The Best Concerts in Denver This Weekend
Don’t miss these shows.
Don’t miss these shows.
Khemmis, which sits at the helm of Colorado’s metal resurgence, released its latest album, Desolation, a six-song exercise in anthemic power metal.
In 2007, Samuel Brightman Glover had his first manic-depressive episode. He says it rocked his world.
Denver rapper Ray Reed makes honest music that reflects the real events of his life.
Don’t miss these shows.
Umphrey’s McGee resists definition.
Kenny Chesney’s No Shoe Nation tour stop in Denver on Saturday, June 30, would have made Betsy Ross proud.
Sometimes things don’t work out. Other times you play the keytar.
“This is a song about finding an option, after you’ve seemingly run out of them.”
The Denver rock band Dirty Few will have a seven-inch release show at Larimer Lounge on Monday, July 2.
The electronic music duo Zeds Dead brings spectacle wherever it goes.
Don’t miss these shows.
Rivers of baby boomers, decked out in leis, khaki shorts and floral-print shirts, schemed to cut each other in line outside Coors Field Thursday night, eager to see Jimmy Buffett and the Eagles.
Jason Heller is something of a nerd Renaissance man.
Singer Kiley Lotz of Petal will be playing at the Marquis Theater on June 29, 2018.
Don’t miss these shows.
Hugo Award-winning writer Jason Heller has written for the New Yorker, Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and the Atlantic Monthly. He’s been a Westword contributor for many years and is a familiar face on the Denver music scene, both as a DJ and now in his current band, Weathered Statues. For his…
Primitive Man has been consistently releasing heavy records since forming six years ago, but Caustic, which dropped last year on Relapse, is the local sludge metal trio’s most abrasive to date.
Don’t miss these shows.
Polo has a bad reputation for being a leisure activity of ultra-wealthy snobs, an image that Ty MacCarty, of Horseplay.TV in Littleton, is trying to turn around with PoloFest, one part music festival, another part polo tournament.
Dirty Projectors’ return to the stage was filled with new songs, old classics, and a reassurance that the upcoming album is going to be worth the wait.
At the end of June, South Broadway is flooded with black denim vests, cannabis smoke and loud, heavy riffs, as Electric Funeral Fest dominates the neighborhood, turning it into a haven for all things doom, sludge and heavy rock.