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Low Cut Connie
July 15thMountain Grass Unit
July 15thPhosphorescent
July 16thLumbre Del Sol
July 17thThe Psychedelic Furs - SOLD OUT
July 17thImprovement Movement
July 18thBully
July 18thSonia De Los Santos
July 19thThe Wild Robot
July 19thSurprise Chef
July 19thReverend Peyton's Big Damn Band
July 21stFather John Misty - SOLD OUT
July 21stJulian Marley
July 22ndThe Family Stone
July 25thGyedu-Blay Ambolley
July 26thDavid Berkeley
July 26thTanner Usrey
July 27thBuena Vista Orchestra
July 27thBoris McCutcheon and The Salt Licks
July 28thKT Tunstall
July 29thDogs in a Pile
July 31stSanta Fe Salutes: Ladies of the 80's
August 1stGirls Inc. Stronger Together Fest
August 2ndInside Out 2
August 2ndRebirth Brass Band
August 3rdFelix Y Los Gatos
August 4thWaxahatchee
August 4thAl Hurricane Jr.
August 5thMarty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives
August 6thThee Sinseers & The Altons
August 7thYelawolf
August 7thBig Daddy Kane With His Live Band
August 8thJunior Toots
August 9thChuck Prophet and His Cumbia Shoes
August 9thChuck Prophet and His Cumbia Shoes
August 10thRosali
August 10thChuck Prophet and His Cumbia Shoes
August 11thLevi Platero
August 12thMacy Gray
August 12thIndigenousWays Festival: Robert Mirabal
August 15thHot Buttered Rum
August 16thA Complete Unknown
August 16thLincoln Jesser
August 16thABBAquerque
August 18thThe English Beat
August 19thCuarenta y Cinco
August 21stNew Breed Brass Band w/ Trombone Shorty
August 22ndA Hawk and A Hacksaw
August 23rdModest Mouse
August 23rdTennis
August 24thThe Dead South
August 24thDetroit Lightning
August 25thPokey LaFarge
August 26thKeb' Mo' and Shawn Colvin - SOLD OUT
August 27thThe Blue Ventures
August 28thScott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox
August 28thSam Barber - SOLD OUT
August 28thJon Batiste Plays America - SOLD OUT
August 31stJon Batiste Plays America
September 1stThe Fixx
September 5thThe Mavericks - SOLD OUT
September 6thA Prairie Home Companion's 50th Anniversary
September 7thTribal Seeds and The Movement
September 9thSamantha Fish
September 10thMelvins
September 10thBlossoms & Bones
September 11thMax McNown
September 11thThe Swell Season
September 15thBirdtalker
September 16thFortunate Youth
September 17thWyatt Flores
September 17thKeller Williams' Grateful Grass
September 19thBad Suns
September 19thPile
September 20thBUNT.
September 23rdCuco
September 23rdJohn Moreland
September 24thNate Sib
September 25thNathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats
September 27thThe Dandy Warhols
September 29thLiam St. John
September 29thI'm With Her - SOLD OUT
September 29thThe Waterboys
September 30thLA LOM
September 30thSoftcult
September 30thDominique Fils-Aime
October 1stRainbow Kitten Surprise
October 1stNoah Reid
October 1stBuilt To Spill
October 2ndThe Head and The Heart: Aperture Tour
October 2ndPanda Bear
October 5thWednesday
October 9thThe Julia Keefe Indigenous Big Band
October 9thStrawberry Guy
October 17thLas Cafeteras
October 19thNicotine Dolls
October 21stThe Last Revel x Oliver Hazard
October 22ndOne More Time: A Tribute to Daft Punk
October 23rdBooker T. Jones
October 25thArlie
October 26thBETWEEN FRIENDS
October 26thLas Cafeteras
October 28thDeVotchKa
October 30thJosh Johnson: The Flowers Tour - SOLD OUT
November 1stJosh Johnson: The Flowers Tour
November 2ndMurder By Death - SOLD OUT
November 2ndOsees - SOLD OUT
November 4thRichy Mitch & The Coal Miners
November 5thMarcus King Band
November 6thWilli Carlisle
November 6thThe Brian Jonestown Massacre - SOLD OUT
November 8thJoshua Radin
November 10thDean Johnson
November 12thLucius
November 12thStanley Clarke
November 13thInfinity Song
November 19thNew Constellations
November 20thWillie Watson
November 21stNeko Case
November 21stDakhaBrakha
December 3rdDakhaBrakha
December 4thThe Klezmatics: Happy Joyous Hanukkah
December 17thSquirrel Nut Zippers Christmas Caravan
December 19thWelcome To Night Vale: Murder Night in Blood Forest
January 26thStorm Large
February 5thThe Assad Brothers
March 6thThe Bad Plus
March 13thLunasa
March 15thPink Martini
March 23rdPink Martini
March 24thChristian McBride & Edgar Meyer
April 7thUkulele Orchestra of Great Britain
April 28thMac DeMarco - SOLD OUT
May 21stY La Bamba & Kiltro
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Y LA BAMBA
To declare one thematic narrative from Lucha, Y La Bamba’s seventh album, would be to chisel away a story within a story within a story into the illusion of something singular.
“Lucha is a symbol of how hard it is for me to tackle healing, live life, and be present,” Luz Elena Mendoza Ramos, lead vocalist and producer of Y La Bamba, says of the title behind the album which translates from Spanish to English as ‘fight’ and is also a nickname for Luz, which means light. The album explores multiplicity—love, queerness, Mexican American and Chicanx identity, family, intimacy, yearning, loneliness—and chronicles a period of struggle and growth for Mendoza Ramos as a person and artist.
Lucha was born out of isolation at the advent of COVID-19 lockdowns, beginning with a cover of Hank Williams’ “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry,” and following Mendoza Ramos as she moved from Portland, Oregon to Mexico City, returning to her parents’ home country while revisiting a lineage marred by violence and silence, and simultaneously reaching towards deeper relationships with loved ones and herself. The album reflects “another tier of facing vulnerability,” as Mendoza Ramos explains, and is a battle cry to fight in order to be seen and to be accepted, if not celebrated, in every form—anger and compassion, externally and internally, individually and societally. As much as la lucha is about inner work, fighting is borne from survival stemming from social structures designed to uplift dominant groups at the hands of suffering amongst the marginalized.
While peeling back layers of the past to better understand the present has been integral to this period of growth for Mendoza Ramos, time, trauma, and history can feel like interconnected, abysmal loops and music has remained a trusted space for Mendoza Ramos to process, experiment, and channel her learnings into a creative practice. In this way, Lucha has become cyclical, documenting the parallel trust Mendoza Ramos has built with herself to allow the songs to guide how they should be sung, or even sound.
“I’ve been wanting to let whatever feels natural—with rhythm and musical instruments like congas and singing—to just let it be, in the way that I’m trying to invoke in myself.” Lucha reflects on, “the continuing process of learning how to exercise my producing skills,” explains Mendoza Ramos. “I have so many words, ideas to work with all the time, and the hardest part for me has been learning to trust my gut. And figuring out how I work best, and with who.”
The result is a collection as sonically sprawling and bold as its subject matter. On “La Lluvia de Guadalajara,” Y La Bamba leans into a minimal, avant-garde soundscape as Mendoza Ramos recites a spoken word poem. Later, rhythms veer into bossa nova territory on “Hues ft. Devendra Banhart,” a full-circle collaboration for Mendoza Ramos as she reminisces on the significance of finding Banhart’s work nearly two decades earlier: “He was the first young Spanish-speaking musician that wasn’t playing traditional Mexican music I heard when I was 21. There was nothing like it around that time.”
“Nunca” is a warm, wind-rich track dedicated to her mother, Maria Elena Ramos whose poetry is published alongside the Lucha lyrics booklet. “I decided to put my mom’s poem, which is a poem that she wrote to me, letting me know how she felt, exploring her heart in new ways she’s never imagined. Sharing it on the record is me paying attention that she’s expressing herself.
While each song holds personal significance to Mendoza Ramos, part of growing into her identity as an artist has been allowing space for protection and boundaries, and choosing to withhold some of that meaning from the public. Lucha is her own story of the complexity of trauma and nonlinear healing and growth processes, but she imagines it is also the continuation of her ancestors’ stories and might also be a mirror to the story of others. “Even though I’m trying to fight, I never want to demonize suffering, because that’s part of growing. And it’s hard, because we’re living in times where that [stigma] is what’s happening. So if this—me talking about my mental health and finding healing in my queerness—is a risk, I hope that I find a community that protects it and protects me, because they know I have their back. I am also trying to be my mom’s community.”
KILTRO
Years ago, Chilean-American singer/songwriter Chris Bowers Castillo moved to the port city of Valparaíso and became a walking tour guide.
“I would dress up as Wally and give tours to families and kids,” he remembers with a laugh. “It was great, because I got to know the city incredibly well. I’d walk for hours, then spend the rest of the day partying and drinking, probably way too much. But I also wrote lots of new songs.”
Back in Denver, Chris looked for a moniker that reflected the evocative and subtly rebellious musical concepts percolating in his head, and settled on kiltro – a word used in Chile for stray dogs or mutts. He then teamed up with bassist Will Parkhill and drummer Michael Devincenzi, later inviting Fez García to join the band as an additional percussionist on Kiltro’s live gigs.
“I wanted to do a project mixing different styles and aesthetics,” he says. “Valparaíso is my favorite city in the world and will always influence my music. There were street dogs everywhere, and I’m a mutt myself.”
Titled Underbelly, Kiltro’s sophomore album crystallizes those dreams and experiences into a post-rock manifesto of dazzling beauty. Its songs combine touches of shoegaze, ambient and neo-psychedelia with the soulful transcendence of South American folk – the purity of stringed instruments, supple syncopated percussion and elusive melodies that define the works of Latin American legends such as Violeta Parra, Víctor Jara and Atahualpa Yupanqui.
From the propulsive, chant-like groove of “Guanaco” to the art-pop panache of “All the Time in the World,” Underbelly is the kind of record that invites you to quiet down and listen, savoring every single detail. The album reaches an emotional pinnacle during its second half, when the majestic lament of “Softy” – seeped in exquisite cushions of reverb – segues into the hypnotic reverie of “Kerosene.”
It also signals a new chapter in the fusion of Latin roots with mainstream rock, anchoring its sonic quest on a rare commodity: inspired songwriting.
“So much of this album is defined by the conditions that made it,” says Chris. “Our debut – 2019’s Creatures of Habit – has a social, almost communal feel to it, because we played it live time after time before recording. In a way, the songs were troubleshooted in the presence of an audience, then honed in the studio. Underbelly, on the other hand, was made in quarantine. It was just us obsessing in the studio, and we ended up following whatever thread seemed most interesting at the time, which made for an album that is more experimental and creative.”
“We’re trying to make sense of the process as we experience it,” adds Will, who returned to Denver and became part of Kiltro after a few years living abroad. “The way we make music, we’re definitely not interested in dropping singles. Something that Chris and I have in common is our interest in capturing ambient textures that evoke a sense of place. When we first played music together – years before Kiltro – we got microphones and tried to record the sound of water running down a bathtub. It didn’t work out then, but we revisited the same concept on this album.”
Quarantine isolation allowed Kiltro to obsess over every single loop and melodic turn. Now that the band is ready to tour again, presenting the songs in a live setting poses a beautiful challenge.
“We were mixing the album when the question came up: how the hell are we going to do this live?,” says Chris. “Live shows are a real important component of what we do – in a way, it’s the very reason of why we make music. There will be four of us onstage, and I do a lot of live looping. We have two drummers, which helps a lot when you consider the percussive element of this album. I’ve learned that we don’t have to favor a maximalist approach. People connect with melody and the concept. As long as the harmonic elements carry the emotional message across, you can take the songs into many possible directions.”
For now, the release of Underbelly marks a bold step forward in Kiltro’s extraordinary musical journey.
“When we first started the band, I was playing folk songs – focusing on my interior spaces and finding catharsis through melody,” says Chris. “I’ve always been attracted to music that is melancholy and personal. Then we added the rhythmic component, and I realized that having a bit of noise and chaos can add emotional depth. Underbelly reflects everything that happens inside your soul when the world stops on its tracks.”
“We tried a lot of new things on this record,” agrees Will. “We were living through unprecedented times and coming to terms with all of it. The album is a reflection of that. At the end of the day, we wanted to create the kind of music that we didn’t hear anywhere else.”