There’s something to be said about making resolutions and sticking to them. The former is common, the latter is rare. Autry Fulbright is a guy who has put himself in the latter category. He’s one of the most ambitious, energetic guys I’ve ever met. His “day job” is playing bass for death jam band …And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead. He fills the rest of his time (and then some) with a handful of side projects both in Austin and in New York. Why stop at music? The guy is even co-directing and scoring a film about beat generation writers portrayed as modern day demons in Brooklyn. And I promise, he’s just one guy with one head, two arms, and two legs. His ambition knows no bounds. Read the full article.
Ruby Fray Releases Debut Album
Combining elements of folk, lounge, Americana, and the western ballad, all infused with a strange, dark sparsity, Ruby Fray has an uncanny way of leaving her listeners warmed and chilled at the same time. Ruby Fray is the solo project of Emily Beanblossom, the singer for the psyche/surf-punk band Christmas. While not nearly as spastic and exuberant as her work with Christmas, the more subdued backdrop of her new solo project allows room for her hauntingly powerful voice to take center stage. Her debut album Pith was recently released by Olympia based K records, and features guest performances by Calvin Johnson, Arrington de Dionyso, and many more. Catch her official album release show this Sunday, May 13th, at Wardenclyffe along with Briana Marela, Benjamin Cissner, and Carlton Bostock.
Austin Artists on the Rise: Burgess Meredith
Burgess Meredith is a indie-pop band that takes heavy inspiration from the era during which their namesake was playing The Penguin on the original Batman TV series. The vocals on their debut EP, Banana Moon, vary from the softness of Elliott Smith to the distorted cry of The Strokes’ Julian Casablancas. With full chorus lines, forceful rockabilly piano, and some tastefully brief and delightfully fuzzy guitar solos, Burgess Meredith are a great new band that has quite the knack at reinterpreting 60’s pop through modern garage-rock. Catch them this Friday at The Beale St Tavern at 10pm, along with with Chase Hamblin and Good Field.
-Brandt Kempin
Kat Edmonson’s Second Album Hits #1
Singer/songwriter and former Elephant Room regular, Kat Edmonson, seems to be doing quite well for herself as of late. After performing with a handful of music industry fixtures (Willie Nelson and Lyle Lovett to name a couple,) her Sophomore album Way Down Low, released April 10th, has held the #1 spot for record sales at Waterloo Records for the first two weeks after its release, as per Waterloo’s website. And we all know that topping any music chart in Austin is, of course, no accident. Edmonson, who lists Nina Simone as one of her biggest musical influences, combines elements of saccharine pop with sophisticated jazz to create music that might easily be mistaken for a recording produced in the 1950s Peggy Lee / Doris Day era–an attribute that Edmonson seems quite aware of in a song on her new album called “I Just Wasn’t Made for These Times.” Edmonson’s own brilliance, however, can be found in her astute, carefully concerted vocal nuances. Her sparsity in composition and arrangement brings to mind, at times, famous minimalists like Bill Callahan, and at others there is a strong resemblance to bossa nova queen Astrud Gilberto–heard especially clear on tunes like “This Was The One.” If you missed her recent shows in Austin, there is a new music video on NPR’s All Songs Considered blog to hold you over until the next one.
-Erin O’Keefe
Milezo: Psychedelic Shoegaze from the Capitol of Texas
With high-pitched, endearingly meandering vocals, watery guitars, psychedelic samples, and a heavy dose of reverb all loosely bound together into surprisingly catchy and unique pop songs, listening to Milezo may be about what it is like to listen to lost Deerhunter tracks recorded onto an old cassette tape at about 420 feet under the sea. Steadfastly holding down the stranger side of lo-fi shoe-gaze, Milezo’s debut full-length, Where the Rivers Meet the Dark Sea was released last year, with another EP, Echoes Depict the Kid being released earlier this year. Catch their free show and celebrate the anniversary of Apollo 16’s moon landing, the invention of "Vitaphone," and the failed Bay of Pigs invasion along with local favorites Corduroi, BackHanderson, and more Friday, April 20th at Wardenclyffe.
-Brandt Kempin
New Post Rock from New Braunfels: See You in the Morning
While taking recognizable inspiration from bands like Pelican and The Album Leaf in their instrumental soundscapes, the New Braunfels based post-rockers See You In The Morning’s debut EP ICHI is a solid example of an emerging group of talented musicians finding their own sound. Layered guitar that ranges from crystal-clear acoustic math rock riffing to heavy, distorted wall-of-sound chords carries the foreground. Metallic, picked bass lines keep the guitars anchored to the main theme. Intricate drums help solidify the drifting strings and yet still manage to steal center-stage on almost every song. Download their album on a pay-what-you-want basis on bandcamp.
A Free Ticket Down the Rabbit Hole: Coma In Algiers
With a signature blend of violent noise and catchy hooks that lure you in like a fly to a pitcher plant, Coma in Algiers are one of the most original noise-rock bands to emerge from Austin in the past decade. With dissonant guitars, dark and heavy keyboards, and lyrics that range from the esoteric to the vulgar, there’s never room for a dull moment. Their new record, Christ Aldonis Algiers, finds them shedding some of their fuzzy, garage rock sound of previous releases in favor of a clarity that allows their increased strangeness to showcase itself like a crazed and caged mutant on display near the hot dog stand at the town fair in David Lynch’s afternoon dreams. Catch them at The Frontier Bar on April 19th with Love Collector and The Gory Details. Free show!
– Brandt Kempin
Black Tabs Find the Blues In a Noisy Haze of Psych-Rock
With fuzzed-out, distorted rock guitar, almost tribal sounding drums, and a vocalist that could quite possibly be the love child of Layne Staley and Grace Slick (unconfirmed), the Black Tabs sound like an acid trip in some early ‘70s garage. It’s heavy, cathartic, raw, and even psychedelic. Head down to Frank’s on Colorado @ 4th on April 13th, crack open a Lone Star, and take a dose of the Black Tabs. They hit the stage around 11:15, $6 cover. Also playing: Scorpion Child and L F Knighton.
– Erin O’Keefe
Lord Buffalo: Getting a little crazy and a new EP
Something about Lord Buffalo’s eerie, reverb-laden strings and stretched, raspy vocals bear some not-so-subtle vibes of lunacy; blatantly, emotionally off-kilter. Even in a town that embraces those who veer from the norm, Lord Buffalo may be one of the more interesting emerging groups in Austin right now. Oddly enough, they also recently scored a friend’s theatrical interpretation of The Yellow Wallpaper (a famous short story about a woman’s slow descent into insanity) and have an EP due out in a week. Go get yourself a copy and see the guys play at their release party with the Black Books at Hotel Vegas on April 7th.
– Erin O’Keefe
Prolific and Unknown: Have you ever heard of Bobee?
Combining the pained, lo-fi disjointedness of early Smog, the weird isolated love songs of Daniel Johnston, and hints of the pseudo-hip-hop and sarcasm of 90’s Beck, it’s hard to tell whether or not to take Bobee seriously. His simple beats that call to mind a crappy 80s Roland drum machine barely mix with acoustic guitars and keyboards (that often clash uncomfortably) and lovestruck vocals that are not always in key. Yet there is something extremely charming in his unique brand of sad, lo-fi isolation and bedroom-tape weirdness that will worm its way into your chest long before you can begin to put your finger on what the hell it is… Download all of his albums for free on Bandcamp.
Austin bands on the rise: Black Books, live at Hotel Vegas, 04.07
Black Books announced their arrival with the appropriately titled EP An Introduction To…and those of us who enjoy their dreamscapes have had to wait until this January for the follow up. But it’s finally here, and it’s more of their trademark floating-above-the-clouds brilliance. Ross, Meg, Clarke, Kevin, and Mike — the lineup features the all-too-rare singing drummer — have hit on a sound they call Southern Dream Pop, which is fairly apt as three-word descriptions go. For a longer one, try some words from the blog Yvynyl: “Listening to this is like wrapping up in a navajo blanket and laying under the big Texas desert stars with your lover and, you know, making babies.” Yeah…it’s about that good. Word is starting to grow on these guys and it wouldn’t surprise anyone in Austin to see them strike some sparks this SXSW. You can see them live at Hotel Vegas with Lord Buffalo on April 7. – Tom Vale
Cowboy and Indian announces debut album + plays SXSW
Combining bright, melodic vocal harmonies and traditional folk elements, Cowboy and Indian create a distinctive yet familiar sound that can easily resonate within the roots music fan. One may think that a trio of songwriters might be too overwhelming, lacking cohesiveness to their songs, yet their voices complement each other so well that this end up adding to their dynamic composition, setting them apart from other folk artists. The band just shotd a music video to “Hurt My Pride” (check it out here) and is set to release their first full-length album this spring. Cowboy and Indian performed on Friday at 35 Denton, but don’t fret, they’re playing for the SXSW showcase, March 14 at The Bat Bar. – Alejandra Ramirez