The 10 Best Images of The Underground Music Showcase

Here are the ten best images from this year's 2018 Underground Music Showcase. Big thanks to Alyson McClaran and Robert Castro. Images in no particular order.

Tyto Alba (Photo: Aly McClaran)

Nightlove (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Bison Bone (Photo Credit: Aly McClaran)

Hot 8 Brass band (Photo Credit: Aly McClaran)

Madge (Photo Credit: Robert Credit)

PPL MVR (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Milky. WAV (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Digable Planets (Photo Credit: Aly McClaran)

The Corner Girls (Photo Credit: Aly McClaran)

Duckwrth (Photo Credit: Aly McClaran)

Beards, Bruises and Beer: Surviving The 2016 UMS

Another year, another UMS. If you convinced your boss to give you all four days off, you’re probably looking a lot like us, hiding in the bathroom stall at work and drinking coffee from a styrofoam cup trying to count your weekend’s whiskey gingers. Just kidding, we’re not still hungover. It’s Friday. Sighs. We’re more likely suffering from PUMS-- Post Underground Music Showcase syndrome. Although WebMD does not officially recognize PUMS, we’ve seen widespread cases of poor concentration, fatigue, headache, shin splints, and breast tenderness (for the last one we blame the pit at Thee Oh Sees’ set on Saturday). 

John Dwyer of Thee Oh Sees (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

The Underground Music Showcase has been bringing Denver’s local acts to the forefront of our attention for 15 years running now, showing the public at large what goes on behind closed doors in places like RocketSpace, Denver’s practice space for local bands to experiment (not with sex or drugs, but rock and roll, you sly and dastardly person). 

iZCALLi proving why The UMS is important. (Photo Credit: Andrew Rios)

Olivia Rudeen at the South Broadway Church (Photo Credit: Maddie Casey)

UMS is a festival which proves that Denver rivals the city which claims to be the alt-music mecca: Austin, Texas. UMS, like SXSW, occurs all over the city in bars and music venues and showcases a wide variety of performances, this year spanning from Casey James & the Burning Angels to Decollage. Across South Broadway over a dozen venues opened their doors for swarms of music lovers and over 400 bands, allowing their floors to become sticky seas of sweat, beer, spirits and everything else you can imagine that tracked in. Illegal Pete’s showcased dozens of acts and buttcracks (on the stage and on the free mechanical bull in the Pete’s parking lot).

Straight up honky tonk country. (photo Credit: Maddie Casey)

Taco Cat send all kinds of glitter punk vibes (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Singer-Songwriter showcase was brilliant. (Photo Credit: Maddie Casey)

Noah Shomberg of The Yawpers. (Photo Credit: Andrew Rios)

Friday saw weather that was surprisingly tame with a slight breeze rifling through the many coifed manes of bandmates and attendees. The Allah-Las gained a large draw around sunset, and onlookers shimmied and kicked complacently, their Breck Brews and cocktails far from spilling in their mild sways to the even milder licks. Mid-set, the sprinklers lining the grass along the sidewalk turned on and surprised the dazed audience, and some frolicking ensued as people tried to pass through without getting soaked.

Saturday afternoon was sunburn inducing, and Youth on Record’s station saw the drenching of both Amy Osgood and Virgil Dickerson. The water reportedly, “Did not taste good”, but still remained a mildly tempting method of beating the heat. Saturday night saw light showers of blood, sweat and tears. Thee Oh Sees kicked off the night on the Mainstage before back to back sets at Hi-dive, with Dirty Few, Dudebabes, Spells, Ned Garth (who pelted us with champagne, silly string, glow necklaces and confetti) and ended with Bud Bronson, a rapid fire succession of sets that lasted from 9 PM until last call. Nothing says “I love music” like romping around, losing shirt buttons in three layers of mosh-pit nastiness and glow stick taste on our tongues.

The dunk tank was a huge hit this year. (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

All proceeds went to Youth on Record. (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

We resurrected ourselves on Sunday for Decollage, Couches, LSD Bags, Anthony Ruptak, and POLICA, whose stunning vocals ended our UMS with a big, synthesized bow. All in all, we saw an amazing conglomeration of people. Shout out to all of the weirdos who reared their heads and made the festival what it was: a celebration of the good, the strange, and the beautiful. 

Take a peek from our photographer’s lenses and see for yourself our top performances of this year’s Underground Music Showcase. 

Austin's own The Bright Light Social Hour. (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Until next year, 

The Ultra5280 Team

Music | The Underground Music Showcase | July 23-26 | Review and Photos

STRFKR performing to a packed house. (Photo Credit: Andrew Rios)

We survived this year's UMS with minimal casualties. Despite almost losing an ear and a few bumps and bruises in the mosh pits, we made out like music-loving bandits. We added an astonishing amount of new artists to our Spotify playlists (ahem...we mean Apple Music) and ate one too many Ortega street tacos... UMS you wily minx you've done it again. There is no easy way to review 4 days of complete bliss, but let's start with the music. 

SPELLS getting personal. (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Crowd participation was a common theme this year at UMS (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

The lineup this year included a couple surprises and a lot of veteran artists. The veterans of course being our hometown favorites like: CRL CRRLL, In The Whale, Rose Quartz, Gin Doctors, Champagne Charlie, Kitty Crimes, Covenhoven, Rossonian, Povi, Wild High, Bud Bronson, Sun Boy, (not local but still a staple) Residual Kid, Dragondeer, Spells, Inner Oceans, Ned Garth, Slow Caves, Shady Elders and lots more. Amongst the national acts a big surprise was the band Diiv, who has been a recluse since gaining popularity amongst hipsters and experimental-indie-rock addicts. Coming in off the bat with a few pranks (div, dive) and melodramatic tude they played one of the best sets this UMS and left us in anticipation of their next Denver show. But who knows when that will be... I mean we should be happy we got at least one. Another surprise was STRFKR, a popular artist among the old, the young and girls who only want to have fun they rounded out the lineup and made it appeal to the masses. With headliners like Diiv, STRFKR and hometown hero TENNIS coupled with all of our local dive bar dwelling musicians there was no way not to enjoy yourselves. 

The lovely Tennis. (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

The lovely Tennis. (Photo Credit: Robert Castro)

Rowdy Shadehouse before the infamous "Tuck of 2015". (Photo Credit: Andrew Rios)

A great compliment to the music of UMS is the people of the UMS... They range from infants in stylish headphones to hobos who found a wristband on the ground and snuck in. The audience is so diverse it makes people watching and band watching an equally entertaining sport. One thing that makes festivals like this so special is that one moment you're watching a band on stage and the next you could be standing in line by them for the port-a-potties or watching another band with the same admiration next door. Everyone's a fan and everyone's an artist. *UMS artists--they're just like us, except they sweat more.

The worst band in Denver In The Whale. (Photo Credit: Maddie Casey)

Cool clouds as we exited another year of UMS (Photo Credit: Maddie Casey)

In summation, we had an amazing 4 days, drank too many beers and took too many photos... Until next year. Oh and we can never unsee what Rowdy Shadehouse did on stage, it will forever be known as the "the great tuck of 2015". Be sure to check the rest of our photos here.

UMS BY THE NUMBERS

  • 94 Instagram photos 
  • 6 Poop Talk stories (http://talkingshitpodcast.com/)
  • 14 Ortega Tacos (not sure to feel shame or pride about this)
  • 52 Deep Eddy Drinks 
  • 61 Breckenridge Brewery Beers
  • 1 almost lost ear
  • 1 Jessie Ware cover from local R&B queen Povi
  • 1 stage dive at the Hi Dive
  • 1 fall on stage during The Yawpers...cough cough Andrew Rios
  • 25 times our UMS app crashed and made us curse relying technology
  • 2 late night street dance parties 
  • 4 the number of times Castro hit on Povi
  • 26 mistaken thunderstorms from the lightening at the entrance to the main stage
  • 11 Illegal Petes burritos consumed obnoxiously to the tune of heavy metal
  • 1 bottle of Gold Bond
  • 4,006 number of photos taken
  • 13 Red Bulls drank
  • 18 "where are you" text messages
  • 0 group photos of the staff
  • countless memories... *cue the Awwws*