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    Our gossip columnist and noted fashion plate serves up a year's worth of unforgettable images.

    By Michael Musto

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    Meet the Anti-Christ

    Omar Call makes a pastime out of baiting Christians.

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    An ex-con's surprising blog celebrates a city's dark places.

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Martina Topley-Bird

Anything (Palm Pictures)

By Lily Moayeri

Published on September 02, 2004

Martina Topley-Bird is the female vocalist who was the focal point of Tricky's groundbreaking first three albums. Back then, the two switched traditional roles, with Topley-Bird playing the male to Tricky's female side with sexy naughtiness. Five years after the duo's split and four years in the making, Topley-Bird released the essence of her own, very feminine being in a stunning album titled Quixotic in 2003. A year later, Quixotic has been rearranged, renamed and released in the States as Anything.

Spine-chilling, seductive and languid, Topley-Bird's caressing voice is as open and vulnerable as a wound, yet as strong and solid as lead. Enlisting Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age), producers David Holmes and David Arnold, and surprisingly, Tricky (who appears on "Ragga" and "Ilya"), Anything embodies all that was enticing and new about Topley-Bird when she appeared on the scene. But it moves far beyond that, bringing her reputation for innovation to bear on creative rock arrangements ("Need One"), beautiful torch songs ("Sandpaper Kisses") and futuristic blues sentiments ("Too Tough to Die"), and killing you over and over with her pure genius.