Queen City Sounds Podcast S5E06: Rubedo

Rubedo, photo by Tom Murphy

Rubedo is a psychedelic prog and pop band from Denver. The trio is comprised of childhood friends Kyle Kramer, Alex Trujillo and Gregg Ziemba whose roots in the influence of alternative rock and art rock bands like The Mars Volta has meant Rubedo would never be trend hoppers and with an interest in concepts of alchemy and how that can inform how music can be made and functions, Rubedo has had a different kind of journey through, around and out of the Denver music scene. In the early 2010s they met R. Isaiah “Ikey” Owens, keyboard player for The Mars Volta and Jack White’s band and became friends and collaborators as he produced the albums Massa Confusa (2012) and Love Is The Answer (2013). Owens became a mentor to the band influencing their ethos, their already strong work ethic as artists and their drive to continue to put out worthwhile releases. Even with the tragic passing of Owens in 2014, Rubedo has continued their friend’s commitment to community and cultivating artistic vision. For a handful of years they were involved in running the influential DIY space Unit E which has since morphed into a record label that focuses on quality local releases including their 2025 album Citrinitas which started brewing in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic and was written and recorded across sessions at R.A.R.E. Records in Winchester, TN (co-owned by Michael McDonald) with Michael Lee, Tayler Martin, Jeremy Mason and Charlie Powell. Additional engineering at The Blasting Room in Fort Collins, Colorado with Andrew Berlin, mixed by Matt Embree (Rx Bandits) at ICS in Long Beach, CA and mastering by Tyler Lindgren (The Milk Blossoms). It’s a record that reflects the band’s community and connections local and beyond and the album is co-release with Mash Down Babylon, Embree’s label. The album is typically both a touching and personal set of songs and those that are an incisive and poetic commentary on the times in which we find ourselves ravaged by the psychopathy of oligarchs, fascists and the ways in which we’re encouraged to isolate ourselves when the opposite is what is needed.

Listen to our interview with Rubedo on Bandcamp and follow the band at the links below. Rubedo releases Citrinitas on vinyl at a show at the Hi-Dive on Friday, June 27 with RAREBYRD$ and Redamancy.

rubedomusic.com

Rubedo on Facebook

Rubedo on Twitter

Queen City Sounds Podcast S4E38: Evan Taylor

Evan Taylor, photo by Drew

Evan Taylor is the former bandleader of the Bernie Worrell Orchestra as well as a producer and musician of note. He has worked and collaborated with the likes of Mike Watt, King Tuff, members of Talking Heads, members of Black Flag on country-influenced records, Marc Ribot, The Chapin Sisters and Sean Ono Lennon. Worrell is of course the keyboard/synth player who helped put some of the cosmic weirdness into the music of Paliament-Funkadelic as well as a much broader swath of music across decades than may seem obvious and worth exploring. When Worrell passed away in 2016 he left behind a rich legacy of great music including a plethora of unfinished and unreleased projects. Some of those were entrusted to Taylor to complete and bring into the world in a form that one hopes would have made Worrell proud. The first of those is Bernie Worrell: Wave From The WOOniverse which released on vinyl on Bernie’s birthday April 19 on Record Store Day 2024 via Org Music and became available for streaming on June 28. It includes contributions from some of the aforementioned as well as Bootsy Collins and members of TV on the Radio, Fishbone, Living Colour and Cibo Matto and B-52s. The compilation additionally features an unreleased Funkadelic song “Confusion.” Altogether the album is a rich tour through the career of one of popular music’s most beloved and influential figures.

Listen to our interview with Taylor on Bandcamp and follow his musical endeavors at the links below for his own website and that of his record label Loantaka Records.

loantakarecords.com

evantaylormusic.com