Smashing Pumpkins

Billy Corgan likes being famous. Thinking he could take his popularity wherever he wished, he tinkered with the Pumpkins’ sonics before breaking up the band. But following the commercial failure of a side project, Zwan, and a flop 2005 solo disc, he’s returned to the Smashing moniker even though drummer…

GOP@Riot

With a lineup consisting solely of two bassists and a drummer, you’d be right to assume that GOP@Riot (aka Go Patriot) is heavy. While skinsman Nate Weaver frenetically abuses his kit, Ben Williams and Sean Inman visit all manner of violence on their instruments. Breaking sticks and strings, the trio…

Pete Wernick & Flexigrass

Banjo expert Pete Wernick, of Hot Rize fame, has never been content to imprison himself within genre conventions, even when the style is bluegrass, a format he loves. What The, the focus of a Friday, July 6, CD-release party at Arvada’s D Note, is a typically off-kilter recording that charms…

Listen Up

John Abercrombie, The Third Quartet (ECM). Abercrombie gets introspective on this gorgeous collection, which comprises mostly ballads, but steps it up on “Banshee” and Ornette Coleman’s “Round Trip.” Backed once again by Marc Johnson, Mark Feldman and Joey Baron, Abercrombie sounds more relaxed than ever. — Jon Solomon Roni Ben-Hur,…

Chairlift

Boulder has long been known for spawning talented musical acts — and then inspiring them to move on to more welcoming climates. Maybe Chairlift didn’t exactly flee the People’s Republic seeking musical asylum, but it did relocate to Brooklyn. To call the act indie rock or synth pop is to…

Maylene and the Sons of Disaster

Although singer Dallas Taylor is no heathen, Maylene and the Sons of Disaster, his latest band (which shares this bill with Modern Life Is War and Paulson), represents a rather unholy enterprise, and thank God for that. Taylor once pledged allegiance to Underoath, a Christian metal-core act with a sizable…

Danny Howells

Over the past five years, renowned U.K. DJ Danny Howells has built a sterling reputation on the strength of his live sets and mix CDs — which straddle the line between deep underground cuts and more accessible tracks — and a series of stellar productions under the moniker Science Dept…

David Vandervelde and the Moonstation House Band

You’ve heard of one-man bands — but one-man glam is something else entirely. On The Moonstation House Band, released earlier this year on the Secretly Canadian label, and a new EP built around the Moonstation single “Nothin’ No,” Vandervelde, who’s based in Chicago, nods to the glitteriest rock of the…

Gravy Train!!!!

If Richard Simmons swallowed a fistful of hipster pills and started sweating to the indies, Gravy Train!!!! would likely be playing in the background. The Oakland-based foursome has been dishing out its rambunctious electro-kitsch sex pop and whipping crowds into frenzies for more than five years. All the Sweet Stuff,…

This Just In

This may seem a bit strange, but one of the fondest memories I have of my dad is the time we went to Shotgun Willie’s (490 South Colorado Boulevard) together. I was home from college for the holidays, and we decided to head to the strip club for happy hour…

Workhorse

One of the most amusing trends in the last few years has been the merging of Southern rock and so-called stoner rock. As if we needed the unholy union of Sleep and Molly Hatchet. And yet someone was bound to make it work without sounding like a pack of rednecks…

Mavis Staples On The Main Line

In a profile from Westword’s June 28 edition, Mavis Staples speaks her mind in a notably feisty manner — and in the following Q&A, which encompasses the entire text of the interview that formed the basis of the article, her undimmed passion comes through even more clearly. Topics include her…

Its a Wrap for the Westword Music Showcase

All right, so the biggest thing I learned on my summer vacation — er, I mean, at the Westword Music Showcase, which, though always a trip, is far from a retreat for me — is that it’s truly impossible to categorize all the disparate factions of the local scene. While…

Mavis Staples Speaks Out

Mavis Staples may be on the cusp of her 68th birthday, but the righteous fire that distinguished so many of her rich, bottomless vocals during an extraordinary fifty-year-plus career continues to burn brightly. When asked why the songs of struggle that make up We’ll Never Turn Back, her moving new…

Shearwater Navigates Explosive Waters

Jonathan Meiburg is up early. Not because it’s the first day of a tour and his band, Shearwater, still needs to practice before leaving — though that’s part of it. Mostly it’s because he wants to make sure all the talking he’ll have to do for this interview won’t drain…

Red, White and You?

In case you’ve ever wondered how “American” you really are, here’s a quiz to help find the answer. 1. Given the chance to actually wear the American flag, you would… a) Turn it into a sexy leather halter top to accentuate your barely legal curves, like Britney Spears did on…

Ryan Adams

Ryan Adams was needled throughout 2005 for releasing three CDs’ worth of songs without seeming to consider whether all of the tunes met his standards. In interviews, Adams shrugged off such criticism, but lo and behold, he waited over eighteen months — an eternity for him — to release Easy…