Should Venues Owned by AEG Employees Get State Relief Grants?
Should venues owned by AEG employees receive emergency state grants?
Should venues owned by AEG employees receive emergency state grants?
Love Some Tea just released a new Dead-themed line, Grateful Tea.
Show up for the Mercury Cafe, enjoy an online concert, or head out to one of Denver’s many venues.
The Colorado Arts Relief Grant funded 722 artists, businesses and nonprofits a total of $7.4 million in state money.
In 2020, the Denver singer-songwriter was hospitalized after overdosing on meth; once he was released, he recorded a brand new album.
The 25-year-old band recorded its latest album entirely online — and it wasn’t business as usual.
The up-and-coming Denver artist has built his career through the pandemic.
Music journalist Michael Goodwin’s zine The City Gasped chronicles Denver’s heavy music scene.
It’s about time.
The fundraiser is organized by Tom Hagerman of DeVotchKa and Professor Phelyx.
A struggling new restaurant and venue is back in action…again.
Enjoy live music all week long.
The Grizzly Rose is closed, again.
Denver music venues are celebrating the looser restrictions while looking forward to serving alcohol later.
Concerts are back. Here’s where.
An Hobbes, Aethernaut, and Felix Fast4Ward discuss their nerdcore project Secret Dog and its debut album, Thumb. Middle. Ring.
Jazz returns to Five Points at an afternoon concert at Sonny Lawson Park.
Scott Durland made the call to let the crowd in..or risk violence.
The Grateful Dead-themed bar is leaving its sixth location and not reopening any time soon.
The Infinite Stringdusters banjoist is back with another solo album.
The Meadowlark is staying aloft through the pandemic.
The Denver singer-songwriter’s latest album is a melancholy, quiet collection of blues songs.