Hit Pick

The Maybellines, with Dear Nora and Jason Heller Thursday, March 30, at the Bluebird Theater, bounce around the same musical stratosphere like fellow locals the Breezy Porticos and Dressy Bessy, and it’s an affiliation the band wears like a scratch-and-sniff sticker. The cover of the band’s new self-titled single features…

Sounds Like Fun!

The Denver Record Collectors Spring Expo 2000, Sunday, March 26, might be the only place in town where you’re likely to see hip-hop DJs and fans of ’50s rock compete for access to the same record bins. The annual event will once again be held at the Holiday Inn Northglenn…

Star-Spangled Bad Boy

As gigs go, singing the national anthem at a sporting event is the ultimate dream and nightmare. The upside is the thrill of belting out the nation’s rallying cry to thousands of pumped-up countrymen and women, a rush no other gig can offer. The downside, of course, is the song…

Give the People a Hand

Most once-forgotten bands wind up being forgotten forever by pretty much everyone except the people who were in them — and depending upon past drug use, even that’s no guarantee. But on occasion, a group that fell short commercially and earned relatively few critical plaudits during its heyday will linger…

The Soft Machine

The last time the Flaming Lips played Denver, the band looked out on the capacity crowd at the Ogden Theatre and saw what some — okay, most — musicians might regard as a peculiar sight. The audience members were more or less doing what they normally do at concerts: watching…

Ron Miles Trio

On his fifth album as leader, recorded roughly one year ago, Denver trumpeter Ron Miles returns to a classic trio approach for the first time since his 1987 debut, Distance for Safety. The trio — and its subtle, patient beauty — might surprise some listeners more familiar with Miles’s cosmopolitan…

Oasis

By this point, to expect an Oasis album not to sound like a discourse on the history of British rock is like expecting Britney Spears not to bare her midriff onstage. The band is a sometimes cartoonish composite of its predecessors — not so much a British Invasion as an…

John Randall Pelosi

Somewhere along the line, most jazz musicians who were interested in actually earning a living at their craft realized that free jazz was better for dispersing crowds than drawing them, and moved on to explore less divisive variations on the form. Yet a few fiscally irresponsible stragglers have stayed true…

High Llamas

Orchestrated easy-listening pop is, by definition, supposed to be unambitious, soothing and relaxing — or so many of us have been lazy enough to believe. But the hell with that: The High Llamas’ Sean O’Hagan composes as if he’s campaigning for his own chapter in Elevator Music, author Joseph Lanza’s…

Two Lips

Dan Castellaneta is the driving force behind the band Two Lips, but it’s a sure bet that whatever renown he gains from his music won’t eclipse the attention he gets from his day job: Castellaneta is the voice of Homer Simpson. A talented impressionist, he also channels Grandpa Simpson, Krusty…

Irish I May, Irish I Might

A friend of mine has this habit. She’s normally a very well-composed, even reserved person who hails from a finer area of Boston, likes to talk about art and uses words like fabulous without any pretext of irony. Yet she’s got more than a little distant Irish blood running through…

Critic’s Choice

Robert Bradley’s Blackwater Surprise, with John McEuen and Jimmy Ibbotson, Sunday, March 19, as part of an E-Town taping at the Boulder Theater, has maintained a somewhat more than normal level of interest in the past few years, based as much on the mythology of the band’s formation as on…

Hit Pick

The Bug Theater has always maintained an eclectic national profile, but on Thursday, March 23, it will concentrate on a disparate bill of excellent local acts, including Ratiocination, Some Gumption, Mystery Children and Judith Priest. It’s a sensibility, not a sound, that ties these groups together, as all four focus…

Sounds Like Fun!

Battle of the Bands, Thursday nights at the Buffalo Rose in Golden, provides local bands and musicians a chance to compete for top honors in a performance setting. The weekly event is part open-mike night, part rehearsal, part vaudeville cabaret. At its most heated, it’s a musical variation on American…

Road Rules

Patty Larkin is sitting in a hotel room in Grand Junction. It’s cold there, she says, but not any colder than it gets on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, where she lives and, when she can, records in her home studio. The hotel of the moment is pretty typical of those she’s…

Orchestral Maneuvers in the Works

The Creative Music Works Orchestra took its name from the small, nonprofit presenter of concerts and educational workshops that sponsors it, Creative Music Works. But the appellation could not be more appropriate. By presenting relatively obscure songs that have been meticulously dissected and then reassembled in imaginative ways, saxophonist Dr…

Luna

Luna The Days of Our Nights (Jericho) Someone in ad land saw the commercial viability of Luna’s Dean Wareham, at least in his previous incarnation as the frontman for Galaxie 500: Late last year, the band joined Curtis Mayfield as a soundtrack provider for a national car commercial. Meanwhile, middle…

Neko Case & Her Boyfriends

Neko Case & Her Boyfriends Furnace Room Lullaby (Bloodshot) Maybe it’s a by-product of “artistic growth.” Maybe it’s just that some young women aren’t satisfied with only singin’ hard country music. Whatever the cause, Neko Case — whose The Virginian was arguably the ultimate female country recording of 1998 –…

Kid Loco

Kid Loco Kid Loco Presents Jesus Life for Children Under 12 Inches (Atlantic) Trip-hop never quite caught on in the U.S., in large part because of its subtlety; the boom-bap of hardcore rap provides immediate gratification, while the sonics associated with its more psychedelic cousin take time to blow minds…

Tommy Womack

Tommy Womack Stubborn (Sideburn Records) On Stubborn, Tommy Womack’s fine followup to his remarkable 1998 debut, Positively Na Na, every last thrilling lick and inflection is wholly received. “She Likes to Talk,” for instance, sounds like Keith Richards singing the best Paul Westerberg song in a decade; elsewhere, folk and…

The Grandfathers of Punk

Fine Line Pictures is getting ready for next month’s West Coast premiere of The Filth and the Fury, a documentary on the career of the Sex Pistols. Yet for anyone who’s likely to give a spit, the story is already familiar. The band’s rise — and the oh-so-loving affair between…

Critic’s Choice

For those about to rock, look no further than to the Murder City Devils, with American Steel and the Down-N-Outs Friday, March 10, at the 15th St. Tavern. Now that Mötley Cre, Metallica and the other dope, guns and fucking bands of the ’80s seem about as threatening as Scott…