The Best Concerts in Denver This Week
From Joan Jett to Ween, these are the best concerts in Denver this week.
From Joan Jett to Ween, these are the best concerts in Denver this week.
Readers loved Paul Simon, but not their fellow fans.
John Grigsby played bass for Gregory Alan Isakov, Dragondeer and Otis Taylor; now he’s dropping his first solo album.
From June 2 until June 23, local musicians playing Westword Music Showcase and the Levitt Pavilion summer concert series will be featured on Open Media Foundation’s Live From The Blue Room.
Looking for live music?
You never know where Ryan Adams’s in-studio adventures will take him next. The singer-songwriter’s experimentation in his PAX-AM studio has led him to cover an entire Taylor Swift album, and now he’s recorded something even further afield: a jingle for 105.5 FM The Colorado Sound.
The Paul Simon farewell concert on May 30 became one of the hottest Denver tickets in recent memory.
Alvvays, B.J. the Chicago Kid and Frankie Cosmos are headlining the 2018 UMS.
Denver musicians are throwing a benefit show to raise funds for Miles, the son of late Planes Mistaken for Stars guitarist, Matt Bellinger.
Gentrification pushed Hinterland out of RiNo. Now the space is reopening as New Hinterland in a barn Morrison, and musicians are raising money to support the new space.
Don’t miss these shows.
This brass band combines musical traditions from around the world and hip-hop.
Seeing the Denver punk band Wild Lives perform is not an experience anyone’s likely to forget.
The doom/sludge trio Voideater released its debut EP Alchemy of Man in April and will play Mutiny Information Cafe on June 2.
The old man asked, “Let’s see how bad you are?”
Guess who’s coming to town…
Summer music festivals: sunshine, timeless jams, good vibes, full hearts and dirty feet. Also summer music festivals: sludge pits, casual assault, blown eardrums, tachycardia and dirty feet.
Taylor Swift rose from the ashes in Denver.
The Devil Makes Three brought gravity to Red Rocks.
Youth on Record has Big Gigantic reasons to party.
When Andre Carbonell was five-years-old, his father strangled his mother to death.
Three years ago, Pat Anthony couldn’t sing.