St. Paul and the Broken Bones in Denver
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Never miss another St. Paul and the Broken Bones show near Denver.
About St. Paul and the Broken Bones
St. Paul and the Broken Bones are an Alabama soul outfit built around Paul Janeway's preacher-adjacent vocals and the band's grip on deep, churchy funk. They emerged in the early 2010s out of Birmingham with a sound that feels equally indebted to Al Green and Stax Records as it does to contemporary indie rock. Their breakthrough came with 'Don't Give Up on Me', a song that plays like a secular gospel number, full of urgency and conviction. Janeway's voice carries the weight of actual belief, whether he's singing about relationships or spiritual struggle. The band doesn't just play songs; they seem to be working through something in real time. Albums like 'Sea of Noise' and 'Yellow Crown' established them as serious practitioners of soul music who actually understand the tradition they're working in. They're not nostalgic about it—they sound like they're living it.
Janeway commands a room like he's leading a service. The crowd goes quiet, leans in. The band locks into grooves that feel genuinely hypnotic rather than just tight. People move because the music pulls them forward, not because it's performatively energetic.
Known for Don't Give Up on Me, Grass, Call Me, Half God, Half Devil, Sanctify
St. Paul and the Broken Bones + Denver
St. Paul and the Broken Bones brought their soul-soaked Alabama sound to Ellie Caulkins Opera House in November 2023, delivering a setlist that balanced their deeper cuts with spiritual peaks. They opened into the instrumental swagger of 'Roach Clip,' let 'City Federal Building' breathe with all its hometown weight, and built toward the transcendent closer 'Broken Bones & Pocket Change.' The band's ability to shift from the raw vulnerability of 'Lonely Love Song' to the churchy ascension of 'Sanctify' showed why Denver crowds keep coming back—they don't just play songs, they build an experience that feels earned.
St. Paul and the Broken Bones in Denver News
- Inside the Album That Made Nathaniel Rateliff—and Changed Colorado Music 5280 · Nov 7, 2025
- St. Paul & the Broken Bones Book 2026 North American Tour Exclaim! · Oct 15, 2025
- Yasmin Williams to Tour with St. Paul and the Broken Bones and The Wood Brothers Nonesuch Records · Mar 4, 2025
- St. Paul & The Broken Bones Detail Extensive North American Fall Tour 2023 JamBase · May 2, 2023
- A Whiskey Festival With 60 Varieties and a Concert by St. Paul & The Broken Bones Is Coming to Denver 303 Magazine · Oct 4, 2019
Live Music in Denver
Denver's soul and R&B scene has quietly built something substantial over the past decade, with venues like Ogden Theatre and Globe Hall hosting acts that bridge soul and indie sensibilities. St. Paul and the Broken Bones fit naturally into that space—they're not pure soul, not pure rock, but something that refuses categorization. The city's audience tends to respect that kind of refusal.
Denver road trip to see St. Paul and the Broken Bones?
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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