Folk Explosion

Are you one of those people who charge around town with a “Real Musicians Have Day Jobs” sticker on the back of his car? Good for you. Instead of slapping on “Pave the Planet” or “No Fat Chicks,” you’ve opted for a printed slogan that hits a worthy target: all…

The Coast Is Clear

To hear the group tell it, the Ground Zero Movement has already infiltrated far-flung corners of the globe. “We’re on five different continents right now,” explains Sid Fly, one of the four charismatic MCs who share mike time in the Denver-based rap collective. “You can’t really count Antarctica. They ain’t…

Tori Amos

Tori Amos has finally managed to synthesize her two musical personas: the quirky-pants, piano-bench-humping cornflake girl singing about frogs named Jethro on her toes, and the older, wiser diva-in-training flirting with a more ethereal electronic sound, backed by a full band. Scarlet’s Walk not only displays Amos’s musical maturation, but…

Steve Earle

“I ain’t ever satisfied,” Steve Earle sang back in 1987. Fifteen years later, the singer once tagged “the Hillbilly Bruce Springsteen” is seething with post-9/11 anger and discontent. In the press notes to Jerusalem, his most politically charged album, Earle writes, “This is a political record because there seems no…

Get Hustle

Sometimes too much caffeine can be a horrific thing: the shakes, the jerks, that vicious nervousness that boils your intestines in adrenaline, blood rushing so hot you can feel your veins sweat. Listening to Get Hustle (appearing Wednesday, December 4, with V for Vendetta at Monkey Mania, 2126 Arapahoe Street)…

Roger Kleier

When Boulder’s Tom Steenland formed the Starkland imprint in 1992, there was real doubt as to whether he’d still be in business even a year later, since he was drawn to musical esoterica of the sort that’ll never be featured on MTV. But he’s managed to survive a full decade,…

Backwash

There was really nothing Backwash wanted to do more than spend the evening in an animal suit. Fortunately, the Warner Bros. publicist understood why I so desired to be among the fuzzy, dancing bears — and frogs, cheetahs, orangutans, unicorns and skunks — who joined the Flaming Lips on stage…

Critic’s Choice

Nobody likes a whiner. And yet a whole troop of emo crybabies, from Dashboard Confessional’s Chris Carraba to Bright Eyes’ Connor Oberst, has whimpered its way into the spotlight over the past couple of years. Mike Kinsella, otherwise known as Owen (appearing Tuesday, November 26, at Club 156 in Boulder),…

Hit Pick

After falling some thirty feet off a windmill and landing on his head, Maraca Five-O rhythm guitarist Matt Stemwedel sustained a serious brain injury, which kept him comatose for three days last June. Following months of extensive physical therapy, the local surf rocker is slowly re-emerging as his old, wily…

Club Scout

Forget Snap and Crackle, because Pop has gone Sonic, thanks to the hip folks at Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art. The monthly avant-garde series continues this Thursday, November 21, with electronic-music innovator devslashnull performing among the Warhols and Murakamis on display as part of POPJack, the MCA’s current exhibition. A…

That’s the Spirit

Denver’s Honky Tonk Hangovers play some of the twangiest music this side of Bakersfield, but they purposefully avoid the “C” word when describing their sound lest they scare folks away. That’s how far mainstream country music has strayed from its hillbilly roots. “We don’t even advertise ourselves as a country…

Polar Opposites

Besides the phenomenal writing of Knut Hamsun, the postcard-perfect fjords, an advanced garment system known as lusekofte and some of the world’s best-tasting salmon, what can Norway really boast about to the rest of the world? The invention of the cheese slicer? The paper clip? Blueberry soup? Graciously hosting Tonya…

The Warlocks / The Greenhornes

These two groups, who share the bill on Friday, November 15, at the 15th Street Tavern, aren’t taking popular music to places it’s never been. Far from it: In many respects, the Warlocks and the Greenhornes are throwbacks to a long-ago time when rock and roll was more about making…

Smokey Robinson & the Miracles

“And love, like a versified cliche, came down on me/Hard, in its casual way,” wrote militant black poet LeRoi Jones in 1962. “Versified cliche,” of course, could be considered an apt description of pop music — that is, until Smokey Robinson got his hands on it. The Miracles’ music was…

Mudhoney

The last thing that you expect to hear on a Mudhoney song is a lone saxophone staggering through the psychedelic mist of hippie-dippy organs, twittering electronica and slow-burn guitar rumble. Yet thar she blows in meandering amplitude on “Baby, Can You Dig the Light?” the extended opening salvo of the…

Backwash

Aubrey Collins is feeling a little tired when I call her on a Friday morning, and it’s easy to understand why. Yesterday she woke up with a sore throat and a sniffle — nothing serious, but the kind of thing that can throw your day when your life revolves around…

Critic’s Choice

Blasting out of late-’70s Los Angeles like the most righteous Santa Ana wind ever, X blew the smog-and-pot-addled minds of hippies and metalheads alike. The fierce foursome’s post-Raymond Chandler, pre-James Ellroy snapshots of L.A. despair and absurdity allowed landlocked daydreamers everywhere to figuratively stand at the corner of Hollywood and…

Hit Pick

“High concept” is a term that often connotes an overwrought art project — something self-consciously deep or, worse, “important.” But when affixed to Denver’s Uphollow, the description celebrates the band’s ability to cultivate new ideas through sound. In 1993, founders Ian O’Dougherty and Whit Sibley released Soundtrack to an Imaginary…

Club Scout

As cold weather sets in, a little naughtiness raises the body’s temperature. So sensation-savvy Club Onyx developed the perfect solution with Fetish Night every week. Saturday, November 16, brings a “Sexy ’70s” theme, as the 13th Street club invites you to bring not just your best toys, but your neglected…

Red Menace

Much like skinning cats, there’s more than one memorable way to scream in a song. There’s the artfully abrasive method — a full-throated screech with enough primal intensity to make Edvard Munch stop and stare. There’s the discordant and painfully deranged animal cry: Think of a confused Jim Morrison wailing…

Constant Evolution

Del tha Funkee Homosapien is known to be a video-game junkie, so it’s no surprise to hear booming electronic explosions firing off in the background of his tour bus; it’s just a member of his crew exploring a new game demo. Del’s response when asked what games he’s into these…

Space Team Electra

Many bands that spend years teetering on the brink of fame get more conservative with age. So it’s refreshing to discover that the latest recording from Space Team Electra, a group that’s been threatening to graduate from Denver since the mid-’90s, is its wildest and least inhibited to date. An…