PITCHING WOO

There’s no shortage of sweet-voiced, guitar-wielding women in Boulder these days. Toss a quarter on Pearl Street and it’ll more than likely land in a female singer-songwriter’s guitar case. Audiences, however, are harder to come by, and renown more difficult to achieve than that. So it’s fortunate that Wendy Woo…

HIT PICK

Windowpane, with Benjamina Ficus Exotica, Saturday, November 25, at the Lion’s Lair, has a new drummer: Kenny Ortiz, the man with the sticks in both D-Town Brown and Tribhanga. This addition is certain to enhance what is already one of the more innovative bands in town–a collection of awesome instrumentalists…

POUR BOY

Avoiding any mention of alcohol during a chat with Shane MacGowan would be as stupid as neglecting to ask Elizabeth Taylor about marriage, perfume, Michael Jackson or cholesterol. MacGowan–onetime leader of the Pogues, current frontman for Shane MacGowan & the Popes–has a reputation as one of popular music’s most aggressive…

THE MOUSE THAT ROARS

Reggae original Eek-A-Mouse began wearing costumes long before anyone knew his nom de plume. “I started doing that stuff back in Jamaica,” he says of his often outlandish attire. “I’d just walk around town in that kind of stuff and people would think I was crazy, you know? Then I…

THE LAZY COWGIRLS GET BUSY

With a new album, a new label and a national tour, Los Angeles punk-rock legends the Lazy Cowgirls seem to be making a major comeback. But there’s something wrong with this picture–because the band never really left. “We keep reading about how we broke up,” says Cowgirls vocalist/ frontman Pat…

HERE COMES THE FUZZ

Take heart, garage-rock fans: In this age of platinum-selling punks, Denver’s Sissy Fuzz is keeping the do-it-yourself ethos alive. “When we started, we’d just been saying, `Wouldn’t it be fun if we were in a band?'” recounts drummer Cincy Woods. “And Andy was the only one who knew how to…

CRITIC’S CHOICE

Once Blue, with Lisa Loeb, Friday, November 24, at the Bluebird Theater, is a New York-based duo making its first Colorado appearance. But the approach taken by vocalist Rebecca Martin and guitarist Jesse Harris on their recent EMI debut recording isn’t particularly new: It suggests a preppy updating of the…

PLAYLIST

Green Day Insomniac (Reprise) In the press biography sent to reviewers with this CD, flack Ben Weasel (a nom de plume, perhaps?) claims that Insomniac “ISN’T a progression, and that’s exactly WHY it’s so fucking good. I mean, Christ, if the Ramones coulda just put out a couple more Leave…

FOND O’ WANDA

Plenty of people have fantasized about the young, virile, mid-Fifties Elvis Presley. But Wanda Jackson, who can make a persuasive claim for being the first female rockabilly singer, is one of the few who actually dated him. “I know that you’ve read that he was a true gentlemen, and he…

TAKING YOUR LUMPS

The bar crawlers gathered at Herman’s Hideaway this brisk Friday night in October know exactly what they want: accessible funk grooves, catchy melodies, good-time lyrics and the steady thump-thump-thump-thump associated with the evening’s headliner, Furious George and the Monster Groove. But when the members of the opening act, Fort Collins-based…

SKUNK ROCK

Since the mid-Seventies, hardcore British music has been linked to messages of rebellion. But if you think the multiracial quartet Skunk Anansie is upholding traditions established by the Sex Pistols and the Clash, lead singer Skin suggests you think again. “We don’t do any of that bollocks, to be quite…

LOVE THAT JOAN

If Joan Armatrading had the power to do so, she would change one thing about her fans: their number. “They’re very hardcore, and they don’t give up on me. It’s fantastic,” she notes. “But I would like, as an artist, for more people to know about what I do and…

CRITIC’S CHOICE

Brutal Juice, with Neurosis and GWAR, Sunday, November 19, at the Ogden Theatre, is not what you’d call a good date band: The name of the quintet’s debut for the Interscope imprint–Mutilation Makes Identification Difficult–provides a fairly accurate indication of their not-so-tender sensibilities. The disc is filled with secretion-spattered lyrics…

HIT PICK

Slim Cessna’s Auto Club and Smokin’ Uncle Rumley and the Pork-Boilin’ Po’ Boys, Thursday, November 16, at the Bluebird Theater, are a one-two punch aimed straight at people who love country music but fear that admitting it puts them just below Pat Buchanan on the hipness scale. The members of…

ALTERNATIVE TO WHAT?

The changing nature of rock and roll is mirrored by shifts in its lexicon, and no term associated with the genre exemplifies this characteristic better than “rock and roll” itself. Blacklisted disc jockey Alan Freed is credited with concocting the slogan, but variations on it can be heard in blues…

‘VENGING ON GREATNESS

The ‘Vengers, Boulder’s premier ska group, don’t do much soul searching when it comes to their music. “I think the bottom line is, it’s not an attitude thing,” says bassist/vocalist Chris “Limey” Welsh. “You get a lot of musicians who stand there and say, `Right, we’re technically brilliant. Look at…

CRITIC’S CHOICE

The New Bomb Turks, Saturday, November 11, at Mammoth Events Center, with Lag Wagon, Samiam, No Doubt, Pietasters, Teengenerate, Strung Out, Buck-O-Nine, Slapstick and the rest of the participants in the Board As Usual ’95 festival, hail from Columbus, Ohio, a sleepy university town known primarily for being, well, home…

HIT PICK

Jux County, with Jonny Rocket, Friday, November 10, at the Bluebird Theater, stars Andy Monley, a performer who understands how the rock-music game is played but chooses to operate by his own set of rules anyhow. And that’s good, because his singular approach to music has made the Denver scene…

IN THE PINK

For decades the USSR officially denied its citizens the small pleasures afforded by “decadent” Western rock and roll. But in recent years, pop-culture-starved Russians were subjected to something worse–visits from bland stars such as Billy Joel and UB40. Now, however, residents of the land of the czars are at last…

MERCURY RISING

The last time Mercury Rev guitarist Jonathan Donahue saw Denver, it was in the rear-view mirror of a bus speeding out of town. Flash back to summer 1994 and Mercury Rev’s appearance on the second stage at Fiddler’s Green as part of the annual Lollapalooza festival. At first the combo’s…

A MORE PERFECT UNION

Hugh Swarts, one fifth of Oakland, California’s Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, is having a tough time adjusting to the digital age. In fact, the guitarist/vocalist/percussionist hasn’t even purchased his first compact disc player yet. “I’m kind of atavistic in that way, I guess,” he concedes. “I don’t really like…

HANDS UP

The music made by the eclectic quintet Laughing Hands can’t be confused with that of most other Denver-area groups: Its folk-meets-worldbeat sound is like an exceedingly enjoyable course in ethnomusicology. But string bassist Tim Cross, who’s been part of the band since its inception over five years ago, points out…