New Angels Trump Old Demons In 2019 for Clay Rose and Gasoline Lollipops
Clay Rose has a lot to be thankful for as this new year begins. A new member of his family,…
Weaving through Denver Music, Art, Culture, and Life
Clay Rose has a lot to be thankful for as this new year begins. A new member of his family,…
Four days in the summer that change the course of the summer – almost every one of the last 15…
The world-famous “Denver Sound” has petered out.
Which is not to say that the beautiful, often over-the-top and heavy handed gothic alt-country sound isn’t significant anymore – not at all. That sound helped put Denver back on the musical globe in the ’80s and ‘90s, and still attracts its fair share of fans. It’s still appreciated world-wide, and many remain ravenous for it – especially in Europe.
But it exists currently in a type of atrophy in Denver – it’s taken a back seat that has allowed an insurgence of more than a few different genres to begin to flourish, or re-flourish, as the case may be. Denver has a strong music scene – perhaps the strongest in the US (at the moment) – and part of its strength comes from its wide variety. So if the sometimes overbearing popularity of the “Denver Sound” – indeed the often overweighted nature of the sound itself – is waning, it can only be good news for the lighter, the more pop-y, the innovative and indie, or the more aggressive and punkier genres.
And that’s exactly what’s happening in the bar, dive, club, backyard and warehouse scene right now.