James Zabiela

Although the club genre prides itself on keeping things au courant, many of the most prominent DJs on the international circuit have been around for ages. That makes James Zabiela, who’s 27, among the younger jocks to earn full-fledged superstar status — although he reached this level with a little…

Björk

While her flamboyant outfits might never be polite, Björk’s last few albums certainly were. The ice-crystal percussion and melodies on Vespertine were stunning but mannered, like an immaculately decorated parlor, while the nearly a cappella Medulla — an album on which beatboxing and throat-singing replaced traditional instrumentation — felt too…

YACHT

Jona Bechtolt is the David Blaine of laptop pop. No, really. Dude is a card-carrying member of the Society of American Magicians. A bona fide magic man. So how fitting is it, then, that the Portland-based IDM wizard dubbed his new album I Believe in You, Your Magic Is Real?…

This Just In…

New Belgium Brewing company, those fine folks up in Fort Collins who make Fat Tire Amber Ale and other Belgian-inspired beers, have opened a new hub — er, make that pub — in Concourse B at DIA. The spot, dubbed the New Belgium Hub, sports art by local artists Todd…

Married in Berdichev

As the frenetic frontwoman of Mannequin Makeout, Brittany Gould caterwauls like a riot grrrl and croons like Siouxsie Sioux. So it’s a bit surprising to listen to her work with her other project, Married in Berdichev, where she takes a turn as a more conventional vocalist. Make that slighty more…

Spill

Club Scout knows the look. I am outside Spill, locking up my bike, and this guy, a very short guy, is standing by himself in the outdoor smoking patio, gawking at me with that shameless Alex from The Real World: Denver look, that come-hither-young-females look. So I know it’s only…

Rock the Vote!

Alright, so the wait is over. This year’s Showcase ballot has finally been revealed. As with every year, the event continues to evolve and improve (we like to think so, anyway). This year, you’ll notice that we’ve added five new categories, and there’s 57 acts making a first-time appearance on…

Meanwhile at the Denver MessageBoard…

Tuyet Nguyen’s April 19th review of Thank God for Astronauts’ latest offering has caused a stir over on the Denver MessageBoard. One member’s letter to the editor sparked a debate of Nguyen’s merit as a music reviewer. Not wanting just a select few to debate this important topic of musical…

Regina Spektor Talks… and Talks… and Talks

As interview subjects, musicians tend to fall into a handful of predictable categories: the kind that offer canned answers, the sort who fall back on cliches, the ones just waiting for something to offend them, those who actually listen to each question and try to answer in a fresh way…

Home Alone

Virgil Dickerson had always suspected that people were stealing his music. Now he has proof. But when we spoke last month (Beatdown, March 8), the Suburban Home Records head had no quantifiable evidence to support his claims that illegal downloads were taking a toll on the label’s bottom line –…

Against the Grain

One night in May 2003, Denver police raided a small, inconspicuous warehouse space in an inactive industrial neighborhood. God knows what they were looking for — a rave, maybe, or some other abstract variation of raging, drug-addled teen culture? Hard to say. What they found, however, was Against Me! and…

Regina Spektor

New York-based singer-songwriter Regina Spektor is in the middle of answering a question, cell phone to her ear, when she suddenly unleashes a squeal. “Ooooh!” she exclaims. “I’m walking near my house in the Bronx, because I went to my grandparents’ house, and there’s a little black cat! What a…

HR Hudson

One of the most volatile and acclaimed bands to rise out of the Washington, D.C., hardcore punk scene in the early ’80s, Bad Brains overcame novelty status (four men of color playing punk) by mixing blazing speed and virtuosity with reggae riddims and social consciousness. Fronted by the often unpredictable…

Soulive

Personally, I just can’t stand doing the same thing all the time,” says Soulive drummer Alan Evans. “And all of us feel the same way. I think a lot of musicians, no matter what you’re doing, you always feel the need to reinvent yourself.” Subsequently, to keep from stagnating, Evans…

Björk

At this point in her career, Björk probably isn’t going to win over any new fans. Those who didn’t like her before won’t start with this release. Volta is challenging, confusing and likely to grate on the nerves, similar to the beatbox-driven Medulla. Björk has always relied on the patience…

Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

On 2005’s Howl, the Rebels stepped sideways, turning down the fuzz tone in favor of a more acoustic-based take on folk and blues. But don’t come to Baby 81 expecting additional twists. The disc marks a return to BRMC’s signature sound, and while it’s likely to please the combo’s longtime…

Deca

Deca probably has one of the most distinct voices in local hip-hop. His gruff and rigid vocal style, which recalls an alto-voiced Supernatural, is one of his strengths; it grabs your attention instantly, even if it’s a bit monotonous. Lyrically, Deca’s as solid as they come. On The Hedonist, his…

The Inactivists

Thanks for the warning — not that a heads-up was really necessary. After all, Dreaded Concept Album, which will be feted at a 5 p.m. show on Saturday, May 5, at the Larimer Lounge, isn’t a rock opera in the traditional (i.e., pretentious) sense. Instead, it’s a heaping helping of…

Listen Up

Betty Davis, Betty Davis (Light in the Attic). This funky diva is best known for being married to Miles Davis for a year and turning him on to the psych-rock that likely inspired Bitches Brew. But the girl could also sing. Slathering sensual stickiness over her words, Davis grinds out…

Cornelius

When Keigo Oyamada, aka Cornelius, performed at Austin’s South by Southwest confab in 1998, he was touted as “the Japanese Beck” — an honorific that was as dopey as it was inaccurate. In truth, Fantasma, his first recording to be widely distributed within the U.S., defied categorization thanks to its…

Amon Tobin

A Brazilian by birth, Amon Tobin rose to the fore as one of the more experimental members of the ’90s drum-and-bass contingent, and his love for fiddling about with technology has only grown with the years. The title of Foley Room, a CD/DVD package, references the spaces where movie sound…

The Postmarks

Florida is probably the last place you’d expect to find a French-pop-influenced, trip-hop-tinged indie band. The place isn’t exactly a wellspring of sophisticated bohemian music. It’s much better known for churning out a seemingly endless supply of rap rock and crap rock. Nonetheless, that’s where the Postmarks hang their hats…