Single Frame

Between being a hot-shot photographer and a full-time rock star, Nick Zinner of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs found time to remix a couple of songs this year: “Compliments,” by Bloc Party, and “People Are Germs,” by the slightly less- known Austin outfit Single Frame. But don’t let the group’s lack…

The All-American Rejects

The moniker adopted by the All-American Rejects is half accurate, half not. The “All-American” part fits the quartet’s leaders, Oklahomans Tyson Ritter and Nick Wheeler, and it’s not a bad description of their music, a thoroughly domesticated variation on classic power pop. However, these self-proclaimed Rejects have been widely embraced,…

Cowboy Curse

Sometimes the wait is so fucking worth it. Cowboy Curse has taken its sweet time putting together a debut album; a year and half has passed since the release of the Welcome to Cowboy Curse EP, a three-track teaser of smart, bashful, damn near flawless indie pop. But the trio…

Manufactured Superstars

As half of rave juggernaut Together Productions, founder of Beatport and talent manager for the Church and Vinyl, Brad Roulier has been a major player in Denver’s nightlife for the past ten years. Now he’s taking a turn at the decks, teaming up with Sean Sabo, aka DJ Sabotage, in…

Cavemen

When Cave In made its first trip to Denver six years ago, the anticipation was feverish. And for good reason: The Boston quartet was touring in support of its second disc, Until Your Heart Stops, which was and remains an undeniable hardcore masterpiece. Combining the power of Slayer, the melody…

Everyone’s a DJ

People don’t know what they like. They like what they know. A program-director friend of mine once shared that axiom with me as he tried to explain why listeners gravitate toward some songs as opposed to others. People are essentially sheeple, he asserted, creatures of conditioning. I’ve always thought this…

Book of Mormon

These days, most people know Jerry Joseph as the leader of Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons, or through his affiliation with Widespread Panic and the Stockholm Syndrome. Back in the ’80s, though, during what he calls his “white reggae hippie” phase, Joseph lived in Boulder and played in the band…

Extraordinary Machination

Plenty of people out there are under the impression that Fiona Apple is, well, nuts — but nothing could be further from the truth. Take the memorable words she delivered at the 1997 MTV Music Video Awards: “This world is bullshit. Don’t model yourself after what you think we think…

Teletunes

Last Chrismukkah, an entire generation did a double take when The O.C. ‘s resident indie geek, Seth Cohen, uttered the words “Death Cab for Cutie” on network television during prime time. A year later, it’s clear a new era has arrived when the biggest name on the soundtrack to TV’s…

Madonna

Like another pop pioneer, David Bowie, Madonna has always been a musical chameleon, hopping artfully from trend to trend, leaving bits and pieces of radio-friendly gold in her wake. (Unlike the Thin White Duke, however, the Material Girl was born and raised in Bay City, Michigan, making her recently affected…

PIG

For a guy associated with German industrialists KMFDM and Einstürzende Neubauten, PIG’s Raymond Watts cranks out deliciously listenable tunes. The Berlin Wall has fallen, and brighter days have arrived — sort of. Gone is the old “We put the noise in annoys” Throbbing Gristle school of sound. Like Neubauten’s Blixa…

Akron/Family & Angels of Light

After Michael Gira’s discovery of Devendra Banhart, it seems that the Angels of Light frontman (and Young God Records head) knows a good investment when he sees it. Gira’s first major find since Banhart is Akron/Family, an avant-folk troupe that traffics in warped twang and blurry harmony. Angels of Light…

Big & Rich

At the outset of City, Big Kenny Alphin and John Rich declare, “Somebody’s got to be unafraid to lead the freak parade” — and they’re clearly the men for the job. As on last year’s Horse of a Different Color, they delight in tweaking country conventions, and, thanks to a…

Michael Lloyd Band

Since singer/pianist Ben Folds isn’t dead, his ghost can’t possibly hover over Highwaters EP, the latest from Boulder’s Michael Lloyd Band. His influence is pervasive, though, and that turns out to be a mixed blessing. “Sleepwalking,” the opening track, serves as a template for the disc as a whole. Guitarist…

Oblio Duo

My handmade copy of Oblio Duo’s eponymous CD came with a strand of human hair accidentally glued into it. There are two things I can do with that hair: make a voodoo doll, or clone singer/instrumentalist Steven Lee Lawson. The cloning probably wouldn’t work, though. Although Lawson and bandmate Will…

Listen Up

The Clientele, Strange Geometry (Merge Records). Alasdair MacLean makes beautifully baroque folk music misted in string arrangements by Louis Philippe. Strange Geometry is not for those afraid of the faint and fey; its tempos wouldn’t disturb a light nap. MacLean’s Nick Drake drag of a voice adds an extra layer…

Nickel Creek

Chris Thile and siblings Sean and Sara Watkins, collectively known as Nickel Creek, have been widely embraced by the bluegrass and acoustic-music communities, even though their music makes a habit of stretching or ignoring genre boundaries. How have they gotten away with such apostasy? “Talent” is probably too facile an…

Naked Aggression

In 1998, director Penelope Spheeris made The Decline of Western Civilization Part III. But unlike the first installment, which centered on legendary punk acts like Black Flag and the Germs, Part III was a much more stark look at contemporary hardcore. Fittingly, one of the featured groups was Naked Aggression…

Young Dubliners

Forced out by oppression — presumably Thin Lizzy’s terrorist twin guitar attack, the monumental weight of the Corrs’ shite pop polluting the moors and the shame Black 47 bestowed upon the Irish with its dodgy hip-hop from men far too old to be “chillin'” — a pair of Celtic immigrants…

Tre Hardson & Fuqawi

Hip-hop history brims with gifted solo artists, but there are far fewer great bands — groups whose shows were every bit as memorable as their best recordings. The Pharcyde earned a spot in this second category as a result of a relentlessly funky sound and members with oversized personalities, including…

Bob Weir and Ratdog

Since its early days as a duet comprising Bob Weir and self-styled acoustic bassist Rob Wasserman, Ratdog has experienced its share of musical evolution and personnel shuffling. Counting late Chuck Berry pianist Johnnie Johnson and members of San Francisco’s jazz-based Charlie Hunter Trio among its alumni, the group morphed from…

William Elliott Whitmore

The art of singing your fucking guts out is almost a lost one — not that you’d know by listening to William Elliott Whitmore. Lunging between a croon and a croak, his voice sounds too big for one body, a ragged, elemental howl that carries all the grit and erosion…