Most Popular
-
Pain Management
Cancer patient Tim Thomason didn't think he could feel any worse. His Denver jailers showed that he could.
-
Denver's Own Royal Tenenbaums
The late Timber Dick's children are carrying on a brilliant family legacy that includes Nancy Dick and Tom Lantos.
-
Gospel Journey Teens Dare 2 Share
Greg Stier is raising an army of adolescents to help save your soul.
-
Curtain Call
Denver mourns the loss of its favorite bipolar, one-armed comic/poet/playwright.
-
The Lords of Payback
Jefferson County officials show Mike Zinna that what goes around comes around.
Blogs
Thu Aug 7, 3:00 PM
Thu Aug 7, 2:00 PM
Thu Aug 7, 2:59 PM
Thu Aug 7, 11:57 AM
Thu Aug 7, 4:08 PM
Thu Aug 7, 7:03 AM
Thu Aug 7, 10:25 AM
Wed Aug 6, 2:18 PM
Thu Aug 7, 10:29 AM
Thu Aug 7, 8:48 AM
Thu Aug 7, 3:02 PM
Thu Aug 7, 1:57 PM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Roberts
Guitarist Don Felder writes about his ouster from the Eagles.
Friday, August 8, Boulder Theater, 303-786-7030.
Thursday, August 7, Denver Botanic Gardens, 1-866-586-4170; Friday, August 8, Chautauqua Auditorium, 303-440-7666; Saturday, August 9, Red Rocks, 303-830-8497.
T*O*S: Terminate on Sight
G Unit/Interscope Records
No related articles found
National Features >
Village Voice
How Andrew Cuomo gave birth to the subprime-mortgage crisis that
threatens to bring down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
By Wayne Barrett
Houston Press
Inside the world of "stash houses," where smugglers use torture to extort illegal immigrants.
By Chris Vogel
Phoenix New Times
Here's the John McCain some Arizonans know--and loathe.
By Amy Silverman
Nick Lowe
Tuesday, April 15, Boulder Theater, Boulder, 303-786-7030.
Published on April 10, 2008
During the '70s, when he went from being a mainstay in England's rough-and-tumble pub-rock scene to a notable part of the new-wave movement, Nick Lowe was known as "Basher." These days, of course, bashing isn't at the top of his agenda. At My Age, his most recent platter, is a musically serene offering whose country and rockabilly influences emerge with ease, not effort. Even so, the man who once jokingly dubbed himself the Jesus of Cool and warbled songs such as "Marie Provost," about a dead woman eaten by her dachshund, retains his cruel-to-be-kind sense of humor. For proof, lend an ear to "I Trained Her to Love Me," which features the winning lines "If you think that it's depraved, and I should be ashamed/So what?" Such witticisms demonstrate that Lowe hasn't lost the ability to amuse despite the passage of time and the gray in his mane. As such, his concert, co-starring Ron Sexsmith, promises to be quite the bash.