Something So Strong

On August 1, 1981, MTV broadcast its first video, a blast of tuneful Technicolor called “Video Killed the Radio Star.” The band that sang it, the Buggles, went on to accomplish absolutely nothing and has been immortalized primarily on the back of Trivial Pursuit cards. The second video MTV aired…

The Beatdown

“You’re either with me or you’re in my fucking way.” There’s no stopping Melissa Ivey. Sprawled out on a jade couch in the green room of Bender’s Tavern, the fiery 22-year-old singer-songwriter sips a Coors Light and discusses her recent West Coast tour. Over a grueling thirty-day stretch, Ivey and…

Various Artists

Today’s Grammy Awards are much more credible than they were in the bad old days, when nausea-inducing performers such as Christopher Cross were regularly treated like musical geniuses instead of stains on humanity. But that doesn’t mean that all of the acts with a chance to receive trophies during the…

Iron & Wine

As numblingly beautiful as Sam Beam’s music is, an entire album of it can almost be too much. His two previous full-lengths as Iron & Wine, The Creek Drank the Cradle and last year’s chilling Our Endless Numbered Days, were overwhelming. Beam’s songs are so dark they threaten to blot…

Sound Tribe Sector 9

After seventy minutes of uncommonly fluid electro-soothe, STS9 doesn’t exactly alter the course of down-tempo music. But here’s the good news: Atlanta’s vibrational five-piece has forgone chasing the Grateful Phish ghost for more computerized pastures. With fresh ideas and a strictly enforced moratorium on dreaded solo noodling, the Tribe unveils…

…And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead

Austin gear-destroyer ŠAnd You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead is one of those bands signed to a major label not for commercial viability, but for street cred. Like Sonic Youth — from whose fakebook Trail of Dead notoriously borrowed more than a few pages for 2002’s Source…

The Chemical Brothers

With 1997’s Dig Your Own Hole, the Brothers Chemical — Tom Rowlands and Ed Simons — kicked up dust via a hybrid of big-beat production and pop sensibilities that was simultaneously stimulating and ultra-commercial. They continue to refine this formula on Push the Button, but because their techniques now constitute…

Lou Barlow

Years ago, Lou Barlow was scheduled to do an in-store performance at Wax Trax Records in Denver. He showed up almost an hour late; by the time he walked through the door with guitar in hand, the place was packed to the ceiling. As he hustled past the cash register,…

Hate Kate

A little raunch can go a long way — not that Denver’s Hate Kate would know. The sleaze sloshes like a tsunami out of the group’s debut CD, It Is What You Think It Is. The title says it all: No holds are barred as the disc lays bare everything…

The Fred Hess Quartet

Saxophonist Hess doesn’t do reviewers any favors. Rather than create discs that vary wildly in terms of quality, he produces consistently strong work that renders comparisons with previous efforts pointless. Crossed Paths, which will be introduced to the public on Sunday, February 13, during a free show at St. Cajetan’s…

Ralph Stanley & the Clinch Mountain Boys

Five years ago, the unexpected, runaway popularity of the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack propelled Ralph Stanley into the American mainstream, his contribution earning him a Grammy and enough royalties to finally tool around in a shiny black Jaguar. On the downside, the deeply religious 78-year-old bluegrass legend still…

Steerjockey

There aren’t many bands who have actually toured in an eighteen-wheeler — let alone committed their artistic vision to something called “balls-out trucker punk.” But for the good buddies in Steerjockey, amphetamines and hundred-mile coffee fuel a sound that won’t back off the hammer, leading a rumbling convoy of Zeke,…

Bella Lea

When indie buzz band Denali broke up last year, the group’s singer, Maura Davis, wasted no time in rounding up a new posse. Minus her guitarist brother, Keely (who left Denali to focus on his main project, Engine Down), the Virginia-based chanteuse enlisted the talents of three Chicagoans — bassist…

Aqui

“What’s it gonna be — pleasure or action?” wails Stephonik X of Aqui on “Roll,” a song from the group’s welt-raising debut, The First Trip Out. The Brooklyn outfit is a maelstrom of noise and electricity, a metal-inflicted mutation of art, punk and rock just as likely to make eyeballs…

Eisley

On the face of things, Eisley ought to be the shittiest group ever. After all, the group features siblings Chauntelle, Sherri, Weston and Stacy DuPree, who range in age from 15 to 22 and look like a casting director’s dream. Thank goodness comparisons to the Partridge Family end there. The…

The Del McCoury Band

The fact that three venues in the Denver-Boulder area have booked Del McCoury over a four-day period speaks to his genre-spanning, cross-generational appeal. He’s been a bluegrass frontman since 1967, but despite recording a slew of long-players for roots labels like Arhoolie and Grassound, he was forced by fiscal realities…

Retroactive

In richly intimate songs, David Wilcox creates audio tapestries that blend intricate arrangements and warmly appealing tunes with the musician’s ongoing personal growth. Whether recording in a log cabin — as he did for the 1997 release Turning Point — or experimenting with unconventional guitar techniques, the introspective Wilcox has…

Critic’s Choice

Love hurts. Love stinks. If the Valentine’s season makes you want to run gagging to the nearest gutter, inoculate yourself against America’s most contrived holiday in style — as part of the Funeral of Hearts 4: Day of the Dead celebration this Friday, February 11, at Rock Island. Conceived as…

Scratching the Surface

DJ Lady Tribe would probably be one of the first to admit that her looks have opened doors. But although her obvious sex appeal may have landed her steady residencies at some of L.A.’s top hip-hop clubs, it’s her turntable skills that have kept her there — and proved she’s…

Stayin’ Alive

The basement where Cost of Living practices is like the armpit of a buried corpse. The stairwell is pitch dark. The brickwork is crumbling. It stinks of decay. But inside this ten-by-ten-foot tomb beneath the Conspiracy Skateboards warehouse on the outskirts of Five Points, there’s a buzz of life as…

Vanishing Act

In 1996, when she was just 22, jazzy vocalist Madeleine Peyroux issued Dreamland, a disc on Atlantic Records that earned solid sales, a gazillion comparisons to Billie Holiday and a slot on a subsequent Lilith Fair bill. Considering the high-profile nature of these accomplishments, not to mention the waves of…

The Beatdown

Late last year, Mootown residents locked horns over the holiday lighting display at the Denver City and County building, re-igniting the age-old conflict between church and state. For all I care, next year Hizzoner Hick could put Don King in the Nativity scene and have the lights above his office…