Cary Brothers

Cary Brothers might be most famous as that guy Zach Braff keeps putting on all of his soundtracks (like Garden State and The Last Kiss), but these days you’ll find Brothers’s folk pop just about everywhere. From Grey’s Anatomy to Smallville to — you guessed it — Scrubs, the guy…

Celtic Frost

Celtic Frost is one of the few ’80s thrash giants that haven’t been co-opted by the forces of hipster irony. In 1988, the Swiss hellions released an excellent yet inexplicable hair-metal album titled Cold Lake. Kurt Cobain loved the disc, but you’d do better to check out 1984’s Morbid Tales…

Sonnenblume

Avant guitarist Todd Ayers has been a catalyst for some of the best and most compelling music to ever come out of Denver. He’s performed with and engineered an array of artists, including Twice Wilted, Volplane, Space Team Electra, the Emmas, Worm Trouble and the Tarmints. These days, Ayers splits…

Pennies From Heaven

Sandeigh Barrett never understood the Holy Trinity. Just six years old and she was already causing trouble by asking too many questions. At the time, Barrett’s devoutly Southern Baptist family was living in a trailer park in a tiny Texas village called River Oaks. While most kids her age were…

Dead on Arrival

The Fray’s road to recognition was unbelievably swift. The band, which is slated to headline Red Rocks this Saturday, September 30, achieved platinum status last week, barely a year after releasing its Epic debut, How to Save a Life, which features the ubiquitous hit single “Over My Head (Cable Car)”…

Whirled Music

Rifling through stuffed closets of musical instruments and influences, Calexico creates indie world music that has been variously described as alt-country, spaghetti-Western and desert rock. Multi-instrumentalist/songwriter Joey Burns and drummer John Convertino explore cultural interstices and intersections by collaborating with Mexican mariachi ensembles, Spanish singers and others from around the…

Zach Attack

Scrubs star Zach Braff’s directorial debut, Garden State, was more than just an art-house hit about twenty-something depression. When it was released in 2004, its melancholic soundtrack was like a nursery for up-and-coming dream-pop bands and acoustic-minded artists. Braff, the album’s executive producer, won a Grammy for his efforts. Acts…

Drop the Needle

Even before Gym Class Heroes frontman Travis McCoy joined a band, women were lining up to show him body parts they usually keep under cover. McCoy served as a tattoo artist in upstate New York for several years, and during that time, he inked designs and illustrations on or near…

TV on the Radio

TV on the Radio’s latest effort is a tad overwhelming at first. But after taking the time to fully absorb the layers and layers of incredibly dense textures woven by guitarist/producer David Andrew Sitek, it’s clear that the baby justifies the labor. Wading through the fractured, shape-shifting aesthetic is made…

Fergie

Stacy “Fergie” Ferguson is a hot, eager and totally empty vessel. On The Dutchess, she displays an affinity for the sort of mainstream pop that would put most Black Eyed Peas fans to sleep faster than a Blizzard with Tylenol PM sprinkles — but if acting like a hip-hop ho…

Wolf Eyes

Big-budget bands, on average, take anywhere from two to five years to produce a full-length album. Wolf Eyes takes about a week. The act is a record collector’s nightmare, with an extensive discography that stretches far into the annals of self-produced cassette tapes, CD-Rs and the occasional etched vinyl record…

Faceless Werewolves

The Faceless Werewolves should — if the gods of good taste have their way — be the next Austin band whose hot, raw licks will get down the pants of America. Singer Baldomero Valdez has a certain Thurston Moore mumble in the way he has to fight for air underneath…

Death Before Dishonor

It’s kind of refreshing to hear a Denver hip-hop act not trying to emulate the latest trends. On Living on the Jib, Death Before Dishonor mates hostile, head-banging breakbeats with strings and piano interludes that recall everyone from DJ Shadow to EL-P (of Company Flow). Tracks like “Somebody Stop Me”…

Fear Before the March of Flames

Nothing to be afraid of here. Open Mouth isn’t just Fear Before the March of Flames’ best album to date; it’s also evidence that this band is only now beginning to tap its potential. Artistically speaking, the Flamers are growing like a brush fire during a drought. “Drowning the Old…

Listen Up

Club d’Elf, Now I Understand (Accurate). The brainchild of Boston bassist Mike Rivard, Club d’Elf is a genre-shattering collective that merges jazz, hip-hop, electronic music, worldbeat and more with the help of collaborators ranging from DJ Logic to onetime David Bowie associate Reeves Gabrels. Now I Understand is both instrumentally…

Preservation Hall Jazz Band

There’s a decrepit old building on St. Peter Street, in the heart of the French Quarter, with little in the way of amenities; drinks aren’t even served there. Regardless, tourists line up hours before showtime because they know that Preservation Hall is one of the few pillars of old-school New…

KMFDM

How to make a KMFDM album: Pair sexy-girl vocals with a frog-throated male lead spitting angry, Euro-style slow-paced raps (à la Trent Reznor on “Down in It”), synthesize every beat to the max and then cover it all up with iconic Brute! artwork. Stick the group’s acronym in a chorus…

Queensrche

Although thinking-man’s metal band Queensrche has a respectable catalogue of albums under its belt — including classics such as Empire and Rage for Order — its legacy was cemented by 1988’s Operation: Mindcrime, one of the greatest and most successful rock operas ever made. Mindcrime wove a tale of a…

Eric Bachmann

Eric Bachmann is one of the newest and most valuable additions to the Denver music scene. A longtime North Carolinian, he first came to indie-rock prominence in the Archers of Loaf, an act capable of cranking up a righteous racket, and subsequently formed Barry Black, an instrumental outfit that paired…

Jenny Lewis

If Jenny Lewis has learned anything from her high-profile friends and semi-frequent collaborators Conor Oberst and Ben Gibbard, it’s this: The bigger you get, the more people hate on you, so let the authenticity of the music be the final word. Nowhere is this lesson more obvious than on Lewis’s…

Mark Kozelek

One of the quickest ways to break into the biz or revitalize a stagnant career is to modernize someone else’s hit song a decade or so after its release with a clever cover version. It worked wonders for Marilyn Manson and Alien Ant Farm — even Johnny Cash cashed in…

Jedi Mind Tricks

Vinnie Paz, Stoupe and DJ Kwestion have to be some of the hardest-working cats in indie/underground hip-hop. Although their group, Jedi Mind Tricks, has released only four albums in its ten-year existence, the three are the brains behind lauded projects from Outerspace and Army of the Pharaohs and had a…