New York Times critic praises Nathaniel Rateliff

So just in case you were wondering how well Nathaniel Rateliff is being received in other parts of the country, check this out: Last week, he caught the notice of Jon Pareles, the highly estimable pop critic for the New York Times, who saw fit to include Rateliff’s show at…

Boonie Mayfield’s studio gets cleaned out by robbers

All right, here’s some news that literally just makes your stomach turn: A few weeks ago, Boonie Mayfield (aka Solomon Vaughn), one of the state’s — hell, the country’s — preeminent beatmakers and producers had his entire studio cleaned out by some soulless scumbags. Worst part: Boon Doc had only…

The whole world’s watching the World Cup this week

“People who are interested in the World Cup can roll out of bed and watch it on their couch, but the feeling is that people want to watch it with like-minded people and get with other fans,” says Glen Eastwood, general manager at Fadó (1735 19th Street). “A hundred guys…

Le Divorce at Summit Music Hall

Only a handful of people who have been part of the circuit of underground-rock shows in Denver since the early part of last decade remember Façade. Part dream pop and part jazz-inflected rock, the band put out one album before fading into the background in 2002. Its talented guitarist, Joe…

MGMT

If ever there were an indie-rock Cinderella story, MGMT could be cast in the lead role. Starting out as The Management when Ben Goldwasser and Andrew VanWyngarden were in their first year at Wesleyan University, this project had already been around for a few years by the time it toured…

Jamey Johnson

At first glance, Jamey Johnson looks like someone who just walked out of the outlaw movement. That’s probably because he spent the better part of a decade in the Marines after dropping out of college. Unlike the “outlaws,” though, Johnson moved to Nashville to pursue the beloved country music of…

Iron Maiden

Written off in the ’90s as yet another relic of the original heavy-metal era, Iron Maiden found new life and relevance when metal made a huge comeback in the new millennium. Still, it’s sad that resurgence had to happen in such a roundabout way: If Maiden has long proved one…

Jeffree Star

With Glee and Lady Gaga all the rage, one can only hope that flamboyance and theatricality are a bit more acceptable across the board today. Regardless, Jeffree Star can and will push any envelope he can find; the genre-bending artist — who seemingly turned to music as a means to…

Wovenhand

It’s been two years since Wovenhand released Ten Stones. But it might as well have been an eternity. Since that last batch of songs, frontman David Eugene Edwards has cast a net across time and space and snared The Threshingfloor, an album that severs the band’s already tenuous tether to…

Laura Brehm

Laura Brehm is eighteen — and she sounds like it. Start with her voice: With the high, girlish timbre and inflection of Miley Cyrus, she’d rate similarly on the Disney Pop Machine register of innocent to raunchy. Of course, unlike most of those Disney starlets, Brehm writes her own songs,…

Swimming With Models

Anyone familiar with electronic music of the ’90s and underground hip-hop will hear shades of Sole, Massive Attack, post-ambient Aphex Twin and Dead Cities-era Future Sound of London on this intriguingly eclectic release. If Martin Scorsese decided to remake After Hours, “Makin’ Love Free” would be the ideal song for…

Strange Lights

On its bio, Strange Lights, a duo that hails from the town of Crestone, cites influences like Television, the Flaming Lips and R.E.M. Anyone who digs any of those acts, however, would probably steer clear of Strange Lights’ third album, Light Bright. Apart from the incongruous comparison, most of the…

Ludacris escorts female MCs into hip-hop’s boys’ club

Imagine revamping a fiery activist anthem into a mindless, rump-shaking jam. That’s exactly what Ludacris did on “How Low,” which features Chipmunk-style vocal effects and young girls being seduced out of pajamas. (It should be noted that How low can you go? in Public Enemy’s original version of “Bring the…

Behold the nimble funkistry of Janelle Monae

The way that Afrofuturist singer Janelle Monáe talks about balance, you’d think she was an acrobat. For example, when discussing the meaning behind her single, “Tightrope” (featuring Big Boi), she touts the importance of avoiding emotionally detrimental extremes. Monáe says the single is similar in spirit to James Brown’s late-’60s anthems…

Excision at Cervantes’

The music of dubstep artist Excision is a fitting soundtrack to the desolate, gritty, apocalyptic landscape of a future ruled by homicidal machines. His tunes are warped, stuttering affairs studded with samples from both sci-fi and hip-hop (and probably some sci-fi hip-hop for good measure). Wobbly bass that can double…

Disco Nouveau calls with a striking, minimal design

If you’re going to advertise a disco night, what better image to choose than the all-powerful disco ball? None better. Even as disco’s influence across the land waned, the glittery allure of the disco ball never faltered. Everyone loves a disco ball. And we love this flier. Not just for…

Rhythms opens in former Trail Dust location this weekend

After a thirty-year run, Denver’s last Trail Dust Steak House closed on Christmas Eve of 2009. (The Trail Dust in Westminster had closed several years earlier, and the building it occupied just literally bit the dust.) Vicky Wagner, whose husband’s family owns the space at 7101 South Clinton Street in…

Suite Two Hundred celebrates Playboy Club’s 50th Anniversary

As part of the 50th Anniversary of the Playboy Club and the Playboy Bunny, Suite Two Hundred (1427 Larimer Street) will be one of fifty clubs in fifty different cities around the world throwing parties. On Friday, June 11, Christina Santiago, Playboy’s 2003 Playmate of the year, will host the…

Eels coming to the Ogden Theatre

Mark Oliver Everett, the man sometimes known as E and the guy behind Eels, and his band will hit the Ogden Tuesday, October 5. On the Eels website, Everett says End Times, the band’s most recent album (released in January on Vagrant Records), is a “divorce album” with a modern…