Dreamy Visions

In photographer Jerry Uelsmann’s visionary world, nothing is necessarily where it’s supposed to be: A tree and the earth in which it’s rooted float eerily above a lake, leaving a reflection on the water below. A spectacularly lit carpet of clouds drifts above the four walls of an artist’s studio…

Meet Me in San Luis

Since the first of the year, Denver has seen a number of heavy-duty exhibits devoted to abstraction: There was the gorgeous Jeff Wenzel show at Ron Judish, the sublime Jeffrey Keith solo at Rule and the historic Robert Motherwell and Richard Serra exhibits seen together at Robischon. Now it’s time…

Artbeat

The William Havu Gallery (1040 Cherokee Street, 303-893-2360) is so jam-packed with art right now that you can’t help but experience sensory overload. On the first floor are exhibits devoted to Emilio Lobato (see art column), Gregory Gioiosa, Mark Lunning and Jerry Wingren. Upstairs is the small and kooky Lauri…

Rhyme and Reason

Richard II is as given to high-flown poetry, and King Lear weathers as many cosmic crises, but the role of Hamlet is still considered the supreme account of an actor’s mettle. From Burbage to Bernhardt to Barrymore to Burton to Branagh, performers have always laid everything on the line to…

Body and Soul

Career academic Vivian Bearing is an expert on the works of seventeenth-century poet and preacher John Donne. A fiery intellectual, she knows the depth of Donne’s passion, the beauty of his wordplay, and, thanks to an exacting mentor, the hidden messages that are embedded in the punctuation of his Holy…

Blowin’ Smoke

This is how famous Denis Leary is: He begins and ends a story by saying, “To this day, when I see Mick…,” and by Mick, he means Mick Jagger. They became pals, oh, seven years back, when the Rolling Stones were on that week’s farewell tour, kickin’ it in the…

A Kinder, Gentler Dope Fiend

Hello, what’s this? Why, could it be another cautionary tale from Hollywood about recreational drugs being — alert the media! — not particularly good for people? Indeed, with Blow, director Ted Demme (Beautiful Girls, Monument Ave.) has set us up with a morality tale in which the moral is obvious…

Lifting the Veil

On the day she turns nine years old, an Iranian girl must bid childhood farewell. Male playmates are banished; girlish dresses are exchanged for a loose-fitting chador to hide the curves the wearer will develop as her body matures, and a rigid segregation of the sexes is suddenly enforced. Increasingly,…

Mr. Natural

When Olu Dara put out his first album, In the World: From Natchez to New York, in 1998, most jazz lovers knew what to expect — the sort of avant-garde trumpet playing that Dara had contributed to performances and recordings by the likes of David Murray, Henry Threadgill and Jamaaladeen…

Spreading the Words

Thomas Buckner only interprets living composers. An expressive, theatrical baritone (and the grandson of IBM founder Thomas Watson) who’s part performer, part perpetual student, part impresario and 100 percent avant-garde, he’s sung the modern operas of Robert Ashley and jammed with synthesizers, electronic-music environments, computer screens, sculptures, all manner of…

The Maestro

Ennio Morricone can tell you stories about each of his 400 children — where they were conceived, what they mean to him, why each one remains so singular and special he cannot and will not choose a favorite. He’s proud even of the orphans, the runts, the bastards, the children…

Best Tuesday-Night Entertainment

Yes, it’s a school night, but that doesn’t bother the lively and loyal crowd on the dance floor at Rock Island. So What, a weekly dance night at this LoDo institution, finds DJs K-Nee, Style ‘N Fashion and Aztec playing just about anything they and the crowd feel like. The…

Best Wednesday-Night Entertainment

A pub named Streets of London might seem an unlikely place for a night of country-flavored entertainment, but don’t tell that to DJs Stagger Lee and Chester Fields. These good ol’ boys are the hosts of Country Gone Wrong, an inside-out C&W show that pairs heartbreak with hilarity. Country classics…

Best Autobiography by a Furniture Magnate

Jake Jabs came out fighting when the News and Post announced their proposed JOA. But then, he’s taken on wilder beasts than rampaging publishers, as becomes clear in the first few pages of his self-published autobiography, An American Tiger ($19.95 at an American Furniture Warehouse store near you, or online)…

Best Musical Advertisements for a Local Venue

Recorded and/or filmed at Red Rocks, Road Rock V.1, an in-concert CD, and Red Rocks Live, a DVD, aren’t just fine documents of Neil Young’s undimmed musical energy. They’re also reminders that the natural amphitheater located in the foothills west of Denver remains the most primordial place to see a…

Best New Online Music Resource

Mark Bliesener’s decision to expand his musician consulting business to the Web is a gift to bands and artists anywhere, not just those who share his Denver area code. Bliesener is what those in the music industry refer to as an “insider”: a former critic, performer, publicist and manager who…

Best Web Site for Agoraphobic Music Fans

While there ain’t nothing like the real thing, jammingconcerts.com provides a pleasant alternative to the live-concert experience. The Denver-based site hosts a dizzying archive of live audio and digital video footage of local and touring artists, all culled from performances in Englewood’s palatial Gothic Theatre. A hell of a lot…

Best Musical Education on Radio

KVCU-AM/1190, the student-run station at the University of Colorado at Boulder, is staffed by musical enthusiasts who break down barriers as a matter of course. They’re eager to inform young listeners about great music of the past through the use of artist features focusing on acts that rose to prominence…

Best Specialty Show on a Commercial Radio Station

Jay Mack is no spring chicken. He’s been in the radio biz for decades and made news last year after having an on-air respiratory attack; a concerned listener who called 911 on his behalf may very well have saved his life. But the years have made him terrifically knowledgeable about…

Best Radio Show

For three years running, KUVO’s Destination Freedom has been broadcasting its own brilliant re-creations of historical black radio dramas every third Tuesday at 9 p.m. The scripts were written in the late 1940s by Richard Durham, who wrote 104 plays about significant African-Americans. His subjects included everyone from artists like…

Best Commercial Radio Station

KBCO is easy to take for granted. But despite being part of the enormous Clear Channel conglomerate, which critics charge with contributing to the homogenization of radio everywhere, the station is still in touch with the singularly Bouldery vibe that it’s emitted from the beginning. And for that, locals should…

Best Non-Commercial Radio Station

In a day and age when too many public-radio stations are generic and canned, Boulder’s modest-sized KGNU remains intensely local, proudly idealistic and wonderfully idiosyncratic. Sometimes smaller is better…