Jaguares

is, at the Marquee Theatre, 730 North Mill in Tempe. Doors open at 7 p.m. Tickets are $36.25. Call 480-829-0607.

Life or Art?

The music industry may want to eulogize Marilyn Manson, Slipknot and Nine Inch Nails, but the alchemy of industrial, metal and theatrics still strikes a chord with teens who just can’t find it in them to link to Linkin Park. Think songs that question the need for religion; vocalists who…

Here Comes the Groom

Like a five-headed Joe Millionaire, Ticker Tape Parade, an average-guy amalgam of pizza deliverer, construction worker, data entry clerk, tee shirt printer and “between jobs”slacker have been doing their best to put together their own million-dollar sound in preparation for attracting the most eligible suitor. For most of the past…

Sum of the Damage

“If you get any four guys into a room, it doesn’t matter if they do market research or accounting or whatever — they fuck around all the time,” contends Sum 41 drummer Steve Jocz (pronounce it yatch). “That’s what guys do. That’s what we do, and people tape it and…

Tobacco Roadie

John Calleo, former roadie for Megadeth and ZZ Top, a concert producer, all-around rock ‘n’ roll guy and a storied prankster, died two weeks ago after a long, slow demise partially related to congenital heart disease. The response from local musicians has been overwhelming. At a benefit gathering held at…

White Stripes

The White Stripes’ Elephant is not a five-star album. In fact, Elephant’s not even the fashionable two-piece garage band’s best record. That’s still 2000’s De Stijl, which years from now may be seen as essential, the blueprint that got this whole burgeoning march toward a renewed simplicity and joy rolling…

Postal Service

One of the weird things about the ill ’80s musical revival spreading through the Western world is the symbiosis between said revival and the global political climate. Then, as now, fear grips. The nervy retro-futurist flavors of this nü New Wave seem to mirror the renewed sense of free-fallin’ civil…

Akasha

There’s little arguing electronica’s link to ’60s psychedelic practice, especially when you think of peace, drugs ‘n’ noise-filled raves to paraphrase Austin Powers as latter-day “happenings” that’ll freak you out. But most well-known electronic artists who’ve tried to integrate early psychedelia into their music have wound up stumbling about in…

Buju Banton

Back in the early ’90s, dance-hall toaster Buju Banton found himself deep in controversy over the lyrics to a song called “Boom Bye Bye,” which advocated violence against homosexuals. That meant a virtual crib death. “Through my travels I’ve seen certain things that I don’t believe in and don’t agree…

Transplants

A more inspired side project than you might have expected from this motley bunch, Transplants features Tim Armstrong of Rancid, Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, and Rob Aston, an Armstrong pal and aspiring rapper. When Armstrong’s gutter-punk-accented, mushmouthed voice appears on Transplants’ self-titled 2002 debut, the band manages to sound more…

Chick Hunt

It’s been a month to forget for the Dixie Chicks and for everyone else involved in country music radio. Owners of a No. 1 country single heading into March, the Chicks now find themselves in a shit storm thanks to that well-covered offhand comment about President Bush at a concert…

Yigee Yes, Y’all. Boom!

Countdown 8:00 p.m. EST, Monday, March 17 In the lobby of Miami Beach’s Radisson Deauville, on the eve of the Winter Music Conference, the music stops. President Buzzkill addresses the world. The face of George W. Bush replaces a Dirty Vegas video. The bright chatter among DJs, promoters, record label…

Park Rager

Singer Chester Bennington remembers his 10 years of musical obscurity and near-poverty in Phoenix, which explains why he’s so hungry now to enjoy Linkin Park’s rocky ride. “There were a lot of great bands in Phoenix I watched disappear,” says Bennington, 27, a former Maricopa County map-making employee who moved…

Kindred the Family Soul

Kindred the Family Soul is a 10-piece band out of Philly that makes the kind of soul music you never hear on the radio. It’s not kiddy R&B or hip-hop. It’s not even the standard template of neo-soul, although that is how the band has been marketed as a neo-soul…

Sigur Rós

Sigur Rós makes beautiful but utterly confounding music. The Reykjavik, Iceland, band’s songs often snake through eight to 12 minutes of near-orchestral prog-rock. Lead singer Jon Thor Birgisson has a startlingly high, feminine voice; he also prefers to make an instrument out of his voice, forgoing lyrics in either English…

Folk Implosion

For all of his lovelorn songs, it’s not Lou Barlow’s wife that’s left him. It was his bandmates in Folk Implosion, a gifted side project if there ever was one. Longtime Sebadoh foil Jason Loewenstein opted for life in Kentucky (and as a solo act) over preserving the group’s waning…

The Black Keys

No musical form, obviously, has been more pillaged by white musicians than the blues. Yet while acts like the Rolling Stones have added sophisticated rock to the music’s bare-bones origins, and others have turned it into rancid SUV rock à la today’s Eric Clapton, very few have gotten it truly…

Lightning Bolt

Known as a live animal setting up its bank of Marshall stacks not on the stage but in the middle of the floor — Lightning Bolt is often hit by writers with hard-ass hyperbole that makes them sound like experi-metal terrorists. But the Providence bass/drums duo is merely the scariest…

Majesticons

Mike Ladd is hip-hop’s Baz Luhrmann and its Alvin Toffler. A maniacally brainy, thirtysomething lyricist-producer, Ladd fashions Luhrmannesque opera from a crude mash of classic material and current mediums, then embeds ’em like Toffler with modern Alvin philosophical meaning. If MTV wanted for the Beyoncé/Mos Def Carmen to turn out…

Richie Cole

Richie Cole doesn’t like to indulge in trade secrets, which is too bad, because he swears he can re-create a wild 18-piece big band solely through a four-horn arrangement. That’s some kind of dexterity. “I’ve always had this sound in my head,” says the legendary bebop alto saxophone player from…

Nouveau Swing

They’re the Hot Club of Cowtown, and they stand front and center in a new generation of young pickers and grinners who carry on their shoulders musical traditions that stretch back as far as the 1920s and as late as the ’40s and render those arbitrary bookends meaningless with wit,…

Surviving the Jungle

The 1990s brought two great technology hypes: the Internet and electronic music. Both were supposed to refashion the culture; both fell far short of their predicted impact. Both balloons fell back to earth a host of Internet stocks can be had for pennies, and “electronica” poster boys like the Chemical…