Grand Theater - Texas Music Magazine
Transcription
Grand Theater - Texas Music Magazine
EXTRA June ‘10 Wonderland, Ruthie Foster, Shannon McNally and Theresa Andersson. It is the first project for Houston-based Rampant Entertainment. Executive producer Anthony Cutrona anticipates that many PBS affiliates, especially those near military installations, will begin broadcasting the film by summer’s end. Austin’s Saxon Pub gets Kinky for its 20th anniversary news calendar releases q&a click here to read click here to read click here to read click here to read The Old 97’s performed new tunes at a secret show at the Sons of Hermann in Dallas on April 17. (Photo: Cindy Royal) Old 97’s take to the studio for eighth album It’s hard to believe it’s been two years since the last Old 97’s release, Blame It On Gravity. The Dallas quintet began work on their eighth studio album in April, enlisting the help of producer Salim Nourallah (who also produced lead singer Rhett Miller’s last self-titled solo CD). Breaking recording up into two sessions, they started pre-production at the legendary Sons of Hermann Hall in Dallas’ Deep Ellum, culminating with a “secret show” on April 17, billing themselves as the Roamin’ Hitchhikers. They completed recording at the vintage Texas Treefort Studio in the picturesque setting of the Austin Hill Country. “It was really helpful to hear the band play the new songs in a live setting before taking them into the studio,” says Nourallah. “They’re going to be playing these songs live for years to come so it made sense to hear them that way first.” Miller penned the majority of the songs while on tour in Europe last year with Steve Earle, and that experience looms large on what could end up a sprawling 16-20 song collection. “I grew up surrounded by Texas music and loving country music and Texas rock ’n‘ roll, like Buddy Holly,” Miller said. “Then I became this Anglophile. So, there I was in England, writing these songs that are pretty country-ish. I think this record is the marriage of those two influences.” Look for the new release, tentatively titled The Grand Theater, in October. The Saxon Pub, Austin’s longtime hotbed for roots-rockers, honky-tonkers and singersongwriters, will be celebrating 20 years in business this June. The highest-profile celebration will be headlined by a man who’s all of the above and then some: Kinky Friedman. The musician/humorist/author/politician will be kicking off his upcoming tour with one last stop in Texas — June 10 at the Saxon — before EXTRA PUBLISHER/ EDITOR CONTRIBUTORS CAITLIN WITTLIF CHELSEY BLACKMON LY N N E M A R G O L I S ETHAN MESSICK C I N D Y R O YA L WILLIAM MICHAEL SMITH Tribute to troops airs on PBS The award-winning concert film, Texas Burning: A Lone Star Tribute To Our Troops, has aired for the first time on PBS affiliates in Houston, Killeen, and San Antonio. Hosted by Austin musicians Patricia Vonne and Sam Baker, the film captures a 2007 concert at the Charline McCombs Empire Theater in San Antonio only a few days before the dedication of a new facility for wounded troops at Brooke Army Medical Center. The film, which won Best Music Video in the Shows/Specials category at the 2007 Houston WorldFest International Film Festival, also features blues guitar giant Sherman Robertson, Carolyn S T E WA R T R A M S E R EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ART DIRECTOR T O R Q U I L S C O T T- D E WA R www.txmusic.com WEB SITE DESIGNER MAILING ADDRESS W I L LT H I N G PO BOX 50273 AUSTIN, TX 78763 SUBSCRIPTIONS: 1-877-35-TEXAS OFFICE: 512-638-8900 E-MAIL: INFO@TXMUSIC.COM hitting Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles and other points west. The West Coast tour, his first in nearly two decades, will feature Kinky performing his off-kilter country classics with members of the original Texas Jewboys band as well as special guests including “psycho-billy” rocker Mojo Nixon and legendary composer Van Dyke Parks. And Conan’s musical guest for tonight is… With his controversial newsmaking departure from the Tonight Show still fresh in national memory, Conan O’Brien made even more headlines by booking the cross-counJimmie Vaughan surprised Conan O’Brien try “Legally fans at the comedian’s performance in Dallas. Vaughan will release his first album Prohibited From in nine years this summer. (Photo courtesy Being Funny on Jimmie Vaughan) TV” tour, appearing in person for the millions who’d decried his ouster. Sticking at least somewhat to the talk-show format for most of the performances, O’Brien invited prominent regional musical guests to share in his spotlight: in May, Texas beneficiaries included veteran rocker Charlie Sexton in Austin (at the Austin Music Hall) and premier bluesman Jimmie Vaughan in Dallas (on the SMU campus). Even in Eugene, Ore., the show had a bit of Lone Star flavor: indie rock heroes Spoon joined Conan’s party on April 12, the first night of the perpetually sold-out tour. COPYRIGHT © 2010 BY TEXAS MUSIC, L.L.C. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. R E P R O D U C T I O N I N W H O L E O R PA R T I S P R O H I B I T E D . Ragweed to take a break Fewer bands tour harder than Cross Canadian Ragweed, long among the kings of the TexasOklahoma country-rock circuit. So it was sur- prising to many when the band announced on May 19 that it was going to wind down its schedule later this year, with only 20 gigs left on the books until the band goes on an indefinite hiatus. The band cited a shared desire for some rest and time with family; drummer Randy Ragsdale expressed the need to spend more time with his autistic 10-year old son, and the other band members agreed that they weren’t a band without co-founder Ragsdale. Their final scheduled date (for now) is Chicago on October 24, and the last Texas date is Ziegfest in Yorktown on October 16. James still Texas’ Idol Fort Worth’s Casey James, 27, took it all the way to third place in the 2010 American Idol competition. James, who USA Today called “the best guitar player the show has seen,” news calendar releases q&a click here to read click here to read click here to read click here to read was eliminated after his performance of John Mayer’s “Daughters” in the Judge’s Choice round. Born in Cool, Texas, James overcame several health obstacles to reach the Idol stage; he suffered from a life-threatening reaction to whooping cough vaccine as an infant and, following a motorcycle accident at 21, had been told that he would not be able to play guitar again. James was the oldest contestant to ever reach the final 24. KNBT Americana Jam packs Gruene Hall New Braunfels radio station KNBT earned its status as one of the world’s leading Americana stations by broadcasting topnotch roots-rock and alt-country music across the Hill Country; for 14 years running, they’ve also presented it live at the venerable Gruene Hall at their annual Americana Jam. This year’s May 16 jam was as talent-packed as usual, with headlining slots from Robert Earl Keen and Wade Bowen, as well as a song-swap featuring genre heavyweights Cody Canada, Charlie Robison and Chris Knight. The show, with proceeds benefiting the New Life Children’s Center in nearby Canyon Lake, also featured young talents like the Band of Heathens and the Trishas alongside veteran performers including Ray Wylie Hubbard, Houston Marchman, and Reckless Kelly brothers Willy & Cody Braun. Familiar Faces In what will certainly prove to be one of the most significant band reunions of 2010, Austin keyboardist Ian M c L a g a n informed fans via Facebook on May 25 that legendary English Ian McLagan and Ronnie Wood reunite this rock group summer as Faces. (Photo: Lynne Margolis) Faces will perform August 13 at the Vintage at Goodwood Festival in West Sussex, England. Of the living members of the original lineup, only vocalist Rod Stewart will not be onstage news calendar releases q&a click here to read click here to read click here to read click here to read with McLagan, Ronnie Wood and Kenney Jones. Stewart will be replaced by Simply Red vocalist Mick Hucknall, who performed a oneoff charity gig last year with the band at London’s Royal Albert Hall. Former Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock rounds out the lineup for the Goodwood show, filling in for the late Ronnie Lane. No further dates have been announced, but Wood and Jones appeared on BBC the day after McLagan’s announcement and were very positive about the band reuniting. After a six-year run that included the hit “Stay With Me” and saw Faces become one of the top grossing touring acts in rock, the band broke up in 1975 when Lane quit as Stewart’s solo career took off. Ronnie Wood began playing his first gigs with the Rolling Stones at the same time. Perkins parties at Antone’s Pianist Pinetop Perkins, one of the last direct connections to the earliest Delta blues originators, will celebrate his 97th birthday and the release of his new album Joined at the Hip with a July 1 performance at Antone’s in Austin. A longtime sideman, Perkins played with Muddy Waters for over a decade and didn’t begin his solo recording career until 1988 with After Hours. In the late ’40s Perkins, a member of the Blues Hall of Fame as well as the holder of a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, played with the legendary Sonny Boy Williamson on the historic KFFA King Biscuit Time, one of the longest continuously running radio programs in the world. news calendar releases q&a click here to read click here to read click here to read click here to read calendar JUNE 5 New 93Q Presents: Battle of the Bands Sam Houston Race Park Houston www.theshowgrounds.com Accordion Kings & Queens Festival Miller Outdoor Theatre Houston www.milleroutdoortheater.com 5-6 Free Press Summer Fest Eleanor Tinsley Park Keep Austin Weird Festival & 5K Houston June 26, Downtown,Austin 9 www.freepresssummerfest.com Blues on the Green After all these years, Austin Texas Tornados remains unashamedly one of Zilker Park the weirdest cities in the world. Austin And every year, it celebrates its www.kgsr.com/other/blues oddity with the Keep Austin 10-12 Weird Fest and 5K, unofficially Sake of the Song Festival known as “the slowest 5K you’ll Whitewater Amphitheater ever run.” It’s hard to focus on New Braunfels speed when you’re running past www.dicksonproductions.com people dressed as movie char- 10-13 acters, Austin landmarks, ani- CMA Music Festival mals, minerals, and everything Various venues in between. Live music will also Nashville be a part of the festivities, with www.cmafest.com performances by the Paul Green School of Rock Kids Band and local rockers White Denim. Online registration for the run is $25, which includes a T-shirt and festival pass. June 26, 2 - 10 p.m., Downtown, Austin. For more info, visit www.keepaustinweird5k.com. 10-13 ROT Biker Rally Travis County Expo Center Austin www.rotrally.com 19 Girls Rock Camp Showcase 1 The Griffin School Austin www.girlsrockcampaustin.com Blues On the Hill McKelvey Park Harlingen www.visitharlingentexas.com 23 Blues on the Green Carolyn Wonderland Zilker Park Austin www.kgsr.com/other/blues JULY 2-4 Que Fest Elgin B. Robertson Park Rowlett www.rowlettexchangeclub.org 3 Stockyards Stampede North Forty Field Fort Worth www.stockyardsstampede.com 9 Live On the Beach Carlos ’n’ Charlies Austin www.CnCAustin.com 31 Girls Rock Camp Showcase 2 The Griffin School Fort Worth’s Black Tie Dynasty are reuniting Austin to rock at the Que Fest on July 3, where they’ll open for Joan Jett. (Photo courtesy Black Tie www.girlsrockcampaustin.org Dynasty) Spring 2010 Issue available on newsstands now or click here to subscribe! Jamie Wilson Dirty Blonde Hair myspace.com/jamiegriffinwilson There are two schools of thought on Jamie Wilson: either you’ve never heard of her or you think she’s one of the finest songwriters of her day, of any gender (or genre). And even if the name doesn’t jump out at you, you may have caught her in her previous band (the criminally overlooked Gougers) or her new group — the Trishas, currently working up a well-deserved buzz on the fringes of the Texas/Red Dirt scene. One could see this short-but-sweet EP as a bridge between the two projects, with collaborators from both bands among the backing cast here, but it hardly needs context to be appreciated. Wilson’s vocal timbre finds that sweet spot between the ethereal tone of Emmylou Harris and the warmer twang of news calendar releases q&a click here to read click here to read click here to read click here to read Patty Loveless, and as a lyricist she’s equally capable of conveying a heartbreaking sense of compassion (“Dusty Shoes”) or a downright unsettling melancholy (the title track). In a nifty reverse of alt-country martyr (and obvious influence) Gram Parsons’ approach, it often seems that the lyrics actually ground the songs here, with Wilson and her band of roots-rock pros pulling off adventurous sonics that send her folkie sentiments surging to the stratosphere. “Produced By All Of Us With Love” is stamped on the back of the CD’s plain brown packaging, and many a listener will doubtlessly second that emotion. ETHAN MESSICK Indian Jewelry Totaled We Are Free Houston-based psychedelic rock band Indian Jewelry's Totaled is a bleak look at the future. Each track leaves listeners submerged in an industrial wasteland with no hope for escape. Droning soundscapes haunt the album, creating an uneasy aesthetic enhanced by heavily distorted vocals. Opener “Oceans” is the most enjoyable tune, conforming to a more traditional song structure the rest of the album generally rejects. Indian Jewelry is most engaging when they choose to break from their muddied sound, throwing in a few hooks without breaking away from their unique style. CHELSEY BLACKMON Wild Moccasins Skin Collision Past wildmoccasins.bandcamp.com Just in time for summer, Wild Moccasins’ latest release, Skin new releases May 18 Javi Garcia & the Cold Cold Ground May 18 Willie Nelson May 18 Sarah Jaffe May 21 Wild Moccasins June 1 Tift Merritt June 1 Townes Van Zandt June1 Lucky Tubb June 1 Rosehill June8 Pinetop Perkins June 15 Shinyribs June 22 Terri Hendrix June 22 Chamillionaire June 26The Mother Truckers June 29Alejandro Escovedo July 6 Jimmie Vaughan Aug 17 Randy Rogers Band Aug 24 Sleep Good Aug 31 Sahara Smith A Southern Horror thecoldcoldground.com Rarities Vol. 1 Suburban Nature Skin Collision Past See You on the Moon Legend: The Very Best of Townes Van Zandt Hillbilly Fever White Lines and Stars Joined at the Hip Well After Awhile Cry Till You Laugh Venom Van Tour Street Songs of Love Blues, Ballads and Favorites Burning the Day skyclimber Myth of the Heart Great American Music Kirtland Collision Past, calls for an end to sadness and sobriety. Each tune is filled with relentless bliss, even when the band slows it down on tracks like “Cake” and “Chapter Four.” Catchy choruses alternate between male and female vocals, and their harmonies elate the senses. Skin Collision Past hones the style of the group’s previous EP that landed them a spot at last year's Free Press Summer Fest in their hometown of Houston. Full of hooks, shimmers, shouts and glee, Skin Collision Past leaves listeners feeling the infectious joy contained in each track. CHELSEY BLACKMON Jonathan Tyler & the Northern Lights Pardon Me Atlantic Some bands use a lot of synthesizers, and some bands just are synthesizers, in another sense of the word. Jonathan Tyler & the Northern Lights didn’t need a lot of over-programmed keyboards to pull off Pardon Me, an inspired mish- wildmoccasins.bandcamp.com Fantasy Snapper myspace.com/luckytubb Cypress Creek Telarc International myspace.com/shinyribs Wilory Universal Republic themothertruckers.com Concord Shout! Factory Mercury Autobus Playing In Traffic mash of nearly everything that went platinum in the 1990s. Their sophomore effort boasts the sonics of a late-model Aerosmith album, with nods to the Black Crowes (Crowe guitarist Rich Robinson has a co-write), Lenny Kravitz, and even Nirvana, via Tyler’s impassioned vocals that sometimes cross over from a cocksure wail to a gravelly sob (especially on the anthemic “Gypsy Woman“). Hell, the psychedelic interlude “Ladybird” even sounds vaguely like Boyz II Men until the fuzzy guitar wash kicks in. Rock snobs might sniff at the album’s more derivative moves, but really, what could be more critic-proof than adrenalized bluesrock buffed to an arena-sized sheen by youngsters who are already opening for Kid Rock and ZZ Top less than five years into their career? “I don’t care if I’m wrong or right/I’m just looking for a way to take her home tonight,” Tyler sings on “Bright Energy”. Mission, one would imagine, accomplished. ETHAN MESSICK news calendar releases q&a click here to read click here to read click here to read click here to read Q&A Sahara Smith With delicate lyrical prowess and a soulful, angelic voice, Sahara Smith is poised to make a huge impact on the world of music, and she’s only 21 years old. The young singer-songwriter releases her debut full-length album Photo: John Pattillo Myth of the Heart in August, and it’s already been blessed by heavyweight producer T Bone Burnett — he oversaw the project, and calls Smith “the best young artist I have heard in many years.” Smith is about to depart on a tour with Mason Jennings. To hear some of her songs, go to www.myspace.com/saharasmithmusic. How did you end up connecting with T Bone Burnett? Well, my managers and I were discussing producers [for Myth of the Heart] and asking, in a perfect world, who would be producing my album? We all kind of said T Bone, but it was a long shot. He contacted me through my MySpace page and asked to meet him, and said he wanted to oversee the project. The bulk of the project was done with Emile Kelman. He was the producer, but our initial demos that we did were done at Burnett’s home studio. He gave us a lot of tips, especially with singing on different songs; just giving me pointers on how to relax my voice and make it sound a little easier, and it really helped a lot. How was the collaboration with Emile Kelman? We both had very strong opinions on how the record should sound and we didn’t always agree, we kind of butted heads sometimes. Ultimately, we came out with something that I think we both really loved, so that was great. Once you were in the studio, what was the process like for recording songs? It was a very layered process. We started out in the studio with me, Jay Bellerose on drums, Chris Bruce on guitar and Paul Bryan on bass, and we played everything live. We recorded the first layer of the album that way. Emile called some of T Bone’s guys to come in and he had Dennis Crouch come in and do some bass lines on some songs, and Mark Ribot on guitar on some songs. It was more laying a base for all of the songs with the four guys, and then coming in on top of that and exploring each song. There were some amazing parts that we didn’t end up using because they didn’t fit the mood of the songs. What is your songwriting process like? Do you find the words come first, or the melody? Or does it come together? It normally comes together. Sometimes the rhythm of a series of words will determine a melody. I think probably most of the time it comes as a melody. I write very much based on syllables; like certain words, when you speak them, certain syllables in those words are stressed and I always think about making the music fit that — I wouldn’t want to sing anything that wouldn’t sound natural to say. You write poetry as well. Do you find that the process for that is different from songwriting? Definitely; I think songwriting is a lot easier than writing poetry, honestly. Songwriting has an inherent structure. With poetry, there’s nothing you can’t do. So when you write a poem, there’s that risk — this could be wrong! Do you think you might ever release a book of poetry? Leonard Cohen came out with Dear Heather, and his sketches are in there and I love it, so I’d love to try and do something like that. How did you end up on a tour with Mason Jennings? I signed with High Road Touring, and they had a bunch of ideas about people I could open for and festivals I should do. The Mason Jennings tour seemed like a good fit; it’s soft and mellow and those are the shows I really love to do. There is a lot of Texas imagery in your music — would you consider Texas an influence? Definitely. Growing up in Wimberley, we’d have bluegrass jams, and that was when I’d start singing in front of people – I’d play my songs for them. Part of what I do will always be rooted in that. I think it was very important for the Who would be your dream act to go on tour sound that I’ve created. with? When I was 13 it was my fantasy to play with Do you think you’ll ever uproot and move Paul Simon, and that’s still a big one. So now, somewhere different? dream tour would be with Tom Waits or I think Texas is my home. When I fly back into Leonard Cohen or Paul Simon. Austin, the Austin-Bergstrom airport — that big cloth butterfly thing, and the smell of barYou mention those songwriters a lot as becue — I just feel home. Absolutely home. influences; what are your other influences? CAITLIN WITTLIF The song “Mermaid” is based on a dream I had about a T. S. Eliot poem, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. It’s really hard to pinpoint specific influences because everything I read or listen to influences me. My most recently written song is influenced by astrophysics, which sounds a lot dorkier than it is!