Happy International Day of Drug Checking! Are Your Drugs Laced?
DanceSafe has declared today International Day of Drug Checking, a holiday to promote drug-checking kits that test the purity of various substances.
DanceSafe has declared today International Day of Drug Checking, a holiday to promote drug-checking kits that test the purity of various substances.
Keyboardist Marco Benevento, touring in support of Woodstock Sessions, plays Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom tonight and the Fox Theatre tomorrow, while Social Distortion plays the second of two nights at the Ogden Theatre tonight. This weekend’s lineup also includes G. Love & Special Sauce, Big Wild, Teenage Bottlerocket, Jeezy and Flow…
Jay Vance, who performs as Jbot, plays brutal music with robots.
The band PrettyMouth quit playing from October 2016 until March 2017, in part, because Marie Litton, the group’s lead singer, was suffering from complications with her scoliosis, a curvature of the spine that can causes debilitating pain if untreated.
GRiZ takes over Red Rocks for two nights on Friday, September 1, which will be the debut of the GRiZ live band, and Saturday, September 2. General admission tickets ($49.75) and two-day passes ($99.50) go on sale on Saturday, April 1, at 10 a.m.
The Henderson-based band Holophrase created the video for “Alligatron” on a tight budget, with a homemade set, thrift-store costumes and some simple green-screen magic — well, the screen wasn’t green. It was pink.
About halfway through Jonathan Richman’s hour-long set at the Bluebird Theater on Tuesday night, he proclaims, “We don’t do concerts; we do parties.”
When UC Boulder professor Adam Bradley, alongside co-editor Andrew DuBois, released the book The Anthology of Rap in 2011 and, one year earlier, put out Book of Rhymes: The Poetics of Hip-Hop, he sought to prove rap lyrics had literary value. Likewise, his “Hip-Hop in the Classroom” course has been…
Currently, 18 of the first 30 songs listed on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart are electronic music, hip-hop, or contain some element of either. This year, the 19th edition of Ultra Music Festival was a reflection of that. The main stage, headlined by the biggest names in EDM — DJ…
Music has always been a way to escape, and dance music embodies this mission more than any other genre. Following the “disco sucks” movement of 1979, marginalized groups — black, Latino, and gay — were once again pushed outside the mainstream. Genres like house and techno were born in the warehouses in which these groups sought refuge.
Building a career on blending traditional blues and hip-hop for a college audience, G. Love & Special Sauce emerged in 1992 and stumbled upon a winning formula.
Up here in the Rocky Mountains, the popularity of country music seems like a given.
Things haven’t been easy for a local nonprofit that serves refugees, Project Worthmore, in the current political climate.
Sunday night, Ultra Music Festival let downtown know that its three-day party was over with a fireworks display at the end of DJ Snake’s set on the main stage. Condo dwellers breathed a sigh of relief knowing they would finally be free once again to roam the city.
In 2001, Russian-born singer-songwriter Regina Spektor released the 11:11 debut album, a self-released effort recorded while she was performing in colleges and amid the downtown New York City anti-folk scene.
Cloud Catcher guitarist and singer Rory Rummings lives and breathes heavy music. It’s been that way for as long as he can recall.
Denver goth promoter Joshywa Schrader passed away in the early morning hours of March 8, 2017, at age 41.
Legendary punk band Social Distortion headlines the Boulder Theater on Wednesday, March 29 and the Ogden Theatre on Thursday, March 30, while rapper Big Sean takes over the Fillmore Auditorium on Tuesday, March 28.
Phish is making a tradition of playing Denver’s Dick’s Sporting Goods Park over Labor Day weekend, and this year is no exception. And while Colorado has always had a soft spot for the band’s jams, legal weed may be making our state’s shows all the more enticing, even heavenly.
The jazz club Dazzle, which has been on Denver’s music scene for nearly two decades, announced today that it is moving from its current location at 930 Lincoln Street to an as yet undisclosed location.
Yazman Azimi, who performs as YaSI, says, “Music is just about relating to people; the only thing that changes is the sounds.”
Before associates of Beyoncé Knowles recruited Too Many Zooz to perform on her hit 2016 album Lemonade, the trio had established itself as a standout act in New York’s subways.