The Dont’s and Be Carefuls at the Meadowlark

The latest in a long line of noteworthy bands from the unlikely creative breeding ground of Greeley, The Don’ts and Be Carefuls (due at the Meadowlark on Thursday, May 21) have been making their mark on audiences since spring 2008. Putatively a dance-punk band, these guys have gone beyond that…

Iwrestledabearonce

Taking its name from something crazy Gary Busey said during his short-lived television series, I’m With Busey, Iwrestledabearonce doesn’t bother fitting into a specific musical genre. On the surface, the members of this sextet from Shreveport, Louisiana, are heirs to the spastic, experimental grindcore/death-metal hybrid that was the Locust. Singer…

Jane’s Addiction and Nine Inch Nails

The NIN/JA tour isn’t supposed to be an exercise in nostalgia, despite the presence of two ’90s icons (joined by Street Sweeper Social Club, buzzsaw king Tom Morello’s latest project). But one of the headliners avoids this trap more convincingly than the other. The two Jane’s Addiction tracks on a…

The Decemberists

Decemberists main man Colin Meloy must have a dandy record collection. The influences throughout the band’s latest opus, The Hazards of Love, are enough to make older prog heads glow with sweet nostalgia. Love is a suite, each track leading into the next, its narrative told via an engaging mixture…

Doves

“We’ve never wanted to go out and blow our own trumpet, really,” Doves drummer/vocalist Andy Williams told Westword back in 2002. “We want the music to do the talking, and if people like it, that speaks volumes.” In the years since, Williams and his cohorts (twin brother Jez and bassist/vocalist…

Death Vessel

Death Vessel is the brainchild of Brooklyn-based experimental folk artist Joel Thibodeau, the likes of whom we’ve heard from before. With a penchant for hushed electronic atmospherics serving as a backdrop to well-written, largely minimalist guitar melodies and earnest vocals, Thibodeau possesses a soprano singing voice that lends his introspective…

Glyphic

Does saying that an album sounds as slick and professional as major-label fare constitute faint praise or the real kind? In the case of Glyphic, which hosts a Friday, May 22, CD-release party at the Gothic Theatre co-starring Random Hero, Fulcrum, Cypher and Four to Go, it’s a little of…

The Alan Baird Project

Listening to this EP makes me wonder if I’m not missing the gene for liking the kind of music you hear on the radio. I mean, I can identify that these melodies are appealing, that the sound and vibe are contemporary and that this would sound right at home playing…

The Omens

Although the Omens still show a strong Cynics influence here, there are marked departures from the formula. For one, this is probably the best-sounding work in which singer Michael Daboll has been involved. All of the instrumentation has beautifully orchestrated separation, allowing the songs to breathe more while coming together…

Stella Luce

Take Una Volta-era DeVotchKa, subtract Nick Urata’s Morrissey croon and replace it with the sometimes-Ani-DiFranco, sometimes-Sarah-Vaughan vocals of Alana Rolfe, add a little more flair for weird noises, and you might get something that sounds like this Fort Collins-based act. The band’s violin-based pop bears a broad range of influences,…

Paramore’s Hayley Williams finds fame a little freaky

Paramore lead singer Hayley Williams needn’t wonder if she’s having an impact on her audience. Odds are good that every time she looks into the crowd at a concert, she’ll see a veritable ocean of tween and teen girls wearing her hair color of the moment and their best approximation…

The newer generations’ love of classic rock shows a lack of imagination

There’s a disease spreading through our generation of twenty- and thirty-year-olds, a malady we inherited from our parents that’s rendering us culturally stagnant. It’s sapping our identity. Perhaps, most tragically, we are welcoming this plague into our homes, cars and iPods — even our karaoke parties. This cancer is called…

Moderat at Beta

Supergroups aren’t just for bloated ’70s rock stars. In the world of techno, Apparat and Modeselektor are both top-tier acts in their own right. Together they’ve joined forces to become Moderat (due on Saturday, May 23, at Beta) and produced something special. The process of recording the threesome’s first collaboration…

The 3D Lounge returns at the Open Tap

Are you a reggae ambassador or do you just play one on TV? We’ve got great news for you then, mon. Our pal Byron Shaw, the ever affable frontman of Judge Roughneck and the Byron Shaw Projex (and the Jonez, if you’re old school), just informed us that the 3-D…

Sid Fly takes a ‘Flight 2 Bluntville’

While the rumored Ground Zero Movement reunion is still rumbling around town, one member continues to make moves. Sid Fly, who has been hosting Out Tha Box TV for the last couple of years, is finally returning to the studio to put in some work on the music side of…

Last Night: Mike Watt & the Missingmen at the Larimer Lounge

Mike Watt & the Missingmen and Dualistics Monday, May 18, 2009 Larimer Lounge Just as Missingmen guitarist Tom Watson and drummer Raul Morales finished setting up their gear, former Minutemen and Firehose frontman Mike Watt made his way through the crowd to the stage. With his gig bag slung on…

Lowlife jerkwads steal All Capitals’ van

What is it with all these lowlife jerks preying on hardworking, hapless musicians? It has been our great displeasure to report on a series of heists over the past year or so involving a number of local minstels. Off the top of our head, last fall, Epilogues had a laptop…

DJ Quote/Yung Berg fued reaches new level

Last week we reported how DJ Quote put Epic recording artist Yung Berg on blast after failing to pay him for a mixtape he was hired to do. Shortly thereafter, a response clip from Berg’s camp was released on Worldstarhiphop.com, but the rapper was no where to be seen in…