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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Jason Heller
Springtime Can Kill You (Anti-)
Vitamins EP (Self-released)
Thursday, May 4, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
Wednesday, May 10, Bluebird Theater, 303-322-2308.
Larimer Lounge
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Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Do black voters need to get over their homophobia?
By Bob Norman
Riverfront Times
The American Mustache Institute works to make facial hair hip again.
By Matt Kasper
Village Voice
Welcome to America, freedom fighters. Now go home.
By Elizabeth Dwoskin
Seattle Weekly
How a Seattle man made a killing off the misery of local homeowners.
By Nina Shapiro
Joseph Childress
Thursday, May 4, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
Published on May 04, 2006
Thumps, creaks, giggles, clicks -- these are the first sounds you hear when listening to a recording by Joseph Childress. The California-born, Colorado-bred songwriter doesn't make CDs, per se, but rather lo-fi snapshots taken during his many travels across the continent. Perpetually on the move, Childress packs his lush acoustic lullabies with the wizardry of Devendra Banhart and the earthy innocence of Vashti Bunyan, as heard on his widely circulated demo, dubbed The Rebirths by his fans -- if "fans" is an accurate word. Intimate, otherworldly and hypnotically engaging, Childress makes friends, not followers, with his music. Aside from a bona fide recording session in Denver and his hi-dive date with the Places and A Dog Paloma, Childress will no doubt play a few cozy sets in back yards and on front porches while he's in town. Catch a couple before he up and disappears again.