They Still Be Trippin’

Undeterred by four years of music business grief and languishing sales, incendiary rockers Supersuckers have named their new record Motherfuckers Be Trippin’. “As if we didn’t have enough hurdles putting this record out on our own. We had to put up this one,” remarks Eddie Spaghetti, the band’s proverbially good-natured…

Metallica

In 1988, Metallica made an album called … And Justice for All, and it was extraordinary, filled with layered lead-guitar harmonies, whipsaw chord changes, near-orchestral structures and focused ferocity. It was, quite simply, one of the greatest metal albums ever made, despite terribly thin production. The songs, the ambition and…

The Isley Brothers

For an impression of how things change, take a look at the two new Isley Brothers CDs currently on sale at your local Best Buy: Body Kiss, the veteran R&B act’s new DreamWorks album, and Legacy’s reissue of 3+3, the band’s classic 1973 LP. Six impassioned-looking young men stare out…

John Hiatt and the Goners

A tribute album to a critically acclaimed songwriter these days seems inevitable, as is the fact that it would be packed with luminaries. But while John Hiatt’s Southern folk-rock snapshots have been so widely covered as to nearly qualify as modern standards, It’ll Come to You shows them to be…

Led Zeppelin

If you first saw The Song Remains the Same at a midnight showing, like I did, chances are the secondhand pot smoke led you to believe that Led Zeppelin had created the greatest cinematic achievement since the invention of film. Quite a different reaction when you saw the film on…

Sleepytime Gorilla Museum

Cheer up, kiddies, the circus is in town. Art-rock freaks Sleepytime Gorilla Museum are coming, with their “this is what it might sound like to have an enjoyable seizure” sound. Sleepytime must be heard to begin to be truly understood, but here goes a modest attempt: An art supergroup of…

Spying Cool

Retro’s been a fad for so long now that it, too, seems almost retro. But cool will always be cool, and Marco Polo Saldana, who sings and plays standup bass for local “psychobilly” band the Curse of the Pink Hearse, knows cool. He carries cool with him in an old…

Dead Meadow

Bust out the black light and the downers, Dead Meadow is here. An unlikely and largely unsuccessful merging of early Pink Floyd psychedelia and Sabbath’s dark metal, Dead Meadow’s music is mostly a bum trip. The music on Shivering King and Others represents an interesting idea, one even the modern-day,…

The Tao of Pooh

The atmosphere at O’Mallys on a late spring Tuesday night is pumped. The west Phoenix nightspot, an odd mix of sports bar, swank lounge and dance club, is an urban hip-hop magnet. Especially this night, when an amateur freestyle rap battle has drawn a triple-digit audience. Up-and-coming rhyming hopefuls throw…

Producing Tension

“I wasn’t planning on doing this. It was just something I did out of necessity, and then it just kind of turned into my life.” Larry Elyea, veteran musician and guitarist for the hard-core metal band Gift, is the most sought after hard-rock producer in the Valley. He estimates he…

Radiohead

Radiohead have mastered the prog-rock singer-songwriter album — finally. Hail to the Thief, the British band’s latest, is at once an intense personal statement by bandleader Thom Yorke and a celestial dose of guitar heroics, blips, echoes, rattles, moans and other distortions. But the new album also matches mood with…

Marilyn Manson

Marilyn Manson’s appetite for destruction needs sustenance. After 10 years of singing fight songs in fishnets, Manson has been advocating the end of everything for so long that he’s in danger of negating even himself. The shock-rocker’s last disc, 2000’s half-baked Holy Wood, was dismissed by critics and passed over…

Original Soundtrack

The PC forces may not want to hear this, but the porn industry of the 1970s wasn’t all bad. It created numerous professional opportunities for artists, and I’m not necessarily talking about Bambi Woods and John Holmes. Writers like Nick Tosches and Sam Shepard helped fill up countless pages in…

Kenny Chesney

The success of country singer Kenny Chesney — he of the shiny face and black cowboy hat pulled far below his brow — slyly parallels his hit “Big Star.” The Luttrell, Tennessee, native was playing clubs until songs like the ever-so-romantic “She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy” fell into his lap…

Fruit Bats

Fruit Bats are yet another example of a side project eclipsing a musician’s once main commitment. The Chicago band was first created to give head Fruit Eric Johnson (no, not the Archers of Loaf guy or the rad guitar rocker) an outlet from his main band, the now defunct and…

Navajo Hum

By 2000, Tuba City native and Navajo singer James Bilagody had seen his name recognition in Native American musical circles spread like the proverbial wildfire. In 1998, he contributed vocals to several tracks on Canadian Mohawk and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Robbie Robertson’s album Contact From the Underworld…

Northern State

It’s three suburban white girls doin’ hip-hop like the Beastie Boys — only better. That’s the first thing I said to someone after hearing Northern State’s four-song, already-out-of-print EP Hip Hop You Haven’t Heard last summer, and I’m not changing my mind anytime soon, especially after hearing the Long Island…

Gin Mill

Robin Wilson and Scott Johnson walk into Restaurant Mexico in Tempe on a Wednesday afternoon. They look tired. Johnson has just come from his 13-year-old daughter’s orthodontist’s appointment and can’t stay long; there’s a laundry list of other chores to perform. Wilson is itching to resume work on a solo…

Light Fantastic Tripping

Neko Case is hosting her fellow New Pornographers with care. Maybe it’s because five of them have flown in from Canada for a photo shoot, instead of her making the less costly trip to meet them, but I sense that she wants the evening to go well. Moving away from…

The Romantic Fence

Idlewild formed in an era when rockin’ in the U.K. was as close to trendy as it’s been in recent memory. “We came up in 1995 and 1996. Everything was Oasis and Blur,” says Roddy Woomble, lead singer of the band, a five-piece from Edinburgh, Scotland, whose new album The…

Nutcracker Sweet

A ballet rehearsal space seems an unlikely rock venue, but for more than 200 bored kids in Mesa last week, Jeanne’s Dance Studio filled the bill. The crowd turned out on May 24 for the third installment of a growing East Valley guitar pop festival known as Americopa Mantle. Eight…

Deftones

The Deftones’ Chino Moreno and Staind’s Aaron Lewis are two of metal’s most emotive front men. Unlike most headbangers, they trade in tears as much as testosterone, though the two take different routes to your heart. The subtler of the two lyrically, Moreno conveys emotion through his voice more than…