Holing up in a bungalow down the street
from a yuppie mall had its decided advantages. There was a pool
(though it was a bit chilly for swiming, we stuck our sore, swollen
feet in more than a few evenings) a decent amount of peace &
quiet, a sleepy looking orange cat who was feral but friendly enough
to come say hello in the mornings, and proximity to Waterloo Records,
where Boise dream pop darlings Youth Lagoon played to packed parking
lot. The ephemeral tracks on debut album Year of Hibernation were
recorded by 22-year-old Trevor Powers, who on stage hunches over a
keyboard and wails earnestly into a microphone, while friends from
the bands he's played in his whole life back him up. Youth Lagoon have played a few NYC shows to much acclaim but
I'd been hesitant to check them out, worried that all the bleary
wonder of Hibernation would would dissipate, eroded by the
boys' precociousness, but I'm happy to say that it was in no way a
detriment. While Hibernation is imbued with a huge but lonely sound,
it doesn't suffer at all in a live setting as I had feared it would.
In fact, their faithful renditions and impassioned delivery were a
great reminder of what makes Youth Lagoon's slow-building, languid
anthems so fresh and immediate. Maybe all my misgivings were
indicative of my disdain for growing older (or feeling older,
really), and let's be real – in New York, I'd probably be
surrounded by college undergrads still suffering from acne. Instead,
I had the unusual pleasure of being encircled by a diverse audience
that even included families with children, illustrating Youth
Lagoon's wide appeal and accessibility. It was a lovely afternoon
treat, to be sure.
I headed downtown for the Village Voice
showcase at Red Eyed Fly, a bar setup I was now becoming familiar
with for its typical Austinness – divey hunting-lodge interior,
dusty patio with scraggly trees, cheap Lone Star tallboys. Outside,
L.A.-based babes Bleached were setting up. Last October they'd taken
CMJ by storm but I hadn't yet had the pleasure of taking in their
fiery, in-your-face garage rock. They blazed through a rollicking
set, slaying hearts and eardrums. Fronted by sisters Jessica and
Jenn Calvin, Bleached fully satisfies all my riot grrl leanings of
years past – they play fun, fast, and loose, in a nonchalantly sexy
kind of way, snaring you with their trashed-up brand of eye candy but
then proceeding to melt faces.
After a few songs I moseyed inside to
see Pyschic Ills. The band's 2011 release on Sacred Bones, Hazed
Dream, sees the band's culmination as blues-infused stoned-out
psych droners. Before a backdrop of thick, raggedy velvet curtains,
Brandon Davis' sprawling keys, and the thudding bass of
gothy-romantic Elizabeth Hart, backed the heavily glazed drawl and
meandering guitarwork of Tres Warren, clad in grungy denim. By now I
was convinced that everything is just louder in Texas. Psychic Ills'
normally mellow vibe was here amped up high enough to blast through
concrete, though that wasn't a huge loss. The highlight for me was
sexy slow-burner “I'll Follow You Through The Floor”, which got
treated with a little extra jamming out. Between Bleached and
Psychic Ills it was great to get a healthy dose of rock-n-roll from
some bands with a more traditional set-up, since it seemed that this
year's acts were largely favoring tables of electronics to actual
instruments.
Class Actress also played the showcase,
and falls squarely into the former category. While they did have a
drummer instead of a machine that played drum sounds, the line-up
still hinges on the guy-with-gadgets/charismatic-girl-with-mic
dynamic. When I'd first seen them it was just after their inception,
opening for Yeasayer. In that time I would say that though their
sound has not diverged much from their initial vision they've
certainly come into their own. Elizabeth Harper's carefully honed
stage persona is nothing short of rock star – she wore mirrored
shades the whole time, flitting across the stage, shimmying before
the swooning audience as if it were one of her first SXSW
performances rather than, by her count, the ninth in five days. She
performs as if born to do so; in watching Harper's flirtatious stage
moves you could just as well be watching her do a photo shoot in a
fashion magazine. This is a quality she's always possessed, but
she's grown even more bold in her role not just as singer but as
entertainer, never content to be relegated to a position behind the
keyboard she mostly ignored throughout the set. The glamour-infused
party jams from 2011's Rapprocher were incredibly
well-received by the crowd; it was hard to tell if these folks had
just happened onto the scene and become instant converts or if they
were long-term fans seeking out the chance to dance along with their
idols.
Because Saturday was not just the final
day of SXSW but also St. Patrick's Day, the streets were flooded with
a hoard of idiots dressed in green clothing, so I'd had enough of
that scene for a while. Besides, Sun Araw and Cloudland Canyon were
playing a so-unofficial-it's-practically-secret gig with some
electronic drone and psych bands at the Monofonus Press compound, a
crust-punk utopia four miles outside the downtown area in a remote
sector of far East Austin. In a maze of salvaged vintage trailers
and corrugated tin sculpture was situated a grassy stage. The trees
were decorated with blown glass ornaments and rusting basketball
hoops. There was an inexplicable pit of abandoned bowling balls,
next to which some middle-aged hippies had spread a comfy patchwork
blanket on which to mind their unwashed children. Colorful DIY merch
was spread on those over-sized spools, as were a pile of free zines,
one of which was entitled Cool Magic Tricks for Teens (I snapped that
one up immediately). Say what you will about a scene such as this,
but after unwittingly absorbing the barrage of marketing campaigns
being hurled at me by every corporation with a stake in SXSW, it was
nice to be in a space free of advertisements. Not to mention, I got
to enjoy the sedated set offered by Cloudland Canyon, whose droning,
drowned psych rock I've loved since the release of their stunning
Requiems Der Natur, a compilation of the Krautrock-influenced
vibes they'd explored in the early part of the decade. It had been
my plan to arrive in time to catch Sun Araw's set, but I'd somehow
confused the set-times and so only caught the last brilliant moments
of a few of their submerged, tropicalia-laced jams.
Cloudland Canyon's furious
knob-twisting resulted in a woozy wave of noise most informed by the
sounds on their 2010 release Fin Eaves. The crunchy,
skittering synth effects and dense, distorted guitar melodies melded
thickly in the balmy air, cascading through the leafy heights of
attendant elms. Up in the farthest reaches, Kip Uhlhorn's insistent
moan arced through these saturated compositions, acting more as
instrumental component than sonic focus. Uhlhorn's wife, Kelly, was
welcome addition to the band after the departure of longtime
collaborator Simon Wojan, her stoic electronic manipulations melding
everything together in a terrific wave of lush squall. I was so
blissed on their performance I didn't even whip out my iPhone to snap
pics or capture video, as I am often wont to do; the kaleidoscopic
magic of the Monofonus compound, bathed in the bubbling, staticky
lull provided by Cloudland Canyon, hardly seemed the place for such
obtrusive, new-fangled machinations.
A friend of mine I'd not seen in ages
suggested we meet at House of Commons, a DIY showspace in a huge
house on the University of Texas campus, so I eventually peeled
myself from my grassy slumber and headed Northwest. The campus area
is pretty revolting even with all the pledges out of town for Spring
Break, although not unlike my own experience of the sprawling OSU
campus in Columbus. Added to my deja vu and general disgust, the
fact that this friend of mine was a no show made me want to get the
hell out of there, but I figured I might as well grab some food that
wasn't made in a truck (also a big mistake; I had the most desultory
bahn mi I've ever eaten)so I started wandering around. I was hearing
music coming from somewhere, and it didn't take so long to figure out
it was coming from the back of an Urban Outfitters and the performer
was none other my girl Grimes. It was obviously packed to capacity
so I grabbed a chair from a nearby patio and craned my neck over the
fence with a few others who had been denied at the door. She seemed
to have slept in the clothes I'd seen her in last night and was still
suffering from vocal strain but as I now KNOW I've mentioned before
I'm in love with Claire Boucher, so it didn't matter.
Afterwards, I did poke around HoC a
bit, as Cleveland's HotChaCha was playing. This is a band I've
already seen far more times necessary, due to the fact that they're
from Ohio and we have some mutual friends. By the time and Jovanna
Batkovic and Co. had started bringing their YeahYeahYeahs-esque brand
of dance punk around Columbus I was kind of over that scene, but had
still admired the talented all-girl line-up for their bravado as well
as their skilled playing. Unfortunately, like most things coming out
of Cleveland, HotChaCha has deteriorated from their former gloried
state as I remember it from my youth. In this somewhat pitiful and
desperate incarnation of the band, Jovanna dramatically burned
herself with cigarettes and her friend took over the mic at one point
to perform an impromptu rap about hipsters. Weird times are still
good times, but I'd had enough of both, so it was back to
civilization for me.
I decided to do a second round Cheer Up
Charlie's, where Javelin and Teengirl Fantasy were on the bill. To
start, I'm not sure what Javelin were doing at SXSW this year; the
showcase they'd played two years ago to the day in the exact same
location made a lot more sense as that's when Javelin was really on
the rise, making a name for themselves as partytime sound collagists
who blend every style from disco to R&B to funk to pop. But
they've since established quite a reputation for themselves and as
far as I know don't have a new release coming out anytime soon.
That's not to say their presence wasn't much enjoyed; their live
shows are infused with the kind of energy usually seen in daycares
where the charges are provided with espresso shots. Cousins George
Langford and Tom van Buskirk know how to throw a party, and it's nice
to see them branching out and expanding their talents as musicians
(Tom had a guitar on stage, which he told the crowd he was learning
to play) while staying true to their DIY junk-shop pop ethos.
Shortly into the set, one of the speakers blew, but a quick change-up
gave the dudes new life and new excuses to bring the noise. All the
improvisational elements of Javelin's live shows were here as well,
from made-up-on-spot verses to a cover of “Sabotage” that Nite
Jewel tweeted was the “whitest” thing she's ever heard, possibly
because she forgot that the Beastie Boys, too, are white.
Following up such an animated
performance with the same gusto was no small challenge. Oberlin
grads Logan Takahashi and Nick Weiss are beatsmiths of the finest
order, and though their delivery of tracks from 2010's 7am was a bit
more scaled back it still had the crowd dancing. Like a bottle of
cheapish champagne chilled to just the right temperature, TGF popped
off tracks like “Cheaters” and “Portofino” with at synths and
samples at once glistening and fuzzy. The highlight of the set
featured an appearance from vocalist Kilela Mizankristos who brought
some serious soul to TGF's disco pop flourishes.
After the set, I headed to Longbranch
Inn to check out Impose Magazine's final showcase. The venue was
running behind schedule, so I walked in on the last of Xander
Harris's droney electronic set. He was followed by Sapphire Slows, a
Tokyo-based electronic composer who effectively hides behind a tiny
set-up of gadgets and keyboards and shifts around listlessly while
reproducing her submerged but polished beats by pushing a bevy of
buttons. Layering laconic vocals over her sultry compositions proved
an effective means of winning over the audience; I heard one guy
repeatedly gushing over how stoked he was to see a female truly
deliver on an electronic performance (apparently he didn't get a
chance to see Grimes?). While Sapphire Slows' rhythms are moody and
honed to perfection, there wasn't much to see in terms of her
delivery. She remained pretty stiff, her stare a bit blank, as if
trying to remember which knob to twist. It didn't help that I was
surrounded by the tallest audience ever, including a dude well over
6'5” in a Kevin-Arnold style Jets jacket that Paul and Winnie could
have also climbed into to camp out in. Every time I thought I'd
secured a spot with some decent visibility, some overgrown Austinite
would lurch in front of me. I was finally jostled into a corner
between a jukebox and the edge of the stage where I could perch while
Tearist delivered the most mind-blowing performance I saw all week.
Not knowing much about L.A. band
Tearist prior to SXSW, my only expectations were based on a glowing
review of a set a friend had caught earlier in the week.
Vocalist/feral child Yasmine Kittles stood on stage, tiny in an
oversized camouflaged hunting parka with her brown tresses done up in
a huge top knot. She carried a large, rusting table fan onto the
stage and set it to blowing, tugging her hair down around her face
and removing the jacket to reveal a tiny frame clad in black lacy
top, leather shorts, and ripped tights. The fan whipped her wildly
around wide black eyes lined with black mascara. She howled over a
sludgy backdrop of insistent beats and grinding synths produced by
her cohort, William Strangeland-Menchaca, her voice deep and
resonant. She writhed across the stage as if performing some
ritual, lifting her arms up and sweeping them to the floor in one
gracious motion. At one moment she was kneeling, at another
attempting to climb the Impose-bannered curtains. Throughout the
set, Kittles maintained an intensity in her faraway gaze as if the
seething masses worshipping her at the foot of the stage were no
present, but was also acutely aware of her surroundings, like a caged
animal searching for an escape route. The visceral, almost autistic
urgency in Kittles' performance is consistently anchored by the stoic
presence of Strangeland-Menchaca, whose rhythms sizzle and pop. They
are punctuated by Kittles' occasional swings at hammered metal box
she holds in one hand and attacks with a metallic receiver she holds
in the other, the sound coming out somewhere between a clashing clap
and electronic thunderbolt. I obviously see a lot of live music, and
I've seen performances of this nature more than a few times, but
there's simply something about Tearist that is specifically
mesmerizing, exciting, and electrifying. With Kittles' unabashed
lack of self control, you're left to wonder what she'll do next; its
as though she's suffering some intense rite of passage and every
shred of intensity is both turned inward and focused on deliverance
outward, like lava flowing from an erupting volcano.
Peaking Lights offered a mellowed
change of pace, providing the perfect comedown. While 2009's
Imaginary Falcons was a sublime piece of psych drone, it was
last year's widely acclaimed 936 that broke the band to larger
audiences. Hailing from Wisconsin, married couple Indra Dunis and
Aaron Coyes meld together swirling, heady notes with dubby 8-tracked
beats, forming a narcotic poetry. Looking ever part the opium-den
goddess, Indra swayed back and forth, alternately shaking maracas,
tickling the keys of a tiny vintage piano, and crooning into her mic,
clothed in yellow silks depicting peacocks. Coyes was a more
unassuming entity in his jean jacket, manning drum machines and
samples with an occasional shake or nod of his head. The set was
shortened by the closing of the bar, the show having run way past its
2am end time. While doped-up devotional “Amazing and Wonderful”
was sadly missing, the set was an interesting look into what we can
expect from upcoming release “Lucifer”, likely to be a bit more
playful and perhaps even disco inspired, as their most recent mixtape
indicates.
Though Longbranch had let the band keep
playing beyond last call, once the last beats faded the lights came
up and the bartender shouted, “That's it, folks... South by
Southwest is over, thank fucking God!” I'm guessing it gets pretty
grating on locals to have thousands of hard-drinking, heavy-partying
music fans descend on your otherwise quiet, quirky little patch of
dirt, even if they are stimulating your local economy and putting you
on the map in the most innovative tech, music and film circles.
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