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Rob Zombie in Denver

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Rob Zombie
Fiddlers Green Amphitheatre — Englewood, CO

Rob Zombie started as the keyboardist for the noise rock band White Zombie in the late 1980s before pivoting to a solo career that's basically defined industrial metal for the past 25 years. His records are maximalist exercises in horror movie aesthetics and hard-hitting grooves—think heavily processed vocals, samples from B-movies, and riffs that hit like a sledgehammer. Dragula became his signature track, a driving bass-heavy thing that somehow landed on rock radio and MTV despite sounding like nothing else. Beyond music, he's directed horror films, made Halloween remakes, and generally leaned into a decades-long commitment to trashy Americana and monsters that feels either genuinely eccentric or carefully calculated. Probably both. His production style—all that layered synth noise and samples—has influenced plenty of bands in the industrial and metal spaces, even if his mainstream moment was mostly confined to the 2000s.

Loud, intense, and theatrical in the most straightforward way. Zombie shows are heavy on production—strobes, visuals, the full thing—and crowds go legitimately feral during Dragula and Superbeast. More spectacle than you might expect, less subtlety.

Known for Dragula, Living Dead Girl, Superbeast, More Human Than Human, Meet the Creeper

Rob Zombie rolled through Fiddler's Green in September 2023 with the kind of setlist that rewarded the people who'd stuck with him past the radio singles. Opening with "The Triumph of King Freak" set the tone immediately—this wasn't a greatest-hits victory lap. He dug into the weird stuff: "What Lurks on Channel X?" and "Demonoid Phenomenon" shared the stage with the obvious choices like "Superbeast" and "Dragula." The drum solo in the middle felt earned rather than obligatory, a moment to reset before "Living Dead Girl" hit different in the cool mountain air. For a guy who started in White Zombie and never quite shed that art-damaged sensibility, Denver got the full picture: horror-movie theatricality meeting genuinely heavy riffs.

Denver's music scene has always had room for the weird and heavy—it's a city that produces its own flavor of oddness. The metal and industrial crowd here appreciates artists who commit to a vision, who treat the stage like a set design rather than just a platform. Rob Zombie fits naturally into that lineage, sitting alongside the city's own experimental and heavy acts. Fiddler's Green itself bridges mainstream and underground, which is exactly where Zombie operates: accessible enough for casual fans, strange enough to keep the devoted engaged.

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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