Mile High Music Festival Q&A: Jet

Jet is eager to get back onto the road. More than two years after the release of the Aussie rock outfit’s last album, Shine On, the band will be stopping for a slot at the Mile High Music Festival before continuing on a world tour to promote the August release…

Mile High Music Festival Q&A: Pepper

Averaging 200 shows every year for the past eight years, the members of Pepper have earned a reputation for being as dedicated as they are hedonistic.  With five full-length albums under their belt and the development of their own record label, the Hawaiian-bred members have demonstrated an intense love for…

Mile High Music Festival Q&A: The Duke Spirit

Forming in London in 2003, the Duke Spirit has evolved a sound that brings together elements of garage rock, soul, the blues and swirly, noisy atmospheric rock. Rather than sounding like’s trying to do too many things at once, act’s music sounds rich with textures and emotional landscapes. A perfect…

Mile High Music Festival Q&A: Incubus

Incubus was three-fifths of the way formed back in high school in California twenty years ago. Safe to say the band had no idea how popular its music would be – the group has three platinum albums in the US, and two of those went platinum twice. Born in the…

Mile High Music Festival Q&A: Davy Knowles

In an industry littered with tween pop stars and Disney Channel minions, it’s refreshing to come across an artist whose work isn’t a medley of foot-tapping drivel swathed with AutoTune. Equipped with awe-inducing guitar skills and a hauntingly intense wail, 22-year-old Davy Knowles is quickly making a name for himself…

Mile High Music Festival Q&A: Band of Heathens

Although acts such as Tool, Widespread Panic and the Fray are clearly the main draw at this weekend’s Mile High Music Festival, it’s support bands like Band of Heathens, slated to perform on Saturday, that demonstrate the prodigious depth of the fest’s lineup. Boiling down Band of Heathens sound to…

Q&A with Snoop Dogg

It only took about six weeks to get Snoop Dogg to answer a batch of e-mail questions for a profile advancing the July 15 Blazed and Confused Tour stop at Red Rocks co-starring Slightly Stoopid, Stephen Marley and Mickey Avalon — but it was worth it. The former Calvin Broadus…

Q&A with DJ A-What from the Pirate Signal

Because of his outsized persona, Yonnas Abraham is the face that most people generally associate with the Pirate Signal. If you look over dude’s shoulder, though, there’s another cat that cuts an equally impressive figure in his own right on the ones and twos. That distinguished chap’s name? Alejandro Martinez,…

Q&A with Adam Franklin of Swervedriver

Adam Franklin is well known for his role as the singer and guitarist in Swervedriver. His work in post-Swervedriver projects such as Toshack Highway, Magnetic Morning and his solo work, however, shows a remarkable breadth of musical imagination and a wealth of sonic ideas that reveal dimensions of talent outside…

Q&A with the Church’s Marty Wilson-Piper

Twenty-nine years into its career, the Church recently released Untitled #23, one of its most accomplished works in an already remarkable string of albums over the last decade. We had a chance to have a candid conversation about the band’s music, the true meaning of artistic significance and its dazzling…

Q&A with Terrance Hobbs of Suffocation

The Suffocation piece running in this week’s paper was culled from Phil Freeman’s recent conversation with Terrance Hobbs of Suffocation. As with many of our other Rough Mixes features, there’s far more to the story of this stalwart New York-based death metal band than there was space. As such, after…

Q&A with Built to Spill’s Doug Martsch

Doug Martsch, whose band, Built to Spill, headlines this year’s Westword Music Showcase on June 12 (click here for more details), is a rarity — a indie-rock musician who signed to a major label in the mid-’90s who’s still inked to the same imprint today. He’s also a rare, if…

Q&A with Tracyanne Campbell of Camera Obscura

Early on in its career, Camera Obscura endured endless comparisons to revered fellow Glaswegians Belle & Sebastian. At this point, however, any comparison threatens to make the latter look bad: Among scholars of the heartache and growing pains of bookish, precocious youth, Stuart Murdoch’s got nothing on Camera Obscura vocalist/guitarist…

An extended conversation with Tim Pourbaix

In this week’s issue, we’re running a short profile on Tim Pourbaix in Rough Mixes, based on a lengthy interview Eryc Eyl conducted with Pourbaix. The singer-songwriter had much more to say than could fit into that smaller piece. Subsequently, we’ve opted to allow Pourbaix to tell his story –…

Q&A with Hayley Williams of Paramore

Hayley Williams, the frontwoman for Paramore, which opens for No Doubt on Wednesday, May 27, at Fiddler’s Green, is already a star, but few thinks her career trajectory has peaked. Based on the platinum sales of Riot!, the group’s last album, and a successful tie-in with Twilight, the vampire-romance novel…

Q&A with Kevin Devine

Singer-songwriter Kevin Devine, the subject of a profile in this week’s Westword advancing his Sunday, May 24 gig at the Marquis Theatre with Miniature Tigers, The Rouge and Brian Bonz, is the rarest of interview subjects: a guy who listeners carefully to every question and answers each as completely and…

The Denver Boot: Ghost Buffalo’s final show – 05.12.09

A Week ago this evening, the members of Ghost Buffalo played what was presumably their last show ever, at 3 Kings Tavern. While it’s barely been even a week, it’s safe to say that we already miss them. If you feel like we do, then you’ll love this week’s edition…

Q&A with The Ideal Fathers

The Ideal Fathers are four guys (singer Jesse Hunsaker, guitarist Adam Rojo, bassist Michael King and drummer Michael Perfetti) who play gloriously chaotic, hyperkinetic dance punk with verve and abandon. If you haven’t caught one of their sets or heard any of their songs on one of the fine radio…

Q&A with Mike Watt

Mike Watt is most certainly a man whose thoughts cannot be expressed in a mere 500 or words or so. Needless to say, the Rough Mixes entry focusing on him in this week’s issue hardly scraped the surface of our recent conversation the punk elder statesman. While on tour supporting…

Q&A with Barney Greenway from Napalm Death

In this week’s Rough Mixes entry focusing on Napalm Death, we only printed highlights of Tom Murphy’s recent conversation with Barney Greenway. The two of them actually had a fairly extensive conversation in which Greenway discussed the influence of My Bloody Valentine and other unexpected acts on Napalm Death, how…