Donny Osmond, Rick Springfield

What becomes an aging pretty boy most? Judging from these releases, a dogged determination to live in the past trumps aging gracefully any day. First, the bad news: Though Osmond may have found new life as a Broadway balladeer, whoever thought this baker’s mostly down-tempo dozen was a good idea…

Various Artists

One of the enduring agonies of parenthood is having to listen, again and again, to terrible children’s music. I don’t have kids, but I know this is true because my own childhood was irreparably damaged by prolonged exposure to Alvin and the Chipmunks. The two decades since haven’t exactly redeemed…

Backwash

Jay Bianchi sits on a thrift-store couch inside Sancho’s Broken Arrow, the Colfax bar he built from the rubble of the Golden Nugget Country Disco in February 2000. The place is bedecked with tie-dyes, a huge mosaic of the Grateful Dead’s Steal Your Face logo, and a wall of signed…

Critic’s Choice

Kevin Barnes, the primary instigator behind Of Montreal, Saturday, May 12, at the 15th Street Tavern, says that the act’s latest disc, the succinctly titled Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies: A Variety of Whimsical Verse, is a concept recording, and there’s no reason to doubt him. After all, the CD’s…

Hit Pick

The members of Phantom Trigger, Thursday, May 10, at the 15th Street Tavern, with Regular and Mercy Ride, don’t mince words: The majority of the tunes on the band’s self-titled CD are instrumentals; when words do percolate to the top of the dense sound mix, they are usually little more…

Self-Portrait

Damon Gough, who performs under the moniker Badly Drawn Boy, has a thing or two to learn about being an English pop star. Whereas most prominent musicians from his homeland dress flamboyantly, maintain piss-off attitudes and regularly issue bold proclamations about the enduring significance of their work — whether such…

Grim Reverb

Southern California’s brand of sun-soaked Americana evokes a playful, hedonistic teen utopia of endless summers, surfboards and the ocean’s heartbeat, for starters. Without thinking too hard, you’ll likely recall Annette Funicello’s bare little midriff, Gidget’s wiggle, and Malibu Barbie’s tan, polyvinyl-chloride skin. But for Colorado’s Maraca Five-O, the instrumental surf…

Risky Business

With all of the effort that’s put toward indoctrinating middle-class youth into the cult of suburbia, it’s not surprising to see the rate at which bohemian leanings are traded for button-down collars. It’s something that usually takes place just after college commencement. Most likely, it’s that familiar notion — that…

Eugene McDaniels

The trouble with all too many reissues is overfamiliarity: Record-company execs often launch already popular titles onto the market years or decades after their debut in the hopes that people who already own them will be persuaded by the inclusion of alternate tracks, a new mix or remastering to buy…

Blur

While this Blur disc has been out for some time, it’s worth a look-see for all fans of the U.K. scene as well as anyone interested in one of the last decade’s best contributions to rock and roll. The British quartet opens its first American singles compilation with “Beetlebum,” a…

The Blind Boys of Alabama

Led by the indomitable Clarence Fountain, the Blind Boys of Alabama formed in 1939 when Fountain and four other students from the Talledega Institute for the Blind began sneaking off to sing at a local military base as the Happyland Singers. In the ’50s, by then known as the Original…

Backwash

Before Calypso music was hijacked by CapriSun commercials and weddings planned by Pier 1 sales reps, it was a fine, spontaneous song form that centered, to a large extent, on the art of the insult. On the West Indian island of Trinidad, where the rhumba-heavy style flourished before moving to…

Critic’s Choice

No matter how exhilarating the pendulum-swinging dynamics of post-hardcore music can be, they’re also pretty tough on soft ears. While Q and Not U, Thursday, May 3, at Double Entendre Records, will never be confused with puffsters like Blink 182, the band makes more concessions to the cochlea than do…

Hit Pick

Most punks have probably always wanted a good excuse to bust out their leathers, their opaque sunglasses and their favorite three-minute anthems for an unabashed bout of over-amplified Ramones worship. While last month’s premature passing of punk icon Joey Ramone was no doubt a little more extreme than what they…

Mind Over Matter

John Schmersal is one week out of the studio, on the road again with his newish project, Enon; this time, the mostly Brooklyn-based foursome is touring with friends, the Toadies, Texan arbiters of amplified goodness who are on a well-funded mission to reclaim some of the commercial success they nabbed…

A Lighter Shade of Blue

When most Americans think of acoustic blues, they hear the moaning and groaning, my-baby-left-me-and-I’m-down sounds of the Mississippi Delta. John Jackson, however, plays Piedmont blues, a decidedly different breed that’s distinguished from its Deep South counterpart by the same trait that marks Jackson’s personality. Piedmont blues, the 77-year-old Jackson notes…

Shot to the Heart

The first time Pam Puente, the front-woman/vocalist/guitarist of Denver’s Double-Barrelled Slingshots, had the pleasure of meeting her future bassist, Amy Davis, there was more than a little tension in the room. Their predisposition toward one another was antagonistic. Had the introduction snowballed into a full-fledged tussle, few in the room…

Various artists

For years, decades, ages, epochs, music journalists have been writing articles declaring that Rock Is Dead — but it ain’t, my friends. The underground rock scene, in particular, hawks up good stuff on practically a daily basis, and less adventurous stuff is still selling in sizable numbers: Of America’s ten…

Boy George

Boy George gave up a good thing back in the mid-’80s when he left his new-wave reggae outfit Culture Club and its unit-moving profit potential. Drugs, egomania and personal conflicts have claimed casualties among many of pop music’s best contributors, and Mr. O’Dowd was no exception. But the dandy of…

Backwash

Last Sunday night, the weather outside was frightful — but so was much of the discourse inside the Soiled Dove, at a Colorado Music Association meeting where more than 150 people had shown up to discuss the City of Denver’s recently implemented ban on under-21 music fans at small- and…

Critic’s Choice

Ahhhhh, bossa nova. It’s back, you know, although — like the best art — it never really went away. Created in Brazil in the 1950s, bossa nova’s marriage of jazz and samba remains irresistible. One of its masters, pianist João Donato, a contemporary of bossa nova founders Antonio Carlos Jobim…

Hit Pick

The Bowed Piano Ensemble is best observed from a sky-cam. The group consists of ten musicians who are affiliated with Colorado College in Colorado Springs; they’re under the command of Stephen Scott, an instructor at the school who’s internationally renowned not only for his intriguing modern-classical compositions but also for…