Most Popular
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Boys Will Be Wetboys
It was fun while it lasted but now MTV wants to mainstream Colorado's weirdest skateboarders.
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GB Fish & Chips
If at first you dont succeed, fry, fry again.
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This Guardian Angel Bleeds Red
Sebastian Metz's heart is in the right place. If only his brain and body could follow.
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Rent-a-Cop
Denver's finest protect and serve, whether they're being paid by the city or the corner bar.
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Westfalen Hof
Good German food? Youre darn Teuton!
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Hideous Houses of Highland (9)
More is not merrier for Highland homeowners who want to stop construction in their neighborhoods.
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Rush to Riot (8)
How seriously should we take Rush Limbaugh's fantasies of a disturbance in Denver?
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Boys Will Be Wetboys (5)
It was fun while it lasted but now MTV wants to mainstream Colorado's weirdest skateboarders.
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Grand Lux Cafe (4)
What happened in Vegas should have stayed there.
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Balls! (3)
What does Colorado taste like to you? Concrete? Or a big plate of Rocky Mountain oysters, dusted in daisies?
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Tera Melos
Friday, April 18, Marquis Theater, 1-866-468-7621.
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Kingdom of Doom Crumbles
Denver Police bust up a cornerstone of the underground scene.
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The Succulent Sounds of Dark Meat
From Athens, Georgia, comes yet another great new American band.
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Subtlety Isnt a Strength for Does It Offend You, Yeah?
Heres what happens when you blend the hottest sounds of the past five years into a cheeky, abrasive mix.
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Enon Slows Things Down
John Schmersals once hyper-prolific songwriting streak made Ryan Adams seem like a slacker.
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Five Worst Belated Mother's Day Gifts
04:58PM 05/13/08 -
Best New TV Theme Songs
04:00PM 05/13/08 -
A Really Raw Deal
03:33PM 05/13/08 -
Crocs' Big Idea: Upscale Shopping in Downscale Shoes
05:10PM 05/13/08 -
The Last Gasp
05:33PM 05/13/08
What we are writing about
- Barack Obama
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- Charlie Huang
- Cherry Creek
- Colorado Rockies
- David Lane
- Denver Art Museum
- DeVotchKa
- dogs
- Fisher Clark Urban...
- Glenn Morris
- hi-dive
- Hillary Clinton
- Jason Sheehan
- Knocked Up
- Larimer Lounge
- Lupe Fiasco
- Mark Travis
- My Kid Could Paint That
- Nathan & Stephen
- No Country for Old Men
- PlayStation
- Radiohead
- Seth Rogen
- There Will Be Blood
- Various Artists
- Vinyl
- Wii
- William Havu Gallery
- Xbox
Recent Articles By Eryc Eyl
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Dan Craig
Skin Grows Thin
Self-released -
The Succulent Sounds of Dark Meat
From Athens, Georgia, comes yet another great new American band.
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Sirhan Sirhan
Saturday, May 3, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
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Widowers
Widowers
Self-released -
The Sword Conquers
This doom metal comes endorsed by Metallica.
National Features
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The Pitch
We (Heart) Matt
The Shawnee Mission East class of '08 loves its gay homecoming king.
By Jen Chen -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Things That Go Bump on the Flight
Something went horribly wrong on American Airlines Flight 48--and we've got the pictures to prove it.
By Ed Newton -
Seattle Weekly
Being Gary Busey
Everybody thinks Jeff Swanson is somebody famous. And he does nothing to dissuade them of the notion.
By Aimee Curl -
Cleveland Scene
The Artful Dodger
Women loved Zachary Coleman. And he loved their money.
By Lisa Rab
American Music Club
Mark Eitzels still mopey after all these years albeit a little less so these days.
By Eryc Eyl
Published: May 8, 2008
American Music Club should have self-destructed long ago. Formed in 1982, the band released its first album in 1985 and has since seen more than its share of personality conflicts and personnel changes, to say nothing of the very public and much-publicized alcohol-induced tantrums of frontman and songwriter Mark Eitzel.
And yet more than a quarter-century later, the California quartet is celebrating its ninth full-length album and touring extensively — with a lineup that's barely a year old. The new record, The Golden Age, finds the core duo of Eitzel and multi-instrumentalist Vudi joined by bassist Sean Hoffman and drummer Steve Didelot for a remarkably straightforward collection of songs that continues in the direction Eitzel began to go in with 2004's Love Songs for Patriots.
"It's an attempt to write something that's a little closer to my own personality and who I am," Eitzel points out. "I decided a while ago not to be around negative people and not to be negative." Considering that he's long been known for his melancholy and self-pitying lyrics, leaving negativity behind is a major shift. "I'm trying to tell stories as opposed to just opening my chest and exposing my shriveled little dick of a heart," he continues in his inimitable way.
Though Eitzel's songwriting has evolved, he's also grudgingly aware that longtime fans still want to hear American Music Club's classic songs of heartache and pain. "We dig kind of deep," he says. "We definitely do the songs that the old-time fans usually want to hear. At this point, AMC is an oldies revue; I have to gird my loins. There are all these very round Michelin-style men with AMC T-shirts from twenty years ago — it's so disheartening. I have them shine the light in my eyes so I can't see."
Joking aside, Eitzel is eager to hit the road with Vudi, his longtime friend and collaborator, who works as a bus driver in L.A. and stayed behind when the band last toured. "Vudi had to quit his job for this tour," he explains. "He had the Glendale-to-Compton route, and it was his favorite route. He complains that he won't get it back. But Vudi's got to be center stage. It's so good to play with him and just hang out with him."
For his part, Eitzel may be noticably more positive and optimistic about things, but he also realizes that the ride is bound to end at some point — and when it does, he already has a plan for his next career.
"I want to work on a suicide hotline," he says with characteristic black humor. "You can make a lot of money that way. And I'm good at answering phones."











