Most Popular
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita
For days after the storm, inmates in Beaumont lived without A/C, electricity or hot meals. Press releases kept saying everything inside was fine. Guards and prisoners agree — that was nothing but B.S.
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Movie Pirates
That couple in the back row — they're making out big time, but not in the way you think
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Former Death-Row Inmate Sent Back to Prison
Martin Draughon returns to the clink after becoming a test case for alleged flaws in GPS monitoring devices
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It's Hip to Be Square at Masraff's
Continental cuisine is over, so why would anybody want to eat at this retirees' hang-out on South Post Oak Lane?
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Barack Obama and Me (263)
It was the year 2000 and I was a young hungry reporter in Chicago covering a young hungry state legislator
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A Prison Cover-up During Hurricane Rita (28)
For days after the storm, inmates in Beaumont lived without A/C, electricity or hot meals. Press releases kept saying everything inside was fine. Guards and prisoners agree — that was nothing but B.S.
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Are You Hot Enough for Citizen Lounge? (11)
All This Useless Beauty
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What's the Problem Houston? (6)
The city's skuzzy alt-rock scene thinks it is dying
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Remaking Michael Jackson (5)
Why waste money on (or steal) those bogus Thriller remixes when you can get better ones legally for free?
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What's the Problem Houston?
The city's skuzzy alt-rock scene thinks it is dying
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Houston's Matt Clark Strums for New Orleans' Glen David Andrews
A River Oaks kid learns the Basin Street Blues
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The Last Word from the Press on SXSW 2008
We swear, we're done now
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Remaking Michael Jackson
Why waste money on (or steal) those bogus Thriller remixes when you can get better ones legally for free?
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Houston Music Festivals
The last three weeks of this month promise to be hard on your wallet, eardrums and liver
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Emo Poems About Adult Every Day Life
12:01PM 04/04/08 -
R.I.P. The Forum, The Hippest Venue in LaPorte
11:08AM 04/04/08 -
Do We Have to Play the National Anthem Before Every Single Sporting Event?
12:12PM 04/04/08 -
Slideshow: Mudbugs in the Bayou City
03:03PM 04/02/08
What we are writing about
- Altar Boyz
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Recent Articles By Michael Gallucci
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Reel Big Fish, with American Hi-Fi, El Pus, Punchline and Zolof the Rock & Roll Destroyer
Monday, July 18, at the Meridian, 1503 Chartres, 713-225-1717.
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Spiritualized
Let It Come Down (Arista)
Recent Articles By Jennifer Maerz
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Jay Reatard
Blood Visions
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Danava
Danava
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Detroit Cobras
Saturday, July 20
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Les Savy Fav, with 764-HERO and Swearing at Motorists
Thursday, May 2
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Rock and Roll Swirlie
Manhattan's Toilet Boys keep '80s hair metal and '70s glam rock from circling the drain
Recent Articles By Dave Segal
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Betty Davis
Once too hot to handle, Betty Davis's freaky funk is ripe for rediscovery
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Six Parts Seven
Casually Smashed to Pieces
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Super Furry Animals
Love Kraft
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Can
Future Days, Soon Over Babaluma, Landed and Unlimited Edition
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Fischerspooner
Friday, May 6, at HUSH, 15625 Katy Freeway, 713-330-HUSH.
Recent Articles By Annie Zaleski
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Nine Inch Nails
Year Zero
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Scissor Sisters
An interview with the band
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Arcade Fire
Neon Bible
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Fall Out Boy
Infinity on High
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The Earlies
The Enemy Chorus
Recent Articles By Niki D'Andrea
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Dir En Grey
The Marrow of a Bone
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Wired All Wrong
Break Out the Battle Tapes
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Bob Seger
Face the Promise
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White Demons
Say Go
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Fetti Profoun
Valley Fever
Recent Articles By Arielle Castillo
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Pelican
City of Echoes
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Los Tigres del Norte
Detalles y Emociones
Recent Articles By Chris Gray
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Suspicious Minds
commercial tie-ins
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Against Me!
New Wave
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Skyblue 72
concert preview
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The Gourds
concert preview
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Exile on Main Street
Racket and the new guy take the annual Houston Press Music Awards Showcase plunge
Recent Articles By Sarah Askari
Recent Articles By Lina Lecaro
Recent Articles By Jason Harper
National Features
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Miami New Times
The Murder of Master Do
In a city plagued by killings, the most perplexing death is that of a killer.
ByTamara Lush -
SF Weekly
Pitching "Woo-Woo"
He'll find you a parking space and even watch your car--if the meter maids let him.
By Ashley Harrell -
Nashville Scene
Spank the Honkey
The victim of a racial slur exacts a special kind of retribution.
By P.J. Tobia -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Spring Break is Still Awesome
Try as it might, Ft. Lauderdale still can't shake America's die-hard partiers.
By Michael J. Mooney
2007 Music Year in Review
Continued from page 1
Published: December 13, 2007HP: Have you ever thought about making an album with your band? [Scarface occasionally performs, playing several instruments, with a 14-piece live band.]
SF: I want to. Contractual obligations may not allow it, but that's a big dream of mine, to be able to make an album with a rock band. I've got a rock band, the Sick Man Psycho Bastards. I'm the lead singer.
HP: I know you did A&R for Def Jam [signing Ludacris and T.I., among others]. Are you still doing that for Rap-a-Lot?
SF: No. I don't do that no more.
HP: You said earlier you've been playing a lot of blues. What kind of blues are you into?
SF: Old Delta blues. Muddy Waters's old Plantation recordings. Robert Johnson, Blind Willie McTell, Son House.
HP: Lightnin' Hopkins?
SF: That was a little later, but yeah, he's good.
HP: What have you been listening to the most recently?
SF: Reggae. Peter Tosh, Bob Marley. The old one-drop reggae.
HP: Do you go out and see a lot of music?
SF: No. I don't really know what's going on, man. I'm totally out of sync with what's happening right now.
HP: Do you think the local rap community is as strong as it was a couple of years ago?
SF: I hope it's as strong as it was. [Yawns] Excuse me. I think you have to grow up in anything you do. Not grow up, but you've gotta grow with your fanbase. I think that's the secret of what music is. If your fanbase is 25 and older, it's going to be hard to sell to kids [who are] 13, 12.
HP: Do you worry about that with your records?
SF: No, I just make music, man. I know who my fanbase is. See, I'm kind of cheating, man. I grew up with a houseful of musicians. My cousin is Johnny Nash, "I Can See Clearly Now" Johnny Nash. So I know what to do just by watching what he did. He had a brilliant career. He wrote one of the biggest songs in music history.
HP: On your mom's side or your dad's?
SF: Ummm...on my grandfather's side.
HP: Did you get to hang out with him much?
SF: Yeah.
HP: Did he give you lessons or anything like that?
SF: Hell no.
MIAMI
DJ I-Dee's Tracks to Relax
By Arielle Castillo
Unlike, possibly, 90 percent of his neighbors, turntable wunderkind Isaac DeLima did not, in fact, choose his South Beach digs for their proximity to the neighborhood's nonstop party. Rather DeLima, a.k.a. DJ I-Dee, initially landed in Miami almost three years ago from the D.C. suburbs with a plan to attend culinary school.
But then his DJ battle career blew up in a big way. In 2005, I-Dee was crowned the national DMC turntable competition champion, and at barely age 18, one of the youngest ever. And he'd quickly rack up a string of further national and international prizes before retiring from the battle circuit just two years later.
Growing up in Fairfax, Virginia, DeLima still remembers when his bedroom DJ brother showed him his first battle video: the 1994 DMC World Championships (Roc Raida won). He was hooked, but only ten years old. No matter; he learned his way around the decks in secret, standing on a box to reach the turntables.
DeLima attended his first regional DMC competition as a 14-year-old spectator in 2001. Three years later, he'd win, qualifying for the national DMC championship. In 2005, he won that, in San Francisco (and was summarily kicked out of the 21-and-over club as soon as he grabbed his trophy). He would then go on to place third at the international competition in London. In 2006, he took the two biggest remaining U.S. titles on the battle circuit, at the Gong Supremacy and Scribble Jam championships. By 19, he was done, ready to concentrate on his own original music. And he had moved to Miami Beach — for peace and quiet.
"I'm traveling a lot of times during the week, so I love to keep this place in Miami for a feeling of home," DeLima says. "This is my space to relax." It seems that his enviable precociousness has led him to find one of the city's few quiet, pedestrian-friendly pockets amid the chaos.
I-Dee's got big plans for his own musical productions, genre- and media-crossing creations. For example, industrial rock remixed on the decks in a truly humorous, faux-horror video? Sure, why not, and it works. So he's holed up in the lab, doggedly working to finish his first album of all original material, due out next year.
Still, like any worthy party selector, record collector and postmodern music-maker, DeLima devours new music like Tic Tacs. But as a true child of turntablism's cut-and-paste ethos, he's more into individual tracks than complete albums.
"Honestly, the last album I listened to in its entirety was Chromeo's Fancy Footwork [released this past June on Vice Records]," he says. "In the new digital age, and as a DJ, I usually download the singles that I need, and if there's more than one song that grabs my attention, I'll download the whole album. That happens very rarely for me personally, though."
Here, then, are his favorite 2007 bangers.
Talib Kweli, "Hot Thing" remix, feat. Ne-Yo and Jean Grae
"Jean Grae is about to be revealed to a lot of mainstream hip-hop fans and really bring back the female MC. Nowadays, the majority of them are in trouble with one thing or another. She's been around for quite some time, however; be sure to look out for her major debut on Kweli's label, Blacksmith."
Justice, "D.A.N.C.E." Benny Blanco remix feat. Mos Def and Spank Rock
"Definitely one of the best songs of 2007 for me. The remix, though, features the mighty Mos Def, B-More/Philly booty-mover Spank Rock, and production from 19-year-old Benny Blanco. Cop the Bangers & Cash EP from Benny and Spank while you're at it."
RJD2, "You Never Had It So Good"
"RJD2 goes a different route this time around with his latest album, The Third Hand, by singing on a majority of his tracks rather than strictly producing. The reason I liked this song is because I believe he got a sample off Super Mario RPG for SNES; it had me thinking back to '95/'96."
DJ I-Dee, "Eclectic Dreams" feat. Rites of Ash
"The first single off my upcoming debut album on Adiar Cor Records. It features Rites of Ash, an industrial rock band from Washington, D.C. Be sure to check the music video for it on YouTube, as well as my album coming in 2008."
Tay Zonday, "Chocolate Rain"
"Best song of the year. Hypnotizing. 'Nuff said."
Madlib, "Movie Finale"
"This is one of those songs that I'll play over and over during a long drive. Very soothing and has a slight Bollywood feel to it. Check Madlib's Beat Konducta Vol. 3-4: In India on Stones Throw."
CLEVELAND
Electric Avenue
By Michael Gallucci
Cleveland doesn't have celebrities. That's why our contribution to this year-end roundup is star-free. The biggest thing we've got (next to LeBron James, who was too busy playing basketball or something to talk to us) is the stripper-lovin' host of The Price Is Right, Drew Carey. But we're pretty sure he couldn't be pried away from his medical-marijuana crusade to chat music.









When and where are the Sick Man Psycho Bastards going to play...that would be a fun night!
Comment by JK — December 18, 2007 @ 05:54PM