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Elsewhere in this issue, you will find the mammoth guide to the third annual Westword Music Awards Showcase, featuring profiles of all 65 of the event’s nominees. Included in this roster is an update about the Samples, who are among the five aspirants in the Favorite Major Label Act category;…

Rockabilly of Ages

In 1958, Ronnie Dawson, a nineteen-year-old Dallas native, cut “Rockin’ Bones,” a wildcat anthem about boogying beyond the grave whose refrain boasted, “There’s still a lot of rhythm in these rockin’ bones.” Almost forty years later, Dawson has reached an age when most of his peers are rocking in chairs,…

Music Showcase, Take Three

Now in its third year, the Westword Music Awards Showcase is rapidly becoming a Denver tradition. But it seems like only yesterday that it was nothing more than an idea. In 1995, several Westworders wondered what we could do to raise the profile of local music in Denver. From these…

The Truth About the Fibbers

Carla Bozulich, lead singer and primary songwriter for Los Angeles’s Geraldine Fibbers, is in a drab New York City hotel room, waiting to cut Kevin Fitzgerald’s hair. Fitzgerald, the Fibbers’ drummer, is not the only bandmember whose noggin Bozulich trims on a regular basis; she’s also sheared the follicles of…

Fortunate Son

As any lover of the blues realizes, one of the music’s principal themes is love gone bad. It’s a subject with which Chicago-based bluesman Son Seals is extremely familiar. After all, he was shot in the face on January 5 of this year, and the alleged gunwoman was his estranged…

Shorter Over the Long Haul

By almost any measure, Wayne Shorter, 64, is among the most influential jazz musicians of the past two generations. The saxophonist first made his mark during a late Fifties/early Sixties tenure with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers. Then, in 1964, he took on the nearly impossible task of filling the chair…

Trick of the Trade

On the surface, there seem to be plenty of reasons why guitarist Rick Nielsen should be feeling good about himself and his longtime band, Cheap Trick. The quartet (which also includes bassist Tom Petersson, drummer Bun E. Carlos and vocalist Robin Zander) is among the few hard-rock groups from the…

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This year has been a bad one for a lot of prominent Colorado bands: Foreskin 500, Roots Revolt and the ‘Vengers are just three of the well-known acts to have folded their tents and gone home. And now, unfortunately, Baldo Rex must be added to the list. The factors that…

Wilder Thing

Hattiesburg, Mississippi, native Webb Wilder has produced one of the most literate, entertaining and flat-out barn-burning musical catalogues of the past couple of decades–which means that he’s done more than a few interviews in his day. So before launching into another one, he makes a declaration. “I’ve been asked everything…

Converting the Preacherman

Boulder’s Preacherman and the Congregation got its biggest break yet when it was chosen to open last month’s Reggae on the Rocks concert. But shortly after leaving the Red Rocks stage to a positive reaction from thousands of fans at the beginning of the daylong bash, Preacherman (given name: Herman…

Venus Rising

Denver musicians frequently complain about the local scene. But in the minds of the musicians in Venus Diablo, Colorado’s capitol is a virtual mecca compared with their home base of Albuquerque, New Mexico. According to bassist Johnny Cassidy, a onetime member of the M80s, a trashy, Sixties-style garage act signed…

Clear as Crystal

America is in the midst of another British Invasion, at least in terms of the electronica movement. Almost all of the electronic-dance groups making impressive showings on the Billboard sales charts these days hail from merry old England, and even as we speak, A&R representatives desperate to cash in on…

There’s a Riot Going On

According to Alec Empire, a key part of Germany’s incendiary Atari Teenage Riot, the act’s songs are “not like popular music, which is there to entertain. We want to destroy the fake harmony that’s created by the music and the entertainment industry and the government.” That’s hardly the only revolutionary…

Playlist

Echo & the Bunnymen Evergreen (London) Most bands on the comeback trail attempt to reproduce their previous sound but don’t quite manage it; an essential, ineffable something is missing. Not so the Bunnymen. Evergreen so precisely duplicates the act’s classic style that it’s downright astounding–and more than a little creepy…

Out of the Shadows

The middle-aged men behind Denver’s Bob Gillis Group don’t look like musicians. Trumpeter/ keyboardist Gillis could pass for the realtor who lives down the block, the cop who cruises the mall parking lot on Friday nights or a youth pastor at the neighborhood church–and drummer Alan Aluisi, bassist Bob Underwood…

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The Rocky Mountain Music Association, a group that’s promoted local acts and musicians for ten years, has faced plenty of challenges during the Nineties. Early in the decade, attendance at its annual MusicFest events began to fall off precipitously; in fact, the turnout for a daylong bash at the University…

The Reich Stuff

Repetition is an element common to virtually every musical style. African drummers pound out beats that conform to set patterns. Rhythm-and-blues figures such as James Brown vamp atop roiling grooves that gain power through their very immutability. Pop tunesmiths like Hall & Oates sing melodic hooks again and again until…

Playlist

Slaughter Revolution (CMC/BMG) Warrant Belly to Belly (CMC/BMG) Dokken Shadowlife (CMC/BMG) A recent Rolling Stone article declaring the return of Eighties-vintage hair metal probably left many readers wishing that the government would set up a hard-rock subsidy program similar to the ones that pay farmers not to grow any crops…

Daring Escape

In 1989, Andy Daring was a successful mortgage banker with a six-figure income and a lifestyle to match. But he was also a guitarist who played alongside his wife, Chris, a gifted fiddler whom he had married five years earlier–and when he resolved to quit his day job in part…

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Boulder-based Starkland Records, owned and operated by Tom Steenland, has issued some of the most idiosyncratic discs imaginable during its years of operation: Take, for example, the recordings of Tod Dockstader, a onetime sound editor for Mr. Magoo who went on to become an influential musical avant-gardist. (See the August…

Etc.

Musical anthropologist Alan Lomax first captured the voice of bluesman Fred McDowell on tape in Como, Mississippi, in 1959, three years after Elvis Presley appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show and five years before the British Invasion. Because the homogenizing effects of satellite dishes, video rentals and cable-television networks specializing…

Bittersweet Del-lights

Just because the music of Scotland’s Del Amitri is tuneful and accessible doesn’t mean that the group’s lead singer, Justin Currie, is shy about expressing himself. He fires off his opinions straight up, with no chaser. Examples? In Currie’s words, the neo-hippie movement that, from a commercial standpoint, is hotter…