Most Popular
-
Ultrarunning Gets Younger and Faster
Tony Krupicka takes his sport to new extremes.
-
Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
-
GB Fish & Chips
If at first you dont succeed, fry, fry again.
-
Encore Restaurant
Recycling is good for the planet and it can taste good, too.
-
Rent-a-Cop
Denver's finest protect and serve, whether they're being paid by the city or the corner bar.
-
Target Practice: Racism and Police Shootings Are No Game (6)
Are Denver cops trigger-happy for minorities? A video game might hold the answer.
-
Vonnegut (5)
Fall Into Place
Self-released -
CU's Campus Press Fights for Independence (3)
A contentious faculty meeting points to independence for CU-Boulder's student newspaper — but at what cost?
-
Shakeup in Denver Radio (4)
Denver radio's getting a shakeup, with more alterations on the horizon. But do any of the switches qualify as improvements?
-
Deconstructing the DNA of a Denver Post Pulitzer Finalist (3)
Critics raise questions regarding an impressive Post series shortly after it's named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
-
Owsleys Golden Road
-
The Swayback Raises the Bar
Long Gone Lads, this trios long-awaited album, is a painstaking work of art.
-
Laylights Looks Into the Future
The members of this quartet keep the momentum going on Auricle, their latest disc.
-
Tera Melos
Friday, April 18, Marquis Theater, 1-866-468-7621.
-
Waking Up Daniel Johnston
The tales of this singer-songwriters idiosyncracies are not exaggerated.
-
Denver Crack Dancers Get Down
04:26PM 04/29/08 -
Monolith Line Up Announced
10:00AM 04/29/08 -
Lots of Lux
04:18PM 04/29/08 -
Fashion Moto 2008
11:15AM 04/28/08 -
Carded: Supreme Court OKs Voter Photo ID
09:56AM 04/29/08
What we are writing about
- Barack Obama
- Brad Pitt
- Charlie Huang
- Cherry Creek
- Colorado Rockies
- David Lane
- Denver Art Museum
- DeVotchKa
- dogs
- Fisher Clark Urban...
- Glenn Morris
- hi-dive
- Hillary Clinton
- Jason Sheehan
- Knocked Up
- Larimer Lounge
- Lupe Fiasco
- Mark Travis
- My Kid Could Paint That
- Nathan & Stephen
- No Country for Old Men
- PlayStation
- Radiohead
- Seth Rogen
- There Will Be Blood
- Various Artists
- Vinyl
- Wii
- William Havu Gallery
- Xbox
National Features
-
The Pitch
Time Bomb in a Bottle
"The idea that you're using sex hormones to make plastic is just totally insane."
By Nadia Pflaum -
Houston Press
Foreclosure Pets
When homeowners are pushed out, animals get left behind.
By Paul Knight -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
On Your Honor
A judge's alleged relationships with defense lawyers and prosecutors raise eyebrows.
By Bob Norman -
Village Voice
A Soldier's Story
Remembering the day a black mob lynched a white man.
By Tony Ortega
Mini Reviews
Published: April 24, 2008
The Black Crowes, Warpaint (Silver Arrow). On their first studio release since re-forming in 2005, the Robinson brothers show how a little time off from each other can work wonders. Warpaint continues to improve their winning brand of Southern-fried power-blues rock and may finally silence critics who insist on throwing out lazy comparisons the Crowes have long since outgrown. — Bob Ruggiero
British Sea Power, Do You Like Rock Music? (Rough Trade). British Sea Power's sound rises from a subterranean morass of soil, blood and distortion, enabling the act to connect with its audience on a truly visceral level. Although Rock Music is too calculated to be transcendent, ultimately falling short of the band's impossibly high standards, it could still be a prelude to true greatness. — Chris Henderson
Bullet For My Valentine, Scream Aim Fire (Jive). Scream packs more crunch than your favorite breakfast cereal floating in a bowl of Hair Metal Growth Hormone. The prize in the box is that the songs on Scream are tighter than 2005's The Poison, moving away from reckless, rabid aggression and toward the armored discipline of Metallica and Megadeth. — Kevin Galaba
Blind Boys of Alabama, Down in New Orleans (Time/Life). Lead singer Jimmy Carter has lent his sturdy voice to the righteous praise of gospel music with the Blind Boys since 1939. Sharing the honors with God this time is the sound of New Orleans — a city in need of divine attention — courtesy of the swinging Preservation Hall Jazz Band. — Galaba
Dirty Projectors, Rise Above (Dead Oceans). Rise Above is probably one of the most creative — and subsequently insane — ideas out there: Take a classic album (Black Flag's Damaged), pull an Alec Baldwin on SNL on it and create something no one asked you to. The Dirty Projectors turn one of the toughest albums ever into the most flaccid. — Andrew Fersch
The Helio Sequence, Keep Your Eyes Ahead (Sub Pop Records). Singer Brandon Summers's damaged vocal cords have taken the Sequence's sound in a slightly new direction. Now, there's a Dylanesque folk injection that seeps into the corners of the act's jangly indie-pop sound. Modest Mouse drummer Benjamin Weikel effectively straddles the divide, deftly linking bluesy harmonica with upbeat '80s bounce. — Galaba
Van Morrison, Keep It Simple (Lost Highway). Van Morrison pumped up some of his previous albums with horns and strings, but on Keep It Simple he does just as the title implies. Often backed by only a rhythm section, guitars and keys, the seasoned crooner allows his silky tenor to be the centerpiece on this new batch of tunes. — Jon Solomon











