Backwash

So far, 2002 has been a bummer year for clubs. In just one month, Denver has seen the abrupt — though not totally unexpected — combustion of three venues that regularly featured live music: The House of Rock and Alice Coopers’town have both closed, while the Flying Dog Pub has…

Critic’s Choice

Felix Stallings Jr. has used many names during his ascension through the world of homeland electronica: Since the age of fifteen, when a chance encounter with Chicago’s DJ Pierre expedited his auspicious entry into the house realm, Stallings has worked under the tags Thee Maddkatt Courtship, Elektrikboy, Aphrohead and Sharkimaxx…

Hit Pick

Orbit Service releases Space & Valium, its first full-length album, this week with a pair of shows: Friday, February 1, at Boulder’s Penny Lane, with This Film, and Saturday, January 2, at the Crowbar with Fort Collins’s DJ F and This Film. The swirling, ambient aspects of this Denver four-piece…

Leaving the Son

“I don’t really like storytelling or straight narratives,” Jay Farrar says halfway into a conversation about his new solo album, Sebastopol. The co-founder of legendary alt-country band Uncle Tupelo and its celebrated offspring, Son Volt, Farrar is speaking about the process of writing music. But he pauses for a moment,…

The Birth of a Groove

The story was surely blown before it began. Over the telephone, Geoff Vaughan, contact person for the groove collective Vinyl, is asked if he can set up an interview with someone in the band for early the following week. There’s a long pause. Then this: “Well, I’m the bass player,…

Taking Life by the Horn

For a child navigating the uneasy interval of pre-adolescence, few things can guarantee nerd status like the decision to join the school band. All that lugging of equipment and shameless practicing is enough to crush the coolness out of any child who’s unlucky enough to pursue musical knowledge. Darren Kramer…

Backwash

A couple of days before Limp Bizkit and its muscle-bound posse arrived in the parking lot of the Arvada Guitar Center, where one of 23 dates on the band’s current and highly publicized search for a new guitarist was scheduled last week, a teenage boy in Portland, Oregon, greeted frontman…

Critic’s Choice

Not so much a jam band as a pulsating mass of sexy Latin-flavored beats, the San Diego-based B-Side Players embrace a multi-culti groove and make it theirs, urging you with horns and congas to dance, damn it, dance! Reggae it ain’t, and you shouldn’t buy your ticket expecting to hear…

Hit Pick

Buck Wild & His Cocaine Rangers are riding high these days, roping in audiences with their dark but danceable odes to countrified rock and roll. Sporting vintage cowboy duds and a semi-crazed expression, Buck Wild (né Rex Moser) smokes on the electric guitar, while serial bassist Mike Mayhem (who moonlights…

Brown and Red

Whenever and wherever Junior Brown performs, you can bet your Telecaster that a gaggle of guitar geeks will be standing in front of the stage, their mouths wide open, drooling over Brown’s frenzied fretwork on “Big Red,” his custom-made guit-steel. The hybrid instrument, which combines an electric guitar with a…

Taking Flight

When Roy Haynes was attending grammar school in his native Boston — it’s been an age — a teacher once sent him to the principal’s office because he couldn’t stop drumming his fingers on the desk. Little did the authorities know: Soon the distracted imp in their midst would become…

Faith Evans

It’s hard to tell where Evans is headed at this point, given the many directions in which she’s been tugged throughout her career. She began as a fairly straightforward soul/R&B crooner, but her involvement with the Notorious B.I.G., whom she married in 1995, and the Artist Formerly Known as Puff…

New Order

The first New Order album in eight years finds the survivors of Joy Division banging their collective drum in yet another monochromatic burst of synthetic rapture. Not that Manchester’s most brooding band ever really suffered commercially from picking at the same scab — or from adhering to the same descending…

Land of the El Caminos

Finally, a bridge that spans the sometimes mighty chasm between post-hardcore and more user-friendly rock. On its third full-length release, Chicago-area trio Land of the El Caminos has managed to carve a niche wherein singer/guitarist Dan Fanelli can belt out his raspy, half-howled vocals over tunes that snag themselves like…

Charley Patton

Although he never got the notice Robert Johnson received through Eric Clapton and his crowd, Charley Patton is generally considered the king of the country-blues pioneers. Screamin’ and Hollerin’ the Blues shows just what made Patton so special: The staggering seven-CD collection includes all the songs Patton ever recorded, a…

Digging Up the Past

So far, Jay Munly is having a big year. He’s now one of the few remaining Denver-rooted members of Slim Cessna’s Auto Club, which saw a significant change in its roster following the band’s two farewell performances at the Bluebird on December 30 and 31. Those Club-gazers who managed to…

Dada Knows Best

A brief entry in the 1974 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records cites the Sleepytime Gorilla Museum as the Worlds Most Closed Public Institution one that operated openly for only 47 days of its 34-year existence. Shuttered up after crowds gathered in Manhattans meat-packing district for a free…

Tongue in Groove

Esperanto a sort of alphabetic goulash that, some hope, will eventually be spoken by all of the worlds people as a linguistic interface for humanity may well have found a musical manifestation in the Denver band of the same name. Esperanto, which performs Sunday, January 20, at the 15th Street…

Graham Slams

With the release of his debut album, 1976’s Howlin’ Wind, British-born singer-songwriter Graham Parker was pegged as the classic Angry Young Man — and ever since, most reviewers have ranked his works according to where they fall on the anger scale. Scribes who were largely unmoved by his work during…

Our Town

Homegrown artists have a tendency to get lost in the encyclopedic shuffle of year-end lists, such as the sprawling one Westword published two weeks ago. Here we revisit more than thirty albums from Denver-area artists who give life, and sound, to our city, many of which stand up against works…

Backwash

Maggie Simpson is an acoustic guitarist and songwriter, a teacher who instructs other musicians on how to connect emotionally with their own art. Three years ago, Simpson left Boulder for Laramie, Wyoming, our dusty metropolitan cousin to the north, where many a saloon window is darted with historic bullet holes…

Critic’s Choice

Minneapolis rapper Slug might not yet be “bigger than breast implants” as he boasts on his song “Guns and Cigarettes,” but the lyrical skills he displays on that track and on other humorous cuts, like the pimpalicious “Lyle Lovette” (from his cassette-only release Headshots Se7en), are as notorious as Anna…