Coheed and Cambria

It’s hard to imagine that Coheed and Cambria is celebrating its tenth anniversary as a band this year. During a decade-long stint as one of rock’s only trans-media bands, Coheed and Cambria has managed to release not just a crop of solid albums, but comics and novels as well. While…

Mogwai

Mogwai’s evocative, largely instrumental rock adventure first gained notice in the mid-’90s with a promising debut album, Young Team. Since then, the Scottish act has produced some of the most breathtakingly cinematic compositions of recent years. The group’s textured melodies induce moments of claustrophobic anxiety, transcendent peacefulness and catharsis —…

Upcoming M.I.A.-Chris Brown collaboration proves opposites attract

Opposites, as Paula Abdul once noted, attract. In Abdul’s case, the opposite was Skat Cat, a rapping, cigarette-smoking cartoon feline whose straight-up making out with the live-action Paula lent the whole video a vaguely disturbing sexual undertone. In the case of M.I.A., the opposite is apparently Chris Brown — and…

Bare Bones

This self-titled EP from Bare Bones feels a lot like fall, which could be a generic seasonal connotation that comes along with the sawing and shuffling sounds typical of Western Americana and alt-country. But the sense of an inevitable autumn isn’t a bad thing at all: The quartet’s founders, Blake…

Michael PaGÁn/ Colorado Saxophone Quartet

In the liner notes to 12 Preludes and Fugues, Michael Pagán writes about how, as a jazz musician, he’s always had a fascination with the saxophone, and, as a composer, with counterpoint. So on a whim, he wrote a fugue for four voices, and he immediately heard it for saxophones…

Reverb and the Verse

Reverb and the Verse isn’t the first act to bring together hip-hop with experimental electronic music. The lyrics that flow across this release aren’t just rapped, though; they’re delivered like a soul song. “Split” sounds like what might have happened if Trent Reznor had tried his hand at hip-hop a…

Acezi

Last year’s mixtape from Acezi was all about defecting samurai and the need to create a new system of style and art. In what is designed to be an album update of sorts, Ronin 1.1 Enter the Villain uses very dense subject matter to paint a picture of preserving individuality…

DJ ESP spins on April 29 at the Appaloosa Grill

The aptly named DJ ESP (aka Woody McBride) has a long and illustrious resumé — and not just in the electronica world. In 1988, McBride moved to Minneapolis and immediately became involved in community service, coaching basketball, tribal and Celtic-style dance, and spinning what he refers to as “spiritually oriented…

Win a VIP upgrade to this year’s Westword Music Showcase!

Update, 5/2: Congratulations to Gary Peck and Gina Lux, this week’s VIP upgrade winners. Didn’t win? No worries. We’ll be rolling out another contest tomorrow. Got your tickets for Showcase yet? What are you waiting for? Now’s the time. In case you haven’t heard, this is the last week you’ll…

Tonight: KT Tunstall at the Bluebird

Scottish-born singer KT Tunstall (who plays the Bluebird Theater tonight with Robert Francis and Miggs) is, essentially, a one-woman band. Utilizing her own voice and a looping pedal, Tunstall creates layers of sound and faux-instrumentation to back her powerful crooning…

Bad Brains at Summit Music Hall, 4/22/11

BAD BRAINS With Frontside Five and the Other Russia 4.22.11 | Summit Music Hall View photo slideshow While Bad Brains may not have the frenetic stage energy of three decades ago, the hardcore godfathers still managed to fuel quite a few mosh pits over the course of its 45-minute set…

Tonight: Locash Cowboys at the Grizzly Rose

Self-described “funkabilly” duo LoCash Cowboys definitely have that typical Top 40 country swagger in their singing, but it is an observational sense of humor that sets them just a bit a part. Both former dancers and choreographers, Chris Lucas and Preston Brust have the kind of stage presence that made…

Top ten retro metal bands currently melting faces and minds

The world of heavy metal can be an exercise in absurdity and uninspired imitation played at blistering volume. With the relatively recent (and fading) popularity of “stoner-rock” and “doom metal,” as evidenced by tours including the reunited line-ups of Sleep, Saint Vitus (read our recent interview with Dave Chandler) and…