Backwash

Cabaret Diosa — the nine-piece extravaganza of guitars, horns, mambo, swing, jazz and, of course, dancing — is a band that exudes more drama than a late-night Springer marathon. It seems fitting, then, that director Erich Toll of Boulder’s Big World Productions enlisted the musical diaspora as soundtrack providers for…

Critic’s Choice

Vic Chesnutt and Kristin Hersh, with the Willard Grant Conspiracy, Tuesday, May 23, at the Fox Theatre, appear on a double bill they’ve dubbed “In Their Own Worlds.” It’s an apt title considering Chesnutt and Hersh are songwriters who seem tapped into a creative dimension invisible to the normal, naked…

Hit Pick

Denver Turnverein Choir, Saturday, May 20, at the Denver Turnverein, 1570 Clarkson Street, sports a cultural heritage as rich as Denver itself. The outfit’s namesake building dates back to the early part of the twentieth century and serves as the cultural center for Denver’s German citizens and its Turners, a…

Sounds Like Fun!

If diamonds are a girl’s best friend, imagine how you could score with Super Diamond, Saturday, May 20, at the Ogden Theatre. The band is lighting up marquees and dazzling audiences these days with its very own Neil Diamond experience. Save your sneers and scorns, ye of the too-cool masses:…

Endless Lionel

True story: During the mid-’80s, when Lionel Richie, the once and future king of marsh- mellow soul, straddled the pop-music sphere like a colossus, I owned a life-sized cardboard standup of the former Commodore that my malevolent loved ones and I would, um, do stuff to. At first, this Richie…

Blues Traveler

Ben Stevens has just driven from his home in Lyons, Colorado, to Denver for a taste of his favorite pizza. It’s a considerable effort, considering all the pizza joints he’s passed on the way to Famous Pizza on South Broadway. “You can’t get good pizza in Boulder,” says Stevens, an…

Combination Platter

It’s become increasingly easy — and respectable — to create electronic music. Platinum-selling artists like Fatboy Slim and the Chemical Brothers have steadily worn down America’s innate resistance to sampled dance music, and in many ways, the challenge to create engaging new sonic forms of music now falls to the…

Backwash

Last week, some people had the notion that the world might end. On Friday, May 5, eight major bodies in our solar system aligned, and some apocalypse-watchers were downright positive that none of us would live to tell about it (or learn about it later while pulling bongs and watching…

Critic’s Choice

The triple threat of REO Speedwagon, Styx and Eddie Money, Wednesday, May 17, at Fiddler’s Green, is proof that arena rock never died — it just spent a decade or so touring the state-fair circuit. In terms of both nostalgia and comedic potential, Wednesday’s show is not to be missed,…

Hit Pick

To some, musical theater is best left to performers who like tights and tap shoes and audiences who hit the seniors’ buffet on their way to yet another production of The Sound of Music. Rent did its best to destigmatize musicals, though the experience was like watching Friends on Ice…

Sounds Like Fun!

Alex Trebek isn’t the one posing the questions (or answers) when the Hornet bar and restaurant hosts its interactive Trivia Face Off every Monday night at 7:30. Which is probably a good thing. You don’t have to be a super genius to participate in the fact fest at the trendy…

Still Pissed Off After All These Years

Matt Johnson, the man behind the entity dubbed The The, is a good quote — and he knows it. “I’m one of the kinds of people who journalists like,” he says, “because I’m always putting my foot in it and speaking my mind.” How so? Most performers who’ve just issued…

Double Dutch

One listen to the Ranch Girls & Their Ragtime Wranglers might lead a listener to assume that the bandmembers are native students of Americana — heartland dwellers raised on cowboy movies and the Carter family. Western swing, ’40s-girl-group singing and rockabillied country are just a few of the styles that…

Notes From the Underground

The Reverend Howard Finster is a patron saint of the so-called outsider art movement. A simple preacher from Georgia, one day Finster looked at his thumbnail and discovered the face of God telling him that, from that day forward, he was to devote his life to painting. Finster took God…

Lou Reed

Forty years after his suburban upbringing in Freeport, Long Island — an adolescent nightmare that included electric-shock treatments at the age of seventeen — Lou Reed (born Louis Butch Firbank) still has plenty to be hacked off about. But with Ecstasy, his first studio album in almost five years, the…

Japancakes

There’s not a lot to some pop-oriented experimental music: a couple of catchy riffs and repetition, repetition, repetition. As a result, there’s always the temptation to tart up songs with extra sounds, complicated time signatures and so on. But unless that kind of tinkering is done very carefully, it can…

Dilated Peoples

Despite hip-hop’s widespread popularity, DJ culture, one of the foundations of the genre, continues to receive commercial short shrift. Although most fans dig it when turntablists spin on stage, only a relative few seek out the discs such jocks make on their own. And that’s a drag, given that many…

Sleater-Kinney

On “Leave You Behind,” the tenth track on Sleater-Kinney’s All Hands on the Bad One, the guitar intro is such a friendly riff, it could double as a soundtrack for a Kermit-and-Fozzi road trip. When guitarist/vocalist Carrie Brownstein’s girly voice enters the song, it comes soothingly, like she’s humming a…

The Invisible Hand

Greg Osby, a 39-year-old alto saxophonist with frantic tendencies, could not have chosen better company than his collaborators on The Invisible Hand. They include two disparate titans of jazz: the 69-year-old master guitarist Jim Hall and the endlessly innovative pianist Andrew Hill, who is now 62 but still pressing forward…

Backwash

It’s somewhat awkward for Backwash — a shy and humble scribe — to point out that this week’s most notable happening is one orchestrated by this very paper. The Westword Music Showcase will take place in six LoDo locations on Thursday night, providing a chance for you to soak up…

Critic’s Choice

Vue, with Wow and Flutter, Monday, May 8, at the Lion’s Lair, isn’t afraid to take a swim in rock’s deep end, even if it means cutting itself off from the hordes of fans taking the fast road to more easily pigeonholed sounds. With the number of musical subgenres growing…

Hit Pick

With the release of Faith, a new CD on the Cadence Jazz label, the Boulder Creative Music Ensemble, which plays Saturday, May 6, at the Mercury Cafe, reveals another compelling reason to not doubt Colorado’s jazz scene. Tenor saxophone player Fred Hess leads the sextet, which features Ron Miles on…