairs lining up to vote this November — the old-lady variety, that is, not the ones surgically attached to a skateboard. Whatever the reason, our nation’s voting-eligible youth simply can’t be bothered to pull the levers on Election Day. Hoping to alter that…

Dashboard Confessional

Dashboard Confessional, “Rapid Hope Loss” Discuss (18) Posted: April 19, 2004 03:31 p.m. Rapid hopelos is such an awesome song . . . but then again, any song written by chris is awesome! Posted: April 20, 2004 10:51 p.m. This song seriously blows. These songs are not deep and meaningful,…

The Stills, with Sea Ray

The Stills, from Montreal, have the skimpiest backstory of any of the definite-article bands that have won hipster acclaim over the past couple of years. They’re not rich kids, divorcs or Swedish; they don’t wear uniforms or brag about puking up both lungs in all-night benders in Tuscaloosa. Still, Logic…

Pedro the Lion

Pedro the Lion front man David Bazan is, without question, a member of America’s emo-rock fraternity: He records for genre clearinghouse Jade Tree, there’s a picture of a cuddly lion on the cover of his new album, and he called his first CD It’s Hard to Find a Friend. But…

Uncle Kracker

Uncle Kracker (otherwise known as Matt Shafer) was at the brink of divorce when he was pulling double duty as a solo artist and Kid Rock’s DJ. But dropping out of Kid Rock’s Twisted Brown Trucker Band has injected new life into Kracker’s voice. It’s given him plenty to write…

Ron Sexsmith, with David Mead

In the video for his new single “Whatever It Takes,” Ron Sexsmith makes his way through a sea of delicately disco-dancing young people; a couple of times he even gets close to shaking a leg himself, presumably moved to motion by the song’s gorgeous soul-pop sparkle. Singer/songwriterdom needs more of…

Home Grown (Local)

Although some would have you believe our local music scene is deader than Tony Randall, consider that two new bands have migrated here: Tramps and Thieves (from Detroit and Minneapolis) and After Any Accident (from Blacksburg, Virginia), an intense power trio that blends the smarty muso sound of math rock…

Marques Wyatt

Marques Wyatt made a pilgrimage to New York City in 1984 that not only changed his life, but changed West Coast dance music; Wyatt returned with the roots of the soulful, spiritual house music that would define his legacy. Now, the creative force behind L.A.’s legendary monthly party DEEP, born…

A.C. Newman

Like pop homunculi, the Kinks obsessives who have crowded up indie scenes for nigh half a decade are missing something essential in the souls. Their chirpy lilts and out-of-place Britishisms exist in a habitat largely bereft of weight, wit or variance. New Pornographers honcho A.C. Newman (a.k.a. Carl) has transcended…

RJD2

The early word on RJD2’s Since We Last Spoke is that it’s something of a disappointment, especially coming on the heels of the robust, near-heroic Dead Ringer. True, it is willfully introspective and less frenetic than that auspicious debut; there are no headline-grabbing raps by his old crew, MHz, or…

The Streets

No British rapper has a bigger hurdle to overcome than the Streets’ Mike Skinner. His second full-length, A Grand Don’t Come for Free, comes two years after the critical and fan favorite Original Pirate Material, an album the “British Eminem” used to turn the world on its collective ear, with…

The Magnetic Fields

69 Love Songs, the Magnetic Fields’ three-disc adventure in pop-music dilettantism, was the point where the antiquated past (jazz, blues, standards, chamber music) crashed into the space-age future (synth-pop). Five years after 69, on his band’s seventh disc, MF front man Stephin Merritt has ditched synthesizers completely — an unfortunate…

David Cross

As a co-founder of the fiercely lauded sketch comedy program Mr. Show, David Cross may be the only comedian working today who has the cult stature and intensity to not seem out of place on the indie rock label Sub Pop. It’s Not Funny, his second album, has all of…