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Pain Management
Cancer patient Tim Thomason didn't think he could feel any worse. His Denver jailers showed that he could.
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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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Gospel Journey Teens Dare 2 Share
Greg Stier is raising an army of adolescents to help save your soul.
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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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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Roberts
Guitarist Don Felder writes about his ouster from the Eagles.
Friday, August 8, Boulder Theater, 303-786-7030.
Thursday, August 7, Denver Botanic Gardens, 1-866-586-4170; Friday, August 8, Chautauqua Auditorium, 303-440-7666; Saturday, August 9, Red Rocks, 303-830-8497.
T*O*S: Terminate on Sight
G Unit/Interscope Records
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Dale Watson
Monday, April 28, 3 Kings Tavern, 303-777-7352.
Published on April 24, 2008
No one can accuse Dale Watson of not being country enough. The Austin-based singer-songwriter, supported on this bill by Jim Dalton and Tony Nascar, has a bottomless bar-room voice, a wonderfully baroque delivery, and a pronounced ornery streak he proudly displays on "Country My Ass," in which he attacks watered-down C&W with the couplet "Force feed us that shit/Ain't you real tired of it?" Moreover, he actually lives the country life, as director Zalman King learned while making Crazy Again, a 2006 documentary in which Watson tells about the nervous breakdown he suffered after a car accident killed his girlfriend; during the worst moments of his madness, he believed Satan was talking to him directly. Watson's struggles, as well as his adventures, inform every note of his best recordings, including 2006's From the Cradle to the Grave, in ways that the Tims and Faiths and Kennys of the world can't possibly replicate. That, my friends, is country.