Crested Butte, Colorado will host a week-long celebration of funk music when Public House presents its AlpenPhunk 2022 concert series Jan. 31-Feb. 5.
Arts-Music
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Two Telluriders and seasoned Burning Man attendees produce the annual Telluride Fire Festival in Telluride, Colorado.
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Eighteen-year-old Olivia Rodrigo recently released her first album, “SOUR,” and the world hasn’t been the same since.
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If you’re like me, you’ve already decked the halls at home, put on the Christmas playlists and started rewatching your favorite Christmas movies (we all need a little extra joy this year!).
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The latest craze on Netflix, “The Social Dilemma,” has viewers concerned about the negative effects of social media.
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The good folks at Microsoft News shared their list of the twenty best movies about elections.
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One of Netflix’s newest docuseries, “Down to Earth with Zac Efron,” is an exploration of how we as a society can help the environment and how in turn, we can help our bodies including everything from geothermal energy, superfoods and much more.
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Art lovers can now take a virtual tour through the past 90 years of the Museum of Modern Art.
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Music has always brought people together in times of distress.
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Streaming services have kept us entertained while social distancing, with an abundance of content showcasing STEM culture.
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I can’t be the only one who got in trouble for touching art in museums as a kid. However, Denver Art Museum’s new exhibit encourages this. “Serious Play: Design in Midcentury America” explores the concept of playfulness in postwar America, where disposable income and leisure time were more frequent, as a catalyst for creativity.
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How did Colorado go from enacting Prohibition four years before the national law to being home to over 360 breweries? History Colorado Center’s new exhibit “Beer Here!” aims to find out.
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Spring – or at least warmer weather – is finally within sight as evidenced by City Park Jazz’s summer lineup announcement. The beloved free concert series starts June 2 and continues on most Sundays from 6-8 p.m. – rain or shine – until Aug. 4.
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With the end of Tara Donovan’s collection that took up Denver’s entire Museum of Contemporary Art, three new exhibits have taken its place:
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Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) has been overtaken by 12-foot-tall trees of index cards, tar paper stretching approximately 30 feet by 40 feet and a 30-foot-long art piece made out of Mylar.
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The MusicFest at Steamboat runs for six days and features more than 200 hours of live music from some of the biggest Texas and Americana acts in the country. Every year in January, it attracts thousands of people to Colorado’s mountains.
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Dozens of Rembrandt’s unforgettable prints, drawings and paintings are now on display at the Denver Art Museum, the sole venue for “Rembrandt: Painter as Printmaker.”
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The most comprehensive exhibition of Claude Monet’s paintings in decades will make its only U.S. stop at the Denver Art Museum. “Claude Monet: The Truth of Nature” will open Oct. 20, 2019.
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Most of the time, when a marching band plays at Sports Authority Field, it takes a back seat to a football game. That certainly won’t be the case on July 14, when Drums Along the Rockies returns to Denver.
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The summer solstice, the longest day of the year, marks the date each season when “Festivarians” make their way to the high country by the thousands for the Telluride Bluegrass Festival for four days of “music, mountains and magic.”
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Zoot suits, lowriders and calaveras inspire the works of old- and new-school artists sharing an affinity with Mexican-American culture in the 1930s and 1940s in Museo de las Americas’ exhibition “Pachucos y Sirenas.”
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Most people don’t think of Denver as a jazz city in the same way they think of places like New Orleans or New York. But there was a time when Denver’s Five Points neighborhood was nicknamed the “Harlem of the West” for its numerous jazz clubs.
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The traveling exhibition of the Dead Sea Scrolls has arrived at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, offering a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see the world’s oldest-known biblical documents.
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Country superstar Dierks Bentley isn’t from Colorado, but it’s certainly one of his favorite places to be. He fell in love with the Centennial State while spending holidays in Durango as a child.
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Earth is home to a host of gloriously glowing creatures from fireflies and glowworms to plankton and vampire squid.
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Florence Luebke lived a quiet life of close family ties and friendships in rural South Dakota, Chicago and, ultimately, Fort Collins, Colorado. Shortly after her death, her nephew donated her meticulously documented collection of handkerchiefs to Colorado State University.
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The original “Star Wars” film debuted in 1977 and the franchise’s eighth installment (nine if you count 2016’s “Rogue One”) proves the appetite for more adventure “in a galaxy far, far away” is as strong as ever.
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Enjoy original poetry, support Denver’s literary community and help kids who dream of being writers at one merry event, Christmas Poems, presented by Denver Writes.
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The wizarding world of Harry Potter and the bewitching music of composer John Williams will come to life Jan. 5-7 as the Colorado Symphony performs every note from “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban,” the third movie in the series.