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Gospel Journey Teens Dare 2 Share
Greg Stier is raising an army of adolescents to help save your soul.
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Denver's Own Royal Tenenbaums
The late Timber Dick's children are carrying on a brilliant family legacy that includes Nancy Dick and Tom Lantos.
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Curtain Call
Denver mourns the loss of its favorite bipolar, one-armed comic/poet/playwright.
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The Lords of Payback
Jefferson County officials show Mike Zinna that what goes around comes around.
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Mona's
Great hash -- and making hash out of a critic's anonymity.
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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Eryc Eyl
Weaned on Metallica, this duo makes acoustic guitars sound heavy.
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The National
Monday, September 26, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
Published on September 22, 2005
For a certain kind of person, there's nothing happier than really sad music. That's where the National comes in. On the quintet's latest critically lauded album, Alligator, Matt Berninger comes on like Bill Callahan fronting American Music Club, while brothers Aaron and Bryce Dessner and Scott and Bryan Devendorf provide a cinematic and anthemic backdrop that's simultaneously grandiose and vulnerable. Even as Berninger fixates on self-loathing mantras like "I'm so sorry for everything" and "I used to be carried in the arms of cheerleaders," his bandmates swirl around him like the guys who probably beat him up in the locker room. In the end, Alligator's tension-filled juju of arrogance and desperation is the spiritual cousin of the Afghan Whigs' Gentlemen, with an extra dose of misanthropy thrown in for good measure.