Weekend Preview: September 30th – October 2nd, 2011

Here’s what’s coming up this weekend!  The shows I plan on attending are in RED.

Post Paradise CD Release Party

Friday, September 30th

  • Post Paradise w/ Vices I Admire, Common Anomoly, and Take to the Oars @ Hodi’s Half Note (Fort Collins): Fort Collins’ own Post Paradise plays high-energy (think OK Go) alt-rock and tosses in a cellist. So, remember to drink your beer with pinkys out! Admission includes a download card of their new CD. But, of course, I’m attending mostly because Vices I Admire and Take to the Oars are on the bill! 8 PM, All Ages, $5.
  • The Swayback w/ManCub @ Larimer Lounge – The best value of the night!!! 9PM, 21+, FREE
  • Illuminaughty @ Casselman’s Bar – ForeverKid (Ross Ryan) is on this electronica lineup, as well as Omega, Seth Ambruz, and more. 8PM, 21+, $12.
  • Further @ Red Rocks – Jerry’s dead! But that won’t stop hippies from converging on Red Rocks for the first night of a 3-night run. 7:30 PM, All Ages, $55.
  • Electric Six @ The Bluebird Theater – Tonight! I’m gonna take you to a gay bar… and the Bluebird Theater. 9:00 PM, 16+, $15.
  • Kissing Party CD Release Party @ Hi-Dive – 9PM, 18+, $7.
  • Kinetix w/MTHDS @ Cervante’s Masterpiece Ballroom. 9PM, All Ages, $10.
  • In The Whale w/ Colfax Speed Queen @ 12 Volt Tavern. 21+
  • Bonnie and the Beard w/ Petals of Spain @ three20south (Breckenridge)
Saturday, October 1st

Sun Red

  • Sun Red EP Release Party w/De Dos Del Sol, Colfax Speed Queen and Safe Boating is No Accident @ Hi-Dive: I haven’t seen any of these bands yet, but I’ve been enjoying their music – particularly that of Sun Red, which has a Jimmy Gnecco vibe. 9:30 PM, 18+, $7.
  • The Centennial Fall Music Showcase @ The Banana Stand – Nate Meese puts on cool backyard house parties. 6:30 PM, 21+, Donations (space is limited).
  • Serious Moonlight @ Illegal Pete’s Downtown – 10PM, All Ages, FREE
  • The Rapture w/ Snake Rattle Rattle Snake @ Marquis Theater – 8PM, All Ages, $25.
  • Journey w/Foreigner and Night Ranger @ Comfort Dental Amphitheater – Don’t stop believing that you don’t miss Steve Perry. 7PM, All Ages, $40.
  • Ladytron @ Ogden Theater – 9PM, 16+, $22.
  • Bush w/Chevelle & Filter – Holy grunge gonads, Batman! 6:30 PM (I guess they have to go to bed early), All Ages, $35-45.
Sunday, October 2nd
  • Dick Dale w/ Fingers of the Sun @ Gothic Theatre – Dick Dale is still alive?!? He must have outlived all of the Del-Tones! 7 PM, 16+, $25.
  • Chris Robinson’s Brotherhood @ Boulder Theater – The Black Crowes frontman flies solo (sort of). 7 PM, All Ages, $25 .
  • Bring Me the Horizon @ Summit Music Hall – Moved from the Fillmore to the Summit. Yeah, things are tough all over… 6 PM, All Ages, $25.

In the Studio: Monroe Monroe

Monroe Monroe

At the Westword Music Showcase Awards last June, Monroe Monroe took home what was arguably the most coveted prize of the evening: the right to record an EP at Rocky Mountain Recorders for free (worth about $10K). While the other WMS awards were determined by public ballot, Monroe Monroe was hand-picked by the folks at Westword Magazine as most deserving of this prize.

On September 27th, the band invited some of their friends to join them in the studio to lay down gang choruses for the song “Love Language (Wild Hearts)”. Those of us who were able to sneak out of work for an hour were excited to hang out in the studio and offer our services. Among those on hand were In the Whale’s Nate Valdez and Eric Riley, super-fans Anna Apodaca and E.J. Johnson, longtime friend of the band Lan Wilcox, and the entire Everyday (In the Mile High) crew (i.e. me, PK, and our two kids). Thanks to the superb direction of Frank Abbatecola and Tavis Alley, and aided by engineers Andrew Vastola and 7-year old Erin (“one more take”) Thompson, the session went surprisingly quick. Look for “Love Language (Wild Hearts)” on Monroe Monroe’s next release, tentatively scheduled for a December release.

 
“Engines Will Come” from the EP Love Wins is available on iTunes and Amazon’s MP3 store.
Filmed at Rocky Mountain Recorders. All rights to audio are owned by Monroe Monroe and their publisher(s).
Monroe Monroe on Facebook

Wild Boys: An Interview with Ross Ryan of “Boys” and “Life in Electric”

Boys

Imagine the scenario: You’re a local band that enters a competition to be the warm-up act for three Jane’s Addiction shows in Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York. Four months later, you get a call from the contest organizer saying your band has won the competition! It’s the scenario all young bands dream of, right? Now, imagine your singer left the band three months before you got that life-changing call, placing the band in a state of indefinite hiatus. What do you do? Do you scramble to find a replacement singer? Do you attempt to make amends with the singer that helped you win the competition in the first place? Do you decline the offer entirely?

That’s exactly the decision guitarist/songwriter Ross Ryan was faced with when his band Boys won the Guitar Center “On Stage: Jane’s Addiction” competition organized by OurStage.com. Boys won on the strength of the song “Gossip” – a pounding rocker that sounds like Concrete Blonde’s “Bloodletting (Vampire Song)” on an overdose of steroids. “Gossip” was hand-picked by the members of Jane’s Addiction from thousands of entries as the song they liked most. But, as you’ll see by this interview, deciding what to do next was not an easy decision for Ryan to make.


Gossip by Boys Music

Boys came into existence when vocalist Kyle Simmons – one of the most enigmatic icons the Denver music scene has to offer – left the band Speakeasy Tiger in a very public and messy fashion just as their star was rising in the Spring of 2010. Ryan, also a member of the alt-rock outfit Life in Electric, lobbied hard for a collaboration with Simmons. When she finally relented, Ryan (along with Life in Electric’s bassist Zach Newton and drummer Ryan Ramirez) formed Boys and played their first gig together in July 2010. In May of 2011, they submitted “Gossip” for the chance to play with Jane’s Addiction.

Michael Thompson: How did you find out that Boys had won the “On Stage with Jane’s Addiction” competition?

Ross Ryan: Out of the blue, I get a call from OurStage telling me we are in the top X amount of bands and they would be picking in the next couple days. Obviously I was still skeptical that anything would happen, but it did, and we won the spot. We were judged out of nearly 3000 band entries, which shows that Boys was definitely on to something.

MT: What was your reaction when you got that call?

RR:  It was rather shocking. We submitted for it back in May and honestly had just forgotten about it all together. So much time had gone by that it wasn’t even a thought anymore.

MT: Not long after Boys played the Global Dance Fest Battle of the Bands in June, Boys’ Facebook page was de-activated  and Westword Magazine reported that Kyle Simmons had left the band. What went wrong?

RR: In the beginning, writing music was never a struggle. Boys was fortunate enough to get some important people involved in the beginning and that grew rapidly. We had a lot of opportunity there for us and it just sort of happened and kept happening, we didn’t have to do anything but create. But from the moment of conception, it has been an internal uphill battle. This is the first group I’ve been a part of where the battle was one more waged within the band then one fought out on the battlefield. Boys went on an indefinite hiatus just following the Global competition. I can’t really speak on the reasons for the split, as it does get very hairy and drama filled. But to me a band should be “us against the world” not us against each other, and that is what it had become at that time. Kyle was off doing Kyle, and I was doing me, and the other guys were concentrating on their own lives as well.

MT: How did the decision to come back from indefinite hiatus to do the Jane’s Addiction shows go down?

RR: We had the option to pass it on, but I got Kyle on the phone and we talked it out and agreed that Boys should take this opportunity and perform. It’s an opportunity we all earned and should share part in.

MT: What happens after the three Jane’s Addiction shows?

RR: What ever lies beyond this we don’t know. We are taking it day by day right now. When Boys works together, it works amazingly well. If we can make this work right now then maybe we can rebuild our working relationships together again. A lot of damage has been done and its a lot to work through. But I believe that not all bands have to love each other. Most of the greatest bands can’t even stand one another but they make it work because of the art.

Boys

Boys (L-R: Zach Newton, Kyle Simmons, Ryan Ramirez, Ross Ryan)

MT: Kyle was once quoted in a Denver Post article as saying “[There is a] line you draw between how much business you put into your passion”. What does this statement mean to you?

RR:  There are several ways to interpret that. One could take it as her saying she is so passionate about her music that she doesn’t like to involve business out of fear that it may hinder the art in someway. I personally don’t like to put a lot of business into my passion, because I tend to think it can become something the dilutes the art. Business should be the thought after the art has been created. I don’t go into a project or begin writing a song with a business angle in mind. But I do realize the importance of business sense in the music world if you want to “make it big.”

MT: Are you concerned that Kyle may be averse to “making it big”? Do you personally want to “make it big”?

RR: I know Kyle wants to succeed with music to the fullest degree possible, as do I.  I do think that we both have very different reasons for that. I think that “making it big” means very different things to the both of us. You’ve really got to evaluate what success means to you and what the important aspects of it are. Is it fame? Is it money? Is it the persona of being cool? Or is it the true art? The chance to make an impact in peoples lives? The opportunity to travel the world doing what you love? In the wake of success, some people can sort of sabotage themselves, boobie-trap themselves in their actions. I think this is an unconscious thing, but I do believe it happens more often then not. The only person that can really hold you back from attaining anything is yourself.

MT: You originally became involved with Boys after your other band Life in Electric went on indefinite hiatus in the Summer of 2010. But Life in Electric seems to be back in business with a show scheduled for October 16th at the Hi-Dive. Did the problems with Boys lead you back to LiE, and what were the reasons LiE went on indefinite hiatus in the first place.

RR: We took a break because everyone agreed we all needed some time to focus on other projects or other aspects of life. I think that is important sometimes to do. It allows you to come back to something if you really want it and possibly find new life there. We had put so much energy into LiE over the course of 3 years that I think we were just all really needing to branch out and explore some other things for a while. Boys played a huge role in how long it took for LiE to get back together. A lot was being put into Boys at the time and I needed full focus on that.

You gotta know, we had a lot of opportunity on the table with LiE at the time that Boys began. I basically walked away from that opportunity to pursue something that I was feeling more passionate and connected with at the time. Now that doesn’t mean I love one more then the other. Its all just a matter of where the heart is at that moment. And that’s just where it was. The Boys hiatus definitely gave us the opportunity we needed with LiE to get some of that back on track and begin talking about working together again. It is just to much to juggle both those projects at once as they both require a lot of love and attention. LiE as of right now is just doing a couple shows. We have just released an EP containing previously unreleased material from our recording sessions last year. If everyone’s lives allow, we should be recording new material sometime early next year. But that is still all to be decided. We are just looking forward to getting back on stage and doing what we do.

Life in Electric

Life in Electric (L-R: Ryan Ramirez, Zach Newton, Jason McGinnis, Ross Ryan)

MT: If that isn’t enough to juggle, you also seem to be very passionate about creating electronic music.

RR: Since I started LiE back in 2007 I have had this idea of an electronic project called ForeverKid. Just before Boys’ hiatus in June I began digging deep and I have found what I really believe my true calling is, which is producing electronic/computer based music. And that is where I have been these past 3 months since the hiatus of Boys and where I plan on returning to after the Jane’s shows.  I’ve literally been living in my basement studio crafting this new monster I call ForeverKid. I’ve also taken it live a few times with a few DJ gigs in Fort Collins and I am doing my first one in Denver on Sept 30th at Cassleman’s.  I’ve got big plans for this venture and I plan on putting most of my creative energies and time into it throughout the rest of the year and most likely next year as well. With computer based music anything is possible. Your not tied to the boundaries of bass, guitar and drums. Your not at the mercy of the vocal melody to direct the song. Its freedom to move the music in anyway you would like. ForeverKid allows me to do all the things with music I have always wanted to do with out compromise. My driving force is that sound in my head. The sound I’m always chasing and never quite obtaining. And that is what keeps the hunger inside going. That is what keeps art alive.

MT: What about opening for Jane’s Addiction are you most looking forward to?

RR: I’d say the biggest thing I’m looking forward to is the opportunity to go out and perform in front of such a large audience and supporting such a large band.  I saw them perform a few summers ago. I was front row right in front of Dave Navarro. I remember being amazed at the kind of performance they delivered. It really is crazy to think I will be sharing the stage with them within a few days from now! I’m a performer first and foremost. Performance has been the driving force behind my musical career. Those few moments on stage are like the pay off for all the work you put into it. At least to me it is.

Boys Life in Electric ForeverKid
Boys on Facebook Life in Electric on Facebook ForeverKid on Facebook
Boys on Soundcloud Life in Electric on Soundcloud ForeverKid on Soundcloud

Weekend Preview: September 22 – 25, 2011

Here’s what’s coming up this weekend!  The shows I plan on attending are in RED.

Dumpstaphunk

Thursday, September 22nd

  • Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk w/Zobomaze @ Cervante’s Other Side: I’m a sucker for New Orleans funk, and Ivan is Aaron Neville’s son and the nephew to the other Neville Brothers. They have 2 bass players, and you know how much I like a big bottom (just seeing if you’re paying attention)! Zobomaze is a local band that plays pscyhedelic, mostly instrumental funk. 8 PM, All Ages, $20 DOS.
  • Fruit Bats w/Vetiver & Fairchildren @ Bluebird Theater: The Fruit Bats and Vetiver are folk/rock label-mates on Sub Pop Records. They will both also be performing free sets at Twist & Shout Records starting at 6 PM. Denver’s own Fairchildren (featuring members of Miss America and The Centennial) will kick things off at The Bluebird. 8 PM, 16+, $15
  • Gomez w/Kopecky Family & Greylag @ Ogden Theatre: 8 PM, 16+, $28
Friday, September 23rd
  • Serious Moonlight w/Popcult @ Illegal Pete’s DU: The next Illegal Pete’s tour kicks off with two seriously awesome up-and-coming acts. Serious Moonlight is an American act who’s usual live lineup features all four members of The Photo Atlas plus Cooper on the steel guitar and AtticAttak’s Donnie Rosentrater on keys. Popcult features former members of Chain Gang of 1974 and Fear Before (The March of Flames) and play polished dreamy pop tunes. 10 PM, All Ages, FREE!
  • Steve Earl & The Dukes @ Ogden Theatre: 8 PM, 16+, $30
  • The Dwarves w/ Nashville Pussy @ Bluebird Theater: 8 PM, 16+, $20
Saturday, September 24th

John Common

  • John Common & Blinding Light w/ Eldren and Glowing House @ Soiled Dove Underground: Wow, what a lineup! John Common’s lush, emotional pop songs remind me a lot of  Damien Rice’s work with Lisa Hannigan, especially when Common harmonizes with Jess DeNicola. You all know how I feel about Eldren and their ability to be the “Next Big Thing”. Denver’s Glowing House gets the party started with stomp-along folk-rock. 8 PM, 21+, $10-15
  • Serious Moonlight w/Popcult @ Illegal Pete’s Pearl Street Boulder: 10 PM, All Ages, FREE!
  • Come As You Are: A Tribute to the 20th Anniversary of Nirvana’s Nevermind @ Hi-Dive: $8 PM, 21+, $8
  • Big Sam Funky Nation w/ Ultraviolet Hippopotamus @ Cervante’s Other Side: 9 PM, All Ages, $10
  • Low w/ Mercuria and the Gemstars @ Bluebird Theater: 9 PM, 16+, $20
  • Slim Cessna’s Auto Club w/ Old Man Markley @ 3 Kings Tavern: 9 PM, 21+, $12
Sunday, September 25th
  • Blue October w/ IAMDYNAMITE and Ashleigh Stone @ Ogden Theatre: 8 PM, 16+, $35
  • Candlebox w/ Cowboy Mouth @ Bluebird Theater: 7:30 PM, 16+, $35
  • Periphery w/The Textures and The Human Abstract @ Marquis Theater: 7:30 PM, All Ages, $12

Concert Preview: Sleeper/Agent, Offcolor, and Take to the Oars @ Moe’s Original BBQ and Bowl

SleeperAgent

Named Rolling Stone’s “Artist to Watch” in the August 5th, 2011 issue, Bowling Green, Kentucky’s very own Sleeper/Agent comes to Moe’s Original BBQ and Bowl Wednesday night. Combining the angst-ridden garage guitar sound of The Von Bondies with the bright melodies and harmonies of  The New Pornographers, Sleeper/Agent’s debut album Celabrasion is filled with catchy pop-rock nuggets. The first single “Get It Daddy” is a raucous (but not so convincing) kiss-off to all of the daddies and sugar daddies in a girl’s life who buy affection with those material things that they adore so much. You can check out the video here:

Also on the bill is Denver’s Take to the Oars. The boys have been busy in the studio as of late recording new tracks for their next release. Two of the new songs, “Touch the Sky” and “White Noise” have already been busted out in recent live shows and have been polished up in the studio thanks to an insane amount of takes and retakes. Those of you who are starting a band, take note: make sure to hire one band member who also happens to work at one of the most advanced recording studios in the area as an engineer/mixer/producer.

While you’re at Moe’s, try the awesome BBQ and the even awesomer (?) side items. If you arrive early, you can bowl a few games next door!

Movie Review: “Our Idiot Brother” @ Cinebarre Thornton

Paul Rudd has been acting in movies for over 15 years now (remember Clueless?). But it wasn’t until 2004’s semi-improvisational Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy that he really started to show his comic potential. Since then, he has appeared in several films as an affable, quick-witted “everyman” (my favorite being his role as a bored husband in Knocked Up). In his latest film Our Idiot Brother, Rudd plays an affable, dim-witted hippy stoner. The trailer for the film would have you believe that the whole movie is about him and the funny stoner stuff he does, like naming his dog “Willie Nelson”. But it turns out, Our Idiot Brother is a chick-flick in disguise!

The film spends an awful lot of time focusing on the sisters and their problems: the frumpy, libido-less mother of two who’s husband is having an affair with a ballet dancer, the bi-sexual in a committed relationship with a woman who gets knocked up by her artist friend, and the single, career-driven journalist who would sell her soul for a juicy story and bangs her neighbor when its convenient for her. Then there’s the ex-girlfriend who couldn’t wait nine months for Rudd’s character to get out of jail before shacking up with a replacement hippy stoner. Come to think of it, this film paints some pretty ugly stereotypes of women.

The cast is full of recognizable faces. Almost the entire cast of TV’s Parks and Recreation (sans Amy Poehler) is in this film. I went through the whole film thinking Parker Posey was under that Parker Posey haircut, but it was actually Elizabeth Banks (who’s 30 Rock character looks a hell of a lot like Chelsea Handler!). Despite the cast, there are few laugh out loud moments. There was a funny exchange between Rudd and Rashida Jones’ lesbian character, but not much else. The film was heavily improvised – a strategy that has little blueprint for success. In the case of Our Idiot Brother, it just feels rambling and mostly dull – not unlike Little Miss Sunshine, who’s producers also made this film.

As for the Cinebarre theater in Thornton, there are things to like and things to hate. First, they have servers who will bring you beer and food during the movie! And the food is actually really good. The Fried Pickles (called “The Big Lebowskies”) are a “must-order” every time my wife and I go. But you have to eat them quick. Delicious fried pickles turn into disgusting chewy vinegar patties in about 15 minutes. I got “The Blue Velvet Burger”. A nice sized beef patty with blue cheese, buffalo wing sauce, and the usual burger veggies. As good as any burger you can get at Chili’s. A burger, fries, and Coke will run you just a little more than other theaters’ “vat o’ stale popcorn and gallon o’ soda” combo. Then there’s the “no babies, toddlers, or unaccompanied minors” policy. Awesome! The menu is more extensive than you expect and they serve beer and wine. On Monday nights, they broadcast Monday Night Football on the big screen! Unfortunately, the quality of audio and video blows pretty bad. There’s no digital anything in this place, so don’t set your expectations too high.

How 9/11 Elevated U2’s “All That You Can’t Leave Behind”

Released in October 2000, U2’s tenth album All That You Can’t Leave Behind was a comeback of sorts for the Irish quartet. They had been the biggest band in the world, thanks to the back-to-back classics The Joshua Tree and Achtung Baby. Here’s a picture of me and my friend Frank (doing his best Bono impression) on our way from Orange, California to Tempe, Arizona to see U2 play Sun Devil Stadium in 1987 (this was the closest thing we could find to a “Joshua Tree” on our journey):

Tempe or Bust

But the band spent the 1990s as a parody of their former selves – releasing the alt-disco Zooropa and Pop. While these two albums still managed to get to #1, being a fan of U2 started to get a lot less cool. As if to recognize and apologize for this, the band announced upon the release of ATYCLB that they were “re-applying for the job of the best band in the world”. The album certainly sounded like classic U2. Rolling Stone magazine even hailed it U2’s “third masterpiece”. The first single “Beautiful Day” would go on to win several Grammys including the coveted Song and Record of the Year awards.

The album took on even greater life after the events on September 11th, 2001.

Take a song like “Stuck in a Moment You Can’t Get Out Of”. It was originally written as a eulogy to INXS lead singer Michael Hutchence, a close friend of Bono’s who committed suicide in 1997. Days after 9/11, somebody mashed it up with news coverage from that day and it was being played on the radio. And people could relate to the feeling described in the song. Many truly felt like they were stuck in the moment of that awful day, but knew they needed to “get [themselves] together” because “It’s just a moment/This time will pass”.

Then, there was “Walk on”. A song originally meant as an uplifting tribute to Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, it became reappropriated by those looking for the strength to embrace America’s freedom and move forward:

Walk on, walk on
What you got they can’t steal it
No they can’t even feel it
Walk on, walk on…
Stay safe tonight
And I know it aches
And your heart it breaks
And you can only take so much
Walk on, walk on

“Walk On” was performed by U2 as part of the America: A Tribute to Heroes telecast. Released as a single in 2001, it went on to win that year’s Grammy award for Record of the Year, making ATYCLB the only album to produce two singles to win the Record of the Year Grammys in consecutive years. Coincidentally, the album also had a song called “New York”, written as a love letter to the city after Bono purchased a home there. The album sold 2 Million albums in the 10+ months before September 11th, and sold another 2 Million albums in the months after September 11th. The album was already a success the moment it was released. But just as 9/11 transformed Rudolph Guiliani from an adulterer who couldn’t beat Hillary Clinton in the 2000 Senate elections into a viable presidential candidate in 2008, it transformed an already great album into something that defined America’s resolve in the wake of the tragedy. And it got U2 re-hired U2 as “the best band in the world”.

Concert Review: Melissa McIntyre’s Big Night; Popcult

Melissa McIntyre

There’s no shortage of people in their 30’s, 40’s, or even 50’s who cling to dreams of rock stardom. Just spend a few hours at one of the dozen open mic nights that take place around town and you’ll find them in spades.  But rarely do you find someone who just decided to pick up a guitar at 30 and write songs that has as much talent as Melissa McIntyre. Her Soundcloud page reveals a knack for writing engaging (no pun intended) guitar/bass/vocal songs. Her voice is particularly pretty when used at a lower range and slow tempo, such as in the Mazzy Star inspired “I Don’t Wanna Ask”.

Melissa McIntyre and Chris Heckman
There were upwards of 30 people – family, friends, and fans – on hand to see her performance in the Summit Music Hall lounge on Thursday night. McIntyre seemed nervous and at times it was evident in her performance. A little guitar mistake here, a little voice break there. She seemed much more comfortable when her guitar teacher (and frontman of The Epilogues) Chris Heckman joined her on stage for a duet of “Lost My Way”. For her final song, she broke out a brand-new one. Usually, this is not a very good idea and unfortunately it was not quite ready for prime time. I know if I was in her shoes, I would have preferred to decompress on one of the Summit’s leather sofa’s following a nerve-wracking set.  But, this was not in the cards for Melissa. Her boyfriend Justin proposed to her on-stage at the end of her set. She said “yes”.

Melissa McIntyre
Melissa has talent. This was the first time I had seen her perform, so I don’t have any basis for comparison. For all I know, nerves have never been a problem for her. Maybe as she looked out at the sea of her family and friends, she got an inkling of what was to follow and she got rattled. I’ll find out next time, because I’d be happy to see her perform again those songs again. You can follow her journey too on Facebook.

Popcult

Speaking of talent, where in the hell did Popcult come from?!? Fresh out of high school, Justin Renaud and Tyler Venter somehow managed to hook up with Chain Gang of 1974 earlier in the year for a short tour including a stop at SXSW. Then, they went up into the mountains near Fairplay and pumped out an EP’s worth of Coldplay-inspired tracks that benefit greatly from the production, mixing, and engineering talents of Matt Wilcox (who also recently co-produced American Tomahawk’s CD). Thursday night’s show at the Larimer Lounge was only their fourth live performance as a band, which also features bassist Alex Halvorson and former Fear Before (The March of Flames) drummer Brandon Proff.

Popcult

There were supposed to be four bands playing, with Popcult as the headliner. Given that the show was supposed to start at 9 PM, I figured Popcult wouldn’t hit the stage until at least 11:00 PM. Big mistake. They started at 10:00 PM and I was only able to catch two songs. I might have been treated to a third song, as the crowd really wanted an encore. But, Renaud charmingly admitted they didn’t know any more songs. Why the early set? Maybe it had to do with the fact that Renaud and Venter are only 19 and were playing a gig that they would be too young to actually attend. Maybe it had to do with a shakeup of the schedule – Young Cities had been expected to play, but that never materialized. In any event, Popcult appears to be capable of living up to the promise of their EP. It was one of the best “sounding” performances by a 4-piece pop/rock band I’d heard at Larimer Lounge – comparable to their recorded versions. The mix at Larimer can get overwhelmingly loud, but Popcult’s music allowed for a less aggressive mix. Yeah, they are going to continue to get dogged by Coldplay comparisons. But is it really so bad to be compared to your heroes who have been writing hit songs for over 10 years when you’ve only been doing it for a few months?

Popcult
You can find Popcult on Facebook and download their EP for free at http://www.popcultband.com.

Weekend Preview: September 9 -11, 2011

Thursday, September 8th

  • Open Mic Night @ The Summit Music Hall – Melissa McIntyre is performing at around 9:30 and Chris Heckman from The Epilogues will join her for a song!  Plus no cover and $1 PBR’s!  21+
  • Serious Moonlight @ Lazy Dog/Brick House – An indie-folk band featuring members of The Photo Atlas. 21+, Free(?)
  • Paper Bird @ The Boulder Theater – Paper Bird is one of Colorado’s best Americana bands. All Ages, $17.50 – $19.50 (Under 21)
  • PopCult @ Larimer Lounge – Fans of The Fray/Coldplay will love these guys. 21+. $10
  • My Darkest Days @ Marquis Theater – Canadian rock for strippers. All Ages, $15
  • King Rat @ Bender’s Tavern – Denver’s godfathers of punk. 21+, $10
  • STS9 @ Ogden Theater – SOLD OUT

Friday, September 9th

Back to School Bash

  • Back to School Bash w/ Regret Night, Kill Paradise, The Photo Atlas, Caramel Carmela, and Break Through Beautiful – This is the only thing worth going to on Friday night.  Trust me! All Ages, $10
  • STS9 @ Red Rocks – The first of a 2-night stand. All Ages, $52

Saturday, September 10th

  • DMX @ Gothic Theater – 16+, $35 ($40 D.O.S.)
  • MSTRKRFT @ Ogden Theater – 16+, $25 ($30 D.O.S.)
  • Justice League of Street Food’s Fall Helmet Bash @ 3507 Ringsby Ct – Denver’s best food trucks gather for a party including entertainment and booze from 5-10 PM. Wear a hat or helmet! All Ages.

Sunday, September 11th

The Epilogues w/ Aloft in the Sundry

  • The Epilogues w/ Aloft in the Sundry, Be Brave, and Petals of Spain @ Hi-Dive – If you don’t come, the terrorists win. 18+, $6 (Are you kidding me! That’s a great deal!)