Rocky Mountain Low listening/release party announced

It’s been a couple months since its release, but the double-disc Rocky Mountain Low compilation–an exhaustive overview of the Front Range punk scene of the late ’70s, including a rare pre-Dead Kennedys track by a young Jello Biafra, back when he was a long-haired Boulder kid named Eric Boucher–is getting…

Last Night: Black Francis at the Walnut Room

Black FrancisWednesday July 29, 2009The Walnut RoomBetter than: Seeing him at a much bigger venue. Black Francis (aka Frank Black aka Charles Thompson) doesn’t tour in a van. Dude’s been riding around the country in a big-ass tour deluxe tour bus, which seemed really out of place parked outside of…

The Trampolines bounce back with a solid new album

You’ve heard the old aphorism that being in a band is sort of like being married, right? Only it’s not sort of like being married; it’s exactly like being married. Ask Mark Sundermeier and Chris Stake of the Trampolines. “We’re together so much,” says Sundermeier. “We file taxes together; this…

The view is fine inside and out at Platte River Bar and Grill

I recently stopped by Platte River Bar and Grill (5995 South Santa Fe Drive, Littleton), a good local bar and also a good local restaurant serving Mexican food and burgers. I spotted a guy and his son, who looked about ten years old, sitting at the bar, eating chicken wings…

Ode to the Marionette at the Meadowlark

Owing a clear artistic debt to the smoky atmospheres and muscular rhythms of Portishead, Ode to the Marionette performs the kind of music you’d expect to hear in a club scene in a Gregg Araki movie. The outfit sounds a bit like the Cranes with a grounding in jazz lounge…

Akron/Family

When it comes to Akron/Family, expect the unexpected. The group boasts not one, not two, but three multi-instrumentalist singer-songwriters: Dana Janssen (who took part in a Q&A accessible at blogs.westword.com/backbeat), Seth Olinsky and Miles Seaton. Moreover, each member of the trio is so naturally eclectic that the tuneage on their…

Diana Krall

Jazz singer and pianist Diana Krall has released a dozen albums in the two decades she’s been performing professionally. Her latest album, the bossa-nova-tinged Quiet Nights, might be her most romantic effort to date. She has said the album is very womanly — “like you’re lying next to your lover…

Hot Buttered Rum

Having formed during a backpacking trip on the John Muir Trail, San Francisco’s Hot Buttered Rum is, on the surface, pretty much the embodiment of what many find so distasteful about the jam-band scene: Rum has worked with former members of the Dead, tours around the country in biodiesel-fueled vehicles…

Starlight Mints

One day, perhaps, Oklahoma psych-pop ensemble Starlight Mints will finally escape the long shadow cast by fellow Okie weird-rockers The Flaming Lips. But that day isn’t coming anytime soon. And singer-guitarist Allan Vest’s high, quirky voice, his surreal lyrics, the act’s interest in orchestral-flavored arrangements and everything-including-the-kitchen-and-bathroom-sink sonic experimentation doesn’t…

The Donkeys

With so many bands using the musical equivalent of Mr. Peabody’s Waybac Machine, San Diego’s Donkeys are hardly alone in terms of looking to the past for direct inspiration. Often enough, Americana and country are where punk rockers end up when their anger peters out. These four may not have…

Hearts Like Lions

The five-song debut EP from Hearts Like Lions kicks off with “Through the Cracks,” an irresistible, luminescent monster of a track. Balancing edgy, epic guitar lines with simple synths and an unforgettable vocal, the tune references a large swath of the ’80s new wave without pointing too closely in any…

Subcon

Subcon has been playing the local rap game since the mid-’90s, and Antitoxin sounds like it. No question that he’s well-intentioned on numbers such as “Hey Mom,” dedicated to “all the single mothers out there,” and “4Ever Mine,” a sincere love song — and “Too Blessed to Be Stressed” is…

Yawn Tron

The title track of this album is an opening salvo that sets the pace for a collection of songs that make you wonder how this outfit can call itself Yawn Tron. As Iuengliss, Tom Metz’s solo material is expansive and heady, in sharp contrast to his work here. The first…

Primasonic

From Unadorned’s balls-out opener, “Escape From the Suburbs,” all the way through to the disc’s bonus cut, CCR’s “Have You Ever Seen the Rain?,” it’s apparent these guys are well-schooled in the ways of ’70s and ’80s punk and garage rock. The garage-y “Repossession,” one of the album’s highlights, is…

The Informants give the drop on Crime Scene Queen

While being hailed as one of the city’s best blues bands, the Informants also mix it up with soul, rock and rockabilly, as heard on their outstanding 2007 debut, Stiletto Angel. The group continues down a similar path on its new album, Crime Scene Queen, which was produced by Big…

16 Bit Lolitas at Vinyl

If you long for the glory days of progressive house, ache for the smooth, propulsive and polished mixes of Sasha and John Digweed past, you need to listen to 16 Bit Lolitas (due at Vinyl on Friday, July 31). Amsterdam-based Peter Kriek and Ariaan Olieroock are busy re-creating that same…

High Voltage pumps youth into AC/DC

Although its members are pushing sixty, AC/DC is still going strong. That said, there’s nothing wrong with a bunch of younger musicians coming along and paying tribute to the Australian hard-rock masters. In fact, you’d be hard-pressed to find a city on earth that didn’t have at least one AC/DC…

3OH!3 and Katy Perry get all “Starstrukk” in New York

So yesterday we posted some footage of the Fray crew pranking the Meese boys and vice versa. Seems this sort of tomfoolery is rite of passage on tour. Who knew? Evidently, while they were on the road with Katy Perry in Europe, the members of the boy band known as…