Hit Pick

As members of Boulder’s exploratory outfit United Dope Front, saxophonist Ben Senterfit, guitarist Javier Gonzales, organist Jarad Astin and drummer Damieon Lee Hines mold a groovy, hypnotic and thoroughly modern form of acid jazz. But every now and then even the most future-minded players look to the past for inspiration…

Club Scout

Reluxe Lounge, Sundays at Cosmo, offers a cozy cuddle in luxury’s lap. The new weekly event is a retreat to better — or at least more chic — times: Hosts Tigris Euphrates and Rayo Casablanca fold in elements of artsy eras long gone, from surrealism’s underground advancement in the ’30s…

Unchanged Stripes

The only downside to discovering a band that’s so cool you simply have to tell the world about it is that eventually, the world does find out, and then things are never quite the same. The White Stripes’ regular fan base in Los Angeles knew that a new element had…

Flight Plan

Over the past several years, Americans have grown accustomed to hearing rising stars on the British music scene make pompous pronouncements about everything from their talent level to their odds of success in the colonies. The standard setters in this regard are the men from Oasis, whose Liam Gallagher told…

Visible Man

There are certain words that commonly creep into descriptions of Mark Eitzel: “brilliant,” “tortured,” “honest” and “poetic” are among the often-used adjectives. These may all be fitting descriptions, but isn’t everyone a little brilliant, a tiny bit tortured and even honest sometimes? It’s more accurate to describe Eitzel by explaining…

Backwash

Working musicians might be the only subsection of Denver society that’s actually quite pleased that the Detroit Red Wings scored seven goals against the Colorado Avalanche in game seven last Friday — effectively quelling hometown dreams of hosting that large, silver spitoon-looking Cup thing two years in a row. As…

Critic’s Choice

If you’re going to do an Internet search for the Queers (who appear June 11 at the Bluebird Theater, with the Briefs and the Independents), don’t do it at work: Locating the band online involves scrolling through pages of hits, including Queers for Christ and a Web site named thequeers.com…

Hit Pick

As its name would imply, local indie-rock combo O’er the Ramparts is well-versed in the fine art of the anthem. The band, which appears Friday, June 7, at the 15th Street Tavern, stirs up an epic mess of skittering melodies and saccharine-baited hooks that harks back to the vintage American…

Club Scout

Transcending the stereotype of Moby wannabes, DJ Ty Tek has risen to ubiquity in the Denver dance-club scene, thanks to his preternatural ability to read a crowd and plenty of good, old-fashioned hard work. Despite starting his career in the unlikely town of Pueblo, Tek eventually worked through the ranks…

Twin Towers

Writing about band names is one of the great cliches in rock journalism. Every group with an off-kilter appellation has an allegedly amusing or revealing (and often lengthy) story about how its stage alias was invented, but the majority of these tales are about as fascinating as a day spent…

Wet Dreamer

Andrew W.K. is working hard to have a good time as often as possible. Whether he’s talking about amusement parks or music, it doesn’t take much to raise the long-locked rocker’s excitement level. The Detroit native is the first rock artist to do partying justice since the Beastie Boys fought…

Pulp Fiction

Dr. Bug and I, we were basically playing in dumpsters and garbage cans in alleys around the Denver area,” says Log frontman Harry Lug Nutz, the essence of haute couture in a Mexican-wrestler mask and a pink polyester muumuu. “We would occasionally go down to Tulsa, Oklahoma, for aromatherapy conventions,…

Weezer

Back in 1994, during an interview with Westword, Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo blamed his dislike of promotion on a pre-record-deal gig selling “Cutco high-quality kitchen cutlery. They were really expensive knives — the ‘homemaker’ set, which was ten knives, was a little over $600 — and they were the best knives…

Airport 5

With perennial collaborator Tobin Sprout, Robert Pollard presents his second full-length effort as Airport 5. Life Starts Here is the eighteenth overall installment in the Fading Captain series, a body of work that includes the busy Guided by Voices singer’s nonstop solo flights and side projects. Recorded in separate studios…

Solomon Burke

Solomon Burke comes from the storied tradition of soul singers who made the leap from church choir to radio. He has been proselytizing since he was seven, and he has the warm, rich voice of a singing preacher: part B.B. King, part Al Green. It’s enough to make an unbeliever…

Backwash

Statewide restrictions on campfires have already dampened the spirits of local rugged types who’ve resigned themselves to spending summer indoors, lest they endure freezing-cold evenings at high altitudes warmed only by a Coleman stove. And next summer, fans of Colorado’s many outdoor concert series and festivals could face an even…

Critic’s Choice

Although hot remixers come and go, only a relative handful become hot solo artists. But Timo Maas, a Madonna-approved dial-twister who appears Saturday, June 1, at Vinyl, seems ready to make the leap. Loud, Maas’s first non-remix CD, recently issued by Kinetic Records, is a wonderfully accomplished blend of clever…

Hit Pick

An Cuigear, Friday, June 7, at the Rocky Mountain Center for the Musical Arts (200 East Baseline Road in Lafayette), is an Irish-music five-piece that hails from Boston. But local lovers of Emerald Isle music will be familiar with the group’s founders, Mathew and Shannon Heaton. Before moving east just…

Club Scout

DJ Ahwoo, DJ Schematic and DJ Cabda will preside over this month’s Cabaret 13 (Friday, May 31, at Rock Island), where they’ll spin sultry sounds and be surrounded by luscious artwork. The theme of the show is “future erotica,” but don’t expect to see much in the way of Orwellian…

Gone Again

It’s hard to put into words or numbers the impact that a local band can have on its hometown. Besides just providing the soundtrack to endless drunken Saturday nights, the local bands with tenacity and gumption sometimes wind up as an emblem — the figurehead, even — around which a…

Sum of Their Parts

In the widely anthologized short story “Good Country People,” Flannery O’Conner tells the tale of an overeducated spinster with an artificial leg who tries to seduce a traveling Bible salesman. A self-declared atheist, she coaxes the seemingly innocent faith peddler up into a hayloft — only to discover that his…

Higher Powered

Living as a person of faith involves a constant process of balancing belief and doubt. Sometimes the kinds of doubts that eat away at faith find their way into song — such as U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” — and inspire listeners who are doing their…