Deerhoof, 'Offend Maggie' (Kill Rock Stars)

The world's most lovably baffling art rockers--still lovable, baffling.

The fact that Satomi Matsuzaki sings in her native Japanese for much of Offend Maggie indicates how, after nine albums of chipper noise rock, this Bay Area quartet operates: They're just doing what comes naturally (no matter how unnatural it may sound to the average indie rocker).

Icy Demons, 'Miami Ice' (Obey Your Brain)

Somewhere in their grab bag is a funky quirk just for you.
Miami Ice closes with "Crittin' Down to Babba's," a rap about an eatery where patrons sip lemonade, fries come with hot sauce, and "the music's always bumpin'." Sweet, spicy, and danceable -- that's the template for these fusion tracks created by Man Man and Bablicon members who make up Icy Demons.

Parenthetical Girls, 'Entanglements' (Tomlab)

Sweeney Todd make you wanna cut your own throat? May we suggest...

For anyone too creeped out by the bombast of the average Broadway musical, this Portland, Oregon quartet's third release may serve as a theatrical substitute.

Fujiya & Miyagi, 'Lightbulbs' (Deaf, Dumb + Blind)

The funkiest soundtrack to a cultural studies seminar ever.

For an album so full of crunchy krautrock and sly funk bass, these Brits' 2006 breakout, Transparent Things, felt weirdly sexless, as smoothly immaculate as a nude boutique mannequin. Their more subdued follow-up doesn't dirty things up much, but it does give some character to the quartet's airtight groovemaking.

Bound Stems, 'The Family Afloat' (Flameshovel)

History teacher's heartfelt tales get a focused, melodic punch.

Drifters, abandoned families, and college kids populate the stories on Bound Stems' second album, as singer (and Chicago high school educator) Bobby Gallivan explores how people randomly connect amid turmoil and travel.

Ra Ra Riot, 'The Rhumb Line' (Barsuk)

Rousingly scrappy anthems tinged with eerie musings.

Drummer John Pike cowrote the lyrics for much of the debut album by these Syracuse, New Yorkers before he mysteriously drowned last summer, so the images of cemetery flowers in "Each Year" and the cheerfully delivered e.e. cummings quotes on "Dying Is Fine" aren't the post-traumatic writings of a grieving band.

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