The best metal shows in Denver in September | Backbeat | Denver | Denver Westword | The Leading Independent News Source in Denver, Colorado
Navigation

The best metal shows in Denver in September

PENTAGRAM @ SNOWBOARD ON THE BLOCK | SAT, 9/14/13 If you've seen Last Days Here, you're familiar with the frustrating tale of Pentagram. Formed in Virginia in the early '70s, the pioneering psychedelic metal band should have, by all accounts, realized massive worldwide fame. Instead, success evaded the outfit, thanks...
Share this:

PENTAGRAM @ SNOWBOARD ON THE BLOCK | SAT, 9/14/13 If you've seen Last Days Here, you're familiar with the frustrating tale of Pentagram. Formed in Virginia in the early '70s, the pioneering psychedelic metal band should have, by all accounts, realized massive worldwide fame. Instead, success evaded the outfit, thanks in part to the struggles its frontman (and sole core member) Bobby Liebling has faced over the years. Thankfully, "last days" is merely the title of the film focusing on the band. Pentagram, which has existed for decades in various forms on the fringes of obscurity, beloved by pretty much any metal fan who's come across its music, is still a going concern. Catch Pentagram with Havok, Kadavar and a slew of other acts at the first annual Snowboard on the Block festival.

See also: Visit our Denver concert calendar for all this week's shows

VITAL REMAINS @ MARQUIS THEATER | THURS, 9/12/13 Vital Remains, from Providence, Rhode Island, has been around for more than twenty years. As pioneers of death metal, these guys aren't often among the first to be named by fans of the genre. However, the band's signature mixture of melodic yet punishing music blurs the line between death and black metal. From the beginning, Remains was vehemently anti-religion because of how it has been used as a means of warping minds and serving as a pretext for violence. In 2001, Deicide's Glen Benton joined Vital Remains for two albums, including the appropriately titled Dechristianize with its gleefully blasphemous lyrical content. The rapid-fire jackhammer kick drum and Paganini-esque guitar work can be off-putting, but there's no denying this group's sense of liberating outrage and seething intensity.

VALIENT THORR @ MARQUIS THEATER | MON, 9/9/13 Valient Thorr is from North Carolina by way of outer space (the players have constructed an amusingly overcooked personal cosmology involving a time machine, Venusian babies and Walt Disney), with each member taking the surname "Thorr" for reasons that have more to do with sensibility than sense. Sonically, meanwhile, the group exists in the twilight zone where modern rock and old-school metal overlap. Take "Parable of Daedalus," which juxtaposes overamped lyrics such as "Don't you fly too high!/'Cuz it's a long way down!" with crazed boogie riffs that seem to be fueled by moonshine. A lot of the music comes across as a goof, albeit a very entertaining one.

BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME @ SUMMIT MUSIC HALL | MON, 9/23/13 With every album, Between the Buried and Me continues to find new, unexplored territories of the progressive metal world, stabbing forward with a meticulously polished nimbleness with their instruments and the world-isn't-flat kind of an attitude towards music. The band's multi-layered maze isn't for everyone, but for those seeking a challenge with their ears, Between the Buried and Me could put you in the right place and time.

SHINING @ MARQUIS THEATER | MON, 9/23/13 Miss the Shining and you'll miss the newest delivery of envelope-pushing, experimental, extreme metal. This band's music will surely make your brain bigger and bigger with its smart compositions until it explodes on the poor fool behind you with his jaw dropped. Shining is a horde of Norwegian crazy fucks purveying mind-bending, industrial, progressive black metal that's evolved from jazz, a blend that would surely crush zee Rammstein Germans in a heavy metal battle.

A BAND OF ORCS @ MARQUIS THEATER | SUN, 9/29/13 If you often have the urge to watch The Lord of the Rings while blasting death metal like we all do -- I mean, the two go together like mulled wine and salted pork, amirite? -- then A Band of Orcs is a great way to kill two dragons with one stone. Just like orcs running into battle, A Band of Orcs doesn't hold back on unleashing a raging pit of death metal while putting on an elaborate show of battles with props -- often handing out plastic weapons to other war enthusiasts in the crowd.

OTEP @ MARQUIS THEATER | SAT, 9/28/13 Otep loves coming to Denver, and Denver opens its arms every time. In a world where women aren't always heard, Otep Shamaya makes sure her voice is heard with deep growling grunts and brash lyrics. Shaymaya is known for having lyrics condoning aggression against men, but has also repeatedly spoken out about her avant-garde principles saying, "I am an equal opportunity dispenser of rage." In the late '90s when she was younger, she didn't completely look like an aggressor, but with age came a stronger, tougher look and presence on stage.

METAL REVOLT III @ GOTHIC THEATRE | SUN, 9/8/13 This is an absolutely kick ass, can't-miss all local metal bill featuring a pair of steadily emerging titans in the scene, Arise in Chaos and Gomorrah, along with a stellar supporting cast of promising acts like From Within the Trench, Sinful Flesh and Knife to a Gunfight.

ALLEGAEON @ MARQUIS THEATER | SUN, 9/8/13 Allegaeon is a successful amalgamation of tuneful technical death metal out of Fort Collins. The band, which signed with Metal Blade records in 2009, has released two albums that display a metal sophistication far beyond its years.

THE ACACIA STRAIN @ MARQUIS THEATER | SAT, 9/7/13 The Acacia Strain generates pure unadulterated rage. The brutality boiling from the Massachusetts band is carried out with precision, immolating a naturally flowing rage through its growling vocalization of well-placed wordage in a boiling alphabet soup of lyrics and powerful drumming.




BEFORE YOU GO...
Can you help us continue to share our stories? Since the beginning, Westword has been defined as the free, independent voice of Denver — and we'd like to keep it that way. Our members allow us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls.