Carl Cox

Carl Cox may be one of the best Detroit DJs who actually hails from Manchester, UK. Not that the tribal-house guru hasn’t repeatedly blazed through Motor City during his quarter-century of jockeydom. It’s just that he bottles a particular blend of soul tech, futurescape electro and throbbing club vibe that’s…

Negativland

With so many alter egos and in-jokes flooding Negativland’s Universal Media Netweb (social critic Crosley Bendix, psychiatrist Dr. Oslo Norway and the smarmy Weatherman among them), keeping track of who’s who is more of a nuisance than a necessity. Core member Richard Lyons sometimes bullies the pulpit in drag as…

Critic’s Choice

In 1993, the Breeders surprised everyone by going platinum overnight and then imploding almost as suddenly. Nearly ten years later, it’s good to know that Kim Deal — former Pixies bassist, current multi-instrumentalist and perennial patron saint of smart indie pop — still believes in the band as much as…

Hit Pick

Rachel Simring’s sultry husk of a voice is reason enough to head to either of her new band’s shows this week: Rachel’s Playpen appears Thursday, February 21, at Sportsfield Roxxx, and Friday, February 22, at Cricket on the Hill. Unfortunately for those who fear a triple threat, vocals are only…

About to Break

Record collectors have long known that there’s more to a slab of vinyl than whatever music is captured in the circular depressions rotating beneath the turntable’s needle. There’s the kinesthetic appeal of the material, at once so fragile and yet so sturdy, and the almost meditative quality of those shiny…

Rhythm of Ages

Comeliness is the only credential most youthful heartthrobs need. After all, good genes and an attractive mug are more than enough to justify the video and magazine exposure that fills the brief careers of typical nouveau hunks or pubescent toy boys. But while twenty-year-old British swoon-inducer Craig David certainly benefits…

Backwash

At the end of last year, many businesses and music fans declared victory when the Denver City Council approved an ordinance allowing patrons over the age of sixteen to play with the big kids at approved establishments that provide both booze and entertainment. The city had changed its all-ages enforcement…

Critic’s Choice

In Jack Kerouac’s book Tristessa, the eponymous junkie heroine reflects the Buddhist tenet “Life is suffering.” San Diego’s Tristeza (Saturday, February 16, at the 15th Street Tavern, with Pinkku and VU) doesn’t take the suffering trip, but, like Kerouac, the combo does meditate upon the meaning of life with its…

Hit Pick

Drummer Kenny James has done time in so many local outfits, from Sympathy F and the Samples to United Dope Front and Judge Roughneck, that one might think he has some sort of chameleon type of musical sensibility. The famously active local skinsman — who last appeared on local stages…

Union Man

There’s a scene in the Coen Brothers’ movie O Brother, Where Art Thou? in which a promoter by the name of Mr. French drops in at a rural Mississippi radio station to see if he can track down the Soggy Bottom Boys, whose song, “I Am a Man of Constant…

The Junior Bomb

Those of you without daughters or sisters born after 1990 may be in the dark about Aaron Carter. So here are the key facts. He’s the younger brother of Backstreet Boys hunkaroo Nick Carter. (Nick’s the blond one who was arrested last month in a Tampa, Florida, nightclub, either because…

High on the Vibe

It is a Monday night in LoDo, and a famous sky is melting. Over and over on a multimedia screen, the blue swirls and golden orbs of Van Gogh’s “Starry Night” dissolve and re-form, accompanied by a fittingly kaleidoscopic live soundtrack. Shadowed before the dripping images, Denver jazz saxophonist Pete…

The Sunshine Fix

These days, Bill Doss, a key member of the Elephant 6 collective and a co-founder of Olivia Tremor Control, likes to refer to himself in print as “thebilldoss,” or, when he’s in a hurry, “tbd” — both good examples of how he’s able to freshen up familiar ingredients by giving…

Cornelius

Is our little Cornelius all growed up now? Keigo Oyamada’s newest album, Point, manages to preserve the wide-eyed sense of wonder that made his previous release so precious, but this time, he’s clearly on his best behavior. Cornelius’s last album, Fantasma, released in 1998, was one of those universally acclaimed…

Various Artists

Originally, Groundwork was a concert series built to raise money for a variety of sustainable, ongoing food projects around the world, including establishing orchards in Eritrea, producing natural honey in Armenia and building community-wide backyard livestock development in Sierra Leone. The group stayed true to its name by getting down…

Backwash

How long does it take for a new art form to be embraced as legitimate by the music-listening public, a group that, as any modern radio programmer can tell you, is generally wary of change? Judging by the recent surge in the popularity of turntablism, about 25 years. Ever since…

Critic’s Choice

W.C. Clark is one of those blues artists who is totally happy playing to faithful patrons in small clubs. In Austin, his hometown, he can regularly be found at modest East Side venues such as the Victory Grill and Charlie Playhouse. After roughly fifty years on the Austin blues circuit,…

Hit Pick

Belly up to the Marshall stack when the local heroes of Abdomen inflict structural damage to pop architecture on Friday, February 8, at the 15th Street Tavern. Guitarist Mike Jourgensen nails hummable hardcore to the wall with the effects-laden skill of a master carpenter. Measuring psychedelic speed-metal to fit the…

Buckin’ Tradition

Tan, rested and cocky, Tommy Womack returned to Nashville from a Carnival cruise late last summer with a bounce in his step. “The world was wonderful,” he says. “I got a copy of the new Dylan album in advance that nobody else had. I just met Bill Wyman at a…

Preaching the Summit

Twenty years ago, Jim Salestrom was lured to Breckenridge by a folk-friendly bar culture and the Rocky Mountain mentality that John Denver made famous in his music. Like that songwriter, Salestrom built a career around writing high-altitude odes to life in the mountains: In his adopted hometown, locals still refer…

Hank Williams III

On his most recent album, The Rock: Stone Cold Country 2001, George Jones teams with Garth Brooks to sing a good old-fashioned drinking song called “Beer Run.” It’s about getting off work, jumping in the pickup truck and making a beeline for the liquor store — pretty tame stuff, especially…

Jon Dee Graham

It makes perfect sense that Graham’s best-known band was dubbed the True Believers. After all, he’s a songwriter and performer whose affection for genuinely American music — you know, the craggy, rough-hewn stuff that’s heard too seldom these days — is simple and pure. But he also sports an obstinate…