DaytrotterThe Daytrotter hive is in the middle of three heavy weeks of recording sessions and shows. We're welcoming to the studio Margot & the Nuclear So & Sos, Miles Benjamin, Centro-matic, The M's, Cryptacize, Ben Sollee, Nik Freitas, Weinland, Snowblink, and Dan Goodman this week. If anyone would like to purchase any wares from these bands - vinyl, T-shirts, etc. - let us know at (daytrotter@gmail.com) and we can try to coordinate this. Helping these bands out any way possible is always appreciated.

Martin Dosh Martin Dosh, a frequent collaborator with Andrew Bird and a member of his live band, makes electronic music that doesn't sound the least bit electronic.

Yes, there are recognizable synthesized and loop elements and ambient textures, but with live drumming (instead of a drum machine) and breathing cohorts, it comes off as personal instead of mechanized. Its pulse is certainly stronger than most music of any genre composed to a formula.

"It's still at the base rock and roll," Dosh said last week in a phone interview. "It's not somebody with a laptop on stage ... ."

The Alkali FlatsIn their song "Old Salt Wells," the honky-tonk musicians of the Alkali Flats - based out of Sacramento, California - perform an up-tempo ode to the titular establishment, described in one of songwriter Tim White's lyrics as "the place where I first fell in love." It begins: "If you ever get the notion / That you'd like to see some motion / And you really wanna have yourself a ball / There's a roadside attraction / That'll give you satisfaction / They let it all hang out and that ain't all."

But if you're unsure about exactly what sort of roadside attraction the band is referring to, a subsequent introduction to its employees might help:

Daphne WillisIt's a busy day for Daphne Willis.

On the afternoon of our recent phone interview, the lead singer of the Chicago-based Daphne Willis & Co. was in the midst of a two-day shoot for promotional photos, an experience that Willis describes as "crazy. You know, we're all over the city doing shots - about 500 shots yesterday, and we're lookin' to do the same today."

Kent Burnside Kent Burnside is the grandson of blues legend R.L. Burnside, the nephew of blues musicians Duwayne and Dan Burnside, and the cousin of blues performer Cedric Burnside. Yet during a recent phone interview, the 36-year-old Kent recalls that when he decided to finally embark on his own professional blues career in 2006, his inspiration for doing so wasn't one of his famed family members.

"What actually inspired me," he says, "was Samuel Jackson."

Reeve CarneyThe first sound on the EP Nothing Without You has the full-throated force of Robert Plant, and it leaves a strong impression.

Ben Kenney, left, and his bandIf you want to see the full extent of Ben Kenney's talent, check out his video for "Eulogy."

In the clip (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47fzpzNOcw0), the bassist for Incubus and the former guitarist for the Roots sings and performs guitar, bass, and drums - at the same time in four different panels.

Martin Sexton If you're listening to Martin Sexton's Seeds and occasionally find yourself confused by the lyrics, don't despair.

The 2007 album, Sexton's first non-live-performance, non-holiday album since 2000's Wonder Bar, was made differently from his previous work.

"This was the first record I ever did where I didn't have everything written, lyrically, when I was making the record - the first record I didn't do live, basically," he said in a recent phone interview. "I had the music, and I'd have, say, the chorus of a song, but I didn't have the lyrics. So I figured if I make the record, that'll be the little flame under my feet to finish the tunes."

Reader issue #679 On March 8, the Quad City Symphony Orchestra announced that Mark Russell Smith would be its new music director and conductor. And as the Minneapolis-based musician serves as artistic director of orchestral studies at the University of Minnesota, director of new-music projects for the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, and music director for Virginia's Richmond Symphony Orchestra, his current positions alone made him sound an appropriate, and sufficiently intimidating, choice.

Yet a day before our recent phone interview, Smith received an e-mail from the Quad City Symphony Orchestra that managed to intimidate even him - a document, he says, titled "Repertoire from 1917 through 2007," listing every piece the venerable area institution has performed publicly during those nine decades.

Wow, I say.

"I know," he says. "It's a little light reading."

Johnny A. As he prepares for his third solo studio album, the guitarist Johnny A. - who will perform Saturday at the Redstone Room - wants to return to where it all started nine years ago.

"I kind of want to get back to a personified version of my first album," he said in a phone interview last week.

I'm not sure what "personified" means in that context, but I'm certain there's one problem with that plan: It would involve returning to a time when Johnny A. was learning a new genre - the instrumental - and his fellow musicians were learning to play with him. That age of innocence will be impossible to recapture, but Johnny A. hopes to rediscover the intimacy of his first solo work.

Pages