Meshuggah

Ministry, the headlining act on this date, plans to disband following its current tour, and that’s probably just as well: Cover Up, a just-released disc filled with new versions of classic rock songs such as “Lay Lady Lay,” feels unimaginative and unnecessary. On the other hand, opening act Meshuggah, which…

In Flames

Walking the line between brutality and accessibility can be tricky for a bad-ass metal band. Metallica, for example, gained more radio play than ever with its infamous “black album,” but left many of its longtime fans weeping over what they felt was a despicable artistic compromise. Sweden’s In Flames, however,…

Pattern Is Movement

Although Pattern Is Movement often gets lumped in with the whole math-rock phenomenon, the Philadelphia outfit’s sound is much more organic and far less sterile and wanky than that of other groups of that ilk. Avoiding the type of instrumental solos that are more fun to play than listen to,…

Genghis Tron

In addition to having possibly the coolest moniker ever conceived, Genghis Tron is blessed with a genuinely idiosyncratic electro-metal sound. Fusing the synth-driven sensibilities of electro with metal’s brutal crunch has led most acts toward the late, largely unlamented genre of industrial, but that’s not the case here. Starting with…

Nick Lowe

During the ’70s, when he went from being a mainstay in England’s rough-and-tumble pub-rock scene to a notable part of the new-wave movement, Nick Lowe was known as “Basher.” These days, of course, bashing isn’t at the top of his agenda. At My Age, his most recent platter, is a…

Last Night…BDRMPPL, State Bird, The Tanukis, Mad Happy

BDRMPPL, State Bird, The Tanukis, Mad Happy April 6, 2008 Brooks Center Arts Better than: The last party you attended in a church basement. A show at Brooks Center Arts is a truly unique experience. If you’re strictly accustomed to theater or arena shows with lights and smoke, you’ll feel…

The Rap-Up: Apostle, Jay-Z, Kanye West, Mos Def, Beyonce

In the fall of 2006, A.P.O.S.T.L.E. – aka Jeff Campbell — left Denver for San Francisco with his crew, Heavyweight Dub Champion, with hopes of making a bigger splash outside the Mile High City. Fast forward to spring 2008, Apostle is no longer working with Heavyweight Dub Champion and released…

Hey, Radiohead, Was It Something We Said?

Just received a missive from Nasty Little Man, Radiohead’s dutiful PR firm, with the words, “RADIOHEAD AUGUST 2008 DATES & VENUES CONFIRMED,” in the subject line. My heart raced a bit, I’ll admit it, as I scrolled down… but alas, it then flatlined. Again. Still no Denver date. What are…

Video Interview with Daniel Johnston and Bad Weather California

Denver locals Bad Weather California — with some help from friends Roger Green and Erin Roberts — had a dream come true when, three days before the show, they were asked to be the backing band for Daniel Johnston. Of course they said yes. Here’s an interview with the band…

45 Second Reviews: Hawk Nelson, Moby, Van Morrison, Your Vegas

Hawk Nelson Hawk Nelson is My Friend BEC Records 01:30-02:15 of “Friend Like That” Every once and a while I’ll listen to some of my old pop-punk records – that is when my upstairs neighbors aren’t already blaring Bad Religion and the Descendents. For me, it’s a reminder of my…

The Swayback Raises the Bar

They say the devil’s greatest trick was trying to convince the world that he doesn’t exist. A decent ruse, but as the Swayback just proved, the devil truly is in the details. Although the act’s latest, Long Gone Lads, has a loose, almost tossed-off, insouciance, its creators actually toiled endlessly…

Hot Dog!

Over the past few months, I’ve been running into people I haven’t seen in years, and it’s mildly freaking me out. At Vinyl (1082 Broadway) in February, I saw a guy who was on my little-league football team. A few weeks before that, it was a high-school classmate at My…

We Are! We Are!

We Are! We Are! is a slippery beast. Slithering free of instrumental-rock pitfalls and cliches, the trio handily weaves together tropes from surf rock, math rock, hardcore and even funk, creating thoroughly unique, dizzyingly deft compositions. North Carolina transplants Jim Sutton, Sam Gault and Sam Cat have quickly developed a…

DJ Icey

DJ Icey’s name is synonymous with funky breaks. Arguably the best-known and biggest breakbeat DJ and producer in the dance-music scene, he’s been instrumental in shaping major currents within the breaks genre. Icey’s sound is clean and open but always chunky, with relatively straightforward breaks and edgy electronic bass sounds…

Regards From Hello Kavita

I was in my bedroom, trying not to wake people up, so my songs came out naturally quiet and sad,” says Corey Teruya, letting out a chuckle as he reflects on his early songwriting efforts. “Now we can make a little more noise.” Indeed. The Hawaiian-born songwriter and his Hello…

Waking Up Daniel Johnston

Anyone who thinks the man at the center of the 2005 documentary The Devil and Daniel Johnston exaggerated his idiosyncrasies for the camera is flat-out wrong, as I found out before we’d exchanged one word. To schedule an interview with Daniel, I contacted his father, Bill Johnston, who manages his…

Jessica Sonner Comes Home

If the music business were poker, singer-songwriter Jessica Sonner would be holding a straight flush. Her sound is a polished, accessible blend of pop, country and blues influences, and she’s blessed with a powerful, sultry voice that helps elevates her songs. It doesn’t hurt that she’s also a classic beauty…

Mad Professor

From its humble beginnings circa the ’60s, dub has become one of the most influential subgenres in modern music, inspiring innovations in dance sounds, punk rock and countless other categories — and among contemporary practitioners of the art, no one’s been better for longer than Mad Professor. Born Neal Fraser…

Hotel Cafe Tour

Onetime Hollywood coffee shop the Hotel Cafe has evolved into what many feel is the best singer-songwriter haunt on the West Coast — mainly because of an influx of serious talent from around the country looking to catch the ear of movie and television music supervisors who stalk the venue…

The Claudia Quintet

On the Claudia Quintet’s latest genre-bending album, For, composer and percussionist John Hollenbeck dedicates each of the disc’s eight songs to different people, from Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek and Dick Cheney’s daughter Mary to Vipassana meditation teacher S.N. Goenka. While “I’m So Frickin’ Cool” may have been written for Austrian…