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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Roberts
A hip-hop film series does more than scratch the surface.
Musician/author Daniel Grandboiss prose positively sings.
And learn to strike a balance between creativity and commerce.
Tuesday, July 8, Larimer Lounge, 303-291-1007.
Saturday, July 5, Gothic Theatre, 303-830-8497.
Related Articles
Sunday, July 16, Fillmore Auditorium, 303-830-8497.
Broken Boy Soldiers (V2 / Third Man)
Monday, April 28, Fillmore Auditorium, 303-830-8497.
Saturday, July 30, Larimer Lounge, 303-291-0959.
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
The Raconteurs
Monday, April 28, Fillmore Auditorium, 303-830-8497.
Published on April 24, 2008
The second Raconteurs album, Consolers of the Lonely, is getting more pub for the way it was released — quickly, mere weeks after its completion, with little prep time for marketers or retail outlets — than for the music it contains. That's appropriate, though, since the best of the new material conceived by Jack White, Brendan Benson and their pals is the most spontaneous. The players continue to draw upon well-worn rock, blues and country conventions in an overtly self-conscious manner that threatens to turn stifling on numbers such as "The Switch and the Spur," a comparatively ornate number marked by south-of-the-border brass, and "Rich Kid Blues," for which Robert Plant and Jimmy Page deserve songwriting credit. But the boys' ragged enthusiasm predominates on the title cut, the rollicking "Salute Your Solutions" and "Hold Up," a willfully dumb retro-nugget that's as much fun to hear as it probably was to make. That's the kind of speed the Raconteurs need.