Coheed And Cambria, Bobcat Goldthwait, Hercules And Love Affair, and much more
More Just Announced
Here’s this week’s list of concert announcements, with miscellaneous facts for the fun of it:
Bobcat Goldthwait, February 27-28 at Comedy Works (downtown): The stand-up comedian opened for Nirvana on several dates during its last North American tour in the fall of 1993.
Coheed And Cambria, March 3 at the Denver Coliseum: C&C frontman Claudio Sanchez is the author of The Armory Wars, a sci-fi comic book series that also doubles as a visual companion to Coheed’s proggy, space-adventure concept albums.
Hercules And Love Affair, March 6 at Beta: The New York-based disco-clash group is led by Andy Butler, a Denver native who spent his teen years DJing at local gay clubs and raving the fuck out.
The Rev. Peyton’s Big Damn Band, March 13 at Twist & Shout (free in-store before their show at the Bluebird): In order to fund its early tours, the blues band leader Rev. Peyton claims to have “sold everything we owned in a big yard sale.”
Ghostland Observatory, May 30 at the Gothic Theatre: Ghostland is possibly the least controversial duo of caped electro-rock crusaders since, well, ever. Check out The A.V. Club’s review of its latest effort, Robotique Majestique.
Bobcat Goldthwait, February 27-28 at Comedy Works (downtown): The stand-up comedian opened for Nirvana on several dates during its last North American tour in the fall of 1993.
Coheed And Cambria, March 3 at the Denver Coliseum: C&C frontman Claudio Sanchez is the author of The Armory Wars, a sci-fi comic book series that also doubles as a visual companion to Coheed’s proggy, space-adventure concept albums.
Hercules And Love Affair, March 6 at Beta: The New York-based disco-clash group is led by Andy Butler, a Denver native who spent his teen years DJing at local gay clubs and raving the fuck out.
The Rev. Peyton’s Big Damn Band, March 13 at Twist & Shout (free in-store before their show at the Bluebird): In order to fund its early tours, the blues band leader Rev. Peyton claims to have “sold everything we owned in a big yard sale.”
Ghostland Observatory, May 30 at the Gothic Theatre: Ghostland is possibly the least controversial duo of caped electro-rock crusaders since, well, ever. Check out The A.V. Club’s review of its latest effort, Robotique Majestique.