the Chicago Afrobeat Project The Chicago Afrobeat Project could not have a more plainly descriptive name, yet the band's new CD transcends the ordinary. The group, which returns to the Quad Cities with a show on Friday at the Redstone Room, does its fair share of aimless jamming - all pleasant - but on several occasions it reaches highs that lift up the whole endeavor.

Folksongs of Illinois It's 1927, the jazz age, with poet Carl Sandburg toting a funny little guitar and strumming carelessly to the old tunes: "Whisky Johnny," "Where O Where Is Old Elijah?" The Galesburger/Chicagoan published his wildly popular American Song Bag with 280 songs from sailors, cowboys, railroad hands, pioneers, prisoners, and preachers. Sandburg, motivated by The People, Yes, finds democratic merit in these common songs.

RockapellaIn every concert performed by Rockapella, the a cappella quintet that first garnered fame with its appearances (and title-song crooning) on PBS's long-running children's game show Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?, a segment is devoted to a solo by the group's vocal percussionist, Jeff Thacher.

AIDS Wolf When you look at publicity photos of the band on its Web site and elsewhere, stereotypes about hippies come to mind. There are rural settings, and some long hair, and some naughty bits - yes, a pair of breasts, pubic hair, and even a penis or two.

660_coverthumb.jpg Here's what the Davenport-based rapper Kuz and his manager want you to know:

His single "Boss Status" is presently number seven on Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles Sales chart - one slot ahead of Beyoncé, and one behind J. Holiday - and peaked at number three. The song reached 15 on Hot Singles Sales, and topped out at 80 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop chart. As of Monday, it topped Jamster's hip-hop ringtones chart.

Kuz appeared as himself in the 2007 horror movie April Fools (an I Know What You Did Last Summer knock-off, he said) alongside Emmy nominee Obba Babatundé and hip-hop artist Lil' Flip. "I didn't get killed," he said of his character.

Nick Moss Describing the music that he's spent more than half of his 38 years learning to master, blues guitarist Nick Moss states, "There's a lot of nuance that people don't realize," and underscores his point with an unusual - but apt - analogy.

"To me it's like food," says Moss in a recent phone interview.

Driver of the Year Listening to Will Destroy You, Driver of the Year's release from earlier this year, the first thing that popped into my head was Flight of the Conchords, the comedy folk duo from New Zealand that scored an HBO series on which the band's fan base never grew much larger than one.

The Nova Singers To understand the Degree of Difficulty inherent in the Nova Singers' season-opening concert, first imagine singing a particular vocal line - be it soprano, alto, tenor, or bass - against the three other vocal lines, and doing it a cappella, to boot.

Then imagine singing your part while those four parts turn into eight.

Then imagine singing your part while those eight parts turn into 12.

And then, imagine staying on your part with 81 people around you attempting the exact same thing.

Pike For a band that's had its current lineup for five years, the Cincinnati, Ohio-based Pike is maddeningly difficult to get a handle on.

Drive-By Truckers On "Puttin' People on the Moon," the Driver-By Truckers' Patterson Hood sings a litany of tragedies personal and regional: "Mary Alice got cancer just like everybody here / Seems everyone I know is gettin' cancer every year / And we can't afford no insurance, I been 10 years unemployed / So she didn't get no chemo so our lives was destroyed / And nothin' ever changes, the cemetery gets more full / And now over there in Huntsville, even NASA's shut down too."

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