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Gospel Journey Teens Dare 2 Share
Greg Stier is raising an army of adolescents to help save your soul.
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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.
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Curtain Call
Denver mourns the loss of its favorite bipolar, one-armed comic/poet/playwright.
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The Lords of Payback
Jefferson County officials show Mike Zinna that what goes around comes around.
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Mona's
Great hash -- and making hash out of a critic's anonymity.
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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Michael Roberts
Sunday, July 27, Fiddler's Green, 303-830-8497.
Saturday, July 26, Fiddler's Green, 303-830-8497.
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Kathleen Edwards
Friday, May 9, Fox Theatre, 303-443-3399.
Published on May 08, 2008
"Oh Canada," a song from Anything for Flowers, the new CD by Kathleen Edwards (joined live by the Last Town Chorus), won't be mistaken for the national anthem of the singer-songwriter's native country. The track is a gritty attack on a society whose media shifts into overdrive when a white woman is shot but offers no headlines "when a black girl dies." Her touch is lighter on other tracks, but even when she uses a Sesame Street-like alphabet gimmick on the bouncy "The Cheapest Key," lines like "'A' is for all the times I bit my tongue/'B' is for bullshit, and you fed me some" still leave a mark. The album, Edwards's third studio full-length, is her finest to date, partly because of her rising confidence as a performer. Her voice is capable of moving from ringing to raspy as the subject matter demands — and that's a good thing, considering how demanding her subject matter can be.