CRITIC’S CHOICE

P.J. Harvey, with Live and Veruca Salt, Wednesday, August 23, at Red Rocks, is a rarity in contemporary pop music: an artist whose integrity and love of creative risk are virtually unassailable. As demonstrated by recordings such as Rid of Me and last year’s thrilling To Bring You My Love,…

HIT PICK

Sympathy F, with Genuine, X LuLu, Terminal Hinge and Spoon Collection, Wednesday, August 23, at the Mercury Cafe, certainly deserves to have been chosen as one of five area finalists to compete in this, the Denver edition of the third annual Ticketmaster Music Showcase Tour. The bandmates have overcome an…

THE DAISY CHAIN

It’s unlikely that every allegedly autobiographical story recounted by Tim DeLaughter, guitarist and vocalist for the Dallas-based band Tripping Daisy, is true. But he tells his tales with such conviction and with so much twangy, ingenuous charm that it hardly matters. Take, for example, the anecdote that DeLaughter claims inspired…

CRITIC’S CHOICE

Maids of Gravity, with Chaos Theory, Saturday, August 19, at Cricket on the Hill, features two members–vocalist/guitarist Ed Ruscha and guitarist Jim Putnam–who were part of Brad Laner’s visionary band Medicine in 1991 and 1992. It should come as no surprise, then, that the Maids, represented by a groovy, self-titled…

HIT PICK

Vivid Imagination, with No Such Thing and Gothic Frog, Wednesday, August 16 at Cricket on the Hill, is filled with performers who are overqualified to entertain. After all, they’re not just musicians, they’re amateur sociologists, too: They spend hour upon hour absorbing all the stuff kids these days are supposed…

PRODIGAL SON

You’d be hard-pressed to find a more relentlessly upbeat person than Philip Bailey. Give the 44-year-old Denver native a chance to gripe about the press, record companies or practically any topic into which most of us would love to sink our teeth, and he’ll likely respond with the glass-is-half-full homily…

SALEM’S TRIALS

“I tend not to read my own press,” says singer-songwriter/guitarist Kevin Salem, from a standard-issue room at a Motel 6 somewhere in North Carolina. “That’s death for musicians. To read articles about yourself is a little bit stifling and unproductive. It’s like spending all your time staring at a picture…

THE VSS ENTERPRISE

Sonny Kay is as punk rock as anyone in Colorado. Ask him if he agrees, however, and he’ll deny it. “No matter what, we’re always going to be considered relative to punk,” he says of his band, the VSS. “But just for me, personally, what’s considered punk now not only…

PLAYLIST

Red Aunts #1 Chicken (Epitaph) Brutal Juice Mutilation Makes Identification Difficult (Interscope) The first thing you notice about the artwork for these discs is the blood: Red Aunts Angel, E.Z. Wider, Cougar and Sapphire are covered with it in the various mock-crime-scene shots that accompany #1 Chicken, while the Brutal…

SIMPLY THE ZEST

Ashley Kirby, the lead singer, songwriter and guitarist for Boulder’s Zestfinger, insists on setting the record straight. “We love to jam, but not hippie jam,” he asserts. “Our sound is very jazz- and funk-oriented. No trace of Jerry Garcia here.” Kirby’s disclaimer is a necessity, since a cursory reading of…

THE VH1-ING OF AMERICAN MUSIC

When VH1 went on the air ten years ago, the network was rightly seen as a graying version of its sister channel, MTV. Programmers there attempted to endear the service to upscale baby boomers (as opposed to MTV-targeted upscale youth) by focusing on cautious “adult rock” and relatively sedate video…

HIT PICK

Gray Parade, with Lithium Grin and Bustopher Jones, Tuesday, August 15, at 13th Avenue Bar and Grill, isn’t a band that’s going to bludgeon you into submission with its sound. Instead, the group specializes in swirling, hypnotic psychedelia–mood rock that pays tribute to influences like the Velvet Underground (initially, the…

PHAR OUT

Derrick Stewart, aka Fatlip, is not about to explode any myths. The members of his group, the Pharcyde, have a reputation as crazy, good-humored hip-hop stoners, and Fatlip–in conversation, at least–fits this description to a T. As he puts it, “What was your question? What was I talking about?” Actually,…

WHAT A TRIP

Saxophonist Roy Nathanson, co-founder of the Jazz Passengers, is frequently described as quirky–and he’s earned the term the old-fashioned way. According to Nathanson’s partner, trombonist Curtis Fowlkes, “You look up `quirky’ in the dictionary, and Roy’s picture is next to it.” As judged by the music they make together, Fowlkes…

CRITIC’S CHOICE

Wallace Roney, Saturday, August 12, at the Bluebird Theater, came to the public’s attention in 1981. Then a 21-year-old Berklee student with no trumpet of his own, he auditioned for Wynton Marsalis’s old seat in Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, armed with little more than ambition and talent. But that was…

CAN YOU BEAT THAT?

The songs played by Kandombe, a Boulder-based percussion ensemble, represent musical freedom in its truest sense. The performers believe their music cannot be contained or categorized, because the sounds they make are not modeled after various styles or genres. Rather, they derive from the basic rhythms of life. “We put…

CRITIC’S CHOICE

Charlie Haden, Thursday, August 3, at the Denver Botanic Gardens, has quietly had one of the most distinguished careers in the short history of jazz. As a key part of Ornette Coleman’s most famous combo, he contributed the sonorous bass lines that held together The Shape of Jazz to Come,…

BIG TRANE

The music that makes up John Coltrane: Heavyweight Champion–The Complete Atlantic Recordings, a six-CD boxed set due for release in mid-August on the Rhino imprint, was cut over the course of a relatively brief period of time. Coltrane, fresh from several years spent as a member of bands led by…

THINK FOR YOURSELF

In Craig Wedren’s world, people really listen–not only for noises but for the spaces that separate the sounds. “Silence is the ultimate dynamic,” says the singer of Shudder to Think. “It’s polar to what most bands do, but it can be a beautiful reminder. There’s so much to listen to…

JILL OUT!

You might expect a female performer with a hit single entitled “I Kissed a Girl” to be an ardent advocate of the lesbian lifestyle. But singer/songwriter Jill Sobule, who co-wrote the tune with collaborator Robin Eaton, hasn’t used the song’s success (it’s spent nearly three months on the Billboard Hot…

FINGER LICKING GOOD

J. Ryan, leader of Six Finger Satellite, from Providence, Rhode Island, has a message for Westword readers. “When we were in Denver, I saw a lot of people in fuchsia-colored Jaguars with hippie crap all over them,” he grumbles. “I’d like to tell them to get their heads out of…

GREAT SKA

Although ska may be an exceedingly vibrant and energetic force, it’s not a new one. In fact, the roots of the music are practically the same age as Tommy McCook, the fiftysomething leader of the Skatalites, one of Jamaica’s earliest ska bands. But while McCook isn’t personally in great shape…