State of Shock

I’m a bastard. That’s the whole thing.” It’s early on a frosty evening at Gabor’s, the infamous Capitol Hill dive bar where the jukebox leans toward Zeppelin and X and autographed snapshots of Hollywood has-beens like Louie Anderson adorn the walls. Charles Edward, leader of Seraphim Shock, sits at a…

Lip Service

I don’t know where the Slayer comparisons first started,” says Eric Madris, quick-fingered banjo picker for bluegrass quartet Split Lip Rayfield. “Obviously, other than just the speed, there isn’t much of a sonic comparison. The tempos are there, but it’s not like we’re trying to get bucked off a goat…

Lilium

Lilium may be two-thirds of the venerable Denver-based alt-country collective 16 Horsepower, but Short Stories, the band’s second release, is a beautifully moody and atmospheric record that suggests this is far more than a side project. Multi-instrumentalists Pascal Humbert and Jean-Yves Tola make up the core of Lilium. Together they…

Mark Riva

The ambient electro genre is usually associated with tropical playgrounds, not mountainous ones, which helps explains the title of this disc, as well as the name of veteran DJ Mark Riva’s production company (Mango Beach International) and the fact that his label is headquartered in Miami. Since 2000, however, the…

Eric Bailly

There’s something about sticking an acoustic guitar in someone’s hand and leaving them alone in a room that makes for some pretty gloomy tunes. Maybe it’s the solitude, the lack of external stimulus or simply the fact that that’s just what people have always done with acoustic guitars in lonely…

Chris Daniels, the Kings and friends

Long an outstanding fixture on the scene, Chris Daniels and the Kings began making a name for themselves years ago in the smaller clubs around town with their trademark rhythm and blues peppered with ample amounts of soul and superior musicianship. A few years back, the band began to make…

The Beatdown

Scott Campbell has booked over 2,000 dates in the past eight years at the 15th Street Tavern and his own Larimer Lounge. The guy knows what works and what doesn’t in the concert biz. So a few months ago, when friends in Slim Cessna’s Auto Club asked him to help…

Critic’s Choice

Laughter may be the best medicine, but to Stanley Jordan, music is the universal anodyne. The celebrated jazz guitarist is a spokesman for the American Music Therapy Association, and his 2003 disc, Relaxing Music for Difficult Situations, Volume One, is an hour-long improvised solo piece that showcases the more restrained…

Hit Pick

The dream-rock maestros in The Very Hush Hush (due at the Hi-Dive on Saturday, January 10, with Navy Girls and O’er the Ramparts, and at the Gothic Theatre on Thursday, January 15) have an unmistakable sonic kinship to bands like Mogwai and Sigur Ros. Fortunately, though, the members of the…

Living Out Loud

It used to take Jimmy West roughly three days to set up the two-ton P.A. system he built from scratch when he first started working as a soundman in Denver. Most of the venues that hired him, from legit clubs to underground warehouses, had systems that were puny or non-existent…

Turning Pro

If you ask the three members of the Procussions what’s missing from today’s hip-hop, they’ll tell you straight up: substance. “Everything seems to be really stale,” says MC Resonant, who pulls double duty as DJ for the Colorado Springs-turned-L.A.-based hip-hop combo. “If you’re not a super battle-rhymer, then you’re a…

The Beatdown

Right turn, Clyde. This is the year of the monkey, and I can’t think of a better way to kick off 2004 than by flingin’ poo at my fellow simians. Since most of us are still basking in the afterglow of the holidays, however, I thought I’d focus on an…

Critic’s Choice

Decent national concerts in Colorado scheduled the week after New Year’s Eve are about as common as politicians who aren’t interested in personal gain, thereby making skiing a better bet. Fortunately, those with a taste for white powder (not that white powder) have an opportunity to double their pleasure with…

Hit Pick

If October Episode’s music doesn’t make an impact, its members can always use their imposing image — part prison-yard muscle, part garish Gacy clown makeup — to “persuade” listeners. Good thing Denver metal fans are already hooked on the band’s steel-toed stomp to the head of contemporary nu-metal, especially since…

All Mixed Up

Remember that song “Last Night, a Year-End Top Ten List Saved My Life”? Of course you don’t. The music itself — not some perfunctory list — is what makes you laugh, pulls on your heartstrings and gets you thinking. Aside from mix tapes made by old lovers and friends, an…

For the Record

Music got downright deadly in 2003. Some of the great ones went up to that big gig in the sky — icons and legends like Johnny Cash, Barry White, Warren Zevon, Elliott Smith and Wesley Willis — while the RIAA took off after grandmas and single moms around the country…

The Beatdown

Go home and hump, already. It’s become painfully obvious that many of you have never been given a primer on the rules of rock. That’s the only way I can explain the moronic shit that I’ve witnessed these past six months. And now, as we approach the biggest alcoholiday of…

Critic’s Choice

Sometimes there’s no better indication of how old you’ve become than finding yourself sneering over the success of someone younger than you. Peter Cincotti surely has been the recipient of many such grumblings since becoming a jazz phenom at the age of twenty with his self-titled debut release. Receiving praise…

Hit Pick

Zombies are shambling, reanimated corpses that drip with decay and a cold, bloodless contempt for all human life. Zombie Zombie is like that, times two. For the last couple of years, this local foursome has been assaulting the country with a surreal mingling of costumes, noise and apocalyptic hallucinations of…

Recovered

It’s an unseasonably warm Sunday, and the Denver Broncos and the Kansas City Chiefs are embroiled in a bare-knuckle, winner-take-all slugfest. Clinton Portis has just scored his fifth touchdown of the day. Earlier, ex-Bronco-turned-Chief Eddie Kennison had accused his former team of being scared and promised to “put something on…

Tin Men

There’s a very little-known installment of the Shaft movie series where Richard Roundtree’s funky detective gets sent to bust some pimps and pushers on a space station circling Alpha Centauri. Artificial gravity hasn’t been invented yet, so our man Shaft floats weightless with a fishbowl over his head while he…

Mistletunes

Anyone who doubts that there’s a connection between the sorry state of the music industry and this year’s onslaught of Christmas CDs probably still believes in Santa Claus. Then again, record companies do, too. Why? Holiday recordings generally appeal to consumers in their mid-twenties and older — a demographic that’s…