Most Popular
"Most Popular" tools sponsored by:
Blogs
Fri Jul 4, 4:00 PM
Fri Jul 4, 11:53 AM
Sat Jul 5, 11:32 AM
Fri Jul 4, 4:12 PM
Sat Jul 5, 9:40 AM
Sat Jul 5, 8:11 AM
Thu Jul 3, 5:32 PM
Thu Jul 3, 9:37 AM
Fri Jul 4, 4:12 PM
Fri Jul 4, 11:06 AM
Thu Jul 3, 3:51 PM
Thu Jul 3, 3:12 PM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Tom Murphy
Wednesday, July 9, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
Tuesday, July 8, Fox Theatre, 303-443-3399; Wednesday, July 9, the Falcon, 303-781-0414.
Larimer Lounge
Wednesday, July 2, Rhinoceropolis, 303-641-9809.
Wednesday, July 2, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
Related Articles
Friday, February 15, Bluebird Theater, 1-866-468-7624.
Deadbolt's songs have the highest body count in rock and roll.
The biggest musical winners from 1996.
Half of the 2700 block of Downing falls into one police district, the other half into another -- leaving residents caught in the crack.
National Features >
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
By Michael J. Mooney
City Pages
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
By Jeff Severns Guntzel
The Pitch
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
By Justin Kendall
Houston Press
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
By Robb Walsh
Deadbolt
Friday, February 15, Bluebird Theater, 1-866-468-7624.
Published on February 14, 2008
Although its members proclaim themselves purveyors of "voodoobilly," San Diego's Deadbolt doesn't tread quite the same musical waters as psychobilly outfits like Mad Sin, with its overt co-opting of snotty punk-rock poses dressed in retro guise. Instead, the act's music is closer to its obvious influences: Duane Eddy and Dick Dale. Long calling itself "the scariest band in the world," Deadbolt evokes the campier aspects of the old EC Comics, where lurid, heavy-handed tales of horror and madness prevail. While much of the material is intended to garner a chuckle, there are moments that are genuinely weird and creepy. Lead singer Harley Davidson is a gifted storyteller whose lyrics splash Technicolor images right out of a Roger Corman movie starring James Dean. Although Deadbolt sports a collective grin that conjures the psychotic visage of the Joker, its visceral stage show and spooky guitar lines are lively in a way that belies its name.