The Beatdown | Music | Denver | Denver Westword | The Leading Independent News Source in Denver, Colorado
Navigation

The Beatdown

Last Tuesday night, War's "The World Is a Ghetto" poured from the jukebox as a handful of regulars bellied up to the bar at the Lion's Lair. A little farther down Colfax, Bargain Music prepared to take the stage at the Bluebird. As far as John Q was concerned, it...
Share this:
Last Tuesday night, War's "The World Is a Ghetto" poured from the jukebox as a handful of regulars bellied up to the bar at the Lion's Lair. A little farther down Colfax, Bargain Music prepared to take the stage at the Bluebird. As far as John Q was concerned, it was all music business as usual. John didn't know that the future of Nobody in Particular Presents, Cowtown's favorite concert-promotion underdog, was looking as dark as its offices at 1633 York Street.

A warrant issued by the city's treasury department on January 26 had been taped to the door, demanding payment of Facilities Development Admissions taxes -- or else. According to the notice, the unpaid FDA taxes spanned a three-year period, from June 1, 2000, to August 31, 2003, and totaled $587,833.64, including interest and penalties. Two things in life are inescapable: death and taxes. And when you're into the city for over half a million, you'd at least better make a call.

According to Denver treasurer Steve Hutt, the city sent NIPP a formal notice of assessment at the end of December. "They did not respond or protest," says Hutt. Maybe the assessment was buried beneath a pile of Christmas cards; maybe nobody in particular at Nobody in Particular thought it applied to them. Either way, Hutt says, the city was justified in taking action: "Under the law, after twenty days, if there's no payment and there's no protest, then we're authorized to seize the property." Which the city did last Monday, quickly gaining NIPP's attention.

Denver's FDA tax -- aka "seat" tax -- has been around since 1975 and is calculated at a rate of 10 percent on top of the price of admission. It applies to any event held at city-owned facilities, including Red Rocks, the Coliseum and the Auditorium Theatre, and it's intended to help maintain and improve said facilities.

According to Hutt, NIPP's outstanding balance was uncovered during a city audit. "They were making regular payments of the seat tax as they had events at the Coliseum and Red Rocks," he says. "But our audit showed that there were payments that were missing." Though Hutt won't -- or can't (Section 53-356 of the municipal code protects taxpayer confidentiality) -- elaborate further, he does allow that the debt stemmed from a combination of NIPP events held at Denver Botanic Gardens, Red Rocks and the Coliseum.

NIPP's had a couple of tough years. A few weeks ago, when Jesse Morreale sideswiped me with the news that he was parting ways with the company, I was stunned. The prospect of NIPP without Morreale was like Van Halen losing David Lee Roth. There's no disputing that the VH brothers made up the core of the act, but it was Diamond Dave who gave it its voice. The immediate question was whether Morreale, the company's mouthpiece, was walking the plank because of irreconcilable differences with his partners, Doug Kauffman and Chris Swank, or jumping from a sinking ship. "It's been a tough couple of years with the Clear Channel issue, among other things," Morreale says. "We had to make some difficult decisions, which led to disagreements, and it was just time for me to move on."

That Clear Channel issue, a two-and-a-half-year legal battle centering on NIPP's claim that the concert behemoth is monopolizing the market ("Taking On the Empire," August 23, 2001), has taken its toll both financially and emotionally; those stresses were compounded by a rough concert season and a doomed attempt to operate a theater in Detroit, leading to a few layoffs since summer. And while the FDA debt is substantial, NIPP's financial woes don't end there: The promoter also owes the city nearly $200,000 for back rent on Red Rocks and other city-owned venues.

Last Wednesday, NIPP had a sit-down with city officials and hashed out a tentative payment arrangement; by Thursday it was a done deal, and Kauffman and company were back in business. "We reached an agreement and worked out a payment plan that was amenable for everybody concerned," says Kauffman.

While NIPP seems to have weathered this storm, Kauffman and Swank will be working hard to keep the ship afloat. The plan, according to Kauffman, is to get back to basics: "We're going to concentrate more on our core business, which is the three theaters, the Denver Botanic Gardens and the Chautauqua series in Boulder, and select shows -- bigger shows at Red Rocks -- and the Warped Tour and the things that have perennially made us money. And to not stretch ourselves so thin, you know.

"So growing at a slower or more organic pace would be nice," Kauffman adds. "I mean, we still want to grow as a company. We still want to do different things. But, you know, you learn the hard way a few times and then you come back to the next opportunity and you approach the whole thing differently."

After all, if Van Halen could soldier on pretty successfully without Roth, the same could be true for NIPP.

As for the city and that FDA tax: The renovations at Red Rocks thus far are cool, but how about putting some seat warmers up there? Even better -- seat warmers that can be rolled up to double as pugil sticks to pummel obnoxiously drunk neighbors. Then again, maybe the city needs all the cash it can get to fumigate the place after five consecutive nights of stinky hippies celebrating the return of the living Dead.

Upbeats and beatdowns: This Friday, February 6, renowned guitarist Phil Keaggy stops by the Sunset Event Center in Fort Collins, with Brenda Harp. Also on Friday, a compilation featuring tracks by sixteen local acts goes on sale at area Borders Books, Wild Oats and Rockley Music centers; proceeds benefit the Food Bank of the Rockies. To celebrate the release of The Love Album: Colorado Homegrown From the Heart, three parties featuring some of the acts appearing on the disc have been scheduled: On Monday, February 9, Bruce Hayes, Wes Hamil, Laura Haan, the Atoll and SemiGiant hit Eck's Saloon; on Wednesday, February 11, John Erlandson, Josh Allan, Dave Lyon and the Phil Jensen Band head up to the Little Bear in Evergreen; and on Thursday, February 12, Dan Oakenhead, Xiren, Craig Satterfield, Rebecca Folsom and the Ash Ganley Band are due at the D Note. On Sunday, February 8, Dankside Entertainment will celebrate the release of Universal Chapter I, Blaccmac's latest effort, at the Famous Door in Glendale. And finally, for those who didn't get tix to the Big Head Todd and the Monsters shows next week, the Cabeza Grande himself, Todd Park Mohr, will perform a solo acoustic set -- and the rest of the band will be on hand to sign autographs -- at 5 p.m. Tuesday, February 10, at Twist & Shout. The first 150 people who pre-purchase the band's new opus, Crimes of Passion, will guarantee themselves a spot in line.

KEEP WESTWORD FREE... Since we started Westword, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Denver, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.