Club Scout

At about 1:55 a.m. Saturday, 34-year-old Thomas Jones was shot to death in the parking lot outside of Lotus (1701 Wynkoop Street). The crime is still under investigation, but reports have groups arguing outside the upscale club. Five hours later, the lot was still cordoned off with yellow tape rather…

Scratching the Surface

It’s often difficult for musicians to separate the music from whatever drama is consuming their lives. But when an artist leads a particularly interesting life, the outside influence can be a good thing. Take, for instance, Miss Honey Dijon. The fact that this New York-based DJ is a transsexual should…

Time Machine

Wobbling on antique Schwinns and dressed in vintage shades and button-up shirts, Michael Daboll and Matt Hunt are riding down Broadway looking like extras from the set of an old B-movie. It’s a humid afternoon in early July, and the two members of the Omens are arriving at the Irish…

Thug Immortal

Last fall, Immortal Technique came through Denver as part of a voter-registration-themed tour called Stand Up and Be Counted. As he urged young people to make their voices heard in the 2004 election, little did the Peruvian-born, Harlem-bred MC — who’s known for his scathing criticism of the Bush administration…

The Beatdown

Back in 1983, Blackie Lawless claimed to be an animal who fucked like a beast. But today, it seems that the W.A.S.P. frontman is really just an asshole who fucks people over. In one night, this relic from the Revlon era managed to enrage any enthusiasts he might have had…

Ying Yang Twins

Now that even Grandma gets Dave Chappelle’s goof on Lil Jon, crunk faces the challenge of all overexposed genres: how to stay relevant. One way, of course, is through the time-honored bid for “artistic growth.” But when it’s Atlanta’s Ying Yang Twins talking about such matters, you have to worry…

Shakira

“Whenever, Wherever,” Shakira’s 2001 English-language breakthrough, managed to irritate much of the planet’s populace, thanks to its moronic hook and singing that seemed to emulate the bleat of a sheep stuck in a barbed-wire fence. Thank goodness Fijación Oral isn’t nearly that ba-a-a-a-d. The Spanish half of a planned two-disc…

Eels

With Blinking Lights, the reliably melancholic and irresistibly melodic Eels deliver a packed-to-the-gills, two-disc album that roams roads both worn and new. Songs worth pulling over for include the wistfully shimmering “In the Yard, Behind the Church,” the nursery-school-sweet “The Stars Shine in the Sky Tonight” and the knee-pumping “Hey…

Jamie Lidell

Forget neo-soul: Jamie Lidell resurrects the old school so effortlessly you barely notice that Multiply is essentially a one-man orchestra of expressive electronic splicing and dicing. Wielding a voice that alternates between gruff Otis Redding purrs and tight James Brown breakdowns (with moments of Prince’s pre-Jehovah’s Witness sonic orgasming thrown…

Signal to Noise

When bands in the ’90s like Grade and Boy Sets Fire first employed a jarring mix of tuneful whining and cathartic screams, it felt like a smack in the face — the good kind. Since then, the recipe’s become as rote as reality TV, with the same sense of fabricated…

Planetary Nebula

Truth be told, most bands here and elsewhere fall into a few narrow categories. Planetary Nebula, in contrast, busts through descriptive barriers with aplomb, and the combo’s unpredictability makes Ornamental a lively listen. The group’s instrumentation is hardly radical: two guitars, bass and drums intermittently supplemented by saxophone, cornet, strings…

Sound Bites

World Leader Pretend, Punches (Warner Bros.). There is a land where rock groups care more about marketing themselves and aiming for the Coldplay-listening demographic than, well, rocking. World Leader Pretend is its secretary-general. Some advice: No matter how hip you think irony is, it’s never a good idea to put…

Deep Dish

As indicated by George Is On, a just-released set on the Thrive imprint, Ali “Dubfire” Shirazinia and Sharam Tayebi are eager to cross over by any means necessary. The package’s blatantly commercial ploys include the dubious “Flashing for Money,” which mashes together “Flashdance,” the twosome’s irresistible club fave from last…

Holly Golightly

More people have heard Holly Golightly duet with Jack White on “It’s True That We Love One Another,” a highlight of the White Stripes’ 2003 disc Elephant, than have checked out any of the dozen or so discs she’s released under her own name. Yet she doesn’t appear to chafe…

Mt. Egypt

What do Willie Nelson and Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips have in common? Besides resin-caked brainstems, both legends have handpicked the same unknown singer-songwriter as an opening act: Travis Graves, otherwise known as Mt. Egypt. And while his upcoming sophomore disc, Perspectives, is already sparking up a buzz on…

Mtley Cre

Younger generations have come to view the Jack Daniel’s-guzzling, copious-drug-abusing, groupie-violating rock lifestyle as a myth, an impossibility in the age of political correctness, wuss-tastic indie rock, debilitating STDs, an overriding respect for human life, and common sense. But Mtley Crüe once embodied it, and now, incredibly, appears hell-bent on…

Weird War

Ian Svenonius has been many things to many people. But mostly, the enigmatic frontman of Weird War has served as a source of emulation. While every outfit he’s been involved with over the past fifteen years, from Nation of Ulysses to Cupid Car Club to the Make-Up, has met with…

Le Tigre

Kathleen Hanna formed Bikini Kill, the most visible product of the early-’90s riot-grrrl movement, to disrupt the orthodoxy, juicing go-go garage rock with sarcastic drill-team choruses and enough teen spirit to inspire a nation of fanzine-writing followers. After Bikini Kill ran its course — just as the potency of the…

The Bravery

The Bravery was recently provoked into a well-publicized feud by the leader of its fellow new-wave-cannibalizing nemesis, the Killers. Apparently, Brandon Flowers asserted that the Gotham quartet wouldn’t have a record deal if it wasn’t for his synth-driven Sin City-based combo. Meanwhile, the Bravery’s manicured mouthpiece, Sam Endicott, fired back…

Critic’s Choice

The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien’s semi-fictional memoir of Vietnam, is considered one of the greatest war books of all time. Although Fort Collins’s The Things They Carry hasn’t quite reached that level of acclaim, its gritty, relentless post-punk is every bit as visceral. The troupe formed in 2002 from…

Scratching the Surface

Jason Amm, better known to the experimental dance music contingent as Solvent, creates some of the most melodic and beautiful techno-pop music since the heyday of Kraftwerk and New Order. His attention to melody and sweeping synth lines is what distinguishes him from just about every other producer on the…

Club Scout

Here’s reason to celebrate: Bender’s 13th Avenue Tavern (314 East 13th Avenue) marks its one-year anniversary on July 22 and 23 with performances by the Railbenders and Slim Cessna’s Auto Club, just two of the many acts that have passed through its doors in the past year. Bender’s has worked…