The Burroughs Take On Woodstock
Colorado soul band the Burroughs crams thirty songs performed at Woodstock into a ninety-minute set.
Colorado soul band the Burroughs crams thirty songs performed at Woodstock into a ninety-minute set.
Little Dragon, Eric Johnson and the Eagles will play Denver in the coming months.
Years after Rage Against the Machine played its last show, Tom Morello keeps shredding on the front lines.
Natasha Bedingfield argues pop music is a numbers game. But she’s doing something different.
“Darin is impulsive, and every show brings a different energy. The last show we played at 3 Kings proves the resilience of this madman.”
The Eagles, who played a soaring set at Coors Field in June of 2018, will be bringing their Hotel California tour back to Denver.
Inspired by ’80s dark-wave, Weathered Statues is putting out its latest EP on cassette.
Ahead of her Stanley Hotel concert, singer-songwriter Chelsea Wolfe talks about the perils of the road and finding home.
Amigo the Devil, Agnostic Front, JPEG Mafia and Whitney play Denver this week.
Readers debate Westword‘s Lizzo review.
Did you think Bob Dylan’s career was dead? Think again.
The Flaming Lips and the Colorado Symphony are dropping a recording of their live performance of The Soft Bulletin.
Lizzo’s performance was transcendent in Denver. Audience behavior? Not so much.
Rapper JPEGMAFIA took to Twitter to ask the big question: “Why is every music journalist a turkey ass nigga in real life?”
Jonathan Richman, Sara Bareilles, Maluma and Tech N9NE play Denver this week.
Come on down to Cervantes’! You’re the next contestant on the — Cycles Presents: The Game Show?
Tool brought a second night of muscular music to the Pepsi Center in Denver.
The a cappella group that has headlined Red Rocks will be donating thousands to music education programs around the state.
Pitch Invasion invented Coco Punk.
Blake Shelton, Global Dub Festival and Thom Yorke are coming to Denver soon.
Beware: Tool’s Denver concert might keep you up all night long.
For Sami singer-songwriter Mari Boine, the personal is political. It’s also spiritual, generational, historical and musical.