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15 Bands From Colorado That Will Make You Want to Visit, Despite All the State’s Damn Dirty Hippies

Colorado has a reputation for having a population of active, happy people doing active, happy things in their beautiful state. It’s also known for hippies. Lots and lots of hippies. Filling the air with the scent of incense and B.O. and the awful sound of jam bands.

On paper, it doesn’t seem like a place that would have any kind of punk or hardcore scene at all. But much like how it somehow produced both John Denver and Lauren Boebert it is full of contradictions and not only has a scene but a thriving one. We scoured Colorado from the eastern plains, over the Continental Divide to whatever it is on the west side to find some of the best bands that call it home. And yes, I know John Denver wasn’t actually from Colorado but get the fuck out of here with your facts.

Angel Hair

Somewhere between art rock and screamo lived Angel Hair. They were an awesomely weird band and the fact that they were from hippie-ass Boulder and not the screamo headquarters of San Diego makes them even weirder and more awesomer.

Christie Front Drive

Photo by denverkid

Even though they were only briefly active, Denver’s Christie Front Drive were a major influence on the midwest emo scene of the ‘90s. There’s an infamous story of them being offered a major label deal and declining it only to suggest their emo colleagues Jimmy Eat World. I want to believe it’s true. They also made our list of the 50 best emo songs of the ‘90s.

d.biddle

Duncan Barlow spent his youth in Louisville, Kentucky playing in quite a few notable hardcore bands like Endpoint, Guilt, and By The Grace Of God. But as an adult, he moved to Denver, got himself a fancy new hat, and began d.biddle fusing a type of alt-country with stringed instrumentation and emo.

Descendents/ALL

Photo by AppalachianCentrist

Ok, yes Descendents are famously originally from southern California but they moved to Fort Collins in the mid-’90s and Bill Stevenson started his recording studio The Blasting Room there where every Descendents and All album has been recorded for over 25 years. So I’d say that makes them a Colorado band. So suck it, California. You can have Blink-182.

Faim

There have been a lot more female-fronted political hardcore bands lately. It’s almost as if on a daily basis our society slips further into a Handmaiden-esque dystopia which for some reason has made a number of women angry, go figure. Keeping the flames of the discontent burning is relative newcomers Faim. Their brand of raw, politically-charged hardcore serves as a soundtrack to smashing the fuck out of the patriarchy.

Fear Before The March of Flames

There came a time in the early 2000s when the math-y, hectic style of hardcore started to reach embarrassing lows (remember those fucking “crabcore” bands?) But there were some bands still holding it down and destroying stages and eardrums. Fear Before The March Of Flames was one of those bands.

The Gamits

Photo by Dawnftlp

The Gamits have had quite a revolving door of members throughout the years with main songwriter and singer Chris Fogal serving as the only member who has been around since the band’s inception. 25+ years on The Gamits continue to be the centerpiece of Denver’s pop-punk scene.

Nathaniel Ratliffe and the Night Sweats

Probably the only band on this list your mom approves of. And while they may sound like a cross between Sam Cooke and the sound of a craft distillery opening, they have deep roots in the indie and punk scenes of Denver. We dare you not to toe-tap along to their denim-drenched jams.

Native Daughters

Not only do instrumental riff lords Native Daughters have not one, but two, drummers, both drummers play upfront live. They do a post-metal style much in the vein of Pelican and Isis but with the percussive elements taking literal center stage.

Omega Point

Photo by Photo by Kevin Lysaght

Omega Point recorded the first four songs of a concept album in 2003 and then took a brief twenty-year hiatus. They reformed in 2023 and recorded the remaining songs combining elements of black metal, mathcore, and the story-telling aspects of Slint.

Planes Mistaken For Stars

Oh look, yet another Colorado band that made our top 50 emo list. Sure seems to be a lot of emo bands from Colorado. Not really sure why. You would think with all that sunshine and fresh air there’d be nothing to write sad songs about. Sadly both guitarist Matt Bellinger and frontman Gared O’Donnell passed away in 2017 and 2021 respectively.

Primitive Man

Photo by Grywnn

The heaviest band on our list and possibly the heaviest band from Colorado ever. These dudes ain’t fucking around. This is the band on this list that your mom approves of the least.

Small Dog Frenzy

Even though their name might make them seem like a juvenile pop-punk band with songs about farting on your mom or whatever, this three-piece from Boulder was pretty serious. Their driving melodic guitar riffs coupled with Aaron Hobbs’ distinctive voice made them stand out from the other emo-tinged bands of the time. Two of the members would later form the more austerely named Acrobat Down.

Snake Rattle Rattle Snake

The hardcore world was first introduced to Haley Helmericks with her backing vocals on Open Hand’s “Tough Girl.” She would later bring her deep atmospheric voice to form the dark-wave-infused Snake Rattle Rattle Snake and much like the actual rattlesnakes of the Colorado landscape, SRRS’ music feels like it could attack if you fuck with it too much.

Vaux

Photo by Jeff Strahl

If you went to basically any show that happened in the early oughts you probably saw Vaux play. They toured extensively including several hauls on the unending hell that was Warped Tour. They eventually signed to Atlantic Records subsidiary Lava and recorded an album with the single “Are You With Me” which got traction with its video and was even in the end credits of the not-great John Travolta movie From Paris With Love.