Blonde Faith

Second acts in rock ‘n’ roll: Are they misplaced sentimental journeys, uneasily handled unfinished business, or cynical cash-ins? L.A.’s Concrete Blonde formed in 1987 and enjoyed an early ’90s chart run that culminated in the Top 20 hit “Joey,” a heart-stopping pop gem similar in tone to the Police’s “Every…

Dance Manifesto

The Politics of Dancing. For DJ Paul van Dyk, that’s both an album title and the catch phrase of a scene at a crossroads. Since crashing the industry nearly a decade ago, the German native has become an international sensation in electronic music. His name draws sellout crowds in clubs…

Speed Kills

Dave Jensen desperately wanted to work with the band Five Speed.Jensen, singer and guitarist for Before Braille, was so enamored of the driving but melodic emo-punk attack of Five Speed that when he helped put together last year’s impressive local CD compilation Not One Light Red (with former Modified manager…

Celebrity Skin Peel

Though the media’s annoying eggshell-walking has started to subside, most of the toothy hosts of these so-called “entertainment shows” are still being careful to watch their P.C. p’s and q’s. (Of course, they were already attempting to put on a kinder, gentler image before September 11. After all, the public…

Nathaniel Merriweather

Last we heard from Nathaniel Merriweather, he and partner Chest Rockwell were handing out the syllabus for their Handsome Boy Modeling School back in ’99. Since then, Merriweather’s been reabsorbed into his alter ego, Dan “The Automator” Nakamura, who piloted Deltron 3030’s spaceship into our galaxy back in the 2K…

Creedence Clearwater Revival

Success has its price, and in the case of Creedence Clearwater Revival that price came in the form of the critical beating the band took during its peak years. It seems that the string of hit albums and Top 40 singles that CCR unleashed between 1968 and 1970 triggered a…

Monte Montgomery

Whether he’s playing Austin’s ancient Saxon or Chicago’s Abbey Pub, Monte Montgomery’s mix of pop-and-roots rock always leaves ’em stunned and smitten. The consensus: Montgomery is a “guitar god” (the phrase pops up all over Montgomery’s clip file). Guitar One magazine even declared him one of America’s best undiscovered players…

Handsome Devils

In the grand tradition of the wisecracking duo, Brett and Rennie Sparks guide the Handsome Family over cold, windswept snowscapes, replete with dogs, birds and the rest of God’s creatures. They mirror the stark, haunted visages of patrons at Snow White diners, the minds of tormented blind men, and universal…

Moth Balls

Jesse Maxwell made sure to take a box of earplugs to his Friday gig.It’s not all that unusual for rock musicians to protect their ears at live shows, but Maxwell — guitarist and singer for the art-punk quartet Employee of the Moth — didn’t intend the earplugs for himself or…

Prince

Prince’s first gospel album might just be his least spiritual work. If media speculation is to be believed, his latest identity switch has been to Jehovah’s Witness. And though he hasn’t confirmed the conversion, the convoluted music and dry scriptural narrative that dominate The Rainbow Children is hard evidence of…

Jools Holland

Although best known — at least outside of England, where he’s recognized as the host of the BBC-TV show Later — for his stint as keyboardist in the arty pop group Squeeze, Jools Holland’s own musical tastes have always been considerably earthier than that band’s. Holland’s passion is American boogie-woogie,…

Starting Point

Five young men. One band, three years old, with two acclaimed EPs released. This is where it starts. At the end of 1999, Chris Simpson, Jeremy Gomez, Ben Houtman, Brian Hubbard, and Brian Malone entered a recording studio in Austin, Texas, to purge themselves, to whip through the catalogue of…

Southern Knights

The dB’s defined the Southern power-pop/jangle pop movement of the early-to-mid-’80s . . . a quirky blend of smart pop and psychedelia crossed with the more experimental side of new wave [that] provided a key link between Big Star and alternative guitar acts such as R.E.M. — All Music Guide…

Pink Floyd

The spectacular pre-holiday sales success of Echoes isn’t especially surprising. America is filled with people who greatly enjoyed taking drugs during the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s but are no longer in a position to do so on even a semi-regular basis. For them, two discs of Floyd offer a safe,…

Pretty Vacant

If 2001 was a maddening, schizophrenic year for America, that goes double for the music that bubbled to the surface in the last 12 months. For most of the year, bland frivolity and mindless chest-thumping ruled the airwaves. Then, as the World Trade Center went down in a monumental pile…

No Headline

​ ​It goes without saying that fuzz is gonna be hitting Valley streets en masse tonight, enforcing our states fearsome DUI laws and hunting down anyone who’s idiotic enough to get behind the wheel after a couple of drinks at local bars and clubs tonight. (It even brings to mind…

Distilled Gin

The 110 famed lunchboxes sit neatly organized in a special collector’s shrine in Robin Wilson’s Mesa home — just like the gold and platinum record awards the singer accumulated during his glory days with the Gin Blossoms, inarguably the most successful band Arizona produced in the ’90s and the quintet…

Uncanny X-Man

While waiting for the day the turntable would finally be acknowledged as a musical instrument in its own right, hip-hop DJs, feeling they weren’t receiving their due as artists, coined the title turntablist. More than just a marketing ploy, it was a job description, placing the emphasis solely on hands…

Wize Guys

Pete Townshend once had a theory about solo albums. Although solo projects are generally regarded as a threat to the sanctity of a band — and bands as an impediment to a fully realized solo career — Townshend didn’t see it that way. He believed that a band could operate…

Bottoming Out

There’s no need for the exchange of overpriced trinkets to distract me from the agony of having to play the same old tired roles — rankled adult child, tormented kid, alcoholic uncle — that I spend the rest of the year struggling bravely to escape. Hardly. This Christmas Eve I…

Cypress Hill

In theory, one without the other is like bread without jam. But sometimes in hip-hop, the DJ and the MC are at war, even if the rhetoric is all together-forever. Case in point: Cypress Hill’s trackmaster Muggs, and the crew he’s hitched to. Muggs constructs deeply satisfying music. He boasts…

Various artists

As film critics everywhere have pointed out, the first Ocean’s Eleven, released in 1960, isn’t much of a movie. The assorted “actors,” led by Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr., look as if they’re either suffering from lingering hangovers or are still tipsy (which mostly they were), and…