Most Popular
-
The Mayor's Private Dick
Al Capellini takes the Nixon route against his rival on the commission
-
It's Not About the Hair
Don't hate Peter Mendia because he's purty. Hate him because you want his job!
-
They Might Be Giants
Count blessings, not calories, at Del Vecchio's
-
Riviera Beach Sweetheart
A popular waterfront tiki bar rocks and rolls on municipal largess
-
Lady of the House
She's got three kids, 650,000 constituents, and millions of watching eyes. Debbie Wasserman Schultz can't keep them all happy.
-
Real Drama (4)
Debra Lombard and the kids of the ETC can tell you a thing or two about motivation
-
Yo Ho Ho (3)
Watch out, hip-hoppers: Captain Dan and the Scurvy Crew are pillaging for beats
-
Heavy Pets (3)
-
The Alien Has Landed (3)
It's Prince Mongo's planet. We only live on it.
-
The Talk of the Green Iguana (8)
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
-
Haiti, Stand Up
An American Idol-style competition goes Haitian for a good cause
-
Halftime Report
Taking a look at some of the most buzzed-about albums of the year
-
Local Blues Music at the Crossroads
-
Soulful Moaning
Detroit crooner Dwele returns with a new artistic approach
-
Summer Slowdown
-
Massive Job Cuts Coming At Sun-Sentinel, Tally Chief Volunteers
05:48PM 06/19/08 -
The Palm Beach Post Retreat Memo
11:36PM 06/18/08 -
News News
11:19AM 06/18/08 -
Girl Talk Pulls a Radiohead: Download Greg Gillis' New Mix For Free
12:30PM 06/20/08 -
Design the Poster for Counting Crows Tour Arriving in West Palm Beach this October... Bonus: Free MP3s!
08:55AM 06/20/08 -
Major League Drops a New Video
12:07PM 06/19/08
What we are writing about
- Bamboo Room
- Best DVDs of 2007
- Big Bang Radio's...
- Britney
- Chris Russo founded...
- collages juxtapose the...
- Culture Room
- Daniel Day-Lewis
- Ean Sugarman
- exclusive interview
- fearfully grandiose...
- Gryphon Nightclub
- hip-hop
- Hurricane Grill and Wings
- Museum of Art
- Phillip Estlund:...
- R. Kelly
- Revolution
- sauce choices are...
- Sevendust
- Sharon Jones and the...
- Steel Pulse
- The Best of 2007
- The Diving Bell and...
- There Will Be Blood
- Top DVD picks
- Various artists
- West Palm Beach
- world's freakiest...
- ZZ Top
Recent Articles By Jonathan Cunningham
-
Dirty Dozen Brass Band
-
Halftime Report
Taking a look at some of the most buzzed-about albums of the year
-
Summer Slowdown
-
Neo Griots
North Carolina's Toubab Krewe takes world fusion to new levels
-
Soulful Moaning
Detroit crooner Dwele returns with a new artistic approach
National Features
-
Phoenix New Times
The Further Misadventures of Joe Arpaio
The nutty sheriff's latest target: Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon. And us, of course.
By Sarah Fenske -
Seattle Weekly
Tailpipe Dream
Ed Shadle plans to set the world land-speed record using a fighter jet.
By Jesse Froehling -
Westword
Don Becker's Last Stand-Up
Denver mourns the loss of its favorite one-armed, bipolar comic/poet/playwright.
By Adam Cayton-Holland
Global Shakedown
No travel visa required on this global music voyage
By Jonathan Cunningham
Published: June 19, 2008
One of the joys of being a music critic is that every day, you get albums from all over the world. Every week, new music shows up in my mailbox from around the globe, and most of it is stuff I think audiophiles around these parts need to hear. The only thing that's hard about it is trying to cover it all in a timely fashion. So every couple of weeks, expect a rundown in this column of the hottest discs from around the world that deserve to be bought, downloaded, or at least MySpaced for awhile to keep from becoming culturally uninformed.
![]()
Prince Fatty
Survival of the Fattest (raSa)
Reggae albums aren't always easy to predict. When Survival of the Fattest first showed up in the mail a month ago, I was initially miffed that I couldn't remember who the hell Prince Fatty was — as if he were some obscure reggae legend I must have forgotten about, like Prince Far I or Prince Jammy. Turns out I was only halfway wrong. This stellar studio project is actually a collection of middleweight reggae champions based in the United Kingdom like Dennis Alcapone, Winston Francis, and Little Roy. In addition, they've got Hollie Cook (daughter of Sex Pistols drummer Paul Cook and current lead singer of the Slits) as a vocalist, and the result is pure lo-fi reggae madness. It's the most dubwise release since Dub Side of the Moon, and it's just as influential. Key tracks include "Milk and Honey" and "Don't Give Up." There's also a badass cover of Snoop Dogg's "Gin and Juice" here that won't be nearly as popular as the original, but it is twice as nice. Visit www.myspace.com/princefatty.
![]()
Trinidad
Various artists
Calypso Gold (World Music Network)
It would be easy to assume that the only homegrown music export ever to come from Trinidad and Tobago is soca. It's easily the most popular music on the twin-island nation, and it has been for years. But when you break down what the second syllable in soca stands for (soul+calypso = soca), you get the real jewel of Trinidad. On this well-researched disc, listeners are hit with the best of calypso music dating wayyy back to the 1920s and '30s. Considering that some of these original recordings are close to 90 years old, the archival process behind this disc should be applauded on its own. From there, the music jumps forward to the apex of the calypso craze in the late '40s and '50s, as stars like Lord Kitchener and the Mighty Bomber carried the music throughout the Caribbean. The selection of songs here is hard-hitting and thorough. Choice cuts include Calypso Rose's incomparable "Rum and Coca Cola" and King Radio's "Man Smart, Woman Smarter." Visit www.worldmusic.net/calypsogold.
![]()
Canada
John McKinstry
Goliath Falling (Mojo Music)
Hailing from the cultural melting pot of Toronto, Canada, singer/songwriter John McKinstry composed most of the songs on Goliath Falling while on a two-year walkabout through Zimbabwe, Belfast, Northern England, and the Florida Panhandle. That's a lot of ground to cover, but apparently this former bassist for Canadian ska group the Skanksters and Boogiewall Soundsystem had a lot of soul-searching to do. Now that's he's back in the T-Dot (that's Toronto, folks), he's recently released his first solo LP, which is a solid journey into the fusion of two-tone ska with global rock 'n' roll. Due to his ancestry, there is a decided Irish sound here, and many of the songs have a Yeats-style poetry feel to them. But even as you start to notice that these compositions are slightly drenched in Guinness, ska horns blare at you, a clave beat sneaks in, and it's undeniable that, despite all of the traveling, McKinstry couldn't have completed this album anywhere else except Toronto. Visit www.myspace.com/johnmckinstry.










