Apples and oranges; The Faint tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 5:13 pm March 31, 2009

Here’s a thought about what your hard-earned entertainment dollar can buy these days…

I went out to Marcus Village Pointe Cinema Friday night to see I Love You, Man and was surprised to find that movie ticket prices have gone up again, to $9. “It just went up this week,” the gal behind the counter said. Nine dollars for a 90-minute movie that will be on HBO or Netflix in a few short months seems rather excessive. I mean, this wasn’t exactly the kind of film that demands to be seen “on the big screen.” And yet, I Love You, Man has earned more than $37 million in two weeks. And yes, it was funny.

Contrast that with the price for seeing, say, Little Brazil at The Waiting Room last Saturday night. For a mere $7 you got to see four touring bands for more than four hours of live entertainment — with your cash going into the pockets of someone just trying to make a living off of art. Think about it: Live music really is your best value for your entertainment dollar — it’s loud, unpredictable, an interaction with actual human beings, and usually there’s booze involved. And if you miss it, you’ve missed it. There is no replay on HBO or DVD version to rent later. You’re living in the moment; and it can be cheaper than a movie.

Anyway… It’s not always cheaper. Take tonight’s Faint concert at Sokol Auditorium. At $18 per ticket, it’s still not sold out — which seems unheard of for this band. I speculate the reason for the slower ticket sales might have something to do with them having played here within the past six months, and the openers — UUVVWWZ and Noah’s Ark Was a Spaceship — having played a few times within the last few weeks. Still, a Faint show is always worth the price of admission, and I wouldn’t be surprised if this sold out before the first band takes the stage tonight at 8.

Tomorrow: Beep Beep.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Live Review: Little Brazil, Eagle * Seagull; Oui Bandits tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 12:24 am

Before I get to the review, a word of thanks to the men of Little Brazil. While on tour, the band visited the Anheuser-Busch beer plant in St. Louis (where, due to their legendary consumption, I’m sure they were treated like returning heroes) and while there, picked me up a piece of valuable memorabilia — a genuine Rolling Rock bottle opener keychain! Their thoughtfulness was so touching that I, well, teared up at the merch table when Brendan gave it to me. Thank you, gentleman. Your gift will not go to waste.

Now onto the show…

I arrived at around 10:30 and caught the last few moments of Kansas City’s The Life and Times — amazing, I wish I would have gotten their earlier. I can’t estimate the crowd size, but can tell you that the show was very likely “sold out.” Eagle * Seagull was up next. No fewer than a half-dozen people asked me if I knew what “the deal was” with their new album, the long-awaited The Year of the How-to Book, which we’ve been hearing about for over a year. The ongoing unconfirmed story has to do with Starbuck’s record label Hear Music, but no one knows if it’s true since E*S have been exceptionally good at keeping a lid on things. (I was surprised to learn that the label is still functioning, and according to this item at Nashville Scene, plans on releasing a new Elvis Costello album called Secret, Profane & Sugarcane June 2.)

Apparently the band briefly mentioned the new album during their set, but was as elusive as ever. We’ll just have to wait and see. Performance-wise, they never sounded better, though I’ve been hearing most of the “new” songs for nearly two years. Imagine if they actually ever get to release this album — they’ll be stuck having to play those songs for yet another year. God.

Finally it was time for Little Brazil, who tore right into their set that consisted of new stuff off Son and a few older numbers. No, they didn’t play the album front-to-back, and they didn’t need to. They had a number of special guests join them on stage, including balladeer Adam Hawkins (providing harmony vocals), Oliver Morgan’s wife, Megan, on keyboards and Landing on the Moon’s John Klemmensen on trumpet. Who wasn’t amazed by Landon Hedges’ voice? First, he’s been on the road for the past few weeks; second, his songs demand serious high-end vocal work. You’d expect him to be at least be a little hoarse, but no, Landon hit every note dead on, as did the rest of the band. You could tell they were happy to be home as much as the crowd was happy to see them (see photo). If you missed the set, the band is playing again a week from this Saturday (April 11) at The Sydney with The Filter Kings.

* * *

Tonight: At The Slowdown Jr., Oui Bandits opens for These United States and Laura Burhenn. $6, 9 p.m. A word of navigational warning: Cuming St. closed today until November, so take I-480 (if you can find an on-ramp) and get off on the 14th St. exit, or just look for the detours. You think it’s a pain in your ass? I’ve got to navigate this mess every day to get to work, so stfu, as they say on Twitter.

Also tonight, It’s True is opening for The Tallest Man on Earth and Red Cortez. $8, 9 p.m.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

More Cursive numbers; Her Flyaway Manner tonight, Little Brazil Saturday…

Category: Blog — @ 5:44 pm March 27, 2009

Homer’s head honcho Mike Fratt sent along second-week hard-unit numbers for Cursive’s Mama, I’m Swollen: 2,694, enough to place it at No. 200 on the Billboard charts, and for a combined two-week sales total of 8,000 units. So is that good? Says Fratt: “Well, it’s no Faint or Conor, but I think that’s good for an indie.”

He went on to list other sales numbers for comparison:

Vetiver on Subpop has been out since late January, and is at 4,722 total.
The new Buddy & Julie Miller, out three weeks, has sold 7,512 so far.
Heartless Bastards, out since Feb. 3, is at 14,209.
Jason Isbell, out since Feb. 17, is at 8,689 so far.
Black Lips, 2/24, is at 4,684
Matt & Kim, 1/20, is at 8,899
Black Joe Lewis only sold 1,629 in its first week
Razorlight, 3/10, is at 2,787

A few of these numbers surprised me, specifically Black Lips, which is one of the most-hyped bands going these days (certainly at SXSW), and Heartless Bastards (also hyped, but deservingly so). Fratt said Conor’s solo disc has exceeded 100k in sales, and that the Faint sold more than 11,000 copies of Fasciinatiion in its first two weeks of release, dwindling to 500 copies a week by the end of August; Fratt thought Fasciinatiion was at around 20k total.

In that context, 8,000 is respectable. It just never ceases to amaze me how CD sales overall have fallen over the past 10 years. Cursive’s 5,429 first-week sales landed it at No. 104 on Billboard‘s chart. Where would that number have placed it on the charts 10 years ago, or even five years ago? Probably nowhere near the top 200…

* * *

Busy week for shows. Very busy. Not SXSW busy, but busy. Here’s the skinny:

Tonight at The Slowdown Jr., it’s Lincoln punk stars Her Flyaway Manner with fellow Lincolnites UUVVWWZ and Ideal Cleaners. It’s a mini Lincoln invasion, and well worth the $7 cover charge. The fun starts at 9 p.m.

Over at O’Leaver’s, Bazooka Shootout is playing with Birthday Suits. $5, 9:30 p.m. Meanwhile, down that street at The Barley St. It’s True plays with Michael Wunder, Reagan Roeder and Underwater Dream Machine, $5, 9 p.m. The Waiting Room is hosting the Matt Cox CD release show with Filter Kings and Black Squirrels, $8, 9 p.m. Saddle Creek Bar is hosting The Fergusons live recording, with Stephen Monroe and Swapboy Blues. $5, 9 p.m.

The marquee attraction Saturday night is the Little Brazil CD release show with Eagle Seagull, The Life and Times and Noah’s Ark Was a Spaceship. $7, 9 p.m. LB is coming off a tour with Ladyfinger and Cursive, so expect them at their well-honed best… or at least fully loaded (if you know what I mean).

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Interview: Little Brazil; Live Review: Ratatat…

Category: Blog — @ 5:31 pm March 26, 2009

The second photo in the Little Brazil story which I just posted (here) was taken right after the interview, when everyone was three sheets to the wind. After that, I went home and took a nap for a few hours, but was still dragging at Brad Hoshaw’s CD release show that night. Not these guys, though; they drink like champions.

Anyway, read the story and find out about Little Brazil’s new album, Son (which dropped on Tuesday), and the thinking that went into making it a “concept album.” There was some talk about performing the entire album in sequence at the CD release show this Saturday at The Waiting Room, but nothing was definite and I haven’t talked to the guys since the interview. We’ll see.

* * *

Last night’s Ratatat show at The Slowdown sold out some time in the afternoon. Evan Mast said the duo had spent their off time between tours working on visuals for their staging, and the results were impressive — large, bright LED light bars framed the sides of the stage, lasers glowed overhead and a disturbing video that meshed abstract images with warped pop-culture icons played behind them — not that anyone was paying attention. They were too busy “throwing their hands in the air like they just don’t care,” or whatever. The floor was crushed with dancers trying to get into the mid-tempo groove. (See photo).

And if there’s a criticism to be levied, it’s that their music was too mid-tempo, and at times downright plodding, which was only enhanced by the massive (and typical) bass samples. The performance involved Mast on bass and autoharp and Mike Stroud’s whirring electric guitar played over prerecorded samples (drum tracks, synths, etc.). At its best, it was a huge carnival of sound that got the entire audience jumping. Too much, however, was low-energy and ornamental — motion picture soundtrack music. Their videos were absolutely inspired. One song took the video for Paul Simon’s “You Can Call Me Al” — which also features Chevy Chase — and warped them into slithering freaks. Another chopped up scenes from Arnold Schwarzenegger’s “Predator” to make exploding bodies and buildings dance, while other cuts showed Arnold soaring through the air like a god. The most disturbing image: An Abba video distorted so that the singers’ eyes and mouth were turned upside down, creating grotesque masks. Creepy, campy fun.

* * *

The Lepers and The Big Gigantic are at O’Leaver’s tonight. $5, 9 p.m. Go.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Ratatat interview, at Slowdown tonight; Boy Bathing at PS…

Category: Blog — @ 5:41 pm March 25, 2009

In the noise and confusion of SXSW I never got around to posting this interview with Ratatat’s Evan Mast (read it here). The focus was on music licensing and how Ratatat has broadened its exposure by having its music used in TV, movies, commercials, etc. They’ve also broadened their wallets along the way.

Licensing continues to be the new radio. Labels (including Saddle Creek) have personnel specifically dedicated to getting their bands’ music into commercials and movies. In the old days, there were those who considered such endeavors as “selling out.” Today, with record sales being usurped by downloading and leaks, it’s as an economic reality, and a way to survive. Of course you can always go to far, as Of Montreal proved. But like I said in that 2006 column, bands that can’t get played on the radio don’t have many options when it comes to getting their music heard (or making a living off music).

Anyway, check out the story, then go pick up some tickets for tonight’s Ratatat show at The Slowdown. Opening is hip-hop artist Despot and Montreal’s Think About Life. $15, 9 p.m.

Also tonight at PS Collective, The Boy Bathing is back. I’m assuming that this followup to last year’s MAMF appearance is probably a solo acoustic performance. Opening is Brad Hoshaw, Tim Koehn and Black SmoKers Duo. $5, 8 p.m.

Tomorrow: Little Brazil

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

SXSW: Final Thoughts; Aponik’s last words…

Category: Blog — @ 7:48 pm March 24, 2009

Final thoughts on SXSW: An event that enormous makes Omaha’s piddly music scene seem miniscule, almost embarrassingly so. A common theme heard and read this year (and I’m sure was probably heard last year) was that Omaha’s heyday was seven years ago. Seven. That’s forever from a pop music standpoint. And yet, Omaha had a healthy number of acts performing at SXSW, including Beep Beep, Cursive, Ladyfinger, O+S, Yuppies, Box Elders, and unofficially, Little Brazil (I assume Darren Keen also was playing somewhere (other than with Beep Beep)).

But besides the fact that it was a great time, I’m still not sure what purpose SXSW serves other than as a media junket. New bands aren’t getting “discovered,” deals aren’t being made. Will The Oh Sees, who were my favorite at the festival, emerge from SXSW with heighted exposure, increased record sales and more demand for touring (and consequently, more money)? We’ll have to wait and see.

So now I’m back home. I’ve already submitted my 1,500-word version of my three days of blog entries (Thursday, Friday, Saturday) to The Reader, and the whole thing already is fading like a dream. Will I be back next year? Sure, if I can get another badge from The Reader (and if I have the vacation time available). If so, I’ll be booking a room closer to the action — walking over the Congress Ave. bridge twice a day quickly became a drag, especially at 2 a.m.

To round off the coverage, here are the last two submissions by Chris Aponik, received yesterday:

My Friday at SXSW was taken up by one of the biggest non-SXSW showcases, the In the Red Records show at Beerland. For me, it was packed with bands guaranteed to please my garage-rock heart. Texas’ Strange Boys and Seattle’s the Intelligence led the way on that showcase. The Boys smash twee, garage, ’60s psychedelic rock with nods toward Dylan in their winsome, upbeat songs. Ryan Sambol is the driving factor, as his drowsy drawl is part Bob and part Belle & Sebastian’s Stuart Murdoch. Meanwhile, the Intelligence are the garage-punk Devo, turning guitars and keyboards into crisp musical machines. Lars Finberg (also of the A-Frames) sounds more natural than on the band’s records, but the syncopated delivery remains. I also caught Christmas Island and Cramps’ member Kid Congo Powers at the showcase, with the latter doing songs from his days in the Gun Club and with Lux Interior. Rick Froberg’s Obits started the day, proving that he had made a successful leap from the Hot Snakes. Obits is still tightly coiled, but there’s more bar-band groove here. Crack Pipes bloozed up the Beerland patio mid-day and the Oh Sees reappeared closing the In the Red show outside as well. Cause Co-Motion! stirred up a good time with its messy indie pop, though they sometimes went too fast and got ahead of the natural pace of a song. I also walked hurriedly through shows by Delta Spirit and the Hold Steady. Both sounded great, but I’ll be spending time with the Hold Steady here in Omaha, and I’ve had a recent enough taste of Delta Spirit to tide me over until I get to see them again.

Addictive: The Intelligence, The Strange Boys, Crack Pipes, Cause Co-Motion!

Memorable: Dappled Cities, Obits, Christmas Island, Kid Congo Powers

Listenable: Mae Shi, Antlers, Young Galaxy

* * *

It was just a brief moment, but in it, Ed Harcourt transcended me and a room full of SXSW attendees in a Convention Center exhibition hall to another place. Chalk that up to the English songwriter’s daring decision to place a sprawling, noisy song near the end of his televised set on SXSW’s sound stage. That song, “Beneath the Heart of Darkness,” is off his 2001 debut. During its seven minutes, it morphed from piano ballad to noisy, Velvet Underground meltdown and back. The version he played Saturday induced chills. I had just seen one of my favorite songwriters do something amazing. Later on, the other half of that sound stage brought a downer, thanks to the power-pop super group Tinted Windows. In the annals of rock artist distractions, joining a super group should be tossed on the list next to going to rehab, having an identity crisis, having a child and attempting to become an actor. Super group is exactly what has befallen Adam Schlesinger, who now has at least another year worth of excuses to deprive me of a new Fountains of Wayne album. Tinted Windows also has Bun E. Carlos, Taylor Hanson and James Iha, who hasn’t ever met a super group he didn’t like. The results at times are solid power pop, but other times the radio ambition does between Daughtry and mall-emo.

Human Eye bore a weird, wild streak with their oddball lo-fi post-punk. Squealing guitars, spacey keyboards and a bug-eyed singer make for a psychotic, but intensely watchable experience. Gentlemen Jesse and His Men should be promoted to the kings of modern power-pop. They play fast and loud, but with hooks aplenty. The energy is great, the songs are all candy floss and sing-along ready. Magic Kids may give Box Elders a run for best pop band on Goner Records. The Memphis band had three singers melting together over simple, fun ’60s pop. This is the Beach Boys on a shoestring budget. Golden Boys tear ass down Texas back roads with their loud, guitar-fueled country-rock blaring.

And finally, a band I out and out hated: Avoid the Death Set so you don’t need counseling to forget this cancerously bad band. They start off as Girl Talk, Jr., mash-up artists raping pop music in quick-hit snippets. But then they play mediocre noise punk on top of it. It’s colossally stupid.

Addictive: Human Eye, Ed Harcourt, Gentleman Jesse and His Men

Memorable: Sebastien Grainger, Magic Kids, Golden Boys

Listenable: Frustrations, Girls (San Fran.), Jason Lytle, Razorlight, Limes, Razorlight, Ty Segal

Soon to be Forgotten: Abe Vigoda, Tinted Windows,

Please Let it be Forgotten: Death Set

— Chris Aponik

Nice job, Chris. He and I ran into each other briefly at the Waterloo Park day show. It is funny how many Omahans you run into at SXSW.

Tomorrow: Ratatat.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

SXSW Saturday: Janean Garofalo, Abe Vigoda, Echo and the Bunnymen, PJ Harvey…

Category: Blog — @ 4:25 pm March 22, 2009

Before we took off for the park Saturday morning, we bought grab-and-go breakfast from the little Starbucks-like coffee shop in the lobby and carried it out to a patio that also acts as a smoking area, complete with flat-panel television. While unwrapping my cresc-sandwich, I noticed someone pacing like a caged tiger along the sidewalk, her cell phone and backpack lying on an outdoor table. It was Janean Garofalo, the once-star of movies turned professional left-wing talk show guest. Standing around 4 feet tall and covered in tattoos, Garofalo looked angry and impatient, tracking back and forth behind me while I unwrapped a carrot-cake muffin. This wasn’t the first time I’d seen her in Austin. We crossed paths the day before as she marched with her backpack across the Congress Avenue bridge. I guess she was tired of making the hike and was now waiting for someone to pick her up, someone who obviously was late. She stopped her angry march occasionally to stare at the flat-panel, which was showing Fox News. I wondered if that also was why she was seething, and I decided not to say hello fearing that she would lean over my table and try to bite me. We finished our breakfast and left her there, circling and scowling. I wondered what she thought of Ben Stiller these days, her old boyfriend and now a multi-millionaire movie actor married to a model, while she still slummed the comedy circuit and got by with the occasional guest role on “24,” a show that ironically airs on the network she despises.

She was quickly forgotten as we began our own forced march toward 6th St. Waterloo Park is a few blocks north of the action near the edge of the U of Texas campus, and rock-throwing distance to the State Capitol Building. The entire park had been incased in chain link fence for SXSW. We made our way inside and found the small “side stage” where Sleepy Sun was playing, then walked over to the much larger main stage, where fewer than 100 onlookers watched Cut Off Your Hands walk through the same set I heard Thursday night. Were they still New Zealand’s Tokyo Police Club? They were to me, playing that same style of jump-rock indie music, complete with its earnestly young tone. We left and ate lunch and came back for King Khan and the Shrines. By then, the lower bowl was half full. On stage was the Shrines in matching black shirts and ornamental neckware, preceding Khan, who entered to much fanfare wearing a crown and cloak and accompanied by a cheerleader with pom-poms who danced throughout the set (see photo). The whole thing had a James Brown-by-way-of-Hawaii feel to it that was wasted on a crowd composed of afternoon picnic-ers and hungover hipsters.

Afterward we walked back over to the side stage for Abe Vigoda — not the actor but the band named after the actor who, judging by their age, probably never heard of Phil Fish or Tessio. The guy playing bass thought he’d throw a few bombs before they lit into their set: “I used to listen to Cursive when i was in 9th grade,” he said, apparently miffed that Cursive was playing on the big stage. “Don’t get me wrong, Domestica was a great album, and I don’t mean that factiously. But that was 9th grade.”

Shit talking is an odd way to greet your audience, and can be audacious and ballsy if you can back it up, but Abe Vigoda couldn’t. The four-piece played a flaccid set of run-of-the-mill indie rock sung by a guy who couldn’t sing. Listen, if you’re trying to be punk and can’t carry a note, at least try to scream the lyrics so no one notices. Instead, it was typical wonky Modest Mouse-flavored indie rock, poorly played and sung by a band whose only memorable quality was its name. By chance, I ran into Tim Kasher later in the evening and passed along Vigoda’s pre-set soliloquy. “Don’t worry, we’ll get them back,” he said. Anyone familiar with Kasher’s famous between-song rants knows what he’s talking about.

We left halfway through Vigoda’s set and caught the tail-end of Cursive. By then, the field was filled and the band had turned their sound into a monster roar, waves of feedback crashed against the trees.

By the time Cursive ended, it was already around 3 o’clock, so we hiked back to the Austin Convention Center where Echo and the Bunnymen were scheduled to play at 5 at “The Bat Bar” — a made-for-TV lounge that was nothing more than an exhibition hall turned into a sound stage. After waiting in line for an hour, they finally let us in and reminded us over and over that the performance was being televised live on Direct TV — so “make some noise, you’re going to be on TV, too!” Moments later Ian McCulloch stepped on stage with the rest of the band and stood there while we all waited for Matt Pinfield to finish an interview somewhere else. It was strange and awkward. McCulloch tried to pass the time talking about European Cup “football” to an audience that had no idea who Manchester United was, nor cared. Finally, he got the cue and tore into his set. I’ve never been a big fan of Echo and the Bunnymen. To me, their music was a watered down version of stuff I really liked by bands like Psychedelic Furs and Teardrop Explodes. But McCulloch sounded terrific, not a bit of age showed on his 49-year-old voice. I recognized a couple of the songs, including set closer “Lips Like Sugar.” He also played a few new songs that sounded just like the old songs.

We stayed on 6th St. and caught the Oh Sees playing outside at Beerland — not nearly as good as the Emo’s Jr. set from Thursday night — before heading over to Stubbs to find something to eat and wait for PJ Harvey. This turned out to be an agonizing decision, as the food was bad and so were the bands preceding PJ, including the Razorlight, a British act that wants to go the U2 route but doesn’t have the songs for it. They started out strong and quickly became boring. The crowd mulled around just waiting for them to get it over with.

Everywhere people were jockeying for places to sit down, their backs and feet like open sores, dying for some relief but finding none. The crowd shifted from foot to foot just trying to get through the next two hours, while bouncers came by and shooed people off booze loading ramps and camera platforms. We found a spot near a railing where we could at least lean. Down below was a table full of water coolers that had long since gone dry.

PJ came on at 10 sharp, dressed in a white satin outfit with a big white “thing” in her hair — we were too far away to make out what that “thing” was. She kicked into a set of rather low-key songs off her latest album, which sounded good, but I preferred the old Polly Jean, the one that played electric guitar on 4-Track Demos, instead of this modern version of Annie Lennox.

Next it was off to see Alessi’s Ark — the same Alessi that recorded in Omaha a couple years ago at ARC with Jake Bellows. The venue — Stephen F’s Bar — was hidden on the second floor of a 7th St. luxury hotel. Inside was all oak paneling and French doors that opened to a balcony that overlooked the flotsam in the street below. Alesssi played a set of acoustic songs with guitar to a crowd of around 50 — nice stuff.

Finally it was off to punk rock central in the form of Red 7 for Box Elders. I figured it might be my last band of SXSW, why not go out with a bang? There on stage was Dave Goldberg and the McIntyre brothers in their respective get-ups (the too-short shorts, the gold lame smoking jacket) doing their garage band thing to a crowd of 100 punkers and scenesters who got into the vibe. Halfway through the set, Goldberg bit into some sort of capsule that made him drool green foam maddog-style. It was all well received (see photo).

I considered heading over to Emo’s for Daniel Johnston and even got as far as getting into the club, but the previous band was still on stage and I figured they wouldn’t be done ’til past 1:30. So instead I left to find a brat and was hit again with the Mardi Gras-on-amphetemines atmosphere of 6th St., rowdier than ever, but this time The Man was in full force. Crossing Brazos I ran into a battalion of cops headed somewhere, ready for action. A glance down the street revealed a wall of red and blue strobe lights and mounted police surrounding some sort of melee. Fleets of cops in cruisers flew over Congress Ave. bridge, looking for trouble. A couple kids in a black VW GTO sped by us, one of them standing out of sunroof yelling with glee, just glad to be alive — then boom — squad lights, busted. When I passed them walking to the hotel I could see the two kids inside the VW looking scared, digging through their glove box for papers as a second squad car pulled up next to them — a bad scene, but a suiting way to end three days of rock ‘n’ roll chaos. Tomorrow, what it all means and was it worth it.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Friday at SXSW: The Wrens, Titus Andronicus, Cursive, Jeremy Messersmith, Mark Mallman, more; Aponik report…

Category: Blog — @ 3:49 pm March 21, 2009

The goal of my Day Two (yesterday) was to figure out the ins and outs of the so-called “day parties” at SXSW. In the end, I never really figured them out, or I never actually found them. All the performances I had logged into my schedule were at the same clubs where I’d been the night before, with a couple exceptions. The only difference about day parties is that they’re absolutely free — no badge needed for entry. A person could have a good time at SXSW without ever buying a wristband or badge, as the best show of the night for me also was free-entry.

First stop was at noon. We hustled over to Mohawk Patio, an outdoor venue with multi-tier concrete and steel decks that wound around a stage below on the floor (see photo). Stairways led up and up (but only VIPs were allowed to the very top, where someone grilled an assortment of meats; needless to say, we weren’t VIPs). It was a hot, burning sun — nothing to complain about after this past winter — but still, sunblock was needed, or shade. We watched from the center tier next to a guy who was filming the entire performance. The Wrens sounded no different than the last time I heard them a few years ago, though the group had gotten a bit more gray around the temples. I recognized a few songs off older albums, and so did the crowd, all of whom were busy getting started on a long day of binge drinking thanks to free Pabst tickets handed out to everyone who came through the door.

SXSW is a drinkers’ paradise, though I didn’t notice many “free beer” events. Ordering soda pop is looked upon as quaint. But despite the heavy alcohol intake, there were few — if not any — drunks flopping around… in the daytime. At night, well, that was a different matter. We hung around and watched the first 15 minutes of Bishop Allen — a real snore — before heading off to another outdoor venue — which was little more than a large tent constructed in a parking lot behind a bar on the east end of the strip called Habana Calle Annex 6. I figured Titus Andronicus would be playing outside, but instead they played on the stage inside the tiny bar (see photo). I liked their most recent album enough to place it on my 2008 top-10 list — it’s rowdy and rough and young, with unbridled energy — and so was the band, bashing away on stage, the frontman sporting the new-hipster unibomber beardo look. It was loud, but forced — they never got into an angry groove heard or maybe it was just too early for that sort of thing.

It was already approaching 3 p.m. One thing I was dead wrong about in my column: I said there was no way that the venues would stay on schedule. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Bands hit their mark timewise at every showcase. There were no exceptions. I assume either the SXSW organizers or the venues are responsible for drilling the schedule into the bands’ heads. In fact, three or four times during the day, a band commented on how much time they had left. “Just 8 minutes; I better make this a good one.” And so on. Everyone is carrying their own schedules in their hip pockets or saved on their iPhones; and instead of enjoying what they are watching, they’re planning three gigs ahead, tracking their path in their minds, trying to figure out how they’ll get across 6th St. in time for whatever they want to see. A band running late wasn’t going to stop them from heading out when they needed to.

Knowing that we’d be heading back toward the hotel afterward, we figured we’d trek further down the strip. It’s here that I decided to break my own rule and go see an Omaha band — maybe the only Omaha performance of the trip (unless we see Box Elders today). I figured if I’m going to see only one Omaha band, it might as well be Cursive. So we hoofed it west a mile down 4th St. to La Zona Rosa, the newest and most pristine of all the venues and quite a contrast to the usual crap-panel walls or paint-everything-black exterior of most clubs located further east. The place had a stage, sound and lights that rivaled Slowdown’s (see photo). It only made sense that Dan Brennan was there to run sound for our homeboys. They played a strange set, heavy with songs from The Ugly Organ and only two or three from the new album, skipping entirely the big closer, “What Have I Done?” instead opting to close with “Dorothy at 40.” The huge crowd (400?) ate it up. So how did this out-of-town crowd react to an Omaha band? No different than any typical Cursive crowd at TWR or Sokol or Slowdown. Kasher struggled with his voice, and I wondered how he was going to sound at 1 a.m. that same night at the Saddle Creek Showcase at The Radio Room. But I never found out. Cursive is playing the hell out of SXSW — a show Thursday, two on Friday and again today out at a park.

After the agony suffered after Day One, I knew I wouldn’t make it a full day and full night walking/standing around. After Cursive we headed back to the hotel for a dip in the pool and a nap, which made all the difference. We got rolling again around 7, but discovered that none of the night showcases were starting until 8. Sixth St. was crowded with people looking for food options, and finding very little other than pizza, hot dogs and other street vendor fare. This is the worst food I’ve eaten on a trip in years.

With few options, we figured we might as well head east across the freeway to see Peter John and Bjorn. Little did we know that we were entering the dirty side of town, at least compared to 6th St. It not only felt like we were in a different city, but a different country and time — Tijuana circa 1973. Houses like shacks. Dirt lots and rusted fences that surrounded exposed junk yards and auto graveyards. When we got to Fader Fort we found a line that stretched more than a block long. I talked to someone wearing a headset at the front, asking her if there was a badge line. The gig wasn’t really part of SXSW, and you had to RSVP to get in. I RSVP’d to a ton of stuff over the past two weeks but couldn’t remember if that show was one of them, and I couldn’t find out until I made my way through that block-long line that barely moved as every individual had to be looked up in a database on a small white Macbook. No.

We walked up a block to where Mark Mallman would be playing at 9, a place called The Iron Gate Lounge. A shitty haphazard fence had been thrown around the crushed-stone parking lot, a portable stage placed against a retaining wall was covered with one of those portable tents. Two porta Johns were pressed up in the corner. It was seedy but fun (see photo). Up the weather-worn deck steps stood a young mutt with the traditional hippy dewrag tied around its neck that couldn’t have been more than 5 months old. The pup was being walked on the lawn next to the house-like bar, where old power-line cable spindles were being used as tables. Pot smoke wafted in the air as people blazed up in lawn chairs on the tiny side lot, right in the open. Back down on the crushed-stone lot someone sold hippie artwork. I glanced behind a barrier curtain and two guys sat in folding stadium chairs picking through through buds, rolling joints. This was the other Austin that no one on Sixth St. would ever see unless they moved here.

Another non-sponsored event – everyone was allowed in — the crowd looked like it was made up of neighborhood locals. The whole thing felt like O’Leaver’s 5-year anniversary block party. And here’s where the beauty of SXSW comes in: I had no idea who was playing before Mallman, nor did I care. We figured we might as well just stay there instead of hiking back to Sixth St. As luck would have it, the guy playing first was fellow Minnesotan Jeremy Messersmith, who’s self-released album was one of my favorites from last year. With a sideman on electric guitar and a beat-box synth gadget, Messersmith played what wound up being my favorite set of the evening.

Right after him was Mallman with a full band — quite a contrast to the last time I saw him play (a solo set at the long-gone Johnny Sortinos Pizza joint where Wal-mart now stands and I was the only one in the crowd). With his full band, Mallman became an unbridled madman, hyper beyond words, throwing himself on top of his keyboard, doing leg kicks and tossing his piano stool. It was worth it just for his theatrics — entertaining, though the music was sloppy and marred by technical problems. I think Mallman was trying too hard for a crowd that was too small to make his efforts worth it.

We left Tijuana and headed back to 6th St., back to Mohawk Patio this time for The Ettes, a poppy punk four-piece with a bubbly female singer who had the buoyancy of Belinda Carlisle before she got old and fat. The Ettes have enough to turn this relatively straight forward punk into something harder, and do. Not a bad band, though none of their songs stood out.

I considered staying at Mohawk for The Hold Steady, who was playing at midnight, but figured I could see them in Omaha soon enough. Outside, a huge mass of humanity crowded the street, trying to get a glimpse of Metallica playing inside — people stood on top of a nearby parking garage, tossing devil horned salutes down below. I pushed through and headed back to Emo’s Jr. for the other most hyped group of the weekend: The Pains of the Pure at Heart. Once inside, it was a crush mob, mostly girls, many who longingly mouthed the words to the songs (see photo). Their music was standard-issue indie with a pop slant that recalled ’90s acts like The Trashcan Sinatras. It was well-played, but boring and flat. Very run-of-the-mill, but that won’t stop them from riding a hype train all the way to SNL.

I figured I might as well stay for The Black Lips, who I missed at TWR last week. Something was up as their set was running late and there was a lot of back and forth with the sound guy. Finally on came the band with another SXSW surprise — a guest appearance by what I assumed was a member of the Wu Tang Clan based on how the crowd reacted by throwing up the classic thumb-fingers “W” symbol. I have no idea who it was as I was never into WTC. Needless to say, the guy laid down some lyrics while the Black Lips tried to back him. It didn’t work out very well, and the EmCee bossed order throughout the half-hour endeavor, before leaving the stage. After being told to “bring it down” by hip-hop guy so often, the Lips’ set was flaccid and half-assed.

It was well past 1 a.m. when I made the long walk back to the hotel. Sixth St. had turned into a drunken bacchanal — thousands of people stumbling around, yelling, chasing after each other. I expected to see someone carrying around a golden calf. The streets turned from carefree to angry and weird, as huge lines formed behind hotdog carts, people looking for anything to eat to kill their daylong buzz.

* * *

Chris Aponik turns in his report:

Punk band reunion shows are often little more than a desperate money grab by over-the-hill misfits who no longer give a shit. But that ain’t Keith Morris. Circle Jerks owned Beerland with an hour-plus set that transported the churning, sweaty crowd back in time. What’s more is the band was totally into it as well, with Morris telling stories, ranting and pouring out an impassioned vocal performance. He kept the crowd vibe right, going as far to lecture one unruly member about the message of one of the band’s songs. Sure, the Circle Jerks are a seminal hardcore progenitor, but last night’s set at Beerland was seminal as well.

Other standouts included TV Ghost, a no-wave basement punk act that throbs with mechanical menace. Their singer shouts his lines as if giving an incantation. Blank Dogs created an insular punk-pop with vocals processed into some echoing ’50s alien sci-fi effect. Sam Roberts Band won me over with power-pop that also nodded to the Stones, while Mark Sultan (aka BBQ) knows his way around doo-wop stylings. Tim Easton impressed by finally re-embracing a rock band to put a live wire under his alt.country folk stylings.

Meanwhile, Crystal Stilts proved not up to the buzz, as their indie-pop flirts with post-punk atmosphere. Sometimes it clicks, but mostly it seems stuck in indecision. The Living Things don’t have any trouble deciding however. The major label rock act rocks with a capital “R.” They are the Makers with a brasher, glammier sound. Turn off your mind or you’ll just be turned off.

Today, I just don’t know. I’m definitely hitting up the unofficial In the Red Records showcase at Beerland. I’ve already had Tamale House breakfast tacos, so I’m ready to roll.

Addictive: Tim Easton, TV Ghost,
Memorable: Sam Roberts Band, Blank Dogs, No Age, Red Red Meat, Mark Sultan, Crystal Stilts, Greg Ashley Band
Listenable:Army Navy, Living Things, Two Hours Traffic, Naked on the Verge, Baptist Generals, Nite Jewel, Ancestors — Chris Aponik

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

Thursday night in Austin: Peter Murphy, Micachu, Cut Off Your Hands, Thee Oh Sees…

Category: Blog — @ 3:13 pm March 20, 2009

Everything I said in my column about SXSW was true. All true. The good and the bad. It really is a nirvana for “new music” lovers, a paradise, a shrine to what’s happening now in music — be it good and new and original, or regressive, derivative, boring. You’ll hear it all here, along a stretch of road that runs a mile beside a dark, flat river surrounded by hotels and restaurants and new condominium construction. On the streets, in the restaurants, in mezzanines, alongside the locked doors of banks and office buildings, on the stairs alongside rows and rows of garbage scows, besides a Jimmy Johns, in clothing stores, outside of convenient marts where the local downtowners stop in to buy a pack of smokes and a $3 vending-machine-quality sandwich wishing it would all go away. You’ll get a chance to see every band that’s been written about in Magnet and Pitchfork three or four times over the course of the week. If you missed them at 1 a.m. at Emo’s don’t worry, they’re probably playing tomorrow afternoon at the Urban Outfitters or in a tent at a day-party booze-and-brats give-away.

We got in at 5. Our hotel — located on the opposite side of the river — is only a $20 cab ride from the airport. We walked to the Convention Center about a half-mile away to get our “credentials” — a large laminated badge with my photo and an imbedded metallic device that acts as a keyfob that magically gets you into all the shows in all the clubs for the duration of the festival. So efficient was our arrival, we had time to catch a full evening of shows. I checked my list and figured why not try Peter Murphy at Elysium? After all, it was only a couple blocks away.

There’s a sense of disorientation upon reaching 6th St., the same blind chaos of Bourbon St. during Mardi Gras. The street is blocked off and every venue is hosting something, but what? After a few minutes you realize that no one else seems to know, either. The reason this festival works is because people aren’t assholes — more people came up to me yesterday asking for directions or advice about bands than any time I can remember, maybe because I look like an undercover cop or a club bouncer or someone’s dad. Certainly not because I look like a local. This would never work in NYC. Everyone’s friendly, maybe because it’s 82 degrees and sunny, and those of us who flew or drove in from northern climes — having suffered through five months of bone-aching cold — are so desperately happy to be able to casually walk around in a T-shirt and shorts and flip-flops.

We made our way down Red River St. to Elysium and ran into an enormous crowd that turned out to be the 7 p.m. “hold out line” for Peter Murphy, though no one was sure if, in fact, it was a line at all. More of a mob/crowd situation. After waiting for about 20 minutes, the guy behind me said “Dude, you got a badge. You should wait in the ‘badge line.'” I was in the non-badge line. In fact every venue has two lines, one for people with badges, one for those with wristbands or nothing. We moved to the other line, but it didn’t really matter. After waiting for 30 minutes, and almost giving up, the cattle began to move. Elysium is billed as a “dance club,” but it’s not much different than, say, The Waiting Room — a large venue with a decent stage and a side room with pool tables and pinball machines.. Murphy already was on stage performing when we got in. I remembered interviewing him years ago — one of the toughest interviews I’ve ever done because of his thick cockney accent — I didn’t understand half of what he said. Murphy speaks quickly and mumbles. I recognized that London mumble telling stories on stage between songs, but I couldn’t decipher a single word. Musically, Murphy sounds as good as ever (solo-wise anyway). He’s still in good voice — that same old deep warble that slides upward into a David Bowie impersonation. “He looks old,” said a gothy-looking girl standing beside me, and he did. His hair has thinned and he’s starting to comb-over a bald spot, his skin looked drawn and grey, his eyes deeper set, but he still had whatever it is that made him famous in the ’80s.

We lasted about 20 minutes before we’d had enough. I wanted to get across the street to what’s known as “Emo’s Annex” — nothing more than a tent set up across the street from the actual Emo’s. I had called Aponik in a panic while waiting for Murphy asking, “Is it going to be like this everywhere? Super long lines?” He assured me that it wasn’t and he was right. There was no line for Micachu — a young UK lady/guy who plays what looks like is either a tiny guitar or a big ukulele, pounding out arch, dissonant pop songs sung in an angry chirp. Her music will either entice you or drive you away. I loved it. Teresa was confused by it. The crowd of around 75 seemed interested but not terribly drawn in.

We left and got a slice of pizza from one of the countless pizza windows located about every 40 yards down the street. Everyone’s eating pizza, probably because that’s all you notice on the street. Pizza is quick and easy. No one wants to sit down for a normal meal. I wanted to catch The Warlocks, but somehow misread my pocket guide and wound up at Stubbs, an enormous outdoor venue located behind a famous barbecue joint. The stage was large, topped by a huge tent-like canopy.The feature attraction — The Meat Puppets. I’ve never been a fan of the band, though like everyone else in America, I enjoyed their guest spot during Nirvana’s MTV Unplugged gig. It was so loud that I wondered what the diners were hearing inside the restaurant while they crushed their ribs. Meat Puppets sounded pretty dead-on in front of a crowd of at least 500, maybe more. Teresa thought they sounded Brookes and Dunn. I thought they sounded like gritty swamp rock.

It was 10 when we left and Teresa had had enough and I was beginning to fade after too many Shiners. Sixth St. had turned into a drunk noise carnival, exactly as you would imagine it — noise (mostly drums) echoing out of every venue. Street crazies and people on bicycles mixed in with the badge-wearing crowd and locals trying to get into free shows. Everywhere, all the time, an ambulance was either parked in front of a venue — cherries ablaze — or rushing through an intersection. Odd. Despite cops at every corner, I walked Teresa back to Congress and headed over to Emo’s where I spent the rest of the evening. Like Slowdown (but really, not like Slowdown at all) Emo’s has a main stage and “Emo’s Jr.” The diff from Slowdown is that both go at the same time, divided by an outdoor passageway that makes up most of Emo’s excess capacity. I wasn’t sure what I was watching and then found an order sheet taped to the wall. On stage was Wild Light from Manchester, NH, a commercial-sounding indie band that reminded me of shit like Dexy’s Midnight Runners (for no reason, really). Meanwhile, over at Emo’s Jr., The Homosexuals were doing their thing. Formed in 1972 as The Rejects, the trio is the read deal, like a slice of Brittany when the barricades were still in the streets, and they looked like they lived through it.

Back in at Emo’s was Cut Off Your Hands, who I originally was drawn in to see. They played in Omaha just a few weeks ago and I missed them. High energy indie rock from New Zealand that sounded like a rougher version of Tokyo Police Club. I mentioned this to Robb Nansel afterward and he gave me a look like I was nuts. The best was last. Thee Oh Sees from San Francisco — amazing garage rock to the extreme. The lead guy, looking like a young (short) Marty Sheen straight out of Badlands, is magnetic on stage — the best garage rock I’ve heard in years, covered in reverb and noise. Easily the best band I heard on my Day One, or maybe it was the Shiner talking. There was talk of a secret Jane’s Addiction set at a local Playboy Club, which I’d heard about before I left. Nansel was going, but I was dead tired.

By the time I got back to the hotel at around 1, my back felt like it’d been crushed in a vice from standing up for five hours after spending five hours smashed in a jet. Pure agony. The part about SXSW having nowhere to sit down is true, so is the part about doing lots of walking. I will need a vacation from this vacation by Sunday. Today I try to find the day parties on foot.

No Aponik comments. What happened, Chris? Too much partying? The only Omahan I’ve seen so far is Nansel, though I’ve been in touch via IM with a number of people. Stay tuned.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i

SXSW: Aponik’s Day One…

Category: Blog — @ 12:50 pm March 19, 2009

I’m headed to the airport. Don’t let this be the last thing I ever write (if you know what I mean). Chris Aponik sends his Day One comments, below. Chris is known more as a garage band guy (his love of Brimstone Howl is legendary), but you wouldn’t know it judging from the bands he saw yesterday, many of which I’ll (hopefully) be seeing this week. Unlike Chris, I’ve done little planning or RSVP-ing. I hope it doesn’t end up biting me in the ass.

Day One in Austin is in the books and it seems destined to be the lightest of the four main days of SXSW. Still, I was able to knock three must-see acts off my list. Only one of them disappointed.

It was a day of running around and quickly remembering how to get places. The best way to do SXSW seems to let the day show schedule fall into place on the fly, as you zip up and down Sixth Street. The night shows I try to plan a little more, charting out the most desirable options and making sure I’m not passing on anything I’ll not have another chance to see.

Even before Wednesday kicked off, I had spent some time in a downtown club. That Tuesday night show featured a horde of San Francisco SXSW bands and Detroit’s Tyvek. The stand-out was the Oh Sees, the current project of Coachwhips mastermind John Dwyer. It’s still a lo-fi affair, but there’s a tighter, matured pop craftmanship going into the Oh Sees than any of Dwyer’s past projects. But Dwyer still moves like a madman and keeps the pace quick. The Fresh & Only brought a different rock ‘n’ roll experience with a Southern-sounding heap of guitar rock.

Wednesday brought surprises both in surpassed expectations and slight disappointments. Credit Wavves, Pains of Being Pure at Heart and the Heartless Bastards for bringing more to the table than what was asked. Heartless Bastards soared on the backs on their newest album The Mountain. Those songs, delivered by a cohesive, energetic band, gave singer Erika Wennerstrom a chance to send out spinal cord chills down backs. It’s when her simple songs melded blues rock muscle to her inner alt.country chanteuse that made the set. One quibble: the band’s older material stills hews close to forgettable blues bar band territory.

Wavves succeeded with just the right sense of how to mess up a good pop song. The two-piece band ably writes updated slices of surf rock and ’60s pop, but it’s when you hear just how beautifully they sit inside the band’s bowl of lo-fi garage racket that really amazes. Pains of Being Pure at Heart’s achievement isn’t as surprising, but it’s certainly stuck in my head. The Brooklyn dream-pop revivalists made a strong case for not being written off as a shoegaze tribute. That’s because there’s an indelible, unforgettable quality about the band’s simple, fuzzy pop songs, especially with the singer’s twee vocal delivery.

Unfortunately, Black Joe Lewis and the Honeybears bore the disappointment label. Lewis’ two recent Lost Highway releases reveal a new player on the retro soul/funk scene. The cleanliness of those recordings carry over, with a sound that goes for replication instead of reinvention. The only thing different from those old soul singers is that Lewis saddles himself with guitar playing, when he should be sweating like James Brown.

All in all, it was a busy day with a few bands getting left in my dust after a few songs. Here’s the final tally.

Addictive: Oh Sees, Heartless Bastards, Wavves, Pains of Being Pure at Heart
Memorable: Fresh & Onlys, Tyvek, Psychedelic Horseshit, Dikes of Holland, Phenomenal Handclap Band, Thomas Function, Vetiver
Listenable: Anathallo, Greg Laswell, Port O’Brien, Black Joe Lewis, Cut Off Your Hands, Peter Bjorn & John
Soon to be Forgotten: Maus Haus, Laryatta, Loney Dear, Themselves, Fol-chen, Porcelain, Young Love, Lovely Sparrows

See you in Austin.

–Got comments? Post ’em here.

Lazy-i