Morrissey, Amanda Palmer and the Best Shows in Denver, November 14-17

Morrissey, who once tried to start a band in Arvada, headlines the Boulder Theater on Monday, November 14, while Amanda Palmer is at the same venue on Thursday, November 17. Also tonight, there’s a conversation and Q&A with Pussy Riot’s Maria Alyokhina (Masha) and Alexandra Bogino (Sasha) at the Oriental Theater, Lucius is at the Gothic Theatre and later in the week it’s the Lukas Graham at the Fillmore, the Sounds at the Summit Music Hall and Anderson, Rabin & Wakeman at the Paramount Theatre. See our full list of picks below.

Where To Sing, Breathe and Take Action in Denver After the Election

Westword Music is keeping an eye on events that respond directly to the recent election, whether these are music-related protests or gatherings, benefit concerts or workshops. Please send tips and event info to editorial@westword.com.Below are a couple of events that involve local artists. We will be updating this post with more information as we receive it.

A Post-Election Playlist to Incite and Soothe You

As music journalists, we often turn to songs for catharsis and for direction, so we compiled a list of songs that we hope readers might find useful in these times. You’ll find punk, hip-hop, soul, pop and more represented in these songs. Some of them are overtly political, some are not. The music itself can cause discomfort, but if speaking truth to power requires driving bass lines and the itch to get out of our seats, and if urgent lyrics and catchy melodies can push us forward into progress and peace…well, then crank it up.

Microstock 11 Shows That Microtonality Engages the Emotions and Intellect

This Saturday at Cameron Church, avant-garde guitarist Neil Haverstick is holding Microstock 11 wherein he and Ned Evett, an associate of Joe Satriani, will demonstrate their own microtonal compositions in individual sets. Microtonality or microtonal music has been around since humans started making music. Generally speaking, a microtonal music is that which contains tiny intervals between notes, making it different from the twelve tone equal temperament scales we hear in a lot of popular or even classical music. Often the concept is associated with non-Western music, but it has long been a part of gospel, blues and jazz where the inflection and manipulation of standard use of the strings is often employed with bends and pulling on strings with one hand as they are struck with a pick in the other.

Beyond ‘Hallelujah’: The Many Covers of Leonard Cohen, Late Songwriter and Poet

Bob Dylan said of Leonard Cohen, who passed away yesterday, November 10, 2016, at the age of 82, is “very much a descendant of Irving Berlin,” in that both are “incredibly crafty. Leonard particularly uses chord progressions that seem classical in shape. He is a much more savvy musician than you’d think.” The many, many covers of Cohen songs, by artists both expected and unorthodox, prove his latter observations to be true. But like Dylan’s body of work, Cohen’s compositions have been transformed in the hands of other people, and functioned as malleable source material ripe for interpretation and illumination.

Big City Drugs Gets Serious About Punk

Kevin O’Brien never wanted to be in a band. But when the full-time comedian (and occasional Westword contributor) had the chance to start jamming with his friend, fellow comedian and musician Sam Tallent, he loved it. Now, the beer-drinking guitar-playing hangouts have turned into a serious band, Big City Drugs, which celebrates the release of its EP at 10 p.m. tonight at GLOB.

SPELLS’ Rob Burleson on Guilty Pleasures

Rob Burleson is a familiar and friendly face to anyone who has been around the local music scene. After playing in dozens of bands — Hearts of Palm and Lion Sized, just to name a few — he found his way to the “vacation-rock” outfit SPELLS, which has quickly become…

The Best Concerts in Denver This Weekend, November 11-13, 2016

Ben Folds teams up with the Colorado Symphony again for two nights at Boettcher Concert Hall this weekend while YouTube sensation Scott Bradlee’s Postmodern Jukebox headlines 1STBANK Center tomorrow night. Also this weekend SPELLS celebrates the release of its first full-length album at 3 Kings, Colfax Speed Queen debuts its sophomore album at Lost Lake Lounge, Lane 8 is at the Bluebird Theater and rapper YG is at the Ogden Theatre. See the full list of our picks below.

Harry Tuft, Godfather of Denver Folk, Is Now Free to Be a Folk Musician Himself

At eighty years old, Harry Tuft is finally getting the time and opportunity to do what he came to Colorado to do in the first place in 1960: play music. Not that Tuft hasn’t played music all along and put out albums, but it is the first time he’s been free to do so without the weight of running a store, leading the local chapter of the musicians’ union, or, in years past, booking acts like Joan Baez and arranging for her to meet the Beatles when the Fab Four played Red Rocks in 1964. He basically served as the de facto godfather of Denver folk through his establishment of the Denver Folklore Center in 1962, and he was instrumental in founding Swallow Hill. If Tuft hadn’t left Philadelphia to move here, inspired by stories of the opportunities to play live out west, Denver music and culture would be immeasurably diminished.

Hometown Hustle Is Homecoming for Motet’s Newest Member

The Motet is making its second annual pit stop in its home town to Denver to bring “dance your ass off” funk for two nights at the Ogden. The band’s Hometown Hustle show is even more of a homecoming for one of the newest members, vocalist Lyle Divinsky. Divinsky joined the Motet in January 2016 after frontman Jans Ingber left last year.

Bonobo, Bring Me the Horizon and Every New Denver Concert Announcement

Bonobo, who’s set to release his new album Migration in January, and Nick Murphy (formerly known as Chet Faker) will be at Red Rocks on Friday, May 12. General admission tickets ($39.95) go on sale on Friday, November 11 at 10 a.m.  Bring Me the Horizon will release the DVD/CD package Live at the Royal Albert Hall next month and the band headlines the 1STBANK Center on Wednesday, March 29 with Underoath and Beartooth opening. General admission tickets ($39.95) and GA bowl tickets ($32.50) go on sale on Friday, November 11 at 10 a.m. DMX brings his A Very Special DMXmas Show to Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom on Friday, December 23; tickets ($33/$35) go on sale on Friday, November 11 at 10 a.m.

Lane 8 Reclaims the Primal Energy of Pre-Smartphone Dance Floors

When Daniel Goldstein aka deep house artist Lane 8, released debut album Rise last year, heads turned. With tracks premiered by the New York Times, SPIN, and Billboard and topping the Hype Machine charts, Lane 8 went on tour ready to connect with an army of new fans. Goldstein, however, didn’t expect the reaction to his better-known songs to be so, well…uninspired.

Holophrase on Circuit Bending, ‘Glove Hash’ and Making Noise on the Fringes of Denver

Experimental pop band Holophrase has always existed on the fringes of Denver, whether with its difficult-to-qualify musical style or in its living arrangements. The band currently resides in Henderson, a community in Adams County. At the end of a dirt driveway, three-fourths of the band shares the basement of a house and a garage. Outside, you can see undeveloped fields, an increasingly rare sight in most of the metro area.

Your Election Night 2016 Guide to Live Music in Denver

We’ve endured the seemingly endless death spiral of the 2016 presidential campaign, cast our votes and taken selfies of our flag stickers…now what? We’ll be obsessively watching tallies and forecasts, but once the polls close, we need safe havens, distraction, healing and maybe even celebration. We need music, people, sweet music. Here are seven concerts in Denver on election night 2016.

Fifteen Denver Album Releases for November 2016

Denver is brimming with bands taking it to the next level, and November 2016 is particularly bountiful with new album releases. Here are fifteen of the noteworthy albums and EPs being released by Colorado artists this month. Let us know what else should be on our radar.

Chuck Coffey of SPELLS on DIY Record Labels and Writing the Theme for Those Who Can’t

Chuck Coffey has more Denver music pedigree on his own than a lot of bands combined. Starting Not Bad Records in 1997, Coffey helped numerous Denver bands put out albums and gain much needed exposure, all while playing in notable Denver bands like Eyes and Ears, Big Timber, Contender and countless others. These days, Coffey continues to help out bands from all over the world on his Snappy Little Numbers imprint and is set to put out his first full-length with his current band SPELLS.

Courtney Barnett, Sabrina Carpenter and the Best Concerts in Denver This Week

Courtney Barnett was set to appear at Project Pabst last May but she had to cancel her gig after getting an offer to appear on Saturday Night Live. Anyone bummed that she didn’t make the festival can see her headline at the Ogden Theatre on Tuesday, November 8. Sabrina Carpenter is at the Bluebird Theater tonight, Monday, November 7, and the Strokes guitarist Nick Valensi brings his band CRX to the Larimer tonight. Napalm Death and the Black Dahlia Murder are at the Summit Music Hall tomorrow. See our full list of picks below.