With the Dead & Company back in town, so is Shakedown Street, peddling everything from car emblems to clocks to patches to jewelry to infant onesies.
Jason Bracelin
Jason Bracelin once went on tour with Kid Rock so you don’t have to. Prior to first being named the RJ’s music writer in 2006, Bracelin was the music editor for the Cleveland Scene alt-weekly. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois. A Decatur, Ill. native, Bracelin has lived in Las Vegas since 2006.
Descendents, Gorilla Biscuits highlight day one of Punk Rock Bowling fest.
Our pupils are rotten from all the eye candy. Our cute fuzzy boots totally need to be re-soled. And don’t even ask us about our hearing because we can’t hear you.
Kaskade, Deadmau5 and more highlight the fest’s final night.
Alison Wonderland and Tiesto lead the massive dance music fest’s second night at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
The world’s largest dance music festival returns to Vegas and everything is massive — from the three-story high, flame-spewing sculptures to stages the size of football fields.
Yes, the Electric Daisy Carnival is back, the three-day electronic dance music marathon returning to Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
Electric Daisy Carnival is back to swallow Las Vegas Motor Speedway whole in a gigantic maw of light and sound and fire and fuzzy boots.
A Jewish Affinity Group formed at UNLV after the Oct. 7 attack on Israel hopes to make interactions more “educational” than the recent protest on campus.
From killer clowns to “Murder Pizza,” here’s the city’s creepiest visits.
“I don’t know about you, but it feels like 1999 out here,” observed Slipknot’s Corey Taylor, one of nü metal’s signature acts who brought a heightened malevolence — and gnarly dread-locked masks — to the scene.
Sick New World is back. The marathon of heavy music kicks off today at 11:10 a.m. and runs until midnight at the Las Vegas Festival Grounds.
Matt McMullen has been at it for decades. His most realistic creation yet is a supermodel-esque woman with blonde-brown hair who speaks with a mild Scottish accent.
Eye-popping new attraction aims to spur the imagination of visitors.
The 300-capacity Sinwave fills a live music void in the Arts District with an anything’s-possible ethos.