This is the Cinti band I mentioned earlier in the week. Not twangy, 
but SxSW-relevant...

Dave

***
Year later, Tigerlilies face down crash memories in Dallas  

BY LARRY NAGER The Cincinnati Enquirer  

DALLAS — “We're still the Tigerlilies,” Pat Hennessey tells the 
Wednesday night crowd at the Club Clearview.  

It's an old joke, told by bands after they've already announced 
themselves earlier in the evening.  

But the line has an eerie resonance here, on the first anniversary of 
the Dallas crash that killed the group's road manager, destroyed its 
van, Craig Falbe, and injured the four Tigerlilies.  

What he says is true. Even after the tragedy, the physical and 
emotional injuries, the thousands of dollars in still-unpaid medical 
bills and the struggle to return to the stage, Pat and his brother 
Steve Hennessey, Brian Driscoll and Denny Brown are still the 
Tigerlilies.  

Last year, the Dallas show had been an afterthought, a warm-up for 
the South X Southwest music showcase in Austin, a way to break 
up the 1,211-mile drive from Cincinnati.  

But Wednesday's show has become more important than the 
showcase. They're not playing for the $50 guarantee or the chance 
to win a few new fans. This is a real Texas showdown, as the band 
faces down the horror of the fatal accident and the year after, 
finishing its long fight back.  

The shadow of the return to Dallas hung over the two-day drive, 
growing more ominous as the band drew nearer the city.  

During Wednesday's 450-mile drive from Memphis, the group was 
unusually quiet. Band members take turns driving. But not Pat 
Hennessey, who was at the wheel a year ago when Edwin W. 
Killian Jr. of Dallas drove through a stoplight and smashed into the 
van. Since then, he has rarely driven on band trips, says the 
group's friend and new road manager, Andy Georgin, “and 
especially not in Texas.”  

Once the band arrives in Dallas' Deep Ellum entertainment district, 
their nervousness mixes with pre-show anticipation. “I'm not 
nervous,” Pat insists. “I'm used to it by now. I've been living with 
this every day for a year.”  

The Tigerlilies aren't a bunch of kids ready to quit at the first sign of 
trouble. After a decade as a band, they're able to release tension 
where it belongs, onstage, as they unleash a ferocious 40 minutes 
at the Clearview.  

Mr. Driscoll leans into his electric bass, his head bobbing like a 
dashboard dog. Pat Hennessey's lips draw tight against his teeth, 
as he pushes toward the microphone, singing with wide-eyed 
passion. Mr. Brown thrashes at his Fender Telecaster, beating 
knife-edged lead lines and chordal riffs out of it. Steve Hennessey, 
who suffered a broken wrist in the crash, whips at his drums and 
sings harmony to his brother.  

The band is so intent that when a heckler breaks the spell, instead 
of spouting a witty put-down, they look ready to stomp him.  

A silent ride 
By set's end, the exorcism is over. The band members smile at 
one another with relief, happy to be back doing what they came to 
do. There's no pressure here, nothing to gain and nothing to lose.  

Earlier, they had talked about skipping town, not playing at all. 
Now, they go over to the nearby Sand Bar to play a 1 a.m. set just 
for fun. It's a favor to that club's band, Reverbarocket, whose 
guitarist Keenan Nichols helped the Tigerlilies after the crash.  

Afterward, anxiety returns. Last year, the drunken driver smashed 
into their car as they left the club. The drive away from Deep Ellum 
early Thursday is in dead silence. The band refuses to stay in 
Dallas, and only after the skyline disappears does the tension 
break.  

The talk is of the future, what they'll do in Austin today and for the 
rest of the South X Southwest weekend, now that they're finally 
going to make it. 

***

***
Dave Purcell, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Northern Ky Roots Music: http://w3.one.net/~newport
Twangfest: http://www.twangfest.com

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