The Denver Post

Over and Under

One big show, one smaller

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Like often the but odd rarely the thinks jazz Mile navel- cigarette. the High ’ gazing, 90s City, were Loose Alexander the better— Los but Angeles never Brettin’s and sloppy, group’s isn’t Mild opposed psychedeli­c dazed High to rock Club can DeMarco, count with itself guitar a disciple tones of designed playful indie- to sound rock joker like they Mac were piped through the AMband and a jumble of lyrics delivered like smokey whispers in a sun- bleached daydream. In other words: trippy lounge rock. “Skiptracin­g,” the band’s latest, is an ideal calling card for any sun- up, windows- down afternoon. The band’s heady headspace comes to the Larimer Lounge on Nov. 5. Tickets are $ 13-$ 15 and are available via ticketfly. com. down Almost every a quarter rival but century one: into himself. his career, Where Jay- the Z rapper has stared once proclaimed, “I’m not a business man; I’m a business, man,” “4: 44,” his latest album, has the rap mogul spitting a more sobering image of himself. “You got people you love you sold drugs to,” he raps on its ingress, “Kill Jay- Z,” one of many tracks that has the 47- year- old painting an unflatteri­ng, darkly hued self- portrait. It follows that his supporting tour for the album— which comes through Denver on Nov. 5— will see the rapper at eye level with the general- admission audience at the Pepsi Center and in the round, with nowhere to hide. Tickets are $ 29.50-$ 175.50 and available via altitudeti­ckets. com.— Dylan Owens

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