Playlist

The Aluminum Group Pedals (Minty Fresh) Pedals, the latest release from Chicago’s lounge-loving Aluminum Group, is populated by the kind of delicate little melodies that seem to peek at you from around a corner before coyly ducking away once you’ve noticed them. But the timidity is merely an act: These…

Local Yodels

The mountain of local releases that needs reviewing is slightly diminished after last week’s column. But continuing the quest to cover all things local, here’s another smattering. Brethren Fast visits and revisits themes of gear revvin’, truck lovin’ and beer swillin’ on 500 Laps of Beer Drinkin’ Fun, the band’s…

Critic’s Choice

Royal Trux, with Speedholes and the Foggy Mountain Fuckers, Saturday, October 30, at the 15th Street Tavern, has been through a lot since the now hubby-wife team of Jennifer Herrema and Neil Hagerty first came together more than ten years ago at the shared age of sixteen. The band has…

Hit Pick

Linda Maich, Saturday, October 30, at the Curtis Arts and Humanities Center, is a world traveler. In fact, her residences in London and Paris might help explain the global reach of this Denver-born singer, songwriter and painter. It’s a quality captured on the brand-new Magic of the Heart, her second…

Getting Out of the Led

Bassist John Paul Jones isn’t the unluckiest founding member of Led Zeppelin; at least he’s not slowly decomposing like drummer John Bonham, who died in September 1980 after guzzling an estimated forty slugs of vodka in a twelve-hour period and then asphyxiating on his own vomit. But while his surviving…

Never Mind the Bullets

Bruce Hartnell, formerly of Los Angeles punkers the Detonators, has executed a drastic change in style. Instead of the three-chord crunch of his past, these days guitarist Hartnell and his many mates in Los Mex Pistols del Norte are playing a form that hails less from Southern California as from…

Le Stew Culturale

Sister vocal act Les Nubians learned firsthand the meaning of the word “multi-culturalism” at an early age. Helene and Celia Faussert, born to a French father and a Cameroonian mother, grew up in an interracial household influenced by both African and European traditions. They were raised in Bordeaux, France, and…

Sweet Emotion

A funny thing happened to Rainbow Sugar the first time the band performed: It became the opening act for Sleater-Kinney, one of the most critically acclaimed bands on the riot-grrrly record label, Kill Rock Stars. “We just kept calling and calling until they said we could open for them,” drummer…

Playlist

Various Artists Poor Little Knitter on the Road (Bloodshot) In the early Eighties, X ruled the Los Angeles punk scene and won the hearts of fans all along the West Coast who understood that there was something poetic inspiring all that fuzz and fire. No one, however, expected that it…

The Circus is Back in Town

Ah, autumn. The days grow shorter, the trees grow more bare, and local releases continue to pour in like so much sludge down a storm drain. As Denver begins to resemble Kraków more each day, it’s the perfect time to hibernate indoors with a couple of records. As usual, local…

Critic’s Choice

Linton Kwesi Johnson, with the Dennis Bovell Dub Band and the Heavyweight Dub Band, Tuesday, October 26, at the Fox Theatre, is known as a dub poet — a seemingly contradictory term, given that dub is a fascinating form of studio-manipulated reggae that’s frequently instrumental. But the label fits Johnson,…

Hit Pick

Rainville, Thursday, October 28, at the Bluebird Theater, plays a brand of all-American music that’s rare in D-town. While most Denver cowpokes revel in up-tempo forms of roots country, this fresh-out-of-the-shadows local quartet sends up the semi-twanged rock that endears bands such as Wilco and Whiskeytown to alt-country types. Like…

Just the Ax, Man

“You know what amazes me?” asks Ed Mundell, guitarist and frontman for the Atomic Bitchwax but perhaps best known for his efforts in Monster Magnet. “It amazes me that there are kids out there today who don’t know who Jimi Hendrix is. I’ll be in a guitar store, and I’ll…

Swing Low

It’s been more than three years since Miramax released Swingers, the film that helped the swing-dance movement creep out of the underground and guaranteed that we’d all hear the phrase “Vegas, Baby, Vegas,” every time that desert city was mentioned. Then, after legions of potential Gap shoppers heard Louis Prima…

Beyond the Fringe

Over the course of the last decade or so, rappers have made a tradition of exaggerating the misery of their childhoods. Some emcees truly grew up in environments marked by grinding poverty, rampant crime and utter hopelessness, but plenty of others who claim to know about the mean streets firsthand…

Critic’s Choice

Equal Interest, also known as the Myra Melford Trio, Friday, October 15, at St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, brings two legendary players, saxophonist Joseph Jarman and violinist Leroy Jenkins, together with the less well-known (but no less formidable) New York pianist for what promises to be one of the season’s…

Fraternal Rush

From dreary Russian literature to rollicking vaudeville, the institution of brotherhood has seen the likes of Karamozov and Marx — everything from man’s agonizing search for redemption to a well-timed custard pie right in the ol’ kisser. Among certain fraternal orders, you’ll find varying degrees of Masonic ritual, torchlit whispers,…

Hit Pick

ph10, Friday, October 15, at Seven South, will return to the state but not the planet at their first show in the area since relocating to New York City earlier this year. The eclectic duo — a curious collaboration between former LD-50 members Recone Helmut and Clark ov Saturn –…

Playlist

Ol’ Dirty Bastard N****A Please (Elektra) “This ain’t no commercial song,” yelps everyone’s favorite Bastard on “Recognize ,” the lead track here, and the same holds true for the disc as a whole. Rather, it’s a trip to an insane asylum, with ODB as your willing — and highly entertaining…

It’s Getting Harder

Travel with us now way, way back…to the early Nineties. It was a time when modern rock was the popular music of the moment, and indie rock, its not-too-distant cousin, melted the hearts of hipsters everywhere thanks to practitioners such as Pavement. The band, which got its start in the…

Cooking Up Beats in Hell’s Kitchen

New York’s Hell’s Kitchen is a neighborhood in flux. Despite the recent arrival of a Starbucks and gleaming new office towers fulfilling Mayor Giuliani’s Disneyfied vision of New York, Hell’s Kitchen still retains plenty of eclectic grit. So it seems fitting that the DJs known as Ming & FS have…

Army Men

On the surface, it would appear that Tanger has a real thing for war. To wit: The Fort Collins band’s press kit ships with a standard-issue “survival kit,” complete with compass, binoculars, army knife and dog tags; and their Web site, www.forttanger.com, features detailed field coordinates for the band’s upcoming…