Best Shows in Denver 1/30/20 – 2/5/20

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Whipporwill performs at Hi-Dive on January 30. Photo by Glenn Ross

Thursday | January 30

Who: Telefon Tel Aviv w/Steve Hauschildt
When: Thursday, 1.30, 8:30 p.m.
Where: Ophelia’s Electric Soapbox
Why: On Dreams Are Not Enough, Telefon Tel Aviv delves into states of mind and existence as represented by the titles of the song: “I dream of it often,” “Standing at the bottom of the ocean,” “Mouth agape,” “Eyes Glaring” etc. The compositions combine texture and tone in a way processed to convey a sense of space and a journey into the imagination in a way to perhaps suggest that indeed merely having dreams is inadequate to having a life worth living even if we are often guided by them. Like a nod to Langston Hughes’ famous lines about a dream deferred. A dream does not, after all, occupy the same space in the psyche as conscious experiences. Songwriter Joshua Eustis invites on a journey to make these sonic spaces that might have sat in the backburner of his mind manifest. Steven Hauschildt has been crafting exquisite sonic experiences with software and analog synth for years including during his time with experimental electronic pop group Emeralds. As a solo artist his mastery of emotional colorings is impressive and his latest offering is 2019’s Nonlin.

What: Natural Violence Tape Release Show w/Many Blessings, DJ Pop CTRL and Dem Deya Sound System
When: Thursday, 1.30, 8 p.m.
Where: Meadowlark Bar

Friday | January 31

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Natalie Tate circa 2017, photo by Tom Murphy

What: Whipporwill w/Natalie Tate
When: Friday, 1.31, 8 p.m.
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: Whipporwill’s 2019 album The Nature of Storms charts a perilous personal journey that could have ended the band as it endured a fraught tour that took it through extreme, inclement weather followed by a period of personal travails that would test anyone’s resolve to continue with something as dubiously rewarding a music often is. But the result is a dynamic set of songs that transcends expectations knowing the group has roots in folk and indie rock as its compositions are imaginative and evocative with an ear not just for melody but deep atmosphere and emotional tenor. Whipporwill doesn’t hit us with an album full of the same, tried and true dynamics, rather, a series of well developed concepts as set pieces and short stories connected by a larger narrative about life and the interconnected significance of our experiences. Natalie Tate is one of Denver’s most interesting and talented songwriters who hasn’t played around town much but her combination of musical chops and a spirit of experimentation and innovation in songcraft has branched in fascinating directions since she emerged in the local music scene several years back.

What: Goon (album release) w/Sunk Cost, Gack and Sweet Kiss
When: Friday, 1.31, 7 p.m.
Where: Seventh Circle Music Collective
Why: Goon’s Natural Evil takes modern hardcore in a much more experimental direction with the use of noise and atmospheric sounds in a way that is both pointed, intense while warping those edges and taking the angular quality of the music and splaying the dynamic in unpredictable and ultimately wilder directions. The record frankly showcases how a merely excellent hardcore band can become one that can influence more than connoisseurs of that style of music as the appeal transcends subgenre.

What: Jacket of Spiders, Swami and Flat Earth
When: Friday, 1.31, 8 p.m.
Where: 3 Kings Tavern
Why: Jacket of Spiders includes former members of Tarmints, Twice Wilted and Cynic’s Bane. The result is surging, swirling guitar rock that is both colossal and ethereal and frankly out of step with a lot of what’s happening in Denver at the moment. Fans of the members’ previous bands as well as Space Team Electra and Bowery Electric should check out what the band is doing.

What: Guangdong Modern Dance Company
When: Friday, 1.30, 7:30 p.m.
Where: Newman Center

What: Lucy Daydream w/XOXFord
When: Friday, 1.31, 8 p.m.
Where: Larimer Lounge

Saturday | February 1

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Damn Selene, photo courtesy the artist

What: Damn Selene album release w/R A R E B Y R D $, 3Two and Stoney Bertz
When: Saturday, 2.01, 7 p.m.
Where: Seventh Circle Music Collective
Why: Damn Selene has been one of the most respected hip-hop artists of the Denver underground for a handful of years in the more experimental end of that scene. The artist’s beats are rooted in noise, darkwave and industrial soundscaping paired with emotionally charged vocals taking at aim at society with honesty and a gift for combining storytelling with mythmaking and self-examination. Those qualities manifest brilliantly on the new album Nobody By That Name Lives Here Anymore. Selene’s vibrant synth work and transporting melodies vibe well with those of R A R E B Y R D $ whose blend of radical vulnerability and swagger weaves well with its own entrancing beats informed by a rich palette of sounds drawing from dub, analog synth music, classic hip-hop, noise, ambient music and whatever has caught the trio’s ear at the moment.

What: The Heroine, Tokyo Rodeo and Stone Deaf
When: Saturday, 2.01, 9 p.m.
Where: 3 Kings Tavern
Why: Just when the whole “Southern Rock” thing seems played out, rote and utterly performative, The Heroine from San Antonio is there to play up every trope with a sincerity and conviction that is impossible to mime and has to come from an honest place. The Heroine sounds a bit like a way better and non-wack version of Motley Crue circa Dr. Feelgood and performs its shows like they have something to prove to someone even if only to themselves. Tokyo Rodeo from Denver performs with a similar spirit with its own songs reflecting a fire to live an authentic and vibrant life creating the kind of music that sounds like the people making it really lived and felt deeply and aimed for the catharsis of creative expression that only comes from some form of rock and roll.

What: The Yellnats, The Slack and Short Shorts – Winter Coat Donation Drive
When: Saturday, 2.01, 7:45 p.m.
Where: Mutiny Information Café

Monday | February 3

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Mick Jenkins, photo by Sam Schmieg

What: EarthGang w/Mick Jenkins, Wynne and Jurdan Bryant
When: Monday, 2.03, 7 p.m.
Where: Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom
Why: EarthGang’s 2019 album Mirrorland was inspired by the 1978 film The Wiz and the band ran with the surreal quality of the film and infused it into a journey into the modern American cultural and political landscape with the attendant perils, struggles and triumphs. The Atlanta-based duo excels at using the formats of jazz, sampling, rap and soul to craft music that might be called psychedelic in another musical context except it isn’t disorienting, it’s focused on lived experience and creating the world you want to see rather than escapism.

Wednesday | February 5

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Claudzilla, photo by Tom Murphy

What: Weird Wednesday: Ruche Mere, Claudzilla, Space Jail
When: Wednesday, 2.05, 9 p.m.
Where: Bowman’s Vinyl and Lounge
Why: Weird Wednesday this month includes performances from series host Claudzilla and her strange synth pop songs and unique covers, Ruche Mère a duo that uses electronic and organic instruments including bells and improvised percussive textural sounds to create what might be described post-industrial/post-civilization found object folk and Space Jail’s IDM-esque, ambient psychedelic folk soundscapes.

VYKS’ Production on “Night” Stimulates Both Spheres of the Brain Toward Resolving Those Late Night Internal Struggles

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VYKS, photo courtesy the artist

“Night,”the third song from VYKS’ debut album, sounds like a chapter of a story arc by the late French comic legend Moebius. There is a sense of the far flung future but one that also feels familiar. The sound design on the song making extensive use of hard, rapid panning to alternate in stimulating both sides of your brain could be disorienting if it wasn’t also employed in a way that seems to reconcile opposites. The mechanistic percussive elements ground the ethereal vocals in the conflicted emotions that run through the narrative and a story of wanting to be free of the control and oppression of a mysterious “they.” As the song is part of a concept album that sounds like it has some footing in experimental, electronic industrial music it hearkens one to Battle Angel Alita as she awakens to her own identity and independence beyond that programmed into her design. This song is like the inner dialogue one might engage in late at night while sorting out your real feelings and how you want to act on them if at all. Listen to “Night” on Spotify.

Jenny Kern’s Expansive and Vulnerable “Satellite” is a Lush Catharsis of Hope in a Time of Acute Self-Awareness

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Jenny Kern, photo courtesy the artist

From the beginning of “Satellite,” Jenny Kern’s vocals immediately strike you as being different, uniquely expressive. Is it because her voice is huskier or deeper? Perhaps but her cadence and delivery goes in directions that seem to be almost the opposite of the predictable instincts of many singers. As she sketches for us the emotional setting for us and her uncommonly deep self-examination exposing her awareness of her own failings and yet knowing she is capable of better backed by a desire to be better than she had previously thought she could be before becoming intimately familiar with her shortcomings and the consequences for others. The song doesn’t strike a defensive tone, it is not maudlin, instead it reaches out with a spirit of vulnerability and honesty. Kern’s voice sits like a constant presence in an evolving soundscape of lush sounds that swell and change pace with the way she lays out the strains of her aching heart at how she doesn’t want to mess things up this time around as she has in the past. Kern gets you to identify with such feelings in yourself and with her struggle and hope for a better future. Listen to “Satellite” on Spotify and follow Kern at the links below.

jennykernmusic.com
soundcloud.com/jennykernmusic
twitter.com/jennykernmusic
facebook.com/jennykernmusic
instagram.com/jennykernmusic

The Gritty and Fiery “Manic Mood” Finds Easy Jane Exemplifying the Bombastic and Lurid End of Darkwave

 

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Easy Jane “Manic Mood” cover (cropped)

The guitar on Easy Jane’s “Manic Mood” doesn’t carry a melody so much as provide textures and emotional atmospheres the way Daniel Ash has done with various projects. On this song it sears through the track while the bass and drums keep the song moving forward. The sense of menace and and disorientation is only enhanced by the two vocalists whose singing goes from fairly dry to slightly echoing and swirly. Where many other bands in the vein of post-punk and darkwave eschew technical prowess in their instruments, Easy Jane embraces the bombastic, searing guitar solo and song breakdown here as “Manic Mood” goes to outro in a manner reflecting the title of the song. Though the tone is lurid and the singers sound like they’re coming to us from some kind of afterlife, there is nothing tentative to the pacing lending even the most melancholic moments some grit and intensity. Listen to “Manic Mood” on Spotify.

“Let Em Down” by Hunnid is Like a Focusing Mantra in Times of Great Adversity and Struggle

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Hunnid, photo courtesy the artist

Hunnid spits the lyrics of “Let Em Down” like he’s been running for miles but finding not his second but his third and even fifth wind because he can’t let himself falter out of concern for those for whom he feels the weight of great responsibility. So he repeats the refrain “Ain’t no way that Imma let ’em down, see my family dependent on me, ain’t no way that Imma let ’em down” like a focusing mantra to stay motivated even as life throws challenges and stumbling blocks his way. There is no bravado in these proclamations because it doesn’t feel like Hunnid is talking tough, he is talking himself up as a reminder that if he doesn’t make the effort no one else really will. Ignoring his discomfort and the effort and time it takes he needs to tell himself what needs to be done and his own motivation for persevering. Along with the vocals is a beat with kinetic percussion and a simple yet dynamic synth arpeggio and piano line that traces the outer edges of the mood. It is almost a counterpoint to the momentum of the vocal line but also the element of the song that can go outside the tight focus of the narrators vision and it is in the beat that the song can take a breath making the sense of mission running through the song possible. Listen to “Let Em Down” on Soundcloud and follow Hunnid at the links provided.

keepit1oo.com/home
soundcloud.com/hunnid-2
twitter.com/Hunnid_CCG
facebook.com/HunnidCCG
instagram.com/hunnid_ccg

Draag’s “Ghost Leak” is a Soothing and Illuminating Peek Into the Wonders All Around Us Hiding in Plain Sight

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Draag, photo courtesy the artists

On overpasses, in Asian markets, amid shops of various kinds, on balconies, in darkened streets and fields, on a bridge in broad daylight and standing unobtrusively staring, a figure with a mask covering the lower part of her face is the central figure of Draag’s video for “Ghost Leak.” The figure seems invisible to other people except us who see it from the vantage of not being in the video. Like we’re getting that ghost leak that is the title and granted special powers of observation that we all possess but have come to ignore and neglect. And yet this figure doesn’t instill a sense of fear. Rather it’s more like the ghost experience many report of figures who appear unexpectedly without menace. Perhaps here it represents those things in the world many of us miss if we don’t pay attention or are turned in to our surroundings with the proper cognition as the mind often renders insensible or terrifying that which it has no framework or expectation.

Musically the song is like layers of cassette recordings put together so that vocals wander about spectrally as ethereal guitars glide along at a metronomic pace, sweeping between chords and notes, organic percussion provides texture and a shuffling and hypnotic pacing. Synths swirl into the mix and bass figures help to give the track occasional and loose definition. All the sounds convey a sense of depth and mystery that is soothing and inviting. Like if My Bloody Valentine wrote an IDM song using a similar palette of sounds. Its amorphous structure suits it as it winds its way into your consciousness as a reminder of everyday unexpected phenomena that, when noticed and observed can turn a mundane environment into something fascinating and inspiring once we’re able to perceive beyond our conditioned responses and interpretations. The song will be part of the band’s Clara Luz EP produced by Jon Nuñez of Torche due out in February when the group will have a residency at The Echo in Los Angeles. Watch the video for “Ghost Leak” on YouTube and follow Draag at the links below.

draagdraag.com
soundcloud.com/draagdraag
draagdraag.bandcamp.com/releases
twitter.com/draagsadpeople
facebook.com/Draag85
instagram.com/draagsadpeople

Moontwin’s Single “Reach Through” is a Densely Dynamic Anthem to Yearning and Triumph Over Adversity

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Moontwin, photo courtesy the artists

Moontwin’s “Reach Through” has the kind of momentum and urgency one doesn’t hear often enough in an era of too much dispassionate music that also seems to lack for conviction. It’s tempting to compare it to 90s bands that fused industrial music with post-punk like Curve but the production on the track doesn’t sound or feel throwback. More comparable to something like Big Black Delta or TR/ST where the low end, rhythm and melody compliment each other in a mutually fortifying way. The distorted bass line starts the song off in a headlong drive that pushes and carries the song in its wake. Maple Bee’s vocals are part commentary part subject in the way Dale Bozzio’s were in Missing Persons. Zac Kuzmanov lost the use of his hands a few years ago due to a degenerative muscular disorder (the crowdfunding campaign to aid his disability can be found here https://zhouse.xraydio.net/?fbclid=IwAR0_Tc2SJDKwxmSfUhuo2X6wb8qzraezU9jkIwVhchAjGlm6JvC0pntu7k8 ) but it clearly didn’t put a damper on his powers of imaginative production and songwriting. Listen to “Reach Through” on Bandcamp where you can also sample the rest of the album Moon TV (available digitally but also as a limited edition cassette) and follow Moontwin at the links below.

soundcloud.com/user-977876126
twitter.com/moontwinmusic
facebook.com/moontwinmusic
instagram.com/moontwinmusic
youtube.com/channel/UCmzWUfHkhyJS7cFtvzv2ehQ
open.spotify.com/artist/44NqCpdthTpVVnN8149SuA?si=Pf2-TLtjSAycbvIZjwRkYA

Domus and Guest Singer Ljung Evoke the Sense of Mystery and Imagination of Nature on the Edge of Civilization on “Canada”

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Domus, photo courtesy the artists

The video for “Canada” by Domus, directed by Marcus Malmström, gives us the hazy, enigmatic night time imagery of traveling on lonely rural highways and wandering in mysterious spaces, and a wolf whose image phases as though traversing multiple dimensions at the same time. All while guest singer Ljung’s vocals drift in to add to the impressionistic composition with ethereal couplets that weave together perfectly with the languorous pace as synths swirl out in slow, hypnotic rosettes of tone accented by a melodic, distinct bass line. The song is based on impressions one of the songwriters had of his visit to Canada so he must have been through in spring or fall with the murky weather and lightning without the snow, when the world is not yet woken up from winter or preparing for the long slumber thereof. It speaks to the allure of a world where nature and urban living are so close together and making for a culture that isn’t so disconnected from the spiritual aspect of the uniqueness of the environment. The song itself though dusky and meditative provokes a spirit of exploration and reflection. Watch the video on YouTube and follow Domus at the links provided.

soundcloud.com/domusband
facebook.com/domussthlm
instagram.com/domusband

Robin Anderson Sings of Wrapping Up Pleasant Memories For a Future When You’ll Most Need Them on “Solstice”

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Robin Anderson “Solstice” cover (cropped)

Robin Anderson’s spare arrangement on “Solstice” is centered on the dulcet tones of her vocals and and piano melody. In the background a subtle synth drone, strings and bells accenting the lyrics. In the song Anderson sings about wrapping up the years and experiences for a later date knowing she’ll miss the cherished times because there have been rougher times and will be again when being able to unwrap those memories in your mind can be a welcome reminder that life isn’t always the hardship and struggle even when it can seem like it for longer stretches of time than you think you can endure. That sentiment elevates the song from perhaps mere holiday music written for and even during a sentimental season to a statement on making memories to have something positive to hold on to when you need it most. Listen to “Solstice” on Spotify and follow Anderson at the links provided.

robineanderson.bandcamp.com
facebook.com/robineanderson
instagram.com/robin.e.anderson

“Surfacing” by SCERE is the Sound of Swimming Your Way Through Life’s Murk to Better Places in the Psyche

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SCERE self-titled EP cover (cropped)

SCERE’s debut, self-titled EP is reminiscent of 90s downtempo with a more industrial approach to the beatmaking. This is exemplified no better than on the single “Surfacing,” on which the serpentine structure of the rhythm gives one the impression of singer Coral wandering in a dimly lit room (as evidenced by the music video) unwinding and unpacking her struggles to herself and yearning for someone, maybe herself, to take her home whether literally or a place where she can feel grounded again and gain the strength to emerge from a kind of stasis or psychic funk. The streaming, hazy melodies and the layered beats accenting the emotional colorings of the vocals have a similarly sensual quality heard in “#1 Crush” by Garbage. The dynamic range of dense atmospheres and spacious, melancholic tonal spaces is wide but subtle making it a compelling journey of a song and EP overall. Producer Ged Denton is also a member of Der Prosecutor and C-TEC (which includes members of Front 242, Cubanate and Nitzer Ebb) and brings some of that expertise to this project in method but creating a decidedly different sound. Watch the video for “Surfacing” on YouTube and follow SCERE at the links below.

scere.com
soundcloud.com/scere