Shitwolf becomes Undead Uglies

For reasons that are seemingly innumerable, the outfit formerly known as Shitwolf has rinsed off its fur and will now be known simply as Undead Uglies. Too bad, Shitwolf was such a memorable moniker. Besides the fact that the name looked, uh, killer on fliers (check out past handbills on…

Rainbow Music Hall now officially only a memory

I could handle seeing the original sign for the Rainbow Music Hall still standing even though a Walgreen’s had taken over the space of the legendary music venue years ago. It was a little piece of music history that I could still hold on to, considering that most of my…

Josh Wambeke Fell into one of Denver’s most compelling bands

I had my big thirtieth-birthday party the other night,” says Josh Wambeke, singer/guitarist and leader of Fell. “I just bought a new home in Arvada, and we’re surrounded by older people, so we had to make sure they were going to be okay with it.” Respecting your neighbors isn’t exactly…

The ’80s are alive at the Roadhouse

A strong police presence near a bar definitely makes you think twice about drinking too much. It can also make you feel safe — or make you mighty suspicious of a saloon’s clientele. Particularly when three squad cars are constantly circling a place, as was the case at the grand…

Denver Does Denver

At Denver Does Denver, some of the most talented and interesting musical projects in town will do an entire cover set of material by another Denver band or songwriter. With at least two dozen bands playing on four stages in two venues half a block apart (Old Curtis St. Bar…

DJ Micro at Beta

You don’t have the career longevity of DJ Micro in a style of music as fickle as electronic without being willing to change it up. During his thirteen years in the business, Micro has progressed from yesterday’s acid-flavored breakbeats to today’s bouncy, techno-tinged trance. He’s a tireless performer, playing at…

A quick look at albums due out this summer

The music industry may be melting down, but plenty of great new albums are slated for release this summer. Spanning folk to electronic to rock to hip-hop — with some drawing from multiple genres — here are eight worth a listen. Neil Young, Neil Young Archives, Vol. 1: 1963-1972 (Reprise):…

Christian Scott walks the line between old-school and new-school jazz

While Christian Scott is hailed as one of the hottest young trumpeters on the jazz scene, the Grammy-nominated musician doesn’t listen to much jazz these days. Lately he’s been lending his ears to more indie rock and hip-hop (he’s performed with Mos Def). Scott says he doesn’t expose himself to…

Super Seed

The latest project by Lazyface vets Aaron Rocha and Andy Anderson doesn’t qualify as an enormous departure. Planted, the subject of a Friday, June 5, CD-release party at the Gothic Theatre co-starring the Alan Baird Project, Quillon and the Side Project, embraces the mainstream via classically structured pop songs replete…

The Widow’s Bane

Falling somewhere between Tom Waits and the Misfits (with a generous helping of classic seafaring work-song influence), the debut album from Boulder zombie folk-punkers the Widow’s Bane is arresting and addictive. These pitiless lads got their start performing in storefronts on Pearl Street, and their self-titled CD was recorded partly…

Hot Robots

Power pop, by its nature, is a regressive genre, and Hot Robots is no different. The only thing that’s in doubt is exactly which decade the band has so gleefully embraced. Built to Tilt, the Robots’ full-length debut, re-creates every hook ever beaten to death by Cheap Trick, the Plimsouls…

Peru or Germany

This experimental pop duo’s debut EP begins with the lo-fi indie rock of “Circus.” Frayed but controlled guitar riffing and just-off-melodic harmonies give the song a slightly emotionally ragged feel to match the lyrics. “Haircut” introduces vintage keyboard sounds into the band’s palette; its freewheeling dynamics are reminiscent of Matt…

Ear PWR

Like many electronic acts at the moment, Baltimore’s Ear PWR is clearly drawing inspiration from analog synth-pop bands of the ’80s as well as the bizarre disco/ambient/experimental pop hybrid made famous by Giorgio Moroder. There’s also a hint of that surrealistic Teletubbies air (minus the borderline creepiness) to the band’s…

Etta James and The Roots Band

Last year’s Cadillac Records didn’t catch on with cinema lovers as did recent biopics of Ray Charles, Johnny Cash, etc., in part because of its split focus. Viewers got a mere taste of assorted Chess Records performers who deserved more screen time than they got — particularly Etta James, portrayed…

Mayhem

Few, if any, bands can claim the level of notoriety enjoyed by Norway’s black-metal legends Mayhem. From lurid but true stories of suicide to intra-band murder and connections with the burnings of numerous churches to purge the Viking homeland of the taint of Christianity, the music of Mayhem is almost…

The Dead Science

Mutating faster than a flu virus, Seattle’s the Dead Science has grown from a mildly arty indie-rock combo into a full-on deconstruction crew since the release of its rich and challenging 2003 debut, Submariner. Lest you miss the title’s reference to one of Marvel Comics’ B-list superheroes, frontman Sam Mickens…

Loretta Lynn

Loretta Lynn’s hipster quotient shot up considerably after the country legend invited White Stripes frontman Jack White to produce her most recent release, 2004’s Van Lear Rose. While it might seem like an odd pairing, White and the coal miner’s daughter made a diamond of an album (named after the…

Twist that knob, push that button, make some noise

Okay you rock snobs, listen up. It’s time to stop hating on electronic music. For years now, electronic in all its incarnations has been the go-to format for haters to dump on safely (remember eight to ten years ago when it was country and/or rap?) and frankly, it’s bullshit. These…

Secret Aceyalone show at Meadowlark Friday

It may not be so much of a secret now, but the rapper Aceyalone and the Slippers will be at the Meadowlark (2701 Larimer Street) Friday, June 5. Chances to see high profile cats like Aceyalone, who was one of the founders of the Freestyle Fellowship, up close at a…

Irony free disco at Problems D’Amour tonight

DJs Boyhollow and Max Klaw are kicking off a monthly all-disco party tonight at the Walnut Room, but before you break out that white jumpsuit and faux-Saturday Night Fever shuffle, you need to know this is not about the irony. “We think this music deserves a real forum for expression…

Fell to appear on upcoming soundtrack

The shoegaze narcopop of Fell will be appearing on the soundtrack for The Deepest Blue, an upcoming movie from first-time writer/director Dustin Lane, slated to release in 2010. Fell member Bryan Romero reports that Lane found the band on MySpace, looking for some appropriately “sad music for a sad movie”…

Last Night: Animal Collective at the Boulder Theater

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 The Boulder Theater, Boulder Better Than: Most shows going through Boulder these days. Brooklyn’s Black Dice opened this show in what has lately become their typical fashion. Long gone, I suppose, were the harsh, brutally abrasive textures of old, replaced by something more, well, musical. Nonetheless,…