J. Robbins in Denver
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About J. Robbins
J. Robbins is a guitarist and vocalist who's been quietly essential to post-hardcore and indie rock since the late 80s. He founded Jawbreaker, the influential emo band that released Unfun and 24 Hour Revenge Therapy before breaking up in 1996—only to reunite decades later. Beyond that, he's run Dischord Records' operations, played in Burning Star Core, and released solo work that strips things back to his guitar and voice. Robbins isn't a household name, but people who care about the DC hardcore scene or emo's actual origins know exactly what he's done. His work tends toward angular, thoughtful songwriting rather than bombast. He's someone who helped shape what indie rock sounded like without ever needing to be the loudest person in the room.
Robbins plays with the intensity of someone who's been doing this for actual decades. Jawbreaker reunions draw devoted crowds who know every word. His solo shows are stripped-down and conversational, but he doesn't need much—just attention. Minimal between-song chat. People listen.
Known for Burning Star Core, Gray Matter, Lifetime of Temporary Relief, Everready, Small Circle of Friends
J. Robbins in Denver News
- Sugar Announce Full Reunion And ‘Love You Even Still’ 2026 World Tour That Eric Alper · Jan 22, 2026
- Sugar announce full 2026 reunion tour & 7" single, share new song "Long Live Love" BrooklynVegan · Jan 21, 2026
- Sugar Details Extensive 2026 Reunion Tour & Shares New Single JamBase · Jan 21, 2026
- THE SWORD Announces 'Warp Riders' 15th-Anniversary Tour BLABBERMOUTH.NET · Apr 30, 2025
- Clutch announces North American tour with Dinosaur Jr. and Red Fang Chaoszine · Mar 15, 2023
Live Music in Denver
Denver's always had a soft spot for guitar-driven indie and alternative rock, from the '90s onward. The post-hardcore lineage that J. Robbins helped define — that careful balance of technical precision and actual emotion — sits well with audiences here who've grown up on Jawbreaker and emo that actually meant something. Denver gets nuance.
Denver road trip to see J. Robbins?
Stay in Highland, where tree-lined streets and independent bookstores make it feel like you're actually in Denver rather than passing through. Eat at Frasca Food and Wine if you want to understand why Colorado takes its ingredients seriously—it's fine dining without pretense. Before the show, spend an afternoon at the Denver Art Museum's contemporary wing, which often has installations that match the visual language of experimental music. Walk around Santa Fe Drive's gallery district. It's the kind of neighborhood where the art and music scenes actually talk to each other.
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