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In May, I derided Denver’s electronic media and the folks at our fair city’s daily newspapers for their hysterical coverage of an altercation between kids and cops during a punk-rock show at an area Veterans of Foreign Wars hall. Well, the coverage of the ruckus in Morrison on August 5,…

In Their Element

“Our style of music is called garage punk,” says Michael Daboll, lead singer and guitarist for Denver’s Element 79–and he’s glad to elaborate. After all, Daboll and his brethren (bassist Mike Gilligan and drummer Jeff Learman, supplemented by Dancin’ Boy Wade Morse, “the only male go-go dancer in a five-state…

Free Willie

Willie Nelson is right where you’d expect to find him: on a tour bus, heading from one show to the next. He’s 63 years old and wears every one of his adventures on his leathery features. But he still has a guitar and a voice, and he fully intends to…

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The Artist Formerly Known as Prince Chaos and Disorder (Warner Bros.) Spite is often overlooked as a spur to creativity, but it’s as capable of providing artistic inspiration as love and beauty–something that Chaos and Disorder amply demonstrates. Prince, you see, has been sniping at his mega-label for years–but rather…

100 Proof Dash

Life on the road can be fun for a traveling rock-and-roller–but according to Ned “Hoaky” Hickel, bassist for New Orleans-based Dash Rip Rock, it’s not without its drawbacks. “With all this traveling we’ve been doing,” he laments, “there’s no time for fishing.” Hickel and his mates (drummer Chris Luckette and…

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In September 1994, I scribbled an article for this publication entitled “Come Together–Again”; it was intended to lampoon then-current supergroup reunion tours by acts such as the Eagles and Steely Dan via a supposedly fictional list of other outfits considering get-togethers. Among them was the Sex Pistols, about whom I…

Something’s Phishy

I park my car along the side of a narrow road at 7:10 Sunday evening, August 4, and begin running up the incline toward Red Rocks, where the Vermont phenom Phish is due to take the stage in less than twenty minutes. My speed and technique certainly don’t put Michael…

Good Vibrations

It’s not uncommon to hear stories of a reggae star’s rise from the ghettos of Jamaica to international fame. But few performers have endured as much or struggled as hard as the harmony trio Israel Vibration, whose members are all survivors of polio. “I didn’t get no chance, no job,…

Be Four

Prior to departing for a tour of California, George Fraska and Dave Paco, of the Denver punk band called Four, announce their intention to indulge in a favorite hobby between gigs. “Me and Dave have this thing about spanking kids,” says vocalist/guitarist Fraska. “Yeah,” adds Paco, Four’s bassist. “We pull…

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Neil Young and Crazy Horse Broken Arrow (Reprise) In a review of 1977’s That Obscure Object of Desire, the last film made by the late Luis Bunuel, Pauline Kael noted the relaxed confidence of the director’s work; after decades spent absorbing every aspect of the cinematic medium, he was able…

Ultra Violence

When a writer at the New York Times coined the phrase “heroin chic” to describe those underaged bulimia babes who have defined the fashion scene in recent years, he didn’t have Augy, the front man for Denver’s MK Ultra, in mind. But the term applies. Consider the evidence. In performance,…

Honesty Is Golden

Golden Smog began its life as what singer-guitarist Dan Murphy describes as “the cover band from hell. We’d learn, like, twenty or thirty covers in two days. And we’d just barely learn them. We’d play requests, too–like ‘Freebird.’ There’d always be some wiseacre who’d call out for that one. But…

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Singer/guitarist Michael Daboll loves garage music. He loves to play it in his band, Element 79, and he loves to listen to albums by other artists who love it, too. Which goes a long way toward explaining why Daboll has created Treble Fest! ’96, a celebration of all things garage…

Surf’s Up

The exhaustive liner notes that accompany Cowabunga! The Surf Box, a four-CD set recently issued on the Rhino imprint, are certainly respectful of the musical category dubbed surf; you’d expect nothing less from John Blair, author of The Illustrated Discography of Surf Music, 1961-1965, widely acknowledged as the most loving…

Going Nuts

It’s Saturday night at the Knights of Columbus hall in Brighton, Colorado, and about 250 people are mingling near the stage, waiting for the band to strike up. Their patience is soon rewarded: Mike Gaschler counts to three, then gives his accordion a hearty squeeze. Another set by the Polka…

Breaking Tabu

Unlike those musicians who play up a variety of interests, perhaps to demonstrate that there is more to them than their tunes, Tabu Ley Rochereau, the Zaire-born leader of L’Orchestre Afrisa International, insists that music is his be-all and end-all. “I’m writing one book about my life,” he says. “I…

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Metallica Load (Elektra) Thus far, this album has been reviewed more often on the basis of the bandmembers’ new grunge-junkie haircuts and the act’s decision to headline the worst Lollapalooza bill imaginable than it has on the merits of the music itself. But even if you exclude the aforementioned factors…

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Most local, independent record labels are labors of love–small outfits such as Arnie Swenson’s Prolific company (lauded in this space last issue) that struggle from day to day and month to month to remain in operation. But Pro T.U., a Denver imprint that makes its bow this week, is quite…

Deal With It

Kelley Deal and her twin sister, ex-Pixie-turned-head-Breeder Kim Deal, are anomalies among alternative-rock royalty: They enjoyed popularity in high school and positive relationships with their parents. So why would the lesser-known of the sisters be the focus of one of the past year’s more publicized descents into drug abuse–a slide…

I Talked With a Zombie

Of course Rob Zombie’s surly; you’d expect him to be, wouldn’t you? But on this mid-July evening, he’s somewhat less glum than usual, and for a very good reason. The singer and conceptualist behind young America’s favorite band, White Zombie, just spent the previous 72 hours visiting the Happiest Place…

Perfectly Revolting

Boulder’s Roots Revolt takes an unusual approach to songwriting. “For our first show at the Fox Theatre, we still didn’t really know what we were doing,” concedes percussionist Grant, who, like his bandmates, feels that one name is plenty. “Since our songs were basically improvisational, we had to play back…

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Patti Smith Gone Again (Arista) For an artist with such a stratospheric reputation, Smith’s body of work is, in a word, skimpy. Horses, from 1975, stands as one of the most impressive debuts in the annals of pop; the first words out of Smith’s mouth (“Jesus died for somebody’s sins/But…