In the Name of the Father

When the subject of Thelonius Monk is raised, most people think about the late pianists’ groundbreaking compositions and his singular approach to playing, which was marked by rhythmic innovation, subtly virtuosic technique and stirring emotionalism. By contrast, T.S. Monk, Thelonius’s only son, is as apt to inspire lust–particularly among females…

Everything Old Is New Again

“I was reading an article about 16 Horsepower,” says Rhett Miller, the leader of the Old 97’s, from Dallas, Texas, “and one of the guys in the band said something like, ‘Trains are bad. If we could tour in a covered wagon, we would.’ And I was like, ‘You would…

Playlist

Pearl Jam Yield (Epic) The amount of ink spilled over Yield by our friends at daily newspapers across the country suggests that mainstream pop scribes view it as the most awaited disc of the season, but I see little evidence of that. A lot of people with whom I’ve spoken…

Still Wailing

It’s no exaggeration to say that behind every great reggae band is a great bass player–and the bass player who’s been behind more great reggae bands than practically anyone else is Aston “Family Man” Barrett. His work with the Skatalites, Lee Perry and the Upsetters, Bob Marley and the Wailers…

Feedback

Since bands tend to change personnel more frequently than Kenneth Starr subpoenas interns, the majority of lineup shifts are of only passing interest. But every once in a while, there’s a departure so odd that it begs to be looked at in detail. Such is the case with bassist Kirwan…

Sublime’s Legacy

Percussionist/DJ “Field” Marshall Goodman is a member of a band called the Long Beach Dub All Stars. But when he’s interviewed these days, the number of questions about his current group generally come in a distant second to the amount of inquiries about the act with which he was previously…

Bar Bands of the World, Unite

Pete Alexander, bassist and co-frontman for Denver’s Damn Shambles, knows a thing or two about eating up his group’s profits. “We were playing at the Market Street Lounge, and some guy comes up to me and says he wants a CD,” he remembers. “I said, ‘Ten bucks,’ and he says,…

Color Him Bluegrass

“Our audiences are smaller than, say, country’s or rock’s,” concedes Del McCoury, as exciting and authentic a bluegrass performer as any presently drawing breath. “And I’m sure a lot of bluegrass people would like to get more coverage or popularity. But I kind of enjoy it this way–because I’ve been…

Size Matters

It’s a story as old and tired as Liam Gallagher’s liver. A group releases an album on an independent label. Shortly thereafter, said combo is dubbed an “indie” band and in turn receives undying praise from the rock-and-roll press and indie-rock devotees who admire its staunch “DIY sensibilities.” But unfortunately,…

Feedback

The anticipated Denver concert-promotions war has not yet begun in earnest, but the field of battle is already crowded with potential combatants. The January 22 Feedback column contained information about the new partnership between veteran Colorado promoter and manager Chuck Morris and Bill Graham Presents, a major San Francisco enterprise…

Kingdom Comes

Although Denver doesn’t have a reputation as a national hip-hop mecca, Jeffrey McWhorter, aka Kingdom, believes it’s only a matter of time before the scene is acknowledged–as long as the artists and fans in the community support one another. “You’ll never see me talk down any rapper in Colorado,” he…

Not Standing Pat

A few years back, I spent an afternoon with Pat DiNizio, the leader of the Smithereens, in Hartford, Connecticut, killing time before a radio interview. At a time when everyone else was replacing their record collection with CDs, DiNizio was looking high and low for a turntable to accompany him…

Playlist

Roni Size Reprazent: New Forms (Talkin’ Loud/Mercury) Plenty of electronica artists are taking the Prodigy route: i.e., they’re attempting to split the difference between dance music and pop in the hope of coming up with hit singles that will still work in Clubland. Size, for his part, is moving in…

Feedback

Way back in our January 1 issue, I wrote about Sire Records’ decision to license Tone Soul Evolution, a fine CD by the Apples that was originally emblazoned with the spinART logo. Now Sire has climbed into the sack, business-wise, with another Denver artist: Sherri Jackson, whose eponymous debut on…

Playlist

Timbaland and Magoo Welcome to Our World (Blackground/Atlantic) Tim Mosley, aka Timbaland, is a producer who has stepped into the spotlight a la Sean “Puffy” Combs–but unlike the Puffster, Mosley seems to understand his limitations. Rather than positioning himself as an egomaniacal rap word-slinger, he keeps the focus on the…

Queer Power

Joe Queer, leader of the Queers, is a veteran of the punk-rock wars, but that doesn’t mean he’s stopped making enemies. A recent example involves Converse, the sneaker giant, which slapped the Queers with a cease-and-desist order after the band appropriated the company’s corporate logo for a series of T-shirts…

Uphollow Victories

Something’s rotten in the music industry, and Ian O’Dougherty, guitarist/vocalist for Denver’s Uphollow, thinks he knows what it is. During performances, he says, most local and national musicians he’s seen lately have spent more time looking down at their hands than at the audience members with whom they’re supposed to…

The Baroness Rules

San Francisco’s Charlotte Kaufman, whose nom de plume is the Baroness, is an exemplar of a rare species: the female DJ. But even though she’s the only woman in the Hardkiss Family collective, a group that’s considered legendary by many participants in global electronica, neither of her names is of…

Heavy Petting

Released in June 1966, the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds was regarded at the time of its appearance as a commercial disappointment. As author Timothy White reports in The Nearest Faraway Place, his detailed 1994 biography of the band, representatives of Capitol Records, the group’s label, were frankly baffled by the…

Feedback

Low Estate, the scorching second album by 16 Horsepower, is reaching retailers in the United States this week, but it’s already a success beyond these shores. Says the band’s leader, singer-songwriter/multi-instrumentalist David Eugene Edwards, “It’s been out in Europe for five months or so, and it’s doing really well–better than…

Wright on Track

In a working-class town north of Columbus, Ohio, a few years back, the rowdy patrons were drinking beer out of buckets–using straws–when the bartender clanged a ship’s bell and announced, “I want all of you to hear this sax player!” Such an introduction would have left most instrumentalists fearful that…

Getting in Between Sheets

By day, Billy Sheets teaches special education to middle-schoolers in Los Angeles. But by night, he offers a different brand of instruction to swing dancers across Southern California. In a musical environment in which most combos make hep-cat Forties jazz and frenetic Western swing for the growing legion of loose-jointed…