Review
Review: Eisley plays Miramontes
Interview with the family band
Visibly exhausted from a long road trip and spending the night in a hotel, the members of Eisley took time to relax before their set, sipping on coffee and tea as they discussed their lives as a family band, the pressures of big record labels, and their upcoming album.
Sufficiently smashed
SmashBurger opens in 29th Street Mall
SmashBurger is no dainty, keep-your-fingers-clean restaurant where one would go to make a well-mannered impression on a first date.
Movie Buff: “Alice in Wonderland”
Even Alice is wondering who wrote this script
In a land where heads fill a moat, animals are used as slaves and big heads are in style, Wonderland has been revamped Tim Burton style.
Playlist: Ladies who rock
Listen to some amazing gals
Although female singers seem to be all over the pop charts right now, it’s hard not to be a little disappointed that ladies aren’t better represented on the rock charts.
Playlist: Songs for a snowy day
A soundtrack to a gloomy winter’s day
In the cold Colorado weather it can be easy to get a little gloomy when stuck inside watching an endless wall of white fall for days on end.
Review: “The Country Wife”
The past meets the present
The lights have just been lowered to signal the start of the play.
Movie Buff: “Valentine’s Day”
Holiday film plays up clichés with all-star cast
Set on Valentine’s Day in Los Angeles, “Valentine’s Day” tells the story of several different strangers and the overlapping occurrences that they have.
Concert review: St. Vincent
Avant-garde chanteuse performs at the Bluebird Theater
With spastic movements and batting lashes, Annie Clark becomes the envy of every girl and the object of every male’s attention every time she performs.
Vintage Album of the Week: “August and Everything After”
“When everybody loves you, son, that’s just about as funky as you can be”
If you like a storm of emotions in an album (“August and Everything After” by the Counting Crows is for you). Adam Duritz is a sufferer of depression and his personal demons are evident in his emotional diction.
Classic of the Week: “The Graduate”
Here’s to you, Mr. Nichols, Mr. Hoffman and Mrs. Bancroft
No college alum should have to suffer after graduation like Benjamin Braddock does in 1967’s “The Graduate.” When I graduate in a few weeks, I sure hope I don’t.







