Austin

This is How You S U R V I V E

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S U R V I V E, who do their thing on the Light Lodge label, and who like some space between their letters in order to truly stretch out, will be out at Hailey’s in Denton this Jan. 30th. Their track Holographic Landscapes was described by 20jazzfunkgreats as "a bit like an analogue incarnation of Rustie taking a couple of notes from Eduard Artemiev’s poetic account of a supernova imploding upon itself in a storm of strobe lights which are but morse signals from God’s ship as it sails across the empty black sludge of space" – which is pretty much exactly what we were going to say. 

Austin

Spoonerisms

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The News of Spoon ramps up fast & furious as the release of Transference (January 19) approaches: firstly, you are lucky to live in Austin, because they’ll play an instore, or technically, an out-of-store, in the Waterloo parking lot on January 25th at 4 pm (weather permitting), secondly, they’ve announced tour dates (below, including kickoff at Stubb’s), and also tour companions, which will include yet another fast-rising Austin act, The Strange Boys, and lastly, you can stream Transference right now right here. 

P.S. – Also happening in the non-Spoon universe: local original cosmic cowboy Ray Wylie Hubbard drops A: Enlightenment B: Endarkenment (Hint: There is no C) today. 

Spoon Dates…

Wed Mar 17 // Stubb’s // Austin, TX 
Thurs Mar 18 // Republic // New Orleans, LA * tix
Fri Mar 19 // Workplay Soundstage // Birmingham, AL * tix
Sat Mar 20 // Tabernacle // Atlanta, GA * tix
Mon Mar 22 // 9:30 Club // Washington DC * tix
Tues Mar 23 // 9:30 Club // Washington DC * tix
Wed Mar 24 // The National // Richmond, VA * tix
Fri Mar 26 // Radio City Music Hall // New York, NY * tix
Sat Mar 27 // House of Blues // Boston, MA * tix
Mon Mar 29 // Sound Academy // Toronto, ON * tix
Tues Mar 30 // Royal Oak Music Theatre // Royal Oak, MI * tix
Thurs Apr 01 // Aragon Theatre // Chicago, IL & tix
Fri Apr 02 // First Avenue // Minneapolis, MN & tix
Sat Apr 03 // First Avenue // Minneapolis, MN & tix
Mon Apr 05 // Ogden Theatre // Denver, CO & tix
Tues Apr 06 // Ogden Theatre // Denver, CO & tix
Wed Apr 07 // In The Venue // Salt Lake City, UT & tix
Fri Apr 09 // Moore Theatre // Seattle, WA & tix
Sat Apr 10 // Moore Theatre // Seattle, WA & tix
Sun Apr 11 // Orpheum Theatre // Vancouver, BC & tix
Tues Apr 13 // Fox Oakland Theatre // Oakland, CA & tix

* with DeerhunterThe Strange Boys
& with DeerhunterMicachu & the Shapes 

Austin

Check out Cheeto FOol, Fool!

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Under the moniker Cheeto FOol, Jonathan Aseron writes pop songs about girls, dreams, loneliness, and longing. Using an 8-track, guitar, and synthesizer, Jonathan records at home in South Austin. Most of his songs are guitar-based; a combination of acoustic sounds with layered synth and electronic percussion. The musical arrangements are made up of simple melodic riffs that feed off of laid back but emotionally charged vocals. With a distinct pop sensibility and an ear towards song craft, Cheeto FOol’s music feels immediate and warm. His influences include Grandaddy, Magnetic Fields, and the Flaming Lips to name a few.

(this post taken from our DIY Open Blog, check out other Open Blog posts in the Deli Kitchen)

Austin

Casual Victim Pile: The Shows

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In conjunction with the release of the anagrammatic comp Casual Victim Pile (that’s ‘Live Music Capital’ re-scrambled – someone had fun with a Scrabble set) WOXY, Austinist, and Matador records will be presenting a series of shows at Beerland this Feb. 4th – 6th. Included will be the freshly scrubbed but slightly dizzy band Follow That Bird (pictured above). Also worth knowing: "WOXY is giving away three-night passes between now and February 4: send us an email to woxycontests @ gmail.com and use the subject line Casual Victim Pile. We’ll let you know if you’ve won by Feb. 4." 

Show lineups…

2/4
Follow That Bird!
Dikes Of Holland
Kingdom Of Suicide Lovers
Distant Seconds
The Persimmons

2/5
Woven Bones
The Young
Wild America
Flesh Lights
Elvis
The No No No Hopes

2/6
Harlem
Golden Boys
Bad Sports
Love Collector
Stuffies
Lost Controls

Austin

Today’s Free Week Selections: Great Nostalgic, Strange Attractors, Zookeeper, Wiretree + Goodbye Haunting Oboe!

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Hard to pick just a handful out of the wild array of Austin bands out there tonight playing for the cuddly price of No Money Whatsoever, but here’s what’s making our feet tap today: Mohawk has a terrific lineup both inside and out, including Brazos, TV Torso, Great Nostalgic (that trio outside – worth braving the chill), Ume, Many Birthdays, and more. Strange Attractors play Red 7, the enigmatic Zookeeper graces the Parish along with Suzanna Choffel and the consistently underestimated Wiretree, Emo’s features what will be one of the last sets by Haunting Oboe Music (pictured above and soon calling it quits) + one of our recent Open Contest winners, The Eastern Sea. And you will soon be able to vote in our mega-mega Year End Poll. That’s quite a Thursday…there is also some sort of sporting contest happening tonight, which, whatever the result, works as a nice lead-in to an evening of free music. Get on out there. 

Austin

Open Contest Results: Monahans

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Hey fellow Austinians,

We apologize for being a little slow lately with all things related to our Best of Nashville 2009 poll for emerging indie artists. Our NYC Readers’ Poll (which we recommend you to check out here) has brought an unexpected amount of traffic to our site, which has caused our server to crash several times yesterday, making us waste a lot of time. Because of this we decided to postpone slightly the beginning of some of the other cities’ readers’ polls, Austin included.

Anyhoo… we just finished collecting the nominations from our knowledgeable and attractive panel of jurors and we are now ready to hit you all with an impressive list of awesome local, emerging and 100% independent artists. If you’d like to learn more about our voting process, please check out the rules here

While we are organizing the list of nominees for the readers’ poll, we wanted to announce the winners of our Open Contest. For those unaware, this Contest is the part of our Best of Austin Poll that nominates artists through an open submission system – while the majority of our finalists are freely selected by a jury of local bloggers, promoters and scenemakers. We’d like to thank all the artists who participated in our Open Contest, the ones who submitted directly, and the ones who qualified throughout 2009 by winning our monthly polls. 

Choosing the winners was not an easy decision to make for The Deli writers, which is a testament to our amazing music scene. We are happy to announce that the following artists qualified for the next phase of the poll:

Monahans: 9

Authors: 8

Drew Smith: 7.5

The Eastern Sea: 7.5

Special congratulations to Monahans (in the picture) who were the overall winners of our Open Contest!

The Austin Best of 2009 Readers’ Poll will start soon, keep an eye out for it on the right column under all those logos!

The Deli’s Staff

 

 

Austin

Free Week Continues…Look After Your Scorpion Child

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The very very Austin phenomenon that is Free Week is in full swing, and the cornucopia of live music to be heard at Agent Zero prices includes – and we’re just talking about Wednesday night here – Scorpion Child at the Mohawk, Midgetmen & The Gary at Red 7, Mobley at Club Deville, Wine & Revolution and Hollywood Gossip at The Parish, Strange Attractors and New Roman TImes at Beauty Bar, and Brothers & Sisters, The Laughing, and Oh No Oh My at Emo’s.

That list is by no means comprehensive. Those are just samples – there’s a handful of up & comers at every Free Week venue. If you spent 2009 thinking about seeing more live music in 2010, spend 2010 seeing more live music, and thinking about spending more time on your couch. Just to mix things up.

 

Austin

Where the Strange Boys At

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Though we haven’t been sleeping much lately, we slept on this a bit: here are the Strange Boys’ upcoming, recently announced, 2010 tour dates, kicking off with a show at Emo’s Feb. 19th.

                  Friday Feb 19th Austin @ Emo’s *#                 

                  Sun Feb 21 Marfa TX @ Padre’s *
                  Tues  Feb 23 Phoenix, AZ @ Trunk Space *
                  Wed Feb 24 San Diego, CA  @ Casbah *
                  Thurs Feb 25 Isla Vista, CA @ Biko Garage *
                  Fri Feb 26 Los Angeles, CA @ The Echo *
                  Sat Fat 27 San Francisco CA @ Elbo Room *$
                  Sun Feb 28 Reno, Nevada @ Rainshadow Community Charter High School *
                  Tues March 2 Salem, OR @ The Space *%
                  Wed March 3 Olympia, WA @ Northern *%
                  Thurs March 4 Seattle WA @ Comet Tavern *&
                  Fri March 5 Vancouver BC @ Media Club *
                  Sat March 6 Portland OR @ East End *
                  Sun March 7 – Boise, ID @ Visual Arts Collective
                  Mon March 8 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
                  Tue March 9 – Denver, CO @ Hi Dive
                  Wed March 10 –  Boulder, CO @ University of Colorado – Club 156
                  Fri Mar 12 – Lubbock, TX @ Bash Riprock’s

                  * = w/ Chain and the Gang
                  # = w/ Yellow Fever
                  % = w/ The Hive Dwellers
                  & = w/ Lovvers
                  $ = w/ Ty Segall, Nodzzz

 

 

Austin

Color Us Happy: Matador’s Austin Comp

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Are we on board? Are we feeling this? Are we ready for the January 26th release of Casual Victim Pile on the uber-hip Matador label, featuring all up & coming Austin artists? And most importantly, are we mentally and spiritually prepared for the accompanying multi-night showcase promised to occur at Beerland? Eh?

Austin

Possibly Pissing Into the Sea: Interview with Ola Podrida

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I first heard of Ola Podrida from Johnny Christ, their ex-guitarist, who I knew from drinking at a pub in Dallas but first hung out with in a Mexican restaurant in New York City.  While his past involvement with Ola Podrida helped me understand why he was playing air guitar to the Cure in a packed restaurant, it was a fact that I filed away, sure it would never come up again.
 
One year later, Deli asks me to interview David Wingo of Ola Podrida.
 
I emailed Christ to tell him of the upcoming interview with his ex front man and he added some questions to mine. Through the magic of email and phone, Christ and I resurrect the band’s past and examine its future.
 
I sent Johnny an email, telling him I was interviewing you and he sent me some questions to ask you, if you wouldn’t mind answering them.
Oh shit. Let me have them.
 
He wants to know if you’re still composing for film. He told me you did soundtrack work with David Gordon.
David Gordon Green—I’m staying at his loft right now. He sort of lives in Austin but he’s always doing movies so he’s never here.
 

You worked with Jared Hess of Napoleon Dynamite?
Yes, his most recent movie that came out last month–Gentleman Broncos. It’s the biggest budget film that I’ve worked on yet which was really good because it allowed me to move here and not worry about work for a while.  I also scored a documentary called Soundtracker that hasn’t come out yet while I was here. Throughout most of this decade I was focusing on [soundtracks] instead of my own stuff. I was recording and giving it to friends, not really pursuing it, until I moved back to Austin. I felt like time was getting away from me and that I needed to make a record.
 

What’s the difference between writing music for film versus writing music for Ola Podrida? Obviously, it seems like you have less freedom doing soundtrack work because of the script, but in terms of the creative process, is it the same?
I try to make the core of it the same.  It reminds me of doing art projects as a little kid in school. You’re given supplies and tools and you’ve got to make something.  It’s a totally different process but still gratifying in its own way. You’ve got to take a few tools to make something that can make a wide array of emotions pop. However, I do think that it has helped me with my own stuff because I’ve learned to have a single-minded focus and to not use the blank canvas to my advantage. I have parameters now. I’ve learned to gauge what the song needs. It’s helped to maintain the “less is more” aesthetic for sure.
 
If Belly of the Lion was a movie, what would it be about?
I think this album would be about a weird, oppressed teenage kid in the suburbs doing what he can to have a bit of freedom in the claustrophobia while trying to meet girls and doing some drinking in the process.
 
Why are you so focused on suburbia?
It just ended up being that this record was influenced by the music I was listening to when I was a kid growing up in the suburbs of Dallas.  I was also getting back to playing electric guitar.  It’s a bedroom CD—it feels like a kid in his bedroom writing songs and listening to his music even though I was in my own bedroom, making music at the age of 33.
 
Who do you imagine would listen to this record?
Definitely people who like to get to know a record in a more intimate way other than putting it on when cleaning the house or when friends are over.
 
If this was a bedroom CD, how many dates do I have to take it on before I really get to know it?
I would hope that the audience would be composed of people like myself who have nothing to do but put on a record and soak it in a few times to get to know it.  It’s definitely dynamic in terms of loud to quiet but the flow doesn’t hit one over the head. It grows subtly. Lyrically, it’s pretty subtle too. I wanted the lyrics to match the emotional feel of the music. Some of them, like My Fathers Basement, are very explicit but even though it’s painting a specific scene, it’s just [putting] up images. It’s not linear—A to B to C.
 
Is there something you would change on the record?
There are a few songs on the record that hardly have any percussion to them and [while] I was looking for drummers to tour with, I would ask them add a little something.  It has made me think that it could have been interesting to go back and make this song have more of a rhythmic compulsion to it but I don’t think I’d go back.  It captures a moment in time for me. I recorded this record all day everyday for two months and I like that about it. I stretched the recording of the first record for a long, long time. I was working at Waterloo Records at the time so I would record before I went to work. [Belly of the Lion] was a very different experience for me. I wanted to capture what I was listening to and what I was feeling like and I feel like [this album] did that.
 
Johnny wanted me to tell you that Sink or Swim is a masterpiece.
Thank you Johnny. That was one of the ones that I thought needed more drums. But if it has Johnny’s seal of approval, I’m not changing a thing.
 
He also wants to know if you’re ever going to record Pissing into the Sea?
That’s a good question, Johnny. I hope so.

What’s Pissing into the Sea?
That was one of the poppier songs we were doing as a band. I very much regret that we did not record the song before we all took off but I will not record them unless it’s with all those guys. I would love at some point to get Johnny and Robert to come in for a week (Kenny and Mathew are already here), to relearn the songs and record. 
 
Last question, what are your flossing habits like?
My flossing habits have become fantastic. They used to be terrible but I had to have a root canal and fix four cavities right before I moved to Austin. I’ve learned my lesson. I floss twice a day now.

–Resalin Rago
 

(Editor’s note: Ola Podrida’s album Belly of the Lion is out now on Western Vinyl, where he is in very good company – Balmorhea, Here We Go Magic, Sleep Whale, and more are labelmates. Belly of the Lion is getting a lotta lotta lotta love out there.) 

Austin

DJs Throw Down: It’s a Melee, Red 7 12/6

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Dj Orion

The busy folks of Learning Secrets will be the subject of our upcoming, and sadly final, installment of our DJ Education series (all written by the incomparable Tolly Moseley). Before we get to that, though, they’re putting together another DJ Melee – what is a DJ Melee? Glad you asked. Here, in their words, because we’re running low on our own words, is how it works:

"The DJ’s select from the hottest record stores in town and are each given only five minutes to pick up 30 pieces of vinyl to use in a thirty minute set at a series of DJ Melee parties thrown at Austin’s best clubs.  All vinyl goes straight into a locked box until show time, and local industry judges have the final vote on the DJ’s mixing skills and music knowledge."

High pressure produces diamonds, is the idea here…check out their next event this Sunday at Red 7, with DJs Cauze One, Bigface, Manny & Orion (above).

 

Austin

A Spoon and a Poll

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Album art from the upcoming Transference by Spoon, about which there is considerable excitement and giddiness. And, there’s a new poll up yonder, take a look; we’ve got five shiny new bands nominated for your perusal. So peruse those mo fos and take a stand.