Todd Man Out

By most standards, the music industry has treated Todd Rundgren well. His recordings have been put out by major labels since the late Sixties, and while not all of them were hits, the sales of those that could be described as such have sustained him through the inevitable career downturns…

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Listeners to KS-104 (aka KQKS-FM/104.3) can be forgiven for wondering if the station has been abandoned. Earlier this year, the entire KS-104 air staff was raided by KJMN-FM/92.1 (Jam’n), the station that rose from the ashes of the late, lamented 92X format. Rather than recruiting new jocks, however, the folks…

Heavy, Man.

Back before long-form videos and CD-ROMs existed, musicians used the concept album to overextend their half-baked ideas. Not content with letting one song do its job, groups charged an entire collection with the mission of delivering a single dunderheaded message. What follows are the worst of a very bad lot…

Staking Their Pain

When Denver’s Painstake was formed three years ago, its members adhered to straight-edge, a movement in which followers eschew drugs, drinks and other indulgences. Since then, however, the combo has gone through changes in lineup and philosophy. While some of today’s Painstakers (drummer Carl Kumpe, guitarists Jason Andrade and Sam…

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As alluded to in Backbeat’s lead article (“Our Gangstas,” page 71), gangsta-rap artists who sell albums in the millions have been unable to cash in at arenas across the country. The primary reason remains security fears. Promoters are afraid that given the slightest provocation, gangsta fans will start shooting at…

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Wesley Willis Feel the Power (American) If you’re wondering where opportunity ends and exploitation begins, the answer is…here. Willis, for the handful of you who have not yet been subjected to him, is a Chicagoan with a potpourri of mental problems who scribbles songs about whatever pops into his head–and…

The Gods Must Be Crazy

At this writing, Rocket, the debut album by Primitive Radio Gods, is no longer among the 200 best-selling albums in the United States according to Billboard magazine. Nor does the publication list the hit tune “Standing Outside a Broken Phone Booth With Money in My Hand” among the country’s 100…

Our Gangstas

Gangsta rap isn’t dying easily. The lion’s share of critics have long since tired of its formulas, most major record companies (cowed by the Charlton Hestons of the world) are doing their best to distance themselves from lyricists deemed irresponsible by everybody from Christian rightists to radical feminists, and inventive…

Free Beer

“I like beer, bikes and my model trains,” declares Beer Can Bob Schuster. He also likes music–hence his role as frontman and bassist for Beer Can Bob and the Stampede–but as he blows the foam off a cold one at his home in Boulder’s San Lazaro Trailer Park (where he…

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The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion Now I Got Worry (Matador) R.L. Burnside A Ass Pocket of Whiskey (Matador) Mr. Spencer doesn’t fit the mold of your run-of-the-mill sonic archivist. His music is derived from the blues, rockabilly and rock and roll, but his approach to these genres couldn’t be further…

Mood Swingers

But for the quality of their music, the Czars, a band that’s emerged as one of Denver’s most hypnotic live acts, would not exist. And therein lies a tale. Founding Czars John Grant and Chris Pearson met at a local nightclub in the spring of 1994, shortly after Grant had…

Women’s Glib

During performances of “Crazy Song,” a variation on the Patsy Cline favorite, Boulder’s Lisa Wagner displays an impressive voice–or maybe two. She delivers the ditty’s familiar lines in a heartfelt croon but is continually interrupted by a demonic alter-ego who recalls Linda Blair during the possession scenes from The Exorcist…

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Pete Townshend, who recently came through town as part of the Who’s latest reunion tour, is rock’s most prominent sufferer of ear problems; years of exposure to loud noise has left him with tinnitus, a condition that causes a persistent ringing or roaring in his ears. But his ailment is…

Blind Faith Redux

Is it possible for a group to be a supergroup if very few people have heard of either the alleged supergroup or any of the other groups whose reputations make the new group so super? Jeff Mueller, singer and guitarist for the bruising, riveting combo called June of 44, doesn’t…

Chamber Music, Latin Style

Cuarteto Latinoamericano is the classical world’s only full-time string chamber ensemble made up exclusively of Latin American musicians–but don’t make the mistake of dismissing the group as a novelty. Performances by the foursome (Saul Bitran, older brothers Aron and Alvaro Bitran, and Javier Montiel) have earned glowing notices from reviewers…

Playlist

John Parish and Polly Jean Harvey Dance Hall at Louse Point (Island) This disc has garnered the worst reviews of Ms. Harvey’s brief career, and that’s understandable. Compared with 1995’s remarkable To Bring You My Love, it’s resolutely minor. Moreover, the work contains several of our gal’s weakest moments on…

In the Name of Loaf

Rock musicians who are sensitive to criticism would do well to take a lesson or two from Archers of Loaf’s Eric Bachmann. After half a decade in the music business, the guitarist/vocalist not only has learned to cope with the negative feedback that goes along with being in a band;…

Yesterday and Today

Then: I first saw the Who in 1979, when I was in high school. Drummer Keith Moon had died the year before–in an unintended satire of the kick-the-habit movement, he overdosed on medication designed to help him kick his alcohol addiction. But rather than putting a knife to the band,…

World of the Living Dead

Denver’s Jonathan Canady is a very disturbed young man. The recordings he makes under various handles (Dead World and Deathpile among them) are horribly dark and severe–and Canady admits that these descriptives apply to him as well. “I’m a pretty misanthropic person,” he says. “I tend to get frustrated in…

Cool Jerk

A few years ago the members of New York City’s Railroad Jerk found themselves at Niagara Falls, milling among families of fat Midwesterners, honeymooners and suicidal loners. “It was a nice day, and we were on tour and had a day off there,” elaborates Marcellus Hall, the group’s guitarist and…

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For several years, John Chamie has been one of the leading personages in the Denver-Boulder dance-music universe. But lately he’s broadened his scope. Now he wants to bring the sounds he loves to the rest of the world–and the quality of the early releases on Terraform Records, the label he…

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Professor

Although England’s Mad Professor claims to be sane, his many albums offer an argument to the contrary. The leading practitioner of dub music, an instrumental outgrowth of reggae that’s known for its studio effects, he makes music that’s thoroughly, wonderfully berserk. Mixing is in the Professor’s blood: This native of…