Hit Pick

Boulder’s McCloskey Brothers Band crafts a sound that’s apropos of falling leaves, mountain streams and good times at high altitude. Composed of brothers David (banjo) and Todd (mandolin) McCloskey, bassist Steve Roseboom and drummer Dan Menchey, TMBB opens for Strangefolk on Saturday, October 12, at the Bluebird Theater. The outfit…

A Different Qwest

So you think you have a stressful career? Consider Kelly, who makes his living under his given name as a senior attorney in the legal-affairs department of Qwest, a Colorado telecom that’s spent more than a year making the wrong kind of headlines. The guy who said there’s no such…

With a Bullet

Gomez is one of those bands that, like a cat being forced into a pet carrier, struggles against being placed in any one category. Is Gomez a blues act? Space rock? Prog rock? Latin-tinged alt-country? Somehow, the answer to all of the above is yes. Yet despite this crazy-quilt approach…

Furry Logic

Super Furry Animals know the rules have changed. Their music is a throwback to the ’70s and earlier — all pretty harmonies, dreamy strings and expansive, meandering song construction — and yet they’ve laced it throughout with studio trickery, updating the Beach Boys’ sound with Beck’s sensibility. Because in the…

The Apples in Stereo

The Apples’ antsy retroactivity has ping-ponged back and forth so many times over the past nine years, it’s become downright dizzying, from ’60s pop to ’80s jangle to ’90s indie. By the time the band released its fourth studio album, 2000’s Discovery of a World Inside the Moone, it was…

Various Artists

Unlike many soundtracks that pale creatively in comparison with their celluloid counterparts, 24 Hour Party People more than matches the spirit of the film it accompanies. More impressively, it captures the feel of a bygone era in British dance music. At eighteen tracks, this compilation approximates the energy and underground…

Division of Laura Lee

Reviewers seldom gush over discs that remind them of albums made by lousy artists from the past; hence the dearth of notices praising Shakira for introducing a new generation to the genius that is Charo. But the opposite proves true when it comes to CDs that recall the long-ago platters…

Filter

Richard Patrick of Filter might be a good moderator for a music-conference panel: The Hit Single: More Harm Than Good? The band’s 1995 release, Short Bus, produced a major hit with the single “Hey Man, Nice Shot,” but its overexposure on MTV and commercial radio did not come without a…

Backwash

When Kurt Ottaway and Jason Cotter decided to pull their heads out of the underground and take over a legitimate music venue, they entered into a pact — not only with themselves, but with those who for years had begged them to open a damn club already. So on Friday,…

Critic’s Choice

The underappreciated Boston-based Swirlies put out a reliable brand of lo-fi bedroom pop with enough white noise to make the tunes sound like they were recorded in the great outdoors — say, on a busy airport runway during holiday rush hour. Founding member Seana Carmody, who performs Sunday, October 6,…

Hit Pick

A nasty gash from a broken full-length mirror left Andy Falconetti in need of emergency surgery on his calf last summer. Still recuperating (through the curative one-two punch of prescription drugs and bad daytime television), the frontman for Denver’s Breezy Porticos — who open for Athens-based pop upstarts Of Montreal…

This Year’s Model

Music-business decision-makers realize that the pop bubble is apt to burst soon — and most of them are touting post-indie rock as its probable successor. Why? For one thing, underground rockers are in plentiful supply; throw a stick in most major cities, and you’re likely to hit at least one…

Bloc Party

When Gorgol Bordello’s Eugene Hütz was fourteen and living in Striy, a small Ukrainian village near the Hungarian border, he caught wind of the 1986 Chernobyl meltdown while listening to BBC Radio. Moments later, he and his family members were packing their suitcases and preparing to flee. “I’m trying to…

More Than a Mouthful

If the British music press is to be believed, the two biggest stories of the year so far have been the return of rock and the rise of electro-pop. Yet an even more notable phenomenon may be found in Berlin-based singer/producer/performer Peaches, an artist who seamlessly melds the two with…

Styles, Slum Village and Clipse

At this point in its development, hip-hop is all about the marketing. Crossing over to the pop side of town is incredibly lucrative, but doing so too overtly puts street cred at risk. That’s why acts and their labels are looking for new and creative ways to make the music…

The Residents

Subtle as an amputation, the Residents cut themselves off from pop music’s tumorous body three decades ago and never looked back. Still as prolific as they are self-indulgent, the cadre of one-eyed malcontents — led by Mr. Skull — remain cloaked in deliberate secrecy. And while they proudly anoint themselves…

Backwash

Danny Shafer has recently undergone a change of heart. For one thing, he’s been wired to a honky-tonk frequency, studying the players and pluckers who perfected the two-stepper years ago in Texas, Nashville and Bakersfield. He’s also done some stepping of his own — out of the limelight and into…

Critic’s Choice

Whether contemplating the mercurial nature of love or denouncing brutish political oppression in the Third World, Spanish-speaking pop oufit Maná is a pleasant surprise. Despite an image and sound that at times feels shamelessly derived from better-known Anglo acts such as U2 and Sting, the band, which has garnered multiple…

Hit Pick

Something of an all purpose, genre-juggling utility man, Paul Fonfara has played an integral part in several roots-driven acts of local renown, including the Denver Gentlemen, DeVotchKa and Munly De Dar He. Following a recent European tour as a cellist for David Eugene Edward’s solo project, Woven Hand, Fonfara has…

Morbid Angels

On stage, Cephalic Carnage’s Zac spends most of his time swinging his head and his guitar, sweating, screaming and abusing listeners with the brutal bombast that issues from his instrument. But today, sitting in his publicist’s office almost 2,000 miles from his Denver home, there is little evidence of that…

Multi-Taskers

If there’s anything that irritates Fred Sargolini, half of the forward-looking hip-hop/electro duo Ming & FS, it’s artists who think they have to color inside the lines. “A lot of them don’t realize they’re doing it,” he believes. “They say they’re open-minded, but they’re really puritans. And people in drum…

Pretty Poison

Born on Georgia soil and bred on Southern music, John Davis is the first to admit that he’s a fish out of water here in the higher, drier land of Colorado. But that hasn’t prevented him from finding a home and a musical career along the Front Range, where he…