Backwash

If you are not a member of the swelling crowd of beautiful people who frequent local raves and dance clubs, the first annual Colorado Dance Music Awards held last Friday night at the Ogden Theatre might have left you feeling as though you’d accidentally stumbled into an outtake from Blade…

Critic’s Choice

John Doe, perhaps best known as songwriter/bassist for the seminal Los Angeles punk band X, stops in Denver as frontman for his solo project, The John Doe Thing, Sunday, August 27, at the Lions Lair. Far from anonymous, Doe has kept one foot firmly planted in the music world since…

Hit Pick

Raw Material 3, Friday, August 25, and Saturday, August 26, at the Banyan Market, provides a variation on a familiar expression by proving that, in the world of experimental, electronic music, everyone dances to his own drum machine. The third event of its kind sponsored by Ancient Desert Sounds and…

Sounds Like Fun!

You dont need to possess Albert Einsteins intellect to contribute something to the world, but it might come in handy during the 24 Hours of Boulder trivia marathon that begins at 4 p.m. on Saturday, August 26. Teams participating in the marathon — which will raise funds for both the…

Mann in the Middle

At first glance, Aimee Mann’s return to the airwaves seems like the final scene in some topsy-turvy Hollywood movie. In the mid-’80s, she became an MTV darling as the platinum-blond frontwoman for ‘Til Tuesday. After falling from fave-face status, she beat a just-another-pretty-bass-player rap by releasing a pair of critically…

With a Bullet

It is not uncommon for up-and-coming artists to be a little overzealous when it comes to promoting shows or new CDs: Just check the overcrowded windows of local music venues or the utility poles outside them, where musicians’ fliers compete for space with apocalyptic decrees and ads for miracle weight-loss…

Wrap It Up

Summer may be drawing to a slow, sad close, but there’s still plenty of time to pack up the family wagon and head for the hills. We took a bag of local releases along on a recent road trip, and while barreling down the highway, we discovered that the local…

NOFX

The first minute of NOFX’s new album, Pump Up the Valluum, sounds damn near identical to the first minute of the band’s sixth album, Punk in Drublic, released in 1994. The rock-god dueling guitars fire up the intro, then the drum rolls of impending doom indicate something really big is…

The Mermen

Merman Jim Thomas could probably make a good living simply reproducing the surf sounds of old, or revving them up with a touch of punk rock and peddling them to a new audience. But he’s more ambitious than that, and on Road Show, his group’s latest, he proves it by…

3 Twins

Colorado, it’s safe to say, isn’t known for its soul men. But by creating some of the most stirring music to emerge from this state, Denver native and ex-Subdude John Magnie has been correcting that shortcoming for the past couple of decades. These days, Magnie’s crafting his spiritual sounds in…

Hefner

There are two types of mourners in the world. One weeps openly in public, without shame, displaying his sorrow for all to see. The other stands stone cold and impassive, as if any show of emotion would bring on uncontrollable hysterics. Hefner definitely fits into the latter category. With songs…

Backwash

Those of you who frequent Herman’s Hideaway have no doubt noticed the disappearance of Sharon Rawles, who toiled at the club for twelve years and was eventually named its general manager by owner Alan Roth. Well, you can relax, as both alien abduction and spontaneous combustion have been ruled out…

Critic’s Choice

The life of Ohio’s Brainiac came to a sharp, sad and unexpected close in 1997: Vocalist/keyboardist Tim Taylor was killed in a car accident just as the band he helped start was accelerating its experiments with avant-garde indie noise pop. Led by Brainiac guitarist John Schmersal, Enon, Wednesday, August 23,…

Hit Pick

While many eighteen-year-old female musicians are busy bleaching their hair, exposing their navels and ripping off Janet Jackson’s dance moves, Denver’s Liz Clark, Saturday, August 26, at the Soiled Dove, is carving out her own niche as a singer-songwriter. A solo performer who’s been at it for more than three…

Sounds Like Fun!

Once upon a time, deejaying was considered the sole province of menfolk. Recently, however, a crop of female turntablists have put their own spin on that perception and emerged as creative and progressive practitioners of the craft. FIRE (Female Ingenuity Redefining Energy), Friday, August 18, at Rock Island, aims to…

Play It As It Slays

There’s an unwritten rule in American society that once you grow up, you don’t listen to metal anymore,” says Kerry King, guitar mutilator for Slayer. “And that seems to happen in bands, too. I don’t consider Metallica to be a metal band anymore, or Megadeth. But this is still the…

Diamond in the Rough

Superstar collaborations now seem de rigueur for any hip-hop album or movie soundtrack that utilizes urban contemporary vibes to score points with audiences. But how many of these collaborations actually occur and succeed on the artist’s own terms, and how many just exist as a result of some executive producer’s…

Popular Culture

It’s the night before Independence Day, and the moon is seemingly radiating heat. In the maze of strip malls that is South Parker Road, illuminated by the occasional premature firework, Heimmie’s Pub looks the part of a prototypical suburban dive, at least from the exterior. Take a few steps toward…

Backwash

Mike Ballard and the small army of volunteers who compose Friends of Red Rocks — a musically minded not-for-profit organization that claims Twist & Shout owner Paul Epstein, former Herman’s Hideaway general manager Sharon Rawles, chanteuse Lannie Garrett, COMA president Dolly Zander and other local rock-and-roll representatives as members –…

Critic’s Choice

Nathan Hamilton, Tuesday, August 15, at Quixotes True Blue and Wednesday, August 16, at the Dark Horse Saloon in Boulder, is on a roll these days. The Austin-based singer-songwriter (and former leader of the late Sharecroppers) has just won the revered New Folk award at this years Kerrville Folk Festival…

Hit Pick

Rubber Planet, with Sad Star Cafe, Friday, August 11, at Hermans Hideaway, bounces around the pop universe with a classic songwriting approach that results in catchy, radio-ready anthems; luckily, the players possess the talent to make that proposition interesting. The Denver-based four-piece crafts catchy variations on the verse-chorus-verse formula while…

Sounds Like Fun!

While working in an improv group, D.J. Yazzie observed a fellow player making a strange face every time she drew a blank on stage: She looked, he decided, like an undead jugfish. With this image etched in his mind, Yazzie named his new improv group Undead Jugfish, a titular reminder…