Blackout Tuesday and Music Industry’s Response to Police Killings
Blackout Tuesday is here, new music about police violence is dropping, and musicians are hitting the streets.
Blackout Tuesday is here, new music about police violence is dropping, and musicians are hitting the streets.
From rappers to punks to rockers, Denver musicians have been confronting police violence and white supremacy for years.
In the middle of a pandemic, Turkeyfoot is looking back on the Great Depression.
Fighting for its survival through the COVID-19 shutdown, the Oriental Theater has launched a fundraising campaign.
FoCoMX Drive & Jive is a social distancing, family-friendly concert series at Holiday Twin Drive-In Theater in Fort Collins.
Scott Campbell’s independent music venues are slowly coming back to life.
Levitt Pavilion, which usually brings Denver fifty free concerts a year, is pushing all July concerts back to 2021.
“We’ve all been racking our brains trying to come up with a way to bring the true live experience back to our fans.”
Grateful Dead fan and entrepreneur Jay Bianchi is having a terrible month.
DJ Cavem invented the term eco-rapper more than a decade ago, and he’s still at it.
Telluride Jazz, the Planet Bluegrass Festivals, Ride Festival and many more aren’t happening in 2020.
The Denver musician’s new music video, starring Littleton elementary school kids, is the sweetest pandemic video yet.
At 3 Kings, the misfits of Denver celebrated their lives.
It’s not because of COVID-19.
The band didn’t know the world would be facing a global pandemic when it recorded the song “Fever.”
The Avett Brothers, the Lumineers, Bradi Carlile, Dave Matthews and more are helping to launch the Colorado Music Relief Fund.
“Music has been a gift to me to help make it through this weird time.”
Nick Forster. of eTown, is inviting his famous friends to teach him something from quarantine.
“Paradise 1” is a brutal self-portrait of a person in spiritual and cultural crisis.
This one’s going to hurt.
The new EP Lunchin’ With the Dendrites is a deviation from the Denver ska band’s straightforward sound.
Dylan McCarthy’s Lost & Found is more proof that the Front Range bluegrass scene is thriving.