Archive for January, 2011

Sound Off: Not in the Face!

By Austin Sound • Jan 31st, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Off

You might be inclined to write off a band like Not in the Face! simply on the basis of their name, but that would be a mistake. The duo of Jonathan Terrell and Wes Cargal cast raw rock nuggets that can claw and scratch with a garagey abrasiveness, kick dirty roots, and even unload an outright fury of heavy Zeppelin-esque prog that would seem impossible from a two-piece. With Cargal abusing on the drums and Terrell flailing out front with proto-punk intensity, Not in the Face! delivers it direct and untempered. They’ll be playing Club DeVille this Friday, February 4 alongside Crooks and DJ uLOVEi as part of Knuckle Rumbler and From the Mind of Adi’s First Friday Frolic. You can also catch Terrell running his rootsier solo project, JT & the Heartache Tycoons, at the Ghost Room on Saturday the 5th with Frank Smith and Sad Accordions.



Oh No Oh My - People Problems (Koenig)

By Lauren Hardy • Jan 26th, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Reviews

There is some baggage tucked into Oh No Oh My’s body of work. The console is full of a slew of television commercials; the glove compartment, a contest for a Mr. Gatti’s jingle; and in the trunk, the band’s own take on their latest album. People Problems is a causeway of sophisticated indie-pop awash with ever-unfolding beauty, struggle, and tension, yet in interviews with the band, the songs on the album are simply about “slitting a girl’s throat” or “going crazy”. Here Oh No Oh My faces the near-impossible task of crafting something commercial out of material that is inherently challenging, like finding one’s place in the world or death or relationships - topics that abound within People Problems’ palette. Problems shoves the band into a new era. Though the quartet resorts to its characteristic shock-factor appeal at times, Oh No Oh My fails to undermine the complexity of its music. On their second full-length, lyricists and multi-instramentalists Greg Barkley and Daniel Hoxmeier, drummer Joel Calvin, and keyboardist Tim Regan stand unflinching and People Problems finds the band sufficient in and of its music. The album, mixed at Spoon’s recording house Public Hi-Fi, is full of impressive guest appearances including Scott Brackett’s (Okkervil River) lovely trumpet and Miranda Brown of Crooked Fingers. Even still, it’s the band’s carefully constructed rises and falls — its core of opposing traffic — that gives Problems life.



Sound Off: Sleep Good

By Austin Sound • Jan 24th, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Off

Will Patterson’s Sleep Good has blossomed over the past couple of years from a bedroom pop project into a full scale outfit that mirrors the rise of his other work with Bill Baird’s Sunset. The two bands are often on the same bill together, and with good reason; both swim in the psych-pop wake of early Harry Nilsson, effusive and catchy, but not without a good amount of tongue-in-cheek wit that can bite and barb with ease and unexpected turns and experimentation that seem ever evolving in arrangements. Sleep Good dropped two noteworthy albums last year, Skyclimber and the December cassette Strange Vacations, and you can catch the quintet this Friday, January 28, at the Mohawk along with ((Sounder)) and the Denton five-piece Seryn, who will be releasing their debut EP at the show, This is Where We Are.



Video: Candi and the Strangers - “Moving in Stereo”

By Austin Sound • Jan 20th, 2011 • Category: News

You know how we all got really stoned the other night and started talking about the space-time continuum, and then saw ourselves in the future, but it was really more like the past because there was so much synth and it was the Cars, but it wasn’t the Cars, and we were in this bunker that looked like the hatch from Lost, and then I said, “You mean that’s us in the future?” and you said “Yep,” but then it got all kaleidoscopic and our minds were blown!? You don’t? Well, it turns out John and Samantha Constant were filming that entire thing, and they made it the video for Candi and the Strangers’ cover of “Moving in Stereo”, which is a special non-album single to tease their upcoming sophomore LP, 10th of Always. Furthermore, the quintet will be playing the Mohawk tonight along with the Dark Water Hymnal, the Baker Family, and the Mole People, which should provide a nice preview of the album before they officially release it at the ND on February 5th. So, um, wanna get stoned and watch the video? It’s posted below.



The Dark Water Hymnal - Collapse the Structure (SR)

By Chris Galis • Jan 20th, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Reviews

For all of the early allusions to literary figures made by the countless reviewers about The Dark Water Hymnal’s releases, one would think that the subtle and nuanced quintet would be overwrought with expert lyrical tumbling — but they’re not. Collapse the Structure is surprisingly easy to listen to and, at moments, revels in great moments of song-craft and instrumental build without flowing over, like an Arcade Fire album with the reins pulled in.



Chris Brecht and Dead Flowers - Dead Flower Motel (Blue Rose)

By Lauren Hardy • Jan 19th, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Reviews

Chris Brecht and Dead Flowers second album and follow-up to 2008’s
The Great Ride
, leads the listener through a musty corridor with a flashlight, opens a door and flips a switch to reveal stained floral curtains and yellowing lampshades. Slowly, with every listen, the curtains swish and the lampshades crack revealing the deliberate and delicate lace-like arrangements of the room: the Wurlitzer’s exacting pulse, the pedal steel’s reckless extension, the vocals’ penetrating reverberations. The assumption of what one thinks Motel is shrivels and falls off, and a song called “Living Twice as Hard” isn’t just a cliché for the grief and befalls of reckless living. Dead Flower Motel betters with each listen, revealing unseen turns and crevices. But like all motels, it is embedded with a sense of impermanence and the moments of revelation are constantly fleeting too fast.



The Chaos in Tejas Lineup is INSANE

By Austin Sound • Jan 17th, 2011 • Category: News

Really. And this is just the partial lineup. The Chaos in Tejas Fest is seriously getting out of control. Every year we say “Holy Shit!, this year blows the previous Chaos lineups out of the water,” and so here we are again, saying the same thing. Volume 7 of the Fest will be going down June 2-5 (that’s right, 4 days!) and if you can survive all four, you win the a special mosher’s trophy, or something. According to Brooklyn Vegan, who dropped the list below, Chaos in Tejas marks the final show ever of Kriegshog, the only show ever of Veins, and the reunions of Youth of Today and Rorschach. Who the hell does Timmy Hefner think he is - Graham Williams? Anyway, check out the lineup as it stands, and though tickets aren’t on sale yet, you might as well go ahead and plan to skip work for that first week of June.



Sound Off: Little Lo

By Austin Sound • Jan 17th, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Off

Rising out of the new pack of young indie bands making an impression, Little Lo might be best considered as splitting the difference between their peers Marmalakes and Mother Falcon, melding the folk-pop of the former with the ensemble energy of the latter. Fronted by the Jeff Mangum-meets-Michael Nau trembling vocals of Ryan McGill, the band can explode with a cathartic abandon of brass and keys and rolling percussion, but just as easily lull with a subtle folk touch that can silence a room. Though looking to release their official debut EP later this year, the outfit has already garnered well-deserved attention for their live shows, and you can experience Little Lo for yourself this Thursday, January 20th as they pack onto the stage at the Cactus Cafe along with the Sour Notes.



Blue Water White Death - Blue Water White Death (Graveface)

By Marc Perlman • Jan 14th, 2011 • Category: Featured Story, Sound Reviews

My favorite part of Blue Water White Death’s self-titled debut album is definitely – without a doubt – exactly three minutes and fourteen seconds into “Song For The Greater Jihad”. At that moment, in a song that features some gentle acoustic guitar work, some slightly off kilter crooning, and a few well placed bombs of noise, there is such a weird howl that I rewound (or the equivalent in this digital era) back fourteen times just to hear it again and again – before I then finished listening to the song. It’s like if those creatures in The Descent (an awful movie starring girls being killed and chased in a cave) screamed for a split second in the darkness. Like a perfect guitar solo, this jarring noise made the hair on my neck stand up with excitement. For some reason unexplainable by me, that sound defines the entire album: a juxtaposition of gentle and terrifying; or perhaps meticulous and primal.



Bill Callahan Winter Show Benefit Tonight

By Austin Sound • Jan 13th, 2011 • Category: News

It’s been a while since Bill Callahan has graced our Austin stages, so we’re excited that he is continuing with his annual Winter Show benefit at the Mohawk. Usually these happen so close to Christmas that all the college kids are gone and it’s quite intimate, so we’re not sure if it might be a bit more crowded this time or not, but it’s for charity, so stop being a jerk about it, okay? The show benefits Front Steps and SafePlace, which are GOOD causes, as opposed to BAD causes. You can pay anywhere from $5 on up to get in, or you can go ahead and get your $10 ticket here. We’re hoping to hear some new tunes from Callahan, who is rumored to have a new album coming out this year. Last year, of course, Callahan released his live album, Rough Travel for a Rare Thing, and his book Letters to Emma Bowlcut, which we think is a story about one man’s struggle to come to terms with Hermione’s new hairdo. Or something. Maybe we’ll get a reading from the book tonight and find out for sure. At the very least, we can count on Callahan joining local opener Hidden Ritual to end the night with the collaboration “Hidden Callahan” doing a live accompaniment to a film.