Music contributor
Dylan Owens
Dylan Owens was the former music editor of . Now he freelances around Denver and nationally. He spends most of his money on music and soccer jerseys and fears the coming of second-wave YOLO-ists.
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For its 20th birthday, Denver’s Fillmore Auditorium gets a facelift
The venue's facelift has been a long time coming.

Blue-collar buddha John Prine returns to Colorado with “The Tree of Forgiveness”
Legendary singer-songwriter talks about shows with Nathaniel Rateliff, Trump and pork chops.

10 quirky and obscure roadside attractions around Colorado
A few recommendations for plotting your own course around Colorado's funhouse of curios, as suggested by Atlas Obscura's Denver chapter.

Velorama returns to peddle cycling race to RiNo rock fans
With a shaky inaugural year at its back, Velorama, RPM Productions’ hybrid cycling and music festival, returned to RiNo on Friday determined to make a better name for itself on its second lap.

Cold Crush team opening new nightclub and restaurant concept in Ballpark neighborhood
Almost nine months after hip-hop club Cold Crush was evicted from its location in RiNo, its owners are returning to Denver's nightlife scene with a new restaurant/nightclub concept called Rock...

Grandoozy’s Phoenix counterpart, Lost Lake, canceled after its first run. Organizers say don’t worry, Denver.
As an expansion into a new market, the festival was as close to a bellwether for Grandoozy as Denver could have gotten.

Colorado country: A look at the music’s Mile High popularity from Seven Peaks and Country Jam festivals to the Grizzly Rose
While the Denver area has recently come into its own as a mecca for pop concerts, country music has ridden a steady wave of popularity for far longer.

Denver street art tours turn neighborhoods into open-air galleries ripe for exploration
You don't have to go to a museum for eye-popping art exhibits.

Taylor Swift¶¶Ňőap “slow ticketing,” paperless entry at Red Rocks and face scanners among new concert trends to watch
On-sale codes, digital waiting rooms and sketchy Craigslist merchants.Buying a concert ticket wasn't always this confusing. But even all of that may soon be as quaint as standing in line...

Their dad put Red Rocks on the music map. Now, the Fey brothers hope to do the same for Colorado’s gaming city.
Jeremy Fey has turned down plenty of chances to work in the music industry.  The son of famed concert promoter Barry Fey -- founder of formidable production company Feyline, which made Red...