Backwash

When Doug Bohm migrated from Chicago to Denver in 1994, he quickly found a niche as a gothic industrial concert promoter, a gig that afforded him time to pursue an interest in electronic music with the bands Post-Mortem Stress Disorder and Fish Music. Today, as a director of Bands for…

Shock Treatment

When Vyshonn Miller was a little boy, he learned to stick close to his big brother, Percy, as much out of a survivalist instinct as out of brotherly love. Well-respected in the community for his hustling prowess and basketball skills, Percy was someone people tended not to mess with, even…

Backwash

If you listen closely, you can probably still hear the distant sound of champagne corks popping over in the Denver offices of Universal Concerts. After six months on the auction block, employees are breathing a bit more easily following an announcement that the company has been sold to House of…

Just the Good Old Boys

In their heyday in the Seventies, Southern rock giants Lynyrd Skynyrd were the baddest of the bad, a devout hell-raising outfit that helped put their chosen genre of mayhem in the ears of America. Pushing a wall of sound that borrowed from blues, British rock and country, the band’s Dixie…

House Music

If you were to encounter Tim Sweet at a cocktail party and casually ask him what he does for a living, he probably wouldn’t provide a tidy answer. After a moment of furious internal deliberation, he would offer a combination of the following: He’s a sculptor, a DJ, a music…

Playlist

Tortoise and the Ex In the Fishtank (Konkurrent/Touch and Go) The only commonality between Tortoise and the Ex, apart from the fact that both are remarkable ensembles in their own right, is that they thrive on unusual collaboration. The Chicago post-rock rhythmatists of Tortoise, for instance, backed Brazilian eccentric Tom…

Monster Magnets

The notion that the music industry is corrupt certainly isn’t new–rock history is rife with scandalous tales of shifty, smooth-talking label weasels sticking it to unsuspecting musicians in orifices best probed only by proctologists. Sal Canzonieri, guitarist for New Jersey’s legendary punk-and-roll forefathers, Electric Frankenstein, has heard them all. As…

Playlist

The Donnas Get Skintight (Lookout! Records) Fresh out of Rock and Roll High School, these California girls unapologetically ooze piss and vinegar while chomping on their bubble gum. Blitzkrieging bopping to teen-queen ditties that mix hormone-charged rebellion with a fresh sense of humor à la Ramones, these four girls named…

The Man and His Symbols

Underneath the dulcet pop sensibility of Robyn Hitchcock’s vast repertoire lurk some potentially unsettling images: having one’s soul dry-cleaned, balloon people exploding, supping with the Devil and men with lightbulbs for heads, to name a few. And while such lyrical offerings might compel the curious to probe the seemingly twisted…

End Transmission

Denver resident Dave Granger is a radio junkie who’s not afraid to make waves in order to satisfy his addiction. So when the former disk jockey, production man and programmer with KTCL-FM/93.3 FM burned out on corporate rock and “too many dick jokes” on the commercial dial, he decided to…

Backwash

Coming to a strange town and trying to get at least a superficial handle on its music scene in a very short time is not quite as complicated as it may initially appear. In much the same way that you expect to see the same fast-food restaurants line the roads…

The Wide World of Rap

A quarter-century or so after its genesis, hip-hop has finally been acknowledged by the mainstream–but that doesn’t mean that all of the misconceptions about it have been exploded. Generations of Americans continue to think of the genre not as an art form, but as a sociological symptom of the big-city…

Playlist

Tom Waits Mule Variations (Epitaph) Old Tom’s career has followed the rarest of trajectories: He started out pretty good, only to get better. But how is Mule Variations? Unfortunately, it’s pretty good. To understand why what would be a fine achievement for most artists is actually a mild disappointment for…

Feedback

Barry Fey and Chuck Morris met in 1972, when Fey was the undisputed king of Denver concert promotion. After Morris joined Fey’s company, Feyline, in 1975, they became all but inseparable. Fey was the best man at Morris’s wedding, and he bankrolled the start-up of Morris’s management house, Chuck Morris…

The Joy of Set

Evidence suggests that Fort Worth’s American Analog Set may be effective in managing killer combinations of adult stress and juvenile attention-deficit disorder. Case in point: A six-year-old boy was recently observed repeatedly tossing a red plastic Slinky down a spiral staircase, vandalizing the banister and kicking approximately two-thousand Lego pieces…

Friends of the Devil

What’s in a name? According to Scott Pilgrim, guitarist for Portland, Oregon’s favorite surf instrumentalists, Satan’s Pilgrims, damned near everything. “When people hear the name ‘Satan’s Pilgrims’ the first time around, they usually assume we’re some kind of punk or heavy-metal band,” he explains. “They honestly don’t know what to…

The Vinyl Solution

With techno booming from every ESPN promo and truck commercial on the air, it would be easy to assume that electronic music is the only sound capable of getting Nineties kids on their feet. But Gary Norris and Patrick Robinson know better. These vinyl-crazed young men have built a sizable…

Better Living Through Chemistry

Techno never completely invaded America, in part because the electronica revolution could not be televised. Ed Simons and Tom Rowlands, better known as the Chemical Brothers, are a case in point. Their music has plenty of personality and bravado, but the pair are hardly seen in their own videos and…

Playlist

Cibo Matto Stereo Type A (Warner Bros.) The latest serving from Cibo Matto has a tough meal to follow. The band’s debut, 1996’s Viva! La Woman, was a smorgasbord of wonderfully twisted hip-hop for the Food Channel set: selections included “Apple,” “Beef Jerky,” “White Pepper Ice Cream” and a cover…

Feedback

Dick Weissman, who’s lived in Denver since 1972, is a performer, the chairman of the music and entertainment studies department at the University of Colorado-Denver, and an author of several books, including The Folk Music Sourcebook (with Larry Sandberg), Music-Making in America and The Music Business: Career Opportunities and Self-Defense,…

Punk Minus the Pop

“The punk you see around now is the glam metal of the Nineties,” says Josh Lent, the vocalist for Clusterfux. “It’s almost to the point where it’s embarrassing to say you’re a punk, because people think of that cute little kid bouncing up and down with the pink mohawk wearing…

Long Live the Revolution

When musical superlatives are dished out, they usually come with qualifiers attached–the greatest rock and roll group, the top hip-hop act, and so on. There’s no shame, then, in ACubanismo!, an outfit fronted by brilliant trumpeter Jess Alemany, being characterized as the finest traditional Cuban combo on the scene today…