WTF? Vices I Admire Down a Bassist

Bass players and drummers, man. What is it about bass players and drummers? I’ve never been able to hold on to one. Ever. Actually, that’s probably more on me than them, if you want to know the truth. I’m what I would call a perfectionist — and what other musicians…

Last Night… Flobots and RJD2 @ DU’s May Day Music Fest

Flobots and RJD2 Monday, May 22, 2008 May Day Music Festival, DU, Driscoll Lawn When RJD2 moved a few steps away from his electronics-laden tables to address the crowd after a ten-minute or so “warm-up” last night, his normally blank, at most half-smiling face broke into an unabashed smirk. “Aren’t…

Alternate Soundtrack to the 2008 Campaign

This has been a groundbreaking and altogether interesting election process, but the music, as per usual, is bland – do presidential candidates listen to music? Do we really want to elect someone without knowing their tastes? You could all win my vote if you switched some things up…

Last Night… The Cure @ Red Rocks

The Cure and 65daysofstatic Wednesday, May 21 Red Rocks By any objective measure, the new, economy size Robert Smith is a tepid performer. Onstage during an achingly lovely spring evening at Red Rocks, the Cure’s frontman and reason for continuing existence moved a bit like the Gingerbread Man in Shrek…

Mini Reviews

The Jealous Girlfriends, The Jealous Girlfriends (Good Fences Records). If the Cocteau Twins had been a rock band, they might have sounded something like the Jealous Girlfriends. Centering on Holly Miranda’s gracefully potent vocals, the New York-based quartet seethes and swirls with just the right balance of menace and melancholy…

Danny Tenaglia

Danny Tenaglia is the ultimate DJ, the Platonic DJ form of which other DJs are but pale shadows. His roots can be traced back all the way to the legendary Paradise Garage in New York, where he witnessed the pioneering work of Larry Levan. Tenaglia’s style is wide open, dictated…

Amphibious Jones

Some bands try to throw all of their influences into the mix, and it rarely works. Somehow, Amphibious Jones manages to do it without sounding like it’s trying to pull off too much at one time. It’s also one of the few bands that are funny without seeming like a…

Pogue Mahone’s

When I was just a kid, I walked into Budget Tapes & Records in Cherry Creek to ask Rusty, my friend’s older brother, for some music recommendations. From behind the counter, he asked me what kind of stuff I was listening to, and I said I was a big fan…

The Aakash Mittal Quartet

In the liner notes of his debut, Aakash Mittal asserts that every moment can be the start of something new or the end of something old, and that “through improvisation we seek to create something new from the old.” On Beginnings (slated for release at Dazzle on Thursday, May 29),…

Demon Funkies

During “GD Funk,” Punk Junkies’ concluding track, Demon Funkies singer Ryan Chrys pays tribute to George Clinton and Stevie Wonder — but Wild Cherry is probably a more appropriate reference point. The players, who headline a Thursday, May 29, CD-release party at the Bluebird Theater with Strange Condition and the…

Tokyo Police Club

With only two of the eleven tracks on Tokyo Police Club’s brilliant full-length debut crossing the three-minute mark, the Canadian quartet offers the ideal soundtrack for our attention-impaired age. The twitchy dance rock of the group’s much-lauded EP, A Lesson in Crime, has given way to poignantly nervous future pop…

The Dirtbombs

Remember when the Gories stunned Detroit in the late ’80s? No? Well, you’re not the only one. Worry not, true believers: Striking in a new direction from the Gories’ minimalist rhythm section — which featured no bass and only tom-toms — comes the Dirtbombs, led by guitarist/vocalist Mick Collins, who…

Swervedriver

When most people think of the early ’90s, they instantly think of grunge. But there was a larger phenomenon of non-mainstream music that often gets overlooked on those TV music retrospectives. Swervedriver emerged from the same loose scene, which included the likes of My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, Catherine Wheel, Lush…

Scream Club

Cindy Wonderful has come a long way since her days as a lo-fi pioneer in the mid-’90s. From her time with Denver rap-punk legends Rainbow Sugar to her Julie Ruin-esque solo effort, The Double V Album, to today, Wonderful has explored more facets of her musical creativity than most people…

The Dresden Dolls

The theatrical nature of the Dresden Dolls, appearing here with Ukulele Loki, tends to be an attribute on stage and a detriment on CD. Since the duo’s 2000 formation, Amanda Palmer and Brian Viglione have specialized in keyboard-driven airs from the Bertolt Brecht School of Dark Irony, presented with dramatic…

Al Green

Most producers who supervise reclamation projects for aging stars make the mistake of trying to contemporize the artist’s sound — the equivalent of dressing your eighty-something Uncle Jake like a 21st-century club kid. Not so Roots drummer Amir “?uestlove” Thompson, who helmed the Al Green comeback platter Lay It Down…

Foxy Brown

Naturally, Foxy Brown is the object of Ali G’s affections. With her foul mouth and short skirt, she epitomizes the fake gangsta-ism he parodies. At least she has the track record to support it: She recently finished a stint at Riker’s Island, having violated probation stemming from an attack on…

Denver Music’s Media Onslaught

All right, cancel the Amber Alert. I’m back. For the past few weeks, I’ve been busier than a one-fingered typist attempting to take dictation for Twista. Between curating the Westword Music Showcase — which is shaping up to be a doozy this year (yes, I know, I say that every…

The Breeders

Given that the Breeders release records less often than February 29 appears on your kitchen calendar (last month’s Mountain Battles makes just four albums in the past eighteen years), guitarist Kelley Deal might be better known for playing colleague and caretaker to her twin sister, Pixies bassist and Breeders leader…

Doo Crowder Makes Pee

The sprawling collective known as Pee Pee has been playing its warped blend of folk, rock, blues and noise for Denver audiences for four years. Centered around the striking songwriting of Doo Crowder, the group is finally releasing its full length debut, the cryptically titled Castile Jackine Is Vooded at…