DAMN: Kendrick Lamar Is One Part Mona Lisa, Another Part God
Was Kendrick Lamar making eye contact with me? I’m sure I wasn’t the only person asking that Saturday, July 29, as he played Denver’s Pepsi Center.
Was Kendrick Lamar making eye contact with me? I’m sure I wasn’t the only person asking that Saturday, July 29, as he played Denver’s Pepsi Center.
A brief comic history of the Black Box.
City Council voted on Monday, July 31, to approve a contract with Denver Festivals LLC that would allow the music promotions giant Superfly to run a three-day for-profit music festival at the public Overland Golf Course.
To avoid an uncomfortable encounter with a seasoned show-goer, here’s a list of basic Red Rocks rules. Help us help you, people. Help us help you.
I was surprised to hear Kanye West blaring at Hop Alley recently. It wasn’t the nice, Polo-shirt-wearing Kanye of Late Registration, either. This was angry Kanye. This was Yeezy.
Guns N’ Roses, which recently launched the North American leg of its Not in This Lifetime tour, rolls into town on Wednesday at Sports Authority Field at Mile High, while country stars Faith Hill and Tim McGraw take over the Pepsi Center for two nights.
Earlier this week, we reported that musicians had accused Stella’s on 16th of double-booking bands and then failing to tell them their gigs had been cancelled.
Marilyn Barela is having a party, and she expects City Council members to be there. The occasion: She wants them to hear just how loud Levitt Pavilion concerts are and to persuade them to vote against a proposed massive Superfly music festival at the Overland Golf Course.
Before we sit down to talk with metal titans Lamb of God’s grouchy-yet-likeable frontman Randy Blythe, we’re warned by his people that we’re not to discuss his incarceration in a Prague prison five years ago, events that led to his 2014 memoir Dark Days.
On Friday, August 4, the Open Media Foundation hosts its next monthly free Open Music Session event, which will spotlight music from the Budrows, plus local comedy, beer and artists.
It’s a big weekend for hip-hop with KS 107.5 Summer Jam XX, featuring Migos, Ludacris, Kid Ink, Post Malone and more, happening tonight at Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre, while Kendrick Lamar headlines the Pepsi Center tomorrow with Travis Scott and D.R.A.M. opening.
The first time Austin-based filmmaker Joe Nicolosi saw the avant-garde marching band Itchy-O was at a Stanley Film Festival in Estes Park.
The world has changed fast since the release of the 2014 Zola Jesus album Taiga.
A$AP Mob, featuring Featuring A$AP Rocky, A$AP Twelvy, A$AP Nast and A$AP Ant, headlines 1STBANK Center on Friday, November 3 with Key! and Cozy Boys opening. Cat Power plays an intimate show at the Marquis Theater on Saturday, August 19; tickets ($38.50-$42) are on sale now. Gary Numan, who has a new album slated for a September release, returns to the Gothic Theatre on Monday, December 18; tickets ($25-$85).
Justin, it may indeed be too late now to say “sorry.” On Monday, Justin Bieber canceled the remainder of his Purpose tour, including the August 12 gig at Denver’s Mile High Stadium, due to “unforeseen circumstances.”
Brian Cohen, the owner of Stella’s on 16th, has come under fire from Denver musicians who say their bands were hired to play the venue’s summer music festival but were replaced by other acts without notice.
Lucinda Williams can’t stop talking about death. And it’s not just talking about it. She can’t quit writing songs about mortality, either — even though she wants to.
A brief comic history of Denver’s Orpheum Theatre
City Council pushed back voting on a massive music festival that would be held at Overland Golf Course, an event that could attract as many as 80,000 people to the quiet Overland Park neighborhood surrounding one of Denver’s oldest public parks.
Singer-songwriter Kayla Rae Jackson had a feeling it was time to let go.
The Violent Femmes may be best known for college and mainstream radio hits like “Blister in the Sun,” “Add It Up,” and “American Music.” But at heart, the act is fundamentally experimental.
Justin Blau, who’s better known by his stage name 3LAU, slumps on a black sofa in front of empty lockers. The visiting-team locker room at Mile High Stadium isn’t familiar territory for the DJ; the only thing moderately athletic about him are his black Yeezy sneakers.