Dalek

By most accounts, hip-hop is all about presence: the simple (and incredibly effective) economy of lyrical force thrust onto bone-rattling beats. But avant b-boy Dalek has little time for such easy definitions, and while the challenging Absence is unlike any hip-hop album you’ve ever heard, it hardly lives up to…

Januar

Januar hasn’t played many shows in its three-year existence, but the quartet has a good reason: Drummer Katie Aiken spends more time in far-flung locales like Pennsylvania and Iceland than she does in Denver. That fact — along with the group’s unusual two-acoustic-guitarists/two-drummers lineup — might lead you to believe…

SleepinGiants

If the name Bernard Bickerstaff sets off a buzzer, it should. His father, Bernie Bickerstaff, used to helm the Denver Nuggets and currently oversees the expansion Charlotte Bobcats alongside another one of his sons, assistant coach John-Blair Bickerstaff. As for Bernard, he performs under the pseudonym Mysfyt with SleepinGiants, a…

Killswitch Engage

At the 2005 Grammy Awards, Killswitch Engage was passed over in the category of Best Metal Performance in favor of Motrhead’s Metallica cover. Given the proven irrelevance and utter cluelessness of the Recording Academy, this should be considered an endorsement of Killswitch, a band that has written and rewritten the…

DJ Icey

When DJ Icey laid eyes on Beatport.com’s debut ad in URB magazine, he practically had a heart attack. There on the page, advertising a digital-music distribution service he’d recently considered licensing his catalogue to, was a photograph of a record crateŠon fire. News flash: Vinyl doesn’t hold up well under…

Ben Lee

Although he’s still in his twenties, Ben Lee has already been through more personal and professional changes than the average performer three times his age. In the early ’90s, when he was just fourteen, this Aussie tunesmith was already leading his own band, the punky Noise Addict. Tastemakers such as…

Menomena

The name of Menomena’s debut full-length, I Am the Fun Blame Monster, is an anagram for “the first Menomena album.” Similarly, the Portland trio rearranges parcels of sound into epic pop opuses using Deeler, a software program created by pianist Brent Knopf. But there’s much more magic involved than simple…

The Dead Science

Just when people started to figure out how to unravel Xiu Xiu’s brand of puzzling, theatrical art-rock, two of the group’s provisional sidemen — Sam Mickens and Jherek Bischoff — have spun off into the equally confounding outfit the Dead Science. The Seattle trio’s new EP, Bird Bones in the…

Los Lobos

One of the funniest Los Lobos stories dates back to the mid-’70s, when the band had a regular gig at a Mexican restaurant in Pasadena called the Red Onion. The owner strongly recommended that the band get off the tiny, makeshift stage and partake in the demoralizing mariachi tradition of…

Critic’s Choice

Guitar wizard Dave Beegle’s jaw-dropping, chin-scratching finger work with prog-rock power trio Fourth Estate should have earned him and his bandmates worldwide fame and fortune. Although the act was met with gold-lined pen strokes of praise, such acclaim never resulted in mind-numbing financial success. Eventually the threesome bowed out of…

Scratching the Surface

London DJs and producers Ed Rush and Optical teamed up in 1998 for a series of landmark releases on their Virus Recordings label that earned the pair superstar DJ status. Each had achieved moderate success on his own within the techstep drum-and-bass scene; their collaboration proved to be one of…

Second Coming

Scott Kerr pauses, rests his chin on his hands and ponders for a minute. The clink of glass and burble of conversation overflows from the other booths at Sputnik as the singer/guitarist of Yellow Second composes his thoughts. His bandmates — guitarist Josh Hemingway, bassist Brett Bowden and drummer Jimmy…

Stirring the Eire

I grew up in a country that was uneasy from the day I was born,” says Dave King. “I have a lot of friends who were imprisoned for political activity.” As the token Irishman and founding member of the Los Angeles-based Flogging Molly, King endured a childhood that wasn’t exactly…

The Beatdown

From the outside, the building that houses Rudy’s Studio looks like all of the other tract homes in this suburb just north of Denver — which is why I’ve driven past it three times already. But then, you don’t really expect to find one of the city’s pre-eminent studios in…

50 Cent

With chiseled muscles drizzled in oil and an unspecified power that left him impervious to bullets, 50 Cent exploded onto the pop landscape like a Nietzsche-meets-Al-Capone Superman with a cadre of club-banging beats, itchy hooks and one-dimensional verses. For better and worse, The Massacre breaks little new ground. There are…

Marbles

In 1997, Robert Schneider, a former Denverite whose best-known creation remains the Apples in Stereo, released some of his early recordings on Pyramid Landing and Other Favorites, a disc credited to the de facto pseudonym Marbles. But Expo isn’t another odds-and-sods package. The ten-song EP displays sonic unity of a…

Fantmas

Recorded in tandem with last year’s surgically themed Delirium Cordia, this abrasive and comical offering from Mike Patton and his co-conspirators in Fantmas throws avant-speed metal, kids’ jump-rope songs, film-score snippets and Looney Tunes-era sound effects into a blender set to “frappé” — then churns the whole mess into a…

Fog

Andrew Broder, aka Fog, started off turntabling in the vein of DJ Shadow before taking the Anticon cue and rippling out from hip-hop into musical free-for-all. But experimentalism shouldn’t be synonymous with using pretension as an excuse for not trying. Here, Fog is less Spiritualized and Wilco by way of…

ZZZZ

Chicago’s Sweep the Leg Johnny was always a great band. But that sax? Had to go. Amid all the group’s streamlined savagery, singer Steve Sostak’s ungodly squawking was about as welcome as a turd in a hot tub. So it’s with one hand on the doorknob and the other holding…

Kings of Leon

To expand his already octave-stretching vocals, lead singer Caleb Followill quit smoking before joining his brothers and cousin in the studio to record the followup to 2003’s excellent Youth and Young Manhood. And therein lies the problem. Not that Followill’s voice isn’t as strong and unique as ever — like…

Melissa Ivey

Melissa Ivey doesn’t seem particularly interested in going where no singer-songwriter has gone before — at least not yet. From the Inside Out, which will be introduced to the public on Saturday, March 12, at a Walnut Room show that will also feature Rubber Planet and Paper Boy Jack, is…

Adrenaline Sky

The Eurythmics perfected the formula: the dude who stands in back, tinkering with the equipment, fronted by a chanteuse oozing icy mystery. Eric Smith and Shannon Alexander play Dave and Annie in Adrenaline Sky — a Denver duo whose full-length, The Ultimate Illusion of Privacy, hints at the Brit-pomp of…