Rocket From the Tombs

Like Bob Hope or a common housefly, punk music outlived its usefulness in a hurry, subsisting on bland, discarded jokes and stale cheese. By the time the Sex Pistols called it quits in 1978, an isolated American youth was finally coming to grips with the budding romance of not caring…

Backwash

Randall Shipp is not a newcomer to the entertainment business. He’s owned the Paramount Theatre for ten years, a veritable eon in the concert industry. But the wealth of Shipp’s experience lies in mortgage brokering — he’s the owner of the Denver-based Mayflower Capital Company — which makes his current…

Critic’s Choice

If your cheesy, green-beer-swilling, American version of Saint Paddy’s Day got a mohawk and a few tattoos, then did a fat line of blow along with its usual bucketfuls of Jameson, it would look a lot like Flogging Molly. This band, which appears Sunday, May 5, at the Ogden Theatre,…

Hit Pick

Laymen Terms vocalist Andy Tanner puts emphasis on expression over angst, a quality that just might endear this band to listeners wary of punk’s bratty edge. In fact, there’s plenty to set this Colorado Springs four-piece apart from the pop-punk pack. Fond of roving melodies and vocal harmonies, the band…

Dolemite Makes Right

In “Dolemite,” the raunchy routine that helped define his career, profanity-spewing comedian turned ass-kicking, ass-baring cult-film favorite Rudy Ray Moore describes a character who takes no shit from anyone — even his own father. “Why, the day he was dropped from his mommy’s ass,” Moore brashly announces in his trademark…

Promise Keepers

In the world of music, change is the only constant. Movements mutate. Yesterday’s vogue is today’s punchline is tomorrow’s retro fad. Punk rock is, of course, not exempt from this fluctuation. The turnover of “wannabe” to “it band” to “has- been” can be just as rapid and precipitous as it…

Johnny Cash

Perhaps no one has summed up Johnny Cash better than Richard M. Nixon did: “Yours is truly the voice of America, as rich and strong as our nation itself.” Cash’s nearly fifty-year recording career has produced an enormous body of essential American music, most of which has been spottily issued…

Backwash

We expected Barry Fey, head of the Denver extension of House of Blues Concerts and sworn battlefield warrior in the local concert-promotions war, to have an opinion about the possible sale of his company to Clear Channel Entertainment. Clear Channel, which had made moves to acquire the heart of the…

Critic’s Choice

David Bazan, aka Pedro the Lion, who performs Friday, April 26, at the Bluebird Theater, with Damien Jurado, Gathered in Song and TW Walsh, has been called many things: whiny, self-absorbed, full of “minor-league anxieties.” But the born-again Christian singer-songwriter has a gift for telling stories in an offhand, lo-fi…

Hit Pick

With a big voice and even bigger ambitions, Xiren (pronounced Seer-in) has wasted no time making a name for himself in the Mile High City and beyond since relocating from Detroit in 1996. Known off-stage as Daryl Kenny, the singer sports an eclectic style and a soaring tenor that makes…

A World Apart

Some bands trumpet their presence like a parade of angels. You know — God’s gift to music. The recent elevation of Bono to the status of world diplomat and would-be savior is just one example of the messiah complex rooted in the rock-star psyche. John Lennon spent the latter half…

Art and Soul

Martin Sexton is the central character in one of those bootstrapping success stories Americans love. The performer, who began his career by busking on Boston street corners, has built a supportive fan base of thousands across the nation while remaining independent of the machine that perpetuates mediocre talents better suited…

Busy Signals

The improvement in home-recording technology has caused an explosion of material from bedroom auteurs. But a not-so-funny thing often happens on the way to the iBook. Many performers spend so much time polishing their sonic rocket that their finished products sound slick and lifeless, thereby reducing the initial spark of…

Fruit Bats

Like St. Francis Xavier in a coonskin cap, Fruit Bats frontman Eric Johnson has a way with animals: For starters, dancing moths, honeybees, fireflies, mastadons, mountain goats, chestnut mares, poison frogs and bison herds are all over Echolocation. But while a mismatched menagerie inspires his sweetly rendered retreats from big-city…

Luka Bloom

If this is all Bloom has to say after a more than two-year break from releasing new original material, he may as well take another extended hiatus. Although eminently listenable in a chamomile-sipping, NPR sort of way, there’s little here worth hearing for anyone but diehard Luka lovers. The most…

The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band

Thirty years before O Brother, Where Art Thou?, there was the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s Will the Circle be Unbroken. Released as a lavish three-record set in 1972, a time when country music was desperately trying to shed its hillbilly image — the Grand Ole Opry had fled to the…

Backwash

It’s safe to say that Fancy — a weeklong celebration of sound and style that kicks off in these parts on Sunday, April 21 — has very little to do with Fashion Week, which is held in Paris each spring. Now in its sixth year, Fancy probably won’t attract too…

Critic’s Choice

Given that Merle Haggard marked his 65th birthday earlier this month, no one would brand him a slacker if he decided to call it a career. Fortunately, though, Bakersfield’s favorite son, who headlines at the Fillmore Auditorium on Sunday, April 21, isn’t the retiring sort, and despite his vintage, he’s…

Hit Pick

Ron Jeremy will be so proud. Dead Heaven Cowboys’ tribute to the star appears on their first CD, Conversations in the Flood, which sees release Friday, April 19, at Herman’s Hideaway. Since forming last year, the Cowboys have paid their dues in venues from Cricket on the Hill and the…

Accidental Angel

Sara Hickman didn’t set out to be a crusading-mommy musician and ever-smiling feminist icon. That’s just how the cards have fallen over the course of her career. In addition to being a devoted wife and the mother of two young girls, Hickman has her own record label, Sleeveless, and manages…

Feelin’ It

Disco sucks” are fighting words to the finely honed ears of Charles Fields, widely known in the world of house music as DJ Feelgood. As a child growing up in Baltimore during the ’70s, Fields was often awakened early in the morning by his father blasting current club hits on…

Neil Young

Few artists are as confounding as Neil Young. Days after the attacks on the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, Young performed a stirring version of John Lennon’s utopian anthem “Imagine” on the solemn America: Tribute to Heroes telethon. Then he quickly recorded (and released to radio) “Let’s Roll,” his…