Big Head Todd and the Monsters-Wallflowers

Big Head Todd and the Monsters, June 8, 2024, Red Rocks, Morrison.

Tim Van Schmidt

After 39 years as a band, there’s still a good dose of heavy blues in the music of Big Head Todd and the Monsters.

At Red Rocks on June 8, one of the mightiest tunes of the evening – and the one that had the crowd howling the most – was BHTATM’s “Boom Boom”, a roiling rockin’ blues number based on the lyrics by John Lee Hooker. Everybody was involved, from shouting out “boom, boom, boom, boom” to countering with “bang, bang, bang, bang” and then going nuts when guitarist Todd Park Mohr let loose on his guitar.

Todd Park Mohr 2024 Photo by Tim Van Schmidt
Todd Park Mohr 2024 Photo by Tim Van Schmidt

Blues is only a part of the band’s music, which has more than a touch of soul in it – here, think “Bittersweet.” Or then there’s just the magnificent, showstopping power of rock anthem “Circle.” Still, blues is in there.

I remember back in the 1980s when BHTATM was still a struggling regional band, playing the old Washington’s for free.

I then started covering the band in the local press, reviewing an early record release available only on cassette at the time, and met up with Mohr in the back hallway of the Old Town Ale House (now Lucky Joe’s). He said something interesting at the time, telling me that places like the Ale House were just too small for them. I thought that was pretty arrogant at the time, but the next time I saw the band, they were playing to a full house at Fort Ram – and they haven’t looked back since.

Flash forward to 2024, and BHTATM are playing to a packed house at Red Rocks, a venue they have played more than 20 times over the years. And it was like a gathering of old friends – a rocking gathering.

Jakob Dylan 2024 Photo by Tim Van Schmidt
Jakob Dylan 2024 Photo by Tim Van Schmidt

Even opening act, The Wallflowers, featuring Jakob Dylan, put out an energetic set at Red Rocks. After seeing them last year at Chautauqua Auditorium in Boulder – a set plagued by interruptions and kind of a lousy attitude – I wondered how that was going to go. But The Wallflowers apparently were willing to step up at Red Rocks and make the best use of their time.

What a night at Red Rocks. You can’t really get more Colorado than that – one of Colorado’s most successful bands ever at one of the world’s finest concert venues nestled in the hills above Denver. And there it was, “boom, boom, boom, boom” echoing up the rocks, underscored by snarling guitar. A perfect live music night.