SF1 Drops Music Video for Pop Hip-Hop Earworm “Honest”

Shane Franklin, who raps under the name SF1, has dropped a minimalist music video for his catchy pop hip-hop song “Honest” that nods back to the freewheeling chock-full-of-humor spirit of De La Soul, one part goofy and another part charming as all get out.

Texas Toast Guitars Shows Off Hand-Built Instruments at Open House

While studying guitar making at the Roberto-Venn School of Luthiery in Phoenix in the late ‘80s, Matt Flaherty remembers people saying, “Building an electric guitar is like an eighth-grade shop project.” Flaherty, who started Texas Toast Guitars out of his Arvada-based shop in 2011, has been thinking about that quote since first hearing it.

The Best Concerts in Denver This Week

After headlining Red Rocks for the first time last year, Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats return to the venue for a two-night stand this week. Also on the calendar, Lionel Richie and Mariah Carey will co-headline the Pepsi Center, Lady Antebellum will play Fiddler’s Green, Playboi Carti will take the stage at the Ogden Theatre and Wovenhand performs at the Marquis Theater.

Laetitia Sadier Stalks the Unconscious

Singer Laetitia Sadier, who co-founded the art-pop band Stereolab in 1990, likes the freaks: Young Marble Giants, Joy Division, the Residents and “those freaky freaks from overseas.” But when she was a teenager growing up in France and first discovered the surrealist French singer Brigitte Fontaine, Sadier thought, “Here’s my mother.”

Seven of Our Favorite Artists Playing Titwrench

The experimental music festival Titwrench is back at it again with another stellar lineup of bands fronted by women and queer people. This ninth festival will be bringing more than thirty acts to perform at Denver’s Mercury Cafe.

The Best Concerts in Denver This Weekend

The Lumineers take over Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre for three nights while Friday night Depeche Mode headlines Pepsi Center and Father John Misty plays Red Rocks. Also on tap this weekend are Reggae on the Rocks featuring Sublime with Rome, Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Fishbone and more, Titwrench Music Fest at Mercury Cafe, Goosefest 2 at Goosetown Tavern, and Lucero at Denver Botanic Gardens. See our full picks below.

LaRissa Vienna and the Strange’s Haunted Video Premiere

When we spoke with LaRissa Vienna back in March, she described the sound of LaRissa Vienna and the Strange as, “kind of eerie, or spooky-sounding. A lot of it is also harder-hitting, so it lands somewhere in that rock spectrum. The violin really brings an extra element in there. I…

Warpaint Will Take Longevity Over Instant Gratification

It has been an immense couple of years for Los Angeles indie-rock band Warpaint. Having formed in 2004, the group, composed of Emily Kokal (vocals, guitar), Theresa Wayman (guitar, vocals), Jenny Lee Lindberg (bass, vocals) and Stella Mozgawa (drums), didn’t waste any time building a solid reputation within the then-sparse…

SCI Drummer Scolds Antifa, Goes on Bizarre “Jewish Banking” Rant

The left has had an internal debate about the rise of white supremacy as of late: punch a Nazi, or love a Nazi? String Cheese Incident drummer Michael Travis decided to riff on the topic on his Facebook page, where he bashed antifascists for engaging in violent clashes with white supremacists in Charlottesville. But that wasn’t all.

Historic Elitch Theatre Hosts First Major Concert in Decades

In 2006, work began on the restoration of the exterior of the Historic Elitch Theatre, which celebrated its 125th anniversary last year, after receiving $5 million in federal, state and city grants as well as private donations. Five year later, work started on the interior and was completed in 2014. While the theater opened that summer for its first public events in fourteen years, it hasn’t hosted a major concert there since 1996.

The Myth of the Lumineers

The Lumineers blasted into stardom with the earworm “Ho Hey” on the act’s 2012 self-titled debut full-length. The indie-folk rockers were armed with catchy, stripped-down songs and a marketable story about how in 2009, founders Wesley Schultz and Jeremiah Fraites ditched prestigious New York City for Denver, which was then a cheap cowtown — at least that’s how their story goes.