Re: Updates and SXSW Stuff

1999-04-23 Thread William T. Cocke


On Thu, 22 Apr 1999 20:00:01 -0500 Christopher M Knaus 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 What's on the list of "Cities with good
 alt.country music scene's that get a large amount of press." Um, Austin,
 erm, Chicago, maybe Nashville, maybe St. Louis - that's about it isnt it?

Chapel Hill usedta be mentioned in the same breath as the 
above. I reckon it still should be, right? They've got 
pretty good basketball there too, he said begrudgingly. No 
quarter must ever be given to that team from Durham, tho.

William Cocke
Senior Writer
HSC Development
University of Virginia
(804) 924-8432



Re: Updates and SXSW Stuff

1999-04-23 Thread Dave Purcell

CK sez:

 Dave, who hates all things Chicago...

Not true. Just very glad to be back home, that's all. 

 And as far as your specific examples go, you eliminated one from
 the genre - even tho they are the 'corner stone band' on an
 insurgent country label, and you dismiss another band (who loads of
 people like) because they're not your 'bag of chips.' Kinda reduces
 the number of data points, eh? Read Linda's concert list tomorrow -
 there's ALOT of stuff going on. 

Well, in throwing out the Wacos, it's not a matter of reducing the 
number of data points, it's pointing out the relative weakness of a 
supposedly great scene when one of the "cornerstones" of the 
alt.country lot is, in fact, a rock band (and a good one -- I like the 
Wacos a lot) and three others -- Moonshine Willy, the Blacks, and 
Handsome Family -- suck. Most others are mediocre at best.  

 And are we separating press coverage from the acts themselves? 
 Is there a fantastic Sioux City music scene with all great original
 alt.country bands and no sucky ones and there just arent enough
 music journalists to cover it? Doubt it. Do folks pay attention to
 what it going on in Chicago just because its a big city? Yup. 

Erm...how exactly could a scene be overrated w/o some sort of 
attention being paid to it? I'm not saying there aren't any good 
alt.country bands in Chicago -- there are a handful, and I listed the 
ones I like. My point is that the scene isn't deserving of all the 
accolades and attention throw its way. The majority of the 
alt.country in Chicago is the kind that deserves the scorn Mark's 
Deep Throat pal was railing on: bands full of poorly written songs, 
scenesters climbing on the bandwagon, and loads of bad Yee Haw! 
hillbilly schtick. 

I'll wouldn't get so rankled about it if so much attention weren't paid 
to bad bands. I'm hardly a roots music purist, but watching indie 
rock hipsters don overalls and write bad songs about moonshine 
and fucking their cousins and crap like that pisses me off, when 
there are so many good and deserving bands who don't get the 
attention. Just speaking of local bands: Big In Iowa are doing just 
fine here, but if they were based in Chicago, they'd be huge;  
Prospect Hill has more chops and great original songs than most 
bands anywhere; and Dallas Moore does the outlaw country thing 
as well as anyone. Any number of the good bands on P2 are 
deserving of more attention than shit like Moonshine Willy.   

 CK going to see the over rated chicagoan Sally Timms opening for
 the over rated Alejandro Escovedo Orchestra 

Dave, who thinks Sally Timms has a gorgeous voice but sings 
country music with all the soul of a wet dishrag, and who would 
never call Alejandro overrated in a million years...I'm seeing him 
four blocks from my house on Tuesday, in fact...  


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



Crappy alt-country at SXSW (was Re: Updates

1999-04-22 Thread Don Yates


 If you were to ask any hard working country musician the difference they
 would  tell you its all about the sincerity of the performer. Any 99%
 percent of these bands got no heart.

And this is the only part of the anonymous diatribe that I might disagree
with, or at least amend.  It's not *all* about the sincerity.  There are
also some awfully sincere alt-country bands that are just, well, awful.
No doubt that white-trash minstrel show shit rubs me the wrong way, but
I'm also not a fan of the painfully earnest ones who have nothin' else
goin' for 'em except their sincerity.  Dull as dirt is not much better
than a superficial schtick.  Anyway, it's too bad the person who wrote
that essay spent so much time with the cartoon crowd down there -- he/she
must've missed James Hand, Justin Trevino, Don Walser, Paul Burch, Dale
Watson and all the other hardcore traditionalists types that played this
year.--don



Re: Crappy alt-country at SXSW (was Re: Updates

1999-04-22 Thread Ph. Barnard

Yeah, Don I can agree with most of this critique in general terms, 
until we get to the sincerity bit.  As I've said so many times, the 
"sincerity" argument never gets it for me.  But I'm certainly all for 
more musicianship and less scenester 'tude

--junior



SXSW stuff

1999-04-22 Thread James Gerard Roll


I don't really think the guy had to name names, he certainly said enough
to identify who he was talking about.  Obviously not a big fan of
insurgent/punk attitude.

I would have to agree for the most part.  ALthough there seems to be a
market for this stuff . . . so some fans are diggin' it.

There was a comment made in the (SXSW Saturday??) Statesman by the
columnest on the inside cover, that named CHicago as a highly over-rated
music scene in that he had never heard such bad singing and fake
accents,etc.  I think he named Freakwater among others . . . 

just reporting the facts here.

-jim



Re: SXSW stuff

1999-04-22 Thread Don Yates



On Thu, 22 Apr 1999, James Gerard Roll wrote:

 I don't really think the guy had to name names, he certainly said enough
 to identify who he was talking about.  Obviously not a big fan of
 insurgent/punk attitude.

Perhaps.  But the writer also made clear that combining country and rock
isn't necessarily a bad thing, and I can think of plenty of bands who do a
good job of it.  Then again, I can also think of plenty who don't.g--don
 



Re: SXSW stuff

1999-04-22 Thread Dave Purcell

Jim Roll wrote:

 There was a comment made in the (SXSW Saturday??) Statesman by the
 columnest on the inside cover, that named CHicago as a highly
 over-rated music scene in that he had never heard such bad singing
 and fake accents,etc.  I think he named Freakwater among others . .

Yep, I've said that out here, oh, 30 or 40 times g. When I was 
there, if you take away Robbie Fulks, you're not left with much (the 
Wacos are fun, but face it, they're a rock band). Since then, the 
fabulous Kellys -- Kessler and Hogan -- have emerged, along with 
Anna Fermin, so perhaps things are getting better. Although 
Chicago scores extra negative style points for Moonshine Willy and 
the Handsome Family, two of the worst alt.country bands of all 
time (though, I did like a couple of HF songs Mark Wyatt played for 
me, and though I'm told they're quite nice people, they're not my 
bag of chips live). 

Bring it on, CK.

Dave


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



Re: Crappy alt-country at SXSW

1999-04-22 Thread Don Yates


And here's my own version of Anonymous's alt-country rant, posted to P2
way back in '97.  Looks like I also didn't name names in this one, but
those who were around back then may remember some folks that I was railin'
against at the time.g  I believe Mr. Weisberger may also have 
alt-country rant or two in the archives...--don

-- Forwarded message --
Date: Wed, 28 May 1997 22:22:58 -0700 (PDT)
From: Don Yates [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: It's A Mighty Thin Line Between Love And Hate 

I'm beginning to wonder if the buzz about alternative country is nothing
more than a plot to make the world once again safe for Poco.  Not a day
passes it seems without some stale folk-rock record ending up on my desk,
accompanied by obnoxious press material claiming the harmless mediocrity
in question is the true inheritor of the Hank Williams legacy.  Shania
Twain has more Hank in her than most of that impotent shit.  Combine those
somnolent folk-rockers (and their acoustic coffeehouse brethren) with
college rockers pretending they're the salt of the earth (when they're not
using country music as a weapon of ridicule against the working class),
and sooner or later, it's bound to generate a backlash -- and a
well-deserved one at that.  The Bottle Rockets, Gillian Welch and Dale
Watson are OK by me, but as for the alternative country movement, I hope
it soon withers away, before the glut of mediocrity discourages talented
artists from making innovative, heartfelt music on the margins of country
music.  Bah, humbug.--don

n.p. Johnny Paycheck -- Sings Jukebox Charlie








Updates and SXSW Stuff

1999-04-22 Thread Christopher M Knaus

Hey there,

Dave, who hates all things Chicago...
Yep, I've said that out here, oh, 30 or 40 times g. When I was 
there, if you take away Robbie Fulks, you're not left with much (the 
Wacos are fun, but face it, they're a rock band). Since then, the 
fabulous Kellys -- Kessler and Hogan -- have emerged, along with 
Anna Fermin, so perhaps things are getting better. Although 
Chicago scores extra negative style points for Moonshine Willy and 
the Handsome Family, two of the worst alt.country bands of all 
time (though, I did like a couple of HF songs Mark Wyatt played for 
me, and though I'm told they're quite nice people, they're not my 
bag of chips live). 

Bring it on, CK.

Mark snipped...
As for Jerald's note about the Statesman rating Chi-town as an
"overrated
music scene," be aware that they practice what I like to call
"opposition
journalism" so take that into account.

OK, we've got "Austin's just jealous" covered.

And the rest of this is gonna be quick and not that well developed but
perhaps I'll write more this weekend.

Remember back when Chicago was the 'new Seattle'? Urge Overkill, Liz
Phair, and The Jesus Lizard were all over the place. THAT THEN was an
over rated music scene. 

THIS NOW is alot of people playing the same type of music. And due to a
bell curve some are gonna suck and some are gonna be great. And some are
gonna start out sucky and practice real hard and then get better. And
because there are alot of places to play and alot of bands you're gonna
hear just about all of that bell curve once or twice.

And as far as your specific examples go, you eliminated one from the
genre - even tho they are the 'corner stone band' on an insurgent country
label, and you dismiss another band (who loads of people like) because
they're not your 'bag of chips.' Kinda reduces the number of data points,
eh? Read Linda's concert list tomorrow - there's ALOT of stuff going on.

And are we separating press coverage from the acts themselves? Is there a
fantastic Sioux City music scene with all great original alt.country
bands and no sucky ones and there just arent enough music journalists to
cover it? Doubt it. Do folks pay attention to what it going on in Chicago
just because its a big city? Yup. What's on the list of "Cities with good
alt.country music scene's that get a large amount of press." Um, Austin,
erm, Chicago, maybe Nashville, maybe St. Louis - that's about it isnt it?


And one more thing...
Funny...I was at a real country bar out in the county on Saturday, 
and remarked to a bandmate that someone like Moonshine Willy or 
SCOTS would get their asses stomped if they got on stage.

Does this prove anything other than people in real country bars are mean?

Later...
CK going to see the over rated chicagoan Sally Timms opening for the over
rated Alejandro Escovedo Orchestra
___
You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail.
Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com/getjuno.html
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Re: Updates and SXSW Stuff

1999-04-22 Thread Carl Abraham Zimring

Excerpts from internet.listserv.postcard2: 22-Apr-99 Updates and SXSW
Stuff by Christopher M Knaus@juno 
 What's on the list of "Cities with good
 alt.country music scene's that get a large amount of press." Um, Austin,
 erm, Chicago, maybe Nashville, maybe St. Louis - that's about it isnt it?
 
The San Francisco Bay area doesn't do too badly, though Chicago's given
me as much new music to like (Gastr Del Sol, Pinetop Seven, Freakwater,
Robbie Fulks, Green, Flying Luttenbachers, Kahil El'Zabar, Handsome
Family, Wacos/Mekons/Sally Timms, 8 Bold Souls, Oliver Lake, Dianogah,
etc.) as any town has this decade.

Carl Z.



Re: SXSW stuff

1999-04-22 Thread Bob Soron

At 3:04 PM -0400  on 4/22/99, the guy who said, "You have to
understand, Bob, Robbie Fulks and the Wacos *are* our music scene"
wrote:

Although
Chicago scores extra negative style points for Moonshine Willy and
the Handsome Family, two of the worst alt.country bands of all
time (though, I did like a couple of HF songs Mark Wyatt played for
me, and though I'm told they're quite nice people, they're not my
bag of chips live).

The Handsome Family opened for Vic Chesnutt recently. Wow. The sucking
sounds are still echoing in Schuba's. The Timbuk 3 of alt country,
except with less content.

Nice voices, though (we were right up front and got the stage mix,
which was pretty good). And to be fair, this wasn't a crowd that wanted
to see anyone other than Chesnutt, and the HF knew it and handled it
humorously. (Among themselves. We could hear the off-mic stuff pretty
well.) Nonetheless, that isn't enough for me.

Bob




sxsw photos

1999-04-04 Thread James Gerard Roll


Someone posted a URL on the list for SXSW photos and I wanted to check
them out.

But I of course deleted the message or something.

Help?

-jim



Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-02 Thread Jerald Corder

I want one of those damn 7" Meat Purv records with all the Madonna songs.
Where can I get one other than at one of your sinful shows at the Hole?

Jerald 



re: SXSW finally

1999-04-02 Thread Cherilyn diMond

Thanks guys... I think the winner is "More Record Titles About Chickens."  Oy.

--cherilyn.




Re: Offlist ==Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-02 Thread KATIEJOM

yup, I'm having a banner day, sorry!



Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-02 Thread Jeff Weiss

At 11:14 AM 4/2/99 -0600, you wrote:
I want one of those damn 7" Meat Purv records with all the Madonna songs.
Where can I get one other than at one of your sinful shows at the Hole?

It's on Bloodshot. Waterloo? Favorite mail order source? Begging on 6th and
Congress?

Jeff




Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-02 Thread RMould5417

Dave writes:

 Meat Purveying Cherilyn wrote:
 
  c) could someone please for the love of christ send me an album
  title suggestion that will beat Jo's "When Chickens Cry." Please
  please please 
 
 Can't be that many people who remember the Meatmen. I'd vote for 
 "We're the Meat Purveyors and You Suck."

Uhhh, Dave, wouldn't that be - 
"We're the Meat Purveyors, and You're Not My Cup 'O Tea? g

Sorry. Couldn't resist.

Joe X.

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



SXSW photos

1999-04-01 Thread Hellcountry

Hey all...

I've been out of circulation still since SXSW...Sophie is out here in the
woods of PA taking in some rural America and we've been recoveringg.
Finally the photos I took during the weekend are up at
http://www.hellcountry.com/twangfluff/sxsw99.htm

Not many people, just musiciansg.

Stacey
Hellcountry "supporting the Boston area twang scene"
http://www.hellcountry.com  [EMAIL PROTECTED]



SXSW finally

1999-04-01 Thread Cherilyn diMond

Oh lord. Nobody cares about my SXSW recap now cause I took so long. I had
to go and attend to some, um, business right after the event so I wasn't
around to report, but now I have some things to say. Okay --

1) Thanks to everyone for coming to the BBQ. How much does it rock to have
so many great bands in my own damn yard? It was really cool meeting some of
y'all that I hadn't met before. And then my pals Don, Linda, Meshel, Terie,
Andre, gawd everyone. All you guys -- you make SXSW for me. It's a freakin'
reunion.

2) Why have I not met Neil Weiss yet? I'm gonna kick his ass in the teeth
if I ever do.

3) I saw not a single band that I didn't know the whole damn week. This is
how lame I am. BUT, my world was rocked, as usual, by my main men the
Wacos, by bastard cousins Split Lip Rayfield, and by the sexiest men in
alt.country the Ex-Husbands.

4) Highlights included dirty dancing and planning new alt.country porno mag
with Neko Case, swigging Pepto-Bismal with a beer chaser onstage (punkrock,
y'know), tragically throwing myself at Joey Burns (what else is new), being
a part of the Pine Valley Cosmonauts thing, having my top during our
showcase stay up (the miracle of duct tape), debuting the new TMP Chad
Hamilton song over and over and over, and No.1 without a doubt: Sunday
night after PVC -- Kiss cover band Rip  Destroy followed by Neil Diamond
cover band The Diamond Smugglers at Emos. One of the most fun nights of my
recent memory. Awesome.

Thanks to Stacey for putting up these fotos:
http://www.hellcountry.com/twangfluff/sxsw99.htm
But, my god, am I eating Jonny's ear in our pic? Good lord.

Were there any other picture sites that I missed?

Um, if anyone cares in Meat Purveyors news the new record has been moved up
two months, so a) it will come out the beginning of July, b) this month I
have no life as it has not been started yet, and c) could someone please
for the love of christ send me an album title suggestion that will beat
Jo's "When Chickens Cry." Please please please

Oh, last thing I swear then I will go back to lurking (I am _not_ an
"ex-P2'er" as recently described, I just like to watch) -- we're touring
the midwest with SLR in the Monsters (or Mutants) of Bluegrass tour June
16-27. As always, if you want info email [EMAIL PROTECTED] and I'll
put you on the goofy newsletter thing.

xoxo,
cherilyn,
meat purveyor.




Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-01 Thread Joe Gracey

Cherilyn diMond wrote:
 c) could someone please
 for the love of christ send me an album title suggestion that will beat
 Jo's "When Chickens Cry." Please please please

"When Chickens Lip"

"Chicken Teeth On A Hardwood Floor"

"When Chickens Hurl"

You can use any of those for free.


-- 
Joe Gracey
President-For-Life, Jackalope Records
http://www.kimmierhodes.com



Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-01 Thread BARNARD

Joe suggests:

 "Chicken Teeth On A Hardwood Floor"

Now that ain't bad...

Or perhaps: "(I spent two years in a hot van with her and all she can
think of is) When Chickens Cry?"

Or:  "Meat the Purveyors"?

Or simply:  "Swap Meat"?

Just trying to be helpful,
--junior



Re: SXSW finally

1999-04-01 Thread Barry Mazor

Cherilyn diMond wrote:
 c) could someone please for the love of christ send me an album title
suggestion that will beat
 Jo's "When Chickens Cry."


 And Joe G  suggested:
"When Chickens Hurl"



See, now THAT's  perfect.

And I say that even though I'd tried to get Cherilyn to take "Special
Meals" or "Sticking to Our Guns" or  "When Cows Cry".. months ago..but I
think maybe Jo didn't go for 'em

Barry




Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-29 Thread jacy warwick

Just got the Monte Warden and its good in a Buddy Holly, happy sunshiny
listen at work kinda way

Lonelyland is great, though...  Bob Schneider is concurrently leader of
the Ugly Americans, the Scabs and Lonelyland.  Ugly Americans are more
funk, Scabs more jazz, and LL more acoustic hick-rock but they mostly
play the same songs... which can be found on the Ugly Americans CD
This is the first CD i pull out when i'm getting ready for a great night
or when i just want to wake up happy...

-jacy

--- Barry Mazor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 OK...just a few recommendations and bits of quiet
 good news from what I saw
 and heard dopwn there...People we OUGHT to get to
 hera more of, I think...
 
 
 Monte Warden.
  Big return week for him, as a cxloser with buddies
 the Robison bros and
 Kelly Willis at thge awards, and a strong set at the
 Broken Spoke Thursday
 night of SXSW with James Intveld on keyboards...I'd
 highly rcommend his new
 CD "A Stranger to Me Now" too...which is a brnad new
 1959-60
 post-rockabilly pop album...which is to say, in the
 tradition of Roy
 Orbison, Phil Everly and Buddy Hollymelodic and
 dramatic. Marshall
 Crenshaw fans will probably go for it too. Live, he
 also showed he could
 hit the rockabilly twanger with some slashing guitar
 dramatics--which, by
 my definition, you have to be able to do to do THIS
 brnad of non-rockabilly
 convincingly.
 
 Lonelyland.
 Caught these guys in the Convention Hall one
 afternoon.  Led by Austin guy
 Bob Schneider, who'd appently has led a bunch of funk
 bands before, here
 comes up with a unique and engaging laid back-and
 grinning by the fishin'
 hole  style that I certainly hope will find a
 recording home...A very
 modern twist on what I'd call the traditions of Hoagy
 Carmichael/Phil
 Harris singing...ya know, Rockin Chair's Got Me!
 

_
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Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-29 Thread Christopher M Knaus

Hey there,

jacy reminded me...
Bob Schneider is concurrently leader of the Ugly Americans, the Scabs
and Lonelyland.  Ugly Americans are more funk, Scabs more jazz, and LL
more acoustic hick-rock but they mostly play the same songs... which can
be found on the Ugly Americans CD

The bi-line for the Scabs was '9 piece all start goup' and since they
were after Kelly Willis I couldnt get in. So who is in the band besides
Bob?

Thanks.
Later...
CK staring slack jawed at my stereo playing The Shaggs.
___
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Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-29 Thread jacy warwick


I believe Scabs and UglyAmericans share the same band memebers and just
throw in whoever happens to be in the swing of things (or just there),
but don't know who those particular 'all stars' were

nifty little page at www.uglyamericans.com lists members

np: Ian Moore's got the Green Grass
*sigh*


--- Christopher M Knaus slackjawedly stated:
 Hey there,
 
 jacy reminded me...
 Bob Schneider is concurrently leader of the Ugly
 Americans, the Scabs
 and Lonelyland.  Ugly Americans are more funk, Scabs
 more jazz, and LL
 more acoustic hick-rock but they mostly play the
 same songs... which can
 be found on the Ugly Americans CD
 
 The bi-line for the Scabs was '9 piece all start
 goup' and since they
 were after Kelly Willis I couldnt get in. So who is
 in the band besides
 Bob?
 
 Thanks.
 Later...
 CK staring slack jawed at my stereo playing The
 Shaggs.
 ___
 You don't need to buy Internet access to use free
 Internet e-mail.
 Get completely free e-mail from Juno at
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Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-27 Thread Don Yates



On Fri, 26 Mar 1999, Barry Mazor wrote:

 Continental Drifters
 Saw their really strong set at the Music Hall and their appearance at the
 ND/Miles of Weisses Broken Spoke event--where they finished off with an
 exhuberant version of the Fairport Convention arrangement of Matty
 Groves...This is maybe the most talent almost utterly unheard bunch of folk
 rock pros (if I can use that term; it seems right) that ought to be stars
 again I can think of.  They rock and they sing.  And  the former Miss
 Cowsill was surley the only one at SXSW with Top Tens Hits when she was
 five...

You're forgettin' Bobby Bare Jr., Barry.  He had a #2 country hit with his
daddy at the age of five.  (And yeah, he missed his showcase, but he 
played SXSW at some schmoozy Sony party.)--don



Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-27 Thread Barry Mazor

On Fri, 26 Mar 1999, Barry Mazor wrote:
  the former Miss
 Cowsill was surely the only one at SXSW with Top Ten Hits when she was
 five...

You're forgettin' Bobby Bare Jr., Barry.  He had a #2 country hit with his
daddy at the age of five.  (And yeah, he missed his showcase, but he
played SXSW at some schmoozy Sony party.)--don


This is absolutely true--and reasonably amazing that Don thought of it...

(And I guess Bobby Bare should get extra points for putting that business
on that record about "20 years from now he'll be sitting around stoned with
his friends and he'll ant toi sue me for this!"--which, if memory serves,
does not excatly have a counterpart on The Cowsills Greatest Hits! )

SOMEBODY from P2 told me they'd just seen Bare Jr. someplace in
Austin...They may now speak up!

Barry




Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-27 Thread marie arsenault

SOMEBODY from P2 told me they'd just seen Bare Jr. someplace in
Austin...They may now speak up!
Barry


That may have been me, Barry. I saw Bobby Jr. hanging out in some club (I think
it
was Thursday night) with a waifish model type hanging on his arm. I did not
see him perform in Austin. He does play here in Nashville on a fairly regular
basis,
though.

marie



Re: Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-27 Thread NoSequitr

waifish model type

BAM!
Redundant!
Not allowed on P2.
Not even on a Saturday afternoon

np - Cowboy Romance / NM



SXSW-Austin Chronicle piece

1999-03-26 Thread William F. Silvers

Unable to let SXSW go, and trying in vain to remember every last detail
of the blur, g> I visited the Austin Chronicle site and saw the Dancing
About Architecture column:


http://www.auschron.com/current/music.dancing.html

which has some interesting stuff about the Mike Ness/Continental Club fiasco,
the Stubb's rainout Thursday (oh boy), and further support for Junior's
contention that wristbands are a waste of time and money.

b.s.



Extra recommendations from SXSW

1999-03-26 Thread Barry Mazor

OK...just a few recommendations and bits of quiet good news from what I saw
and heard dopwn there...People we OUGHT to get to hera more of, I think...


Monte Warden.
 Big return week for him, as a cxloser with buddies the Robison bros and
Kelly Willis at thge awards, and a strong set at the Broken Spoke Thursday
night of SXSW with James Intveld on keyboards...I'd highly rcommend his new
CD "A Stranger to Me Now" too...which is a brnad new 1959-60
post-rockabilly pop album...which is to say, in the tradition of Roy
Orbison, Phil Everly and Buddy Hollymelodic and dramatic. Marshall
Crenshaw fans will probably go for it too. Live, he also showed he could
hit the rockabilly twanger with some slashing guitar dramatics--which, by
my definition, you have to be able to do to do THIS brnad of non-rockabilly
convincingly.

Lonelyland.
Caught these guys in the Convention Hall one afternoon.  Led by Austin guy
Bob Schneider, who'd appently has led a bunch of funk bands before, here
comes up with a unique and engaging laid back-and grinning by the fishin'
hole  style that I certainly hope will find a recording home...A very
modern twist on what I'd call the traditions of Hoagy Carmichael/Phil
Harris singing...ya know, Rockin Chair's Got Me!

Henhouse
The all-star Austin women musical extravaganza (Rosie Flores, Marcia Ball,
Cindy Cashdollar, etc.)...and boy, are they capable and roudy and ought to
be a real ongoing group...Fronting Wanda Jackson--who basically sounds
excatly like she did  40+ years ago at age 62, as roaring and growling as
ever..they were maybe even stronger.

Continental Drifters
Saw their really strong set at the Music Hall and their appearance at the
ND/Miles of Weisses Broken Spoke event--where they finished off with an
exhuberant version of the Fairport Convention arrangement of Matty
Groves...This is maybe the most talent almost utterly unheard bunch of folk
rock pros (if I can use that term; it seems right) that ought to be stars
again I can think of.  They rock and they sing.  And  the former Miss
Cowsill was surley the only one at SXSW with Top Tens Hits when she was
five...

Alvin Youngblood Hart
Right up there among the very best young acoustic blue men around...he
proved rather remote from the audience live--and then showed off what he
coulkd do with some electricity in an absolutely rousing and rhythmically
unforgettablke version of, of all things, John Fogerty's "Pagan
Baby"...After it was all over, this one kept coming back into me head..anmd
I hope he'll do an electric blues album now.

Beaver Nelson
OK..I thought he was David and Ricky's unknown little brother, The
Beaver...but Corrie Weiss warned me he was really good ...and he
was...really set the stage for the remarkable Mr. Cisco...

I'll add my nod to the "hillbilly Idol" i a good band list...especially lie
their songwriting...and to those who had nice things to say about Michael
Hall and thre Brooders (best loud band I heard there, plus he looks like
Lou Reed and Woody Guthrie's half brother!)...and while I only caughtn
three Hank Dogs songs, I'd have to ay, on the other hand, they were very
boring even briefly...Best unscheduled xtra good time was on that parking
lot  in South Austin where Doug Sahm and Johnny Bush joined Cornell Hurd
and the Hollisters for some harder stuff in the morning...I am also now the
owner of an officially endorsed Cornell Hurd Band Whoopee Cushion, and you
can't have enough of those.

Barry










Re: SXSW MOVIES of interest here

1999-03-25 Thread Danlee2

 So Barry, what movie stahs did you see???  Was McConaughey (sp?) there
for the EdTV thing?  What about Elizabeth Hurley?  Jenna Elfman?  Did you
invite any of them to Twangfest???  

I need responses on this!

dominick dan



Re: P2 Thanks and SXSW Highlights

1999-03-25 Thread Danlee2

  -.) Calexico and Calexico with Richard Buckner . . . the coolest
  indie-grooves I have heard in a long time.  I love that band . .. and
  hearing Richard sing Tom Petty's 'The Waiting' with them was a joy . . . 
  
  "Yeah I chased a couple women around
  a-all it ever got me was down . . ."

Oh man, speakin'a sticking a knife in and twisting itjust slay me why
don't you.  And to think I was talking to him an hour or so before that and he
didn't tell me anything about that happening.  Bastard...(;-))

  I am sure there was more.  But Shaver rules . . . let it be known.

  Indeed, and tho you mentioned him, his son's name is Eddie.  If I was a solo
artists looking for a hot ax to grace my next record I'd go directly there.
Whatta player.

   (and Jim I'm sorry I missed your shows down there-I promise ya I'll make up
fer that...)

dan shaver



Re: P2 Thanks and SXSW Highlights

1999-03-25 Thread Joe Gracey

James Gerard Roll wrote:
 
 My personal highlights were
 
 1.) the Billy Joe Shaver  Son show.  I was a Shaver virgin and was not
 expecting the amazing Charisma and lyrical power that he posessed.  Every
 word shook the earth as far as I could tell.  That guy is a true poet and
 his band was so amazing they withstood a 10 minute drum solo!!  By far my
 favorite set of music.

 
 I am sure there was more.  But Shaver rules . . . let it be known.
 
 -jim

Yeah, billy joe is the real deal. He is one of those poets who managed
to slip through the commercial wall and get big cuts, but he is the
farthest thing from a hack you could imagine. He is one of those cats
who is so much himself that he sort of radiates his own wattage, on and
offstage. My first brush with him was when he showed up to do an
interview on my radio show in '73, pretty well drunk on tequila at 2pm
(he has since stopped drinking) and wowed us all. Later on I noticed
that he spent several days up on the roof of Kandy Kicker's house,
clutching the chimney and being high on peyote or some shit like that,
having himself a big ole time.

BTW, I'm sorry I missed the dang barbecue and the fabulous Jim Roll set
but I was unable to attend them items, to my chagrin. 

-- 
Joe e. Gracey
President-For-Life, Jackalope Records
http://www.kimmierhodes.com



Re: P2 Thanks and SXSW Highlights

1999-03-25 Thread GEOFFHIMES

Dear Publicity,

I am a regular music critic for the Washington Post, Rolling Stone, the Oxford
American, Request Magazine, No Depression, the Baltimore City Paper, Fi
Magazine, Country Music Magazine, the Patuxent Newspapers and others. Please
add me to your regular mailing list. Please send review copies of your recent
releases to:

Geoffrey Himes
410-235-6627
8 East 39th Street
Baltimore, MD 21218-1801



Re: SXSW MOVIES of interest here

1999-03-25 Thread Barry Mazor

Mr. McConaughey was present--and played a large part in bringing the flick
to Austin--Mr. Woody Harrelson, the noticeable Ms. Elizabeth Hurley, Ms.
Ellen DeGeneres and pal Ms. Anne Heche,  Mr. Martin Landau,  director Ron
Howard and (big applause in hall here), the irreplaceable Clint Howard.
(Ms. Elfman was plugging the flick in NY).  Interesting fact: I had a
better seat than most of these people!

Barry





 So Barry, what movie stahs did you see???  Was McConaughey (sp?) there
for the EdTV thing?  What about Elizabeth Hurley?  Jenna Elfman?  Did you
invite any of them to Twangfest???

I need responses on this!

dominick dan





Re: SXSW MOVIES of interest here

1999-03-25 Thread Ndubb

 Ms. Elizabeth Hurley 

mmm...



Re: SXSW report (long)

1999-03-24 Thread alnjen

Head to panel discussion on Hank Williams. Most fascinating aspect was
contributed by Greil Marcus, who talked about a movie that fancifully
described the last show Hank played.

"Hank Williams: The Show He Never Gave", featuring the great Sneezy Waters,
from Ottawa, as Hank. Based on the play written by Maynard Collins which
toured North America from 1977 to 1993.  Waters nailed the role, winning
kudos from people like Minnie Pearl and Wesley Rose for his portrayal.
Waters also recorded a fine album of Williams covers in 1981.

***

Boot Heel Drag can be heard on CJSW 90.9 FM , Calgary,AB
Tuesdays at 6:30 PM MST and on realaudio at www.cjsw.com.




SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread Tiffany Suiters

it was so great to meet so many in Austin this year.  I asked around and I
still never got to hook up with Jr though.  Definite highlights for me
included The Checkered Past party/show with The Old Joe Clarks and The
FlatIrons playing.  Radney Foster, Fred Eaglesmith, Jack Ingram, Bruce 
Charley Robison, and both Billy Block and the No Depression party.  Cisco
rocked!!

Now next year you guys are all going to have to tie in the KHYI radio show
on Sunday in Dallas to your SXSW trip.  

Tiffany



CSRF - SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread Christopher M Knaus

Hey there,

Lessee... I'll try and contribute some new info here. Fluff included.

Tue:
Yes, tuesday. Started off with another cool chili party at Smiling Jim's
with Jim Roll, Anna Egge, and Beaver Nelson. All three of which did fine
acoustic sets. Anna apparently has a new CD out (or coming out) which I'm
looking forward to hearing. Left during Slim's set in order to get to...
Swollen Circus. Bit size chunks of bands playing SXSW at the aptly named
Hole in the Wall. Jim Roll backed by The Silos sounded _great_ (digging
Jim with a full band (no accordion tho - sniff)) and The Silos their own
damn selves. The Brooders, as mentioned, sounded fine fine fine. And a
bunch of folks liked the moodiness of Willard Grant Consiprancy (tho I'm
not so sure yet). Also started running into p2ers galore Barry! Linda!
Jim Cox! etc. etc. etc.
I'll never be a weasel moment number one: opening the mens room door I'm
face to face Jon Langford. I yell and point, "Hey! Jon Landford!" right
at him. There are not enough o's in smth.

Wed:
The all important from the parents place to The Austin Motel occurs. Heh.
Decided to go non-twang for the early part of the evening. Caught a 
waycool indian-persian type band (1001 Nights?) that sounded great and
then Mr. Rubin's Rubinchyk's Orchestra (which I know I'm spelling wrong)
who ROCKED in an acoustic Kelzmer kind of way. Kudos to Mark for this
effort. 
Back to the Hole in the Wall for Tom House. Erm. Really like Tom electric
with a band (like at NEA) alone and acoustic, not so much. 
Much needed and educational stop at Whattaburger followed.

Thu:
Cherylin's BBQ. Wooo hooo! The partying begins in earnest. Great BBQ.
Foamy Pearl. And loads of p2-ers. Saw The Ex-Husbands and The Meat
Purveyors and Jim Roll and Jon Landforad and Kelly Hogan again, all of
whom were as good as usual. The first band (The Fence Cutters?) were a
very pleasant bluegrassy surprise and the swamp-rocky band that drowned
out the jets passing overhead were pretty cool too. A bit too much
Brooce all day for my taste tho g
I was involved in the cloudburst that Bill mentioned. Phooey. But managed
to make The Backsliders show that night THANKYOUVERYMUCH. And lived
through Joe Henry. Ehh.

Fri:
Bloodshot BBQ. Wo Hoo. I heart Nan. And the rest of 'em.
Free Beer. Beatle Bob. Free Beer. Sunny Day. Free Beer. Cool People.
Great sets from The Meat Purveyors, The Blacks, The Wacos (especially
with Lonesome Bob joining them) and a surprise set from The Ex-Husbands
who may be one of the finest bar bands around. Chatted a bit with Hayseed
who is not only a kick ass singer but also a hell of a nice guy. Schmooze
schmooze. Drink Drink.
Not enough dinner and then hightailed it to The Broken Spoke to see
Hillbilly IDOL who played a fine, tight set to a small crowd. 
Quick, back to the Twangmobile to catch The Hicks! From Nashville! WHO
SUCK. Luckily they were followed by Slobberbone (who Jamie and Kari kinda
like). Last time I saw them they were kinda 'eh - but a fine set was
played tonight (no acoustic stuff tho).
And now, the moment you've all been waiting for...
PUMPSKULLY
Lynryd Skynryd meets Lynryd Skynryd. Kick ass swamp rock that even Jeff
Wall would love. (doing the devil horn heavy metal handshake) They'll be
huge - you heard it here first. Well, you heard it from Tracy first, but
you heard it here second.
The hotel party then began and I wisely decided to pass out before
everyone showed up and The BROX, Slobberbone and Splitlip Rayfield
started jamming in the parking lot. I'm such a drunk dork. Grr... I was
overserved.

Sat:
Um, I kinda missed Saturday. Spent most of the day in bed bargaining with
God. Rallied to see Kelly Willis - which we couldnt get in.
Rallied to see The BROX and Robbie Fulks and The Meat Puppets - which we
couldn't get in.
Rallied to see The Bloodshot Showcase - which we made. Yeah. You all know
the Bloodshot Bands and they were all great. Crossed the street to see
the The Sadies. Man do they exude coolness. Fantastic stuff surfy rocky
twangy bluegrassy and Neko Case jumping on stage. The best band in Canada
g

Sun:
Breakfast. Sunny Day. Neal Weiss will only come to Twangfest if he gets a
badge. Really crowded airport. Back to Chicago.

My one regret (other than the miserable hangover) is I didnt get to as
many new (to me) bands as I wanted to - as Alex mentioned "We might as
well be in Chicago" but if my biggest problem is deciding which of 3
great bands I want to see - I'll deal with it.

Once again, everyone on P2 is cool. Even Don.

And somewhere in Austin there is a rental car with a Miles of Music and
an Ex-Husbands bumper sticker on it. Heh.

Later...
CK
___
You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail.
Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com/getjuno.html
or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]



RE: SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread Grant, Jonathan

ahhh the quinessential justification

-Original Message-
From: Melissa A. Garland [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, March 22, 1999 10:06 AM
To: passenger side
Subject: Re: SXSW


Best P2 moment: Melissa Garland proudly showing me her Zippy the
Pinhead tatoo at the BBQ

As a lurker, I am happy to have finally contributed something useful to
the list.  Now I feel the hangover was worth it.

melissa



Re: The Brooders (was:Re: SXSW)

1999-03-23 Thread Jerker Emanuelsson

Hi folks,

Seems like everyone had a great time at SXSW! Really wish I could´ve been 
there. I haven´t been able to attend SXSW since ´93, but I hope to go next 
year. 

Are there any plans for a Brooders CD? I love all The Wild Seeds stuff and 
Michael Hall´s solo stuff as well. 

Jerker Emanuelson
Sound Asleep Records
Sweden

np. Freakwater-Springtime (eventhough it´s snowing like hell here today!)



Re: CSRF - SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread Bob Soron

At 11:42 PM -0600  on 3/22/99, Christopher M Knaus wrote:

My one regret (other than the miserable hangover) is I didnt get to as
many new (to me) bands as I wanted to - as Alex mentioned "We might as
well be in Chicago"

You didn't miss much, but the Peter Rowan/Tony Rice show Saturday night
was really fine. Marred only by the MC who came on right after the
encore to tell us that Hot Rize picker Charles Sawtelle was off life
support. But everything before that (including Danny Barnes' opening
set) was mighty good. Best part: No Deadheads, who swarm Rowan's Boston
shows.

One thing that surprises me was that NO ONE went to see Terry Allen,
who performs a *little* more often than Tom Waits. If I'd gone, that
would have been the only must-see show. But Steve will post tour plans,
I know...

Bob




Re: Tom Waits Meets Matt Cook at SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread cwilson

 wanted briefly to respond to a few of Barry's comments:

I seemed to be the only one I could find anywhere who'd actually seen him 
perform before--on the Penn campus in Philadelphia some 25 years ago, 

Really? Nobody saw the Big Time tour? The Waits show was the first memorable 
event after I moved to Montreal 11 years ago, in my first year of 
university. And it was rather like an omen - seeing him at an old theatre 
house in Outremont, a gorgeous, transcendent, hilarious show that I can 
still vividly recall to this day (and there ain't that many of those, altho 
I suppose I drank slower in those days) - that I was in the right place. I 
woulda assumed a lot of people saw that tour (and the subsequent movie), 
since it was very large-scale by Waits standards.

On a more contentious note:
I think this show also proves that it's generated some myths--the biggest 
being that Waits' extraordinary music had some drastic sea change when he 
shifted labels, which puts him in a sort of gravelly post-modern and hiphop 
mode which makes him one OK "boomer' performer for the alt. generation.

Note Barry's sarcasm here. But that aside: While I agree completely with 
Barry that the "Asylum Years" were full of fantastic music, much of it as 
interesting and creative etc. as anything he's done since, it's no myth at 
all that Swordfishtrombones (his first Island album) was a dramatic shift. It 
was presaged by some of the material on Heartattack  Vine and even on Blue 
Valentines, where there was a harder-edged blues and rock influence than 
anything on his previous work. But the dramatic move away from the piano as 
anything but an occasional (and even incidental) part of his sound, the 
abandonment of orchestral arrangements, the shift from songs that had 
identifiable stories to ones that tended towards much more pure imagery (this 
was more a shift in emphasis than in style overall, I agree), and 
*especially* his use of non-Western rhythms and avant-garde sounds and 
homemade instruments and further-out singing styles - all did add up to 
something truly new, a genre unto itself, as if 70s Waits had gone through 
Cronenberg's transporter (a la The Fly) with Captain Beefheart (and of course 
Harry Partch).

And while that may have endeared him to younger fans who wouldn't have 
cottoned to the jazz-ballad/bebop stylings, it also turned off a lot of older 
fans. I remember when I was about 14 and Swordfishtrombones came out, I 
dropped by my local bookstore, run by a 36-ish Waits fan. He had the album, I 
didn't yet. He said he thought it was "totally devoid of Waitsian emotion." 
Damn, I thought, that's awful. Went out, bought it anyway - the cover art 
made it impossible to resist. Dropped the needle (wow, needle) and 
"Underground" - whose main sound is brake drum and clanging pipes - started 
up, and my head exploded. And that was the first time I really believed in a 
generation gap.

(Although of course later I met many older fans who loved the new work, too, 
so perhaps I unbelieved it eventually.)

All that said: Damn, I'm jealous of you SXSW bastards. I hope to hell Mule 
Variations is followed by a tour. I attended a listening party for it held by 
Epitaph here last week, and it sounds absolutely superb.

CarlW.



SXSW report (long)

1999-03-23 Thread JimCat

My SXSW report

Wednesday:
Wake up at 3:30 a.m., drive to Syracuse, catch flight to Austin. Arrive at
noon, check into Hotel, get badge at Convention Center, and walk down 6th St.
Immediately run into Hayseed (he’s hard to miss). We had dinner (I had just
interviewed him for a feature, now posted on the milesofmusic.com web site).
After dinner, leave restaurant, immediately run into Don Yates, in Walser cap
(not THE Walser cap, tho) and Johnny Dowd t-shirt, and Deborah Malarek.

Head to Liberty Lunch to see Jim Roll (excellent set), then mosey by Austin
Music Awards to catch Reckless Kelly, who are best described in two words:
Country Hootie. They made guest Joe Ely seem boring, which I thought was an
impossibility. (Joe sang two songs, You Ain’t Going Nowhere and one of his own
about Honky Tonkin, but the one from Live Shots). 

Try to get into Jeff Beck’s show, get shut out, catch Rubinchik’s Orchestyr,
who played trad. klezmer. Head home, collapse with exhaustion.

Thursday:
Lucinda gives keynote address, advising persistance in the music biz. Also
reveals one of her early songs appeared on a porn movie soundtrack (All
American Girls in Heat, Pt II, for those keeping score), and plays several
solo acoustic songs. It was interesting to hear “Right In Time” in that
format.

Head to panel discussion on Hank Williams. Most fascinating aspect was
contributed by Greil Marcus, who talked about a movie that fancifully
described the last show Hank played. Bill Lister also told a funny story about
the making of Hank Jr.’s “There’s a Tear in My Beer.” Then to the songwriting
panel with Jim Lauderdale, Kelly Willis, Bruce Robison, and Jon Dee Graham.
Pretty good, but no revelations. Realize it’s too late to hit Cherilyn’s BBQ.
Bummer

Thursday night, in midst of huge downpour, head to Broken Spoke to see
personal fave Monte Warden, who played most of the songs from his new CD out
on Asylum. He had a really good band, including guest James Intveld on
keyboards. After that, Barry and I headed to Continental Club in hopes of
catching Mike Ness. We stood outside in line while it rained and heard
Intveld’s fine set. We were almost in the door when they stopped letting
people in, so we left. We found out later that the fire marshalls had cleared
the club of everyone, and only let some people back in. Barry and I head to
Jazz Bon Temps, where we dined to the dulcet blues of WC Clark.

head upstairs to see Jon Dee Graham, then across the street to see Wanda
Jackson. Barry stays in line, I head back to catch Shaver (not a bad
alternative). Billy Joe looks like Nick Nolte. I stay for half his set
(leaving before those drum set problems) and head back for another try at
Wanda. Get in time to hear her and Henhouse do Let’s Have a Party. She’s still
in great voice! Head home, collapse with exhaustion.


Friday:
Arrive at Convention Center at noon. Am immediately shanghaighed by Stacey
Taylor, who needs someone to serve on the country demo listening panel.
Proceed to fill in for no-shows Dale Watson and Broken Spoke owner James White
(the latter had plumbing problems at home, the former just didn’t show up).
Most demos were competent and fell into one of the many existing country radio
formats-i.e., power ballad, rocker, etc. Stacey and I tried to say something
nice about each one, even though both of us don’t really like mainstream
country.

Head to Bloodshot party at Yard Dog, just in time to miss the Blacks (who I
don’t really like) and catch Neko Case (who I adore). Leave after Neko’s set
due to claustrophia induced by the awning over the gallery’s back yard. Head
to Continental Club for rumored Ronnie Dawson CD release party, which turns
out to have been the previous day. Instead, buy live Ronnie Dawson CD recorded
and sold only at the club. After that, it was  couple more stabs at panel-
going, including the Sinatra discussion (Cristgau read his obit that was
published in Details last year).

Later walk to Waterloo Records to see Monte Warden’s instore set. Didn’t
realize store was so far from convention, but tired of paying cab fares to get
everywhere. Price: sore feet and shoulders.

Friday night:
Head to Liberty Lunch to see Guy Clark, who played an excellent set. My
hometown friends Donna the Buffalo was next doing their usual thing, although
they were nearly tossed off the stage for not ending their set on time

See some of Terry Allen’s set, then head out to see Kim Lenz and Lou Ann
Barton, return to Liberty Lunch just in time to hear Terry Allen had Marcia
Ball, David Byrne and Guy Clark join him onstage for Gimme A Ride to Heaven,
Boy (which I formerly knew as “Jesus Was A Hitchiker,” as covered by Joe Ely)

Tried to get in Lucinda’ show, but barred because I had a camera with me. Head
back to Liberty Lunch to catch Gatemouth Brown’s set. After that, my feet
finally gave out, causing me to miss the Pumpskully set. I was intrigued that
a band would name itself after lascivious act from the X-Files.


Saturday

Re: SXSW report (long)

1999-03-23 Thread Debnumbers

In a message dated 3/23/99 5:34:34 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:

 Head to Liberty Lunch to see Jim Roll (excellent set), 

That's who I saw at Liberty Lunch that I really liked.  Thanks Jim, I saw you
there too didn't I?



Re: Tom Waits Meets Matt Cook at SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread Jon E. Johnson

 I remember when I was running a record store there was a writer in
his mid-50s named Richard who used to come in once in a while.  He had
been out of the music scene for quite a few years and came in
occasionally to pick my brain and get musical suggestions.  It was around
this time that Asylum was reissuing Waits' early albums, so I suggested
that he pick up the reissue of "Small Change," which has long been my
favorite of the Asylum-era records.  So he bought it and took off.  A
couple of hours later I had gone downstairs to get a soda and when I came
back up my assistant manager told me that Richard had called.  "No
foolin'?  What'd he want?"  "He said 'Fucking awesome' and that he was
coming right back down to buy everything else we had by Tom Waits."  Sure
enough, he cleaned us out an hour later.  Guess he really liked "Tom
Traubert's Blues."
Wasted and wounded...
Jon Johnson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Wollaston, Massachusetts



sxsw

1999-03-23 Thread Jacob London


Well, I made it back. As usual, it was a great time. But this year, I'd
say it had as much to do with the people as the music. I stayed at the
Austin Motel, which was basically P2 central. It was great meeting
everyone and reconnecting with a few folks (like Neil Weiss, who I met
last year). Big thanks to Laura Fowler for scoring my wristband and mixing
a hell of a margarita. What a great crew of people all these P2ers are. 
And so great to finally put faces with names. I'd be more specific here,
but I met so many folks I'm sure I'm gonna miss some. Big props to Meshel
and CK, who drove my sorry ass around to a couple of places. Also thanks
to Wynn for taking me and Steve M back from Laura's. That was very cool.
Sorry I didn't have the stamina to party all night with people on Friday
back at the Motel. I got started a little too early in the day for that.
It's hard to keep it going when you've been drinking since one in the
afternoon (not all of us are blessed with Alex's constitution).

Anyway, on the music front there was some good stuff--although I think I'd
have to agree with those commentators who have said that this year was a
little thinner than years past. Nevertheless I saw some really good stuff.

Peak experience: Dave Schramm (sp?) He only played for twenty minutes at
the Checkered Past bbque, but this was easily the best thing I saw at the
whole conference. I wish he could have played a full set. A couple of his
solos literally brought tears to my eyes. I've been hearing about this guy
for a long time from some of my NYC friends. I'm just a sucker for the
territory he was mining: melodic pop songs and guitar that somehow
combines elements of my favorites (Thompson, Neil, Lloyd, Verlaine, etc.).
What a treat. And the band weren't bad either.

Other cool stuff: 

* I also enjoyed the hell out of Drew,the steel dude from the Silos. He
was great in everything I saw him in (Jim Roll, Silos, etc). 

* Built to Spill at the Copper Tank. This was a surprise unannounced show. 
Really good. Were I 22 instead of 35, this would probably have been a
religous experience for me. As it stands, it was just a hell of a good
show. This band is probably the best thing going in the alternarock arena
right now.

* Paul Burch: This was really good. I liked him last year at the ND party,
and there was more of the same smooth old country at his showcase this
year.

* Meat Purveyors: Saw them at the P2 BBque. They kick it hard. And that
Mando player is a monster. This band just keeps getting better.

*Neko: Really first rate show, especially given that it was like the
fourth show this particular line-up had played together. Really liked the
Mike Ireland dude on guitar.

*Mark Rubin's Klezmer band: First rate

*Wayne Hancock at Under the Sun: great as always.

*Joe Henry: Waterloo Records. Enjoyed this for sure.

There's more I'm sure, but I'm forgetting. I was the Zen Warrior this
year, just sort of going wherever the flow of the day took me. But it was
fun and great to meet everyone. Hope to see you again some time.

Jake


Jake London





Re: Tom Waits Meets Matt Cook at SXSW

1999-03-23 Thread Barry Mazor

Carl's no doubt right that for every one I've heard dismiss the Early Waits
in this nabe (such is the East Village), there probably is somebody else
out there who never got past the evolution/revolution (you call it) in the
music over time.  I've got a strong suspicion  (and find it interesting
BTW) that on P2 MOST of us would probably  go for both ends of
Waits'material, for the simple reason that the twang interest leads us to
an interest in traditional songmaking--but the at least  usually
experimental openness around here leaves ears open to what's come up since.

As to: " the dramatic move away from the piano as anything but an
occasional (and even incidental) part of his sound"...

that's part of what I was referring to, Carl, in how seeing his latest
incarnation live show would tend to show the continuities in his efforts
over the discontinuities...In fact, Waits performed a number of
post-swordfish (guess that's the password!) songs solo at the piano now,
complete with patter, in breaks from the very cool band stuff--and even
"The Heart of Saturday Night" cause it was, after all, Saturday Night.  I
know it all added up to something excellent.

Anyway..I hope lots of people get a chance to see and hear this this
time--especially since so many--and not just those in their early 20s--seem
never to have caught them like us lucky ones did.

Barry M.




SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Bill Silvers

I went to SXSW for the first time this past week. It was every bit as
exciting, challenging and exasperating as I'd always read it was, but I'm
looking forward to a repeat appearance. 
Rather than give my entire weekend's review, (which is why there's a fluff
list) 
just thought I'd mention some highlights and not-so-highlights:

HIGHLIGHTS

-Jim Roll with the Silos Wednesday night- first show I saw, and what a good
start. Jim's already got great songs, but it was a treat to hear those
songs with that group of musicians. That lap steel player blew me away.

-Cherilyn's P2 BBQ- Great afternoon of music and socializing. I met some
folks from the list who I didn't know well, or at all, and that was cool.
Just wish we'd run into each other again. Cherilyn is a force of nature.

-Kim Richey at Wateloo Brewing Company- a very welcome tonic after the
evening's earlier disappointments. Hope a new record hits the streets this
year.

-The Bloodshot party- Lotsa great music, but the Meat Purveyors and Waco
Brothers stole the show. It was great to see Neko Case for the first time,
though the sound problems were disappointing. When did Mike Lemon start
playing with her and is it a "permanent" thing?

-Hillbilly Idol- did a great in-store at Cheapo Records Friday afternoon. I
love these guys and hope they find the audience they deserve.

-Dale Watson- at Under The Sun Friday afternoon. My first time seeing him
and it won't be the last. I particularly liked his pedal steel player's work.

-Heather Myles/Rosie Flores at the Continental Club- seeing Heather Myles
was a priority for me and she didn't disappoint- great band and
near-perfect renditions of the songs- almost all of HIGHWAYS, though she
changed the set list and added "The Other Side Of Town". Terrific. Rosie
Flores was great of course, and she was joined onstage by Radney Foster for
a song, then by Wanda Jackson! Great stuff.

-I got to Under The Sun too late to see but 3 songs of the Hollisters set,
but loved those three. Came back at 7 to see Wayne the Train Hancock, who
I'd also never seen before. He was joined by Biller and Wakefield, though I
expect his fine band would have sounded plenty good on their own. Dynamite
set.

-Neko got a sound system that found her voice Saturday night, and she was
super. I heard more unreserved female admiration for her than anybody else
all weekend. g The Wacos didn't sound quite as good as they had at
Friday's party, IMO. WHO CARES?! They tore the fucking roof off the sucker!
The floor was vibrating as though electrified. The speakers were swaying.
It was wonderful.

DISAPPOINTMENTS-
-Thursday night we arrived at Stubb's just in time to see Wayne The Train
finish his set, which had started at 7 rather than the advertised 8PM. Then
it started raining, hard. We got pretty drenched trying to get indoors,
where it was packed. We tried to wait out the storm, to no avail. I heard
music start back up outdoors and saw a nice show from Radney Foster, though
I got soaked again in the process. Went back inside and finally got some
dinner, 2 hours after we'd put in a reservation. Great company, drag drag
drag scene.

-"Wristbands go to the back of the line and wait. BADGES? DO WE HAVE ANY
MORE BADGES NEEDING ADMITTANCE?" (15 minutes later after 30 or 40 badges
have entered the already packed venue the music starts and they still won't
let you in.)

Ah well. Reckon that's enough for now. It was a great time, and I need to
go back to sleep now. g

b.s.

 
"The truth ain't always what we need, sometimes we need to hear a beautiful
lie." -Bill Lloyd




Re: SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Meshel

It was great to see Neko Case for the first time,
though the sound problems were disappointing. When did Mike Lemon start
playing with her and is it a "permanent" thing?

this was their fourth gig together, and he's really excited about it.  It's
permanent as much as any gig in this crazy world is...

meshel

(Mike's formerly Mike Ireland's excellent guitarist, now pursuing other things)



SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Jim_Caligiuri

Here's my report or most of what I remember:
Best sets: Jim Roll backed by the Silos on Wedneday, Fred Eaglesmith
Saturday afternoon at the Continental, the Schramms at Yarddog, Beaver
Nelson in my living room Tuesday
MVP: Walter Salas-Humara (who stole the award from Jonboy) for playing with
at least four bands
Best P2 moment: Melissa Garland proudly showing me her Zippy the Pinhead
tatoo at the BBQ
Good conversations with the Weiss Brothers, separately of course g
The Alt.country panel was a waste of time. No substance, too much whining,
Matt Eskey for President
The Meat Purveyors on stage with the Pine Valley Cosmonauts
Hillbilly Idol on the radio. Great guys, too.
The Flatirons vocalist was a sultry delight.
Too much beer, not enough bourbon,
The Fastball show was a celebration, the Gourds still suck though. (sorry
Laura).
Wynn Harris ROCKS!
Jacknife's SXSW For Dummies.
The one truly amazing thing is how many of you folks I saw on a regular
basis. Great minds think alike (as Rebecca said).
Thanks y'all for comin by. See ya at Twangfest and remember if you're now
thinking of moving to Austin, be sure to visit in August first.
Jim, still smilin' still yawnin'




Re: SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Wynn Harris


What I remember, by Wynn Harris


What, where, who???  Don who?


Only kidding.

Hanging out with a bunch of P2ers for the first time, really, and having a
blast.  For a bunch of twang geeks, we sure know how to have a good
freakin' time!

Oh and then there was the music.

Hadacol, Jim Roll, Continental Drifters, Chip Robinson solo, Paul Burch,
Silos, jesus, there was so much and so little time...

CISCO, Cisco, Cisco, Beaver Nelson, Hazledine - boy that ND party rocked,
Alejandro at the Taco Express, the Yard Dog rules!  Ted Roddy at the Broken
Spoke, the Doolittle party with Say ZUZU and Todd Thibaud, the Blueground
Undergrass show at Maggie Mae's.

dissapointments: Freakwater, bad room and Reckless Kelly at the AMA -was
Steve Earle there?  I don't think so.

However, my all time favorite gig was the Brooders.  They rule  It's
good to see Randy and Michael back on stage.

BTW, smilin' Jim, you rock too and throw a GREAT party!  You'll never be
able to get out of it now.g





Re: SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Melissa A. Garland

Best P2 moment: Melissa Garland proudly showing me her Zippy the Pinhead tatoo at 
the BBQ

As a lurker, I am happy to have finally contributed something useful to
the list.  Now I feel the hangover was worth it.

melissa



The Brooders (was:Re: SXSW)

1999-03-22 Thread Meshel

Michael Hall and Randy Franklin

what band were they in previously?

meshel
n'vegas



Tom Waits at SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Bill Silvers

For anybody jealous of the P2 SXSW types, this was the event of the event,
and I didn't hear about any of us getting in for it. Step up and testify if
you did...

Tom Waits Previews New
 Album In Rare Show

 Troubadour's concert was hottest ticket at South by
 Southwest. 

 Senior Writer Gil Kaufman reports: 

 AUSTIN, Texas -- "Where you been, Tom?" a woman yelled
 near the end of Tom Waits' two-hour show at the Paramount
 Theater in the early morning hours Sunday.

 The grizzled singer tilted his head and croaked, "I been in
 traffic school. I had a lot of tickets. It adds up,
believe me."

 Waits then joked about getting a degree in parallel
parking and got back to work, bowing his
 head down by his knees and smacking his hands together to
count off one of his newer tunes,
 "Hold On."

 Every year the South by Southwest Music Conference, an
annual confab of music business
 professionals and young bands, produces a bona-fide
must-see show. Last year, it was a rare
 club gig by guitar terrorists Sonic Youth; this year,
troubadour Waits upped the ante with one
 of his only live performances of this decade. 

  Dressed in a dark denim jacket and pants, a
white undershirt and crumpled
  brown fedora, the raspy-voiced singer was
his quintessential, nonchalant self
  during the show, during which he dipped into
his catalog of gut-bucket blues
  and Tin Pin Alley-like ballads and previewed
three songs from his upcoming
  Epitaph Records debut, Mule Variations (due
April 27).

  Hundreds of fans, some of whom you might
have heard of, lined up outside
  the ornate old theater on Congress Avenue as
early as 4:30 a.m. Saturday
  hoping to score one of South by Southwest's
hottest tickets.

  At the front of the line was 28-year-old
Shane Carbonneau, of Austin, who
  said he had to literally beg, borrow and lie
to get in. "I had to borrow my
  friend's [festival] badge, sneak into the
convention center and tell a really
 elaborate story to get this ticket," Carbonneau said.

 Waiting behind Carbonneau on the cold concrete was Mark
Linkous, frontman of the
 experimental Virginia rock band Sparklehorse. "I'm a huge
fan of Tom," Linkous said. "I'm
 really looking forward to this."

 Linkous did, it should be noted, have more than the usual
fan interest in the show. He said he
 was anxious to meet up with Waits later, hoping to
determine that the troubadour had
 completed recording his part for a song on Sparklehorse's
next album.

 Waits took the stage just after midnight, waltzing to the
microphone as if he'd always been
 there. He kicked his left leg like a mule and gripped the
microphone stand with both hands as
 if trying to choke it.

 Accompanied by a four-piece band that included Beck
guitarist Smokey Hormel, Waits
 charmed the rapt audience with such chestnuts as the
clattering "16 Shells From a
 Thirty-Ought Six" (RealAudio excerpt) (from 1983's
Swordfishtrombones) and the tender
 ballad "(Looking for) The Heart of Saturday Night" (from
1974's The Heart of Saturday Night).

 Although the show was packed with such whoop-inducing
Waits staples as "Downtown
 Train," "Temptation" and "Heart Attack and Vine," the
centerpiece of the show was the new
 "Filipino Box Spring Hog," a foot-stomping number from
Mule Variations.

 Waits started the song by squeezing out a ragged, a
cappella howl; Hormel slowly weaved his
 way in with a subtle wah-wah guitar accompaniment. On
Waits' order, drummer Stephen
 Hodges leapt into the mix with a booming, hip-hop-like
backbeat, giving the ragged number
 the feel of a gritty front-porch blues jam.

 Grinding out his vocals in his trademark throaty bellow,
Waits did his best James Brown
 imitation near song's end, suddenly pointing to random
band members to give them the
 spotlight. The instant crowd favorite ended with Waits
telescoping a spectral, far-away voice
 through his cupped hands.

 Almost a

Danlee2's SXSW '99

1999-03-22 Thread Danlee2

Holy shit, I got mentioned in a Marie Arsenault post...my life is
over! g  Man...whatta time.  Despite all concerns voiced hereabouts (and
internally-I hadn't been back to SXSW since '91), it was very worth the trip.
Warning; this is a long, sickeningly self-indulgent post.  I just hope it's
kind of something folks who didn't get to go would want to read.  To help in
the deletion/skimming decision g, a quick run down of the contents w/in;

Thursday nite: Eaglesmith-Buckner/ Jon Dee Graham-Billy Joe Shaver.  
Friday; Bloodshot Party (Waco Brothers)/ Those Bastard Souls-Grandaddy-Mercury
Rev-Sparklehorse-Flaming Lips/ P2 
 after party.  
Saturday; ND-Miles of Music Broken Spoke Party/ Gourds  Guided By
Voices@Waterloo Park/ Bloodshot Showcase
 w/ Trailer Bride-The Blacks-Neko Case-Grievous Angels-Waco Brothers
also; funny quotes throughout, food reviews (very short g), adjective "cool"
typed many times, no charge, etc. etc. etc..(;-))

 Thursday; Got in Friday 7:30ish.  Black sheets of rain.  Got lost in
Austin several times, even tho I've been there many times years before.  Tried
to go to Eaglesmith-Buckner first @ Caucus Club and then run over to see
Shaver at Jazz Bon Temps.  As a wristband holder and non-bizzer, Eaglesmith-
Buckner was the only show all week I could not get into, even tho badge
holders were starting to joust for position-an uneasy beginning what with some
of the "stay away if you're not in the industry warnings" I'd heard.  No
problem tho; I desperately wanted to see Billy Joe Shaver who I never had
before, so I just headed to Jazz Bon Temps on 6th St. straightaway.  

Smart decision.  Very cool and spacious club, no problem getting in, Jon
Dee Graham was solid as an opener for Shaver, even tho I'd never heard his
stuff.   Funny quote was "Buy my new CD so I can stop painting houses!".
excellent set.  Shaver took stage 1ish and for the first 30 minutes anyway,
I'll swear he just picked up the Good Book of hard tonk and wrote several new
chapters, I mean I was just standing there with a huge grin the whole time.
Called up 2 of Johnny Cash's kids, John Carter Cash and one of the daughters
(not Roseanne) to sing "Georgia on A Fast Train", I think it was.  Set
eventually fell apart a bit due to a drum solo (?) and sound problems, but
still ended strongly with "You Can't Beat Jesus Christ", I think.  

   And man oh man, Eddie Shaver is a guitar gawd.  I'd heard he was good
but I meantotellya...he was damn good.  Kind of combines best of SRV's throaty
strat sound with a dirty slide, with a bit of  metal and Cali country sound as
well.  Great quotes from Billie Joe during a tuning break; "We tune up just to
prove we're country" (which was riotous).  Also said he had lost a '29 Martin
(I think?) to Dickey Betts, which Billie Joe said he "could not return because
his uncle has cancer".(;-)).  Sounds kinda cheesy but the thing that kept
running through my mind was "man, if Billie Joe Shaver ain't Texas I don't
know what is".  I was a very a happy man.  SXSW got off to a very solid
start.

 Friday; Bloodshot Party, 3-6ish.  Wandered in, didn't know anyone right
away, started talking to a really cool chick from the aolND folder, Karen B.
and we luckily started to figger out who some of the ND folks were (if anyone
knows Karen's email addy please lemme know, you aol folk).  Met Linda Ray and
Jamie and her friend Kari, very cool.   Couldn't believe this party was set up
as cool as I'd heard it always was; just in back of a folk-art gallery, beer
everywhere (even tho I was too scared to start drinking that early g), etc.
etc.  Missed Neko Case's set, very pissed at self.  Other Bloodshot acts
sounded good, but nothing really starts til Wacos take stage.  Langford et.
al. joke around for a bit, demand alcohol, joke some more...then All hell
breaks loose.  Wacos are a band I'd always heard of but never seen.  Riotous.
I mean I thought the Bottlerockets were the best bar band in America, and I
probably still dobut I'd have to say it's up for grabs, even tho I think
the 'rockets have better songs overall.  Great time tho.  Best quote; Wacos
get Beatle Bob up on stage, Langford shouts "Sing a song you idiot!!!"
Fantastic.  And Bill is right, the Lonesome Bob-Waco collaboration on "Do You
Think About Me?" was searing...

  more Friday;  Despite many competing shows (Lucinda-REK vs. Walser 
Watson), I was a bit worried about getting twanged out over the long weekend
so I opted for the V2 records indie-alt.rock showcase at La Zona Rosa, with a
number of interesting bands I'd really never seen before and very much wanted
to.  I went very early about 8:45ish which turned out to be the *whole* key to
getting in, because by 9:30 it was no go for most folk, even wristbands.

  saw Those Bastard Souls, which some one told me have ex-members o

Re: Tom Waits at SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread marie arsenault



For anybody jealous of the P2 SXSW types, this was the event of the event,
and I didn't hear about any of us getting in for it. Step up and testify if
you did...

Barry Mazor and Slim both had tickets, I believe. I'm sure they'll testify
as soon as they recover. Didn't John Reide catch some of the Waits show
as well?

marie



Re: Danlee2's SXSW '99

1999-03-22 Thread

 
--

On Mon, 22 Mar 1999 18:44:25   Danlee2 wrote:
Serious cool stuff; while I'm gabbing away not paying 
attention, someone tells me to shut up and actually
watch what's going on stage; Lucinda Williams just 
strolling up and singing a song withContinental
Drifters?  I can't remember.  I was stunned. 

It was actually Hayseed that Lucinda jumped up to sing with, presumably because just 
before he launched into the tune he said that he was kind of hoarse and might need 
some help to hit the high notes.

After Doug Sahm got the gold record you mentioned, I was walking back to my pickup and 
passed Doug trying to stuff the thing (all wrapped in a plastic bag) into the trunk of 
his car!

Stephen Lee Canner
Austin, Texas



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SXSW (L-O-N-G)

1999-03-22 Thread JKellySC1

What a wild six days. I don't think I have ever had so much fun crammed into
one week in my life. My feet hurt, my back aches, I am sleep deprived, but so
full of great memories that it was worth every busy minute.

Smilin' Jim's party kicked it off in style, and I have to agree with the host
that Beaver Nelson ruled. He writes some killer songs, and his delivery was
awesome. I also though Anna Egge was a real good guitar player, even if her
tunes are a little folkie for my taste. It was great to meet a bunch of P2ers,
and who would have known that by Sunday we would all have spent so much time
together? Sick minds think alike, huh?

Wednesday started at the Continental with the Hot Club of Cowtown, who are so
damn good now I can't believe it. Then down to Threadgill's for Dale Watson,
who had James Intveld do a great set. I got to meet and hang with a childhood
hero, Sir Doug Sahm. We was hilarious, and when we found out we were both
rasslin' fans he invited me to go to San Antonio with him and Augie Meyers to
see some Mexican  rasslin' sometime. A run to the Broken Spoke found James
Hand doing some hard core honky tonk, and then Charlie Burton doing a great
set.

Thursday started with the P2 party at Cherlyn's, which was a blast. Highlights
included the Meat Purveyors, the ExHusbands, and Jim Roll with the Silos. That
night was rainy, so I settled at the Spoke and saw Monte Warden, who was
really good, and Charlie Robison, who I enjoyed a lot.

Friday was the Bloodshot party, where the ExHusbands did a great set, the
Grievous Angels and the Meat Purveyors were also on the money. That evening I
went to see Gwil Owen, and he was more rocking than I expected, but good
nevertheless. Then I stayed at The Checkered Past showcase for the night, and
saw 8 good acts! Highlights were the Old Joe Clarks, Paul Burch, and Lonesome
Bob.

Saturday totally ruled. I got a ticket for Tom Waits then spent the early part
of the afternoon at the Texicali Grill where Cornell Hurd played. Featured
guests included the above-mentioned Doug Sahm, and a 40 minute set by the
incredible Johnny Bush.  Then to the No Depression party, where I was
impressed with the Continental Drifters, Hayseed (who had Lucinda sing a duet
with him!), and Cisco. Saturday evening was the 1st Donald Linley benefit,
featuring Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Kimmie Rhodes, Guy Clark, Hal Ketchum, and
Robbie Fulks for one song. Rumors of the Flatlanders reunion and Willie Nelson
were abound, but I had to leave to go see TOM WAITS!!! 

Waits was the hot ticket of the fest, and he delivered an amazing career
retrospective. He was in rare form, with hilarious banter between songs, and a
fine band. It was worth the hassle to get the ticket, and one of those shows I
will never forget.

Sunday I almost cancelled to stay home and recuperate. I was exhausted, but
went to Michael Ullman's partry out near the lake, and had a pleasant restful
afternoon. Sunday night was the Pine Valley Cosmonauts' tribute to Bob Wills,
featuring many of the artists on the record. Kelly Hogan did 3 songs and in
spite of the flu she was fantastic. The show closed with Alejandro Escovedo's
orchestra, which was the best show I have ever seen him do. At one point there
were 15 musicians on the stage, including a 6 piece string section. Stunning.

These are my musical highlights, but I have to say that the most exciting part
was meeting so many P2 folks (and others). Our cybervillage is full of great
folks, and it was great to put faces with names. Thanks to all the people who
were so friendly, and I am not even gonna start naming y'all because I will
leave somebody out. 

I stayed home from work today, and now i'm bored. Let's do it again starting
tomorrow!!!

Slim - np: the new Big Sandy EP



Re: SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Jamie Swedberg

Hey everyone--

Well, I hate weaseldom as much as the next person (nearly had to kill some
businessy-looking chick who elbowed her way in front of me at a show and, by
way of explanation or excuse, flashed a goddamn BADGE at me). But oh my god,
what a great time. Dan Bentele said it best--if you show up at stuff early,
you'll have little or no trouble getting in to see what you want, and you'll
have a blast. It is WORTH IT, ten times over.

Let me see if I can remember what I did. Difficult, since I left my Master
Schedule in Kari's car...

Wednesday:
1. Jim Roll, backed by the Silos. Freaking incredible, great songs.
2. Brief and kinda boring time standing around in the Austin Music hall--saw
a few songs by David Garza (very Lenny Kravitz, imo), Kelly Willis, Bruce
Robison, Monte Warden.
3. Ted Roddy. Wow, extremely cool. And the Broken Spoke is definitely the
scene of scenes. Bill S. wanted to stay for Cornell Hurd, but others in the
party (including myself) were nearly unconscious from tiredness, and we went
back to the Austin Motel for some Z's.

Thursday:
1. Cherilyn's BBQ. Whole lot of fun. Saw a bunch of great bands, including
the Meat Purveyors, the Ex-Husbands, Langford with Kelly Hogan, the
Fencecutters, Jim Roll, the list goes on. Lots of dogs in attendance.
Kickass blackberry cobbler made by Jo Walston.
2. Robbie Fulks at Cheapo Records. What an outstanding performance, and
Robbie played all my requests! Every time I see him, I think he's outdone
himself, but it gets better and better.
3. Kim Richey. As usual, I hate the instrumentation on her songs (get that
damn synthesizer outta here!), but I really think she's a songwriting
genius. And her voice is s good live.
4. Abortive attempt to get in to see Wanda Jackson. Yeah right, "badges
only" by that late in the evening. This turned out to be serendipity,
because instead we saw...
5. The Tigerlilies. Everything Purcell has said is true. They're excellent,
a truly stunning guitar-pop band. They're also some of the nicest guys I've
had the privilege of meeting. I really wish more people had been there to
witness their set.

Friday:
1. Bloodshot BBQ. Saw Devil In A Woodpile, The Blacks (wow, love 'em!!!),
and my goddess Neko Case.
2. Left BBQ temporarily to see Hillbilly Idol at Cheapo. Definitely the
right decision. I love these guys, and the vibe was terrific.
3. Returned to Bloodshot BBQ just as the Meat Purveyors were striking their
first note. Whew, made it! They ruled. Also pogoed a little to the Waco
Brothers--sheer chaos in the tent.
4. Heard a little of Dale Watson as I shopped in Under the Sun. Bought a
waycool new-old-stock cowboy hat which allowed folks to spot me from afar
for the remainder of SxSW.
5. Hung out at Maggie Mae's the rest of the night and caught Split Lip
Rayfield (who seemed startled, yet really jazzed, to be playing to a
completely PACKED house), the Hicks (UGH! horrible!), Slobberbone (you know
how I adore them) and Pumpskully (insert little heavy metal "horns" here).
6. Had a bigass party outside our motel room, featuring a really fun
late-night bluegrass jam by members of Split Lip Rayfield, Slobberbone and
Hillbilly Idol. Remarkably, nobody in the motel complained. Lots of reckless
behavior, hope the photos come out  well. Got to bed at 6 am. Ouch.

Saturday:
1. Wandered in and out of the Checkered Past BBQ most of the day. Sunshine,
ahhh! Caught *great* sets by Lonesome Bob, the Old Joe Clarks, Hadacol, my
hero Paul Burch, Dave Schramm + friends (damn, what a guitarist he is...a
new fave of mine), and the Silos. Also saw Souled American and the Flatirons
but was not really that impressed with either.
2. Caught a couple of songs by Wayne Hancock before heading to...
3. The Bloodshot showcase! More great music from the Meat Purveyors, the
Blacks, Neko Case, and the Waco Bros. Didn't think much of Trailer Bride
(hmmm, seems like that woman was picking up a new instrument for each tune,
and upon closer examination, they were all tuned open to different keys so
she could just lay bars on them and "music" would play). Missed the Grievous
Angels because a bunch of us went across the street to see the Sadies. I
like both, so it was six of one, half dozen of the other.
4. Fell into coma.

To all of you who I saw there, it was GREAT to hang out with you. A special
hello to Dan Bentele, whom I'd been wanting to meet for some time; to Cherry
Lou and the Meat Pervs for the excellent party; to Smilin' Jim, our
wristband enabler (I owe you a batch of cookies or something, my friend); to
the Hockeysticks, whom I miss terribly since they moved away; and to my
awesome roommates (did everyone see Marie's Most Excellent Cowboy Shirt?).

Love you all, must wrap this up now.
xx
Jamie S.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.wavetech.net/~swedberg
http://www.usinternet.com/users/ndteegarden/bheaters




Tom Waits Meets Matt Cook at SXSW

1999-03-22 Thread Barry Mazor

Thought that title would get your attention..

Yes--I saw Tom Waits, as did  Matt Cook, Slim Chance Kelly (as he's told
ya), Jim Catalano and Tony Renner..there may have been more P2ers in there
some place...Mr. Roy Kasten. making a completely unexpected appearance at
SXSW, offered me 40 bucks and a Bob Dylan cigarette lighter for the Waits
ticket, but I don't have any Bob Dylan cigarettes, so it was no go...

Rather than repeat the well-desreved raves posted..I'll offer up .some
impressions and thoughts on the Waits show..which sure did become the topic
of the week.  The man has proven to have a tremendous cross-generational
pull!

I seemed to be the only one I could find anywhere who'd actually seen him
perform before--on the Penn campus in Philadelphia some 25 years ago,
opening for Maria Muldaur and the Benny Carter big band...and he was
singing Ol' 55 and Shiver Me Timbers, with just the first two still
semi-obscure albums out...Wait's self-imposed concert exile at 8 years
minus a charity appearance or two is in fact now as long as Dylan's '66-'74
stretch--so I know well what it's like for fans who've come along  without
any chance to see him.

I think this show also proves that it's generated some myths--the biggest
being that Waits' extraordinary music had some drastic sea change when he
shifted labels, which puts him in a sort of gravelly post-modern and hiphop
mode which makes him one OK "boomer' performer for the alt. generation.
Only thing is--this performance was extraordinarily LIKE what he's always
done--mopey to bizarre to heartrending songs, broken up by deadpan beatnik
comedy raps, and all terribly endearing and unique and rhythmic. Those who
dismiss the "Asylum Years" work oughta listen again--cause it strikes me
more than ever now as one continuing, growing body of work that's often
brilliant.

What did evolve over the years--partly cause he uses a swell band rather
than sticking with the pure piano/lounge singer approach (he still did that
too Saturday night)--is pay a whole lot more attention to the snippets of
sounds in a line and the sound of the words rather than their conventional,
literal meaning... Now he bends half way down to the floor, punches the
rhythm with his lil fist till they get in the groove, and starts to go--the
words are often incantations, not narratives

Did I mention that in the audience I spotted The Gourds (Matt Cook, who
apparently likes the Gourds somewhat, ihad just come back with them from
shooting video of their appearance in the Park)..The Silos, and Alejandro
Escovedo were on hand too.  I'm sure there are other performers there, but
it's interesting to see..isn't it... that THESE folks see something vital
to attend in this Waits show..I just bet that Beck gets this guy too.

 I'd suggests that somebody like Smilin' Jim (known not to love those
Gourds but asking what it IS with them to a fan like me) would find  a way
into their often amazing music--as shown on their very good new disc-- by
considering that Tom Waits connection...the sounds of the words matter,  as
Lucinda might say, the rhythm and the blues of 'em,  the bits and pieces
constructed for emotional meaning and body thumping meaning--something far
removed, of course, from lyrics in a good twang song. It's something else.

As I was saying, I heard and saw an amazing continuity in Tom Waits show,
laughs, smiles and tears...and if that goes all the way back to his first
hits, as delivered by those very un-alt Eagles and Bette Midler fergodsake,
so be it. ...I hope he'll take up the audience's challenge to get the heck
back on tour so you can see and hear this too.  Even if there's no twang
content!

 So whooa,, that's more than enough now...more on SXSW in general when I
get the chance and see what others report wiothout my help!  (including
being stuck outside the door of the Continental, watching James Inteveld in
the downpour..just before then police showed up to break up the fire law
busting crowd waiting to see Social Distortion's Mike Ness perform
rockabillyI saw an electrifying  Wanda Jackson with  Rosie Flores,
Marcia Ball and more instead, avoding the 2-hour Ness wait!)

Thans to all the P2ers there for being so nice...as always.

Barry M.




Thanks == Re: SXSW (L-O-N-G)

1999-03-22 Thread KATIEJOM

Hi all,

Continued thanks for all those P2ers sharing SXSW stories with "the less
fortunate."  Sounds like a great time was had by all.

The Tom Waits' clips have also been much appreciated.  He's been one of my
favorites for over 20yrs.  Sounds like he's gotten even better with age.

During the Oscars, I was surprised to hear that Tom and his wife, Kathleen,
worked on the music for "Bunny," an animated feature.  Yet another reason to
spend more money!

Kate



Re: The Brooders (was:Re: SXSW)

1999-03-22 Thread Jim Fagan

 
 Michael Hall and Randy Franklin
 
 what band were they in previously?

Austin's The Wild Seeds, which also had Kris McKay, and
Fastball drummer Joey Shuffield.

I love Mud, Lies, and Shame, their only release to make it
on CD.

 
 meshel
 n'vegas
 
 


-- 
Jim Fagan| AIX Build Architecture and Integration  | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Internal T/L 678-2458 | External (512) 838-2458 | Austin, Texas| fagan@austin



Re: Danlee2's SXSW '99

1999-03-22 Thread Debnumbers

In a message dated 3/22/99 6:44:46 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:

 while I'm gabbing away not paying attention, someone
 tells me to shut up and actually watch what's going on stage; Lucinda
Williams
 just strolling up and singing a song with 

That would be Hayseed



CMR Thursday 18th March: An A-Z of the SXSW '99

1999-03-21 Thread Bob Paterson

Bob Paterson's The Singer Songwriter Show:
An A-Z of the SXSW '99
Country Music Radio for Europe
Thursday 18th March 1999
 
 
Bad Livers - I'm Convicted ["Industry and Thrift", Sugar Hill 1998]
segue
Cindy Lee Berryhill - Jane and John ["Straight Outta Marysville", Demon
Records 1996]

Calexico - The Ride (Pt.2) [CD Single, City Slang 1999]
segue
Neko Case  Her Boyfriends - Honky Tonk Hiccups ["The Virginian",
Bloodshot Records 1998]

Devil In A Woodpile - Steel Guitar Rag ["Devil In A Woodpile", Bloodshot
Records 1998]

Stacey Earle - Simple Gearle ["Simple Gearle", Gearle Records 1998]
segue
Ana Egge - Dakota ["River Under The Road", Lazy S.O.B. Recordings 1997]
segue
Rosie Flores - Who's Gonna Fix It Now ["Dance Hall Dreams", Rounder
Records 1999]

Jon Dee Graham  - Faithless ["Escape From Monster Island", Glitterhouse
Records 1998]

Patty Griffin - Goodbye ["Flaming Red", AM Records 1998]

Hank Dogs - Quality Time ["Bareback", Hannibal Records 1998]

Honey Well - Go Where You Want [Demo, Tongue  Groove Productions 1998]

The Cornell Hurd Band - 7 Cups Of Coffee 14 Cigarettes ["Jukebox
Cowboy", Vinyl Junkie Records 1997]
segue
Robert Earl Keen - Down That Dusty Trail [CD Single, Arista 1998]

The Kennedys - The Fire  The Rose ["Angel Fire", Philo 1998]
segue
Jim Lauderdale - You're Tempting Me ["Whisper", BNA 1998]

Lynn Miles - Anywhere ["Night In A Strange Town", Philo 1998]
segue
Kim Richey - The Lonesome Side Of Town ["Bitter Sweet", Mercury Records
1997]

Jim Roll - The Fall ["Ready To Hang", One Man Clapping Records 1998]

Darden Smith - Levée Song ["Little Victories", Columbia 1993]
segue
Those Magnificent Men - What Kind Of Country Is This? ["What Kind Of
Country Is This?", Way Out West 1998]

Greg Trooper - Lightning Bug ["Popular Demons", Koch Records 1998]

Lucinda Williams - Crescent City ["Lucinda Williams", Koch International
Re-Issue 1998]

-- 
Bob Paterson
59 Miranda Road
London
N19 3RA

http://www.ursasoft.com/bob

Current projects: CMR DJ (Thursday nights 10-12)
  Bob Harris Show on Radio 2 (Researcher)
  Promoter at The Spitz Venue, London
  



** Thanks For the SXSW Updates! **

1999-03-20 Thread KATIEJOM

BIG thanks to all who have been providing SXSW reports "from the field."  Have
been enjoying all of them.  Keep 'em comin!!

Any word on Cisco yet??  He had to have been great!

Kate



Re: ** Thanks For the SXSW Updates! **

1999-03-20 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 3/20/99 8:09:44 AM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:

 Any word on Cisco yet??  He had to have been great! 

cisco is playing this afternoon at the No Depression/Miles of Music party
cohosted our own Weiss brothers. Hayseed is also on the bill. Before that
Cornell Hurd is hosting a big bash at Texicali Grill, with the Hollisters,
Ruthie, Hank Thompson and Johnny Bush. Simultaneously there are shows at Yard
Dog - Checkered Past records party, and the Green Mesquite - lots of Chicago
artists.

Tickets are being distibuted at 10:45AM for Tom Waits' first performance in 8
years. I am outa here.

Choices. ACK!!!

Slim - a study in sleep deprivation

PS: I LOVE Australian women!



eerie quiet called SXSW

1999-03-20 Thread Mike Hays



Unbelievable whatdifference a bunch of P2ers at 
SXSW can make.
Mike Hayshttp://www.TwangCast.com TM 
RealCountry 24 X 7 Please Visit Then let us know what you 
think!

Mike Hays www.MikeHays.RealCountry.netFor 
the best country artist web hosting, www.RealCountry.net


Re: eerie quiet called SXSW

1999-03-20 Thread Masonsod

In a message dated 3/20/99 10:24:50 PM !!!First Boot!!!,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 Unbelievable what difference a bunch of P2ers at SXSW can make.
 Mike Hays
  
Yeah, but in a way, it's kinda nice.  Sort of like sittin' on the back porch
with your guitar and a bottle of Southern Comfort.

Mitch Matthews
Gravel Train/Sunken Road



re: Shaver (and SXSW)

1999-03-20 Thread Joyce Homan



Just had to agree that the Shaver show has been my highlight of SXSW, as 
well.  (The Lonesome Bob show at Scholz Garden, with the Wacos jumping 
on stage to help out, is a close second.)  Did I mention Freakwater at 
the Green Mesquite?  Sublime.

Looking forward to Robbie Fulks and the Bottle Rockets tonight...

Joyce
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com



Re: Shaver (and SXSW)

1999-03-20 Thread JKellySC1

My highlight so far has to be Doug Sahm and Johnny Bush performing in the
Texicali Grill parking lot today with Cornell Hurd's band. Great stuff. 

Cisco was really good, although a bit of a poser. His songs were worth waiting
for, and even though the folks at the Broke Spoke cut the power, he delivered
a tight short set.

The highlight may change tonight as I am off to see the Donald Lindley benefit
show with the reunited Flatlanders, Guy Clark, Kimmie Rhodes, and some fellow
named Willie Nelson. Then after that it's off to the Paramount to see TOM
WAITS Wooohooo

Slim - overstimulated



SXSW (was re: shaver etc.)

1999-03-20 Thread cwilson

Slim wrote Wooohooo
 
Ok, just for that, smart guy - please do post extensive descriptions. The Waits 
show  the Flatlanders hook-up I'd really like to hear details on.

merci,
Carl, bereft in Toronto
 



SXSW Report

1999-03-19 Thread JKellySC1

We are having fun. Lots of fun.

More later.

Slim - sleep deprived



Re: SXSW Report

1999-03-19 Thread Tar Hut Records

I'll second that. For those of us who are complete suckers for Teenage
Fanclub (I'm raising my hand high and proud) remember this name: The Ice
Cream Hands.

Lordy.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: passenger side [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Friday, March 19, 1999 9:09 AM
Subject: SXSW Report


We are having fun. Lots of fun.

More later.

Slim - sleep deprived




Re: SXSW Report

1999-03-19 Thread KATIEJOM

OK folks,

How about some details for the SXSW deprived?  Play nice, sharing is "a good
thing."

K.


In a message dated 3/19/1999 9:22:27 AM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
  I'll second that. For those of us who are complete suckers for Teenage
  Fanclub (I'm raising my hand high and proud) remember this name: The Ice
  Cream Hands.
  
  Lordy.
  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  We are having fun. Lots of fun.
  
  More later.
  
  Slim - sleep deprived



SXSW Report/Houndog/blues fiddle

1999-03-19 Thread kevin . fredette

Jerald reported from SXSW:

 Back to Stubbs to catch Houndog, the David Hidalgo side project.  Good
 greasy, bluesy sounds.   
 
I'm listening to this CD as I eat lunch, and I've got to say, it's really
cool.  Very bluesy, as mentioned, and very primal.  And getting  back to the
blues fiddle thread that popped up last week, David Hidalgo plays a lot of
fiddle on this record, as well as all the other instruments.  All (gritty,
anguished, gutbucket) vocals by Mike Halby, formerly of Canned Heat and John
Mayall's Bluesbreakers.  More info at
http://www.mindspring.com/~krazyfish/loslobos/dog.htm  Of the various Los
Lobos related side projects to come out in recent months (Los Super Seven,
Cesar Rosas solo album, Latin Playboys) this one is rapidly emerging as my
favorite.



Thanks == Re: SXSW Report

1999-03-19 Thread KATIEJOM

Jerald,

Much appreciated!!

Kate.


[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  Ok here's a few things I saw yesterday:
  
  Cherilyn's P2 BBQ - The rain held out through the afternoon so the bands
  played.  I saw Cherilyn's roomie Scott play (Bruce Springsteen cover of I'm
  On Fire), The Meat Purveyors (Bruce cover of You Can Look But You Better
Not
  Touch) and the Ex Husbands (Bruce cover of Cadillac Ranch with special
  "Cher-i-lyn's Ranch" lyrics at the end).  The Meat Purveyors also did their
  great new song about Chad Hamilton called "I'm More Man Than you'll ever
be,
  and More Woman than you'll ever get" about Chad and Cherry Lou's... uh
  relationship.  I am hoping it will make it on the next TMP cd.  The brisket
  and tater salad was good and the Pearl was foamy, the airplanes made
regular
  passes over the house (they will be gone next year after the airport
moves).
  I met a few P2ers that I knew by rep only like Meshel, Amy H. and CK.  Saw
  Yates and Deborah, Slim, Chad H., Matt Cook, Bill Silvers, Jamie S., Jayne,
  and quite a few others I am forgetting right now.
  
  Went to a Sony party at Stubbs and saw a little of Old Pike, Bare Jr.  I
had
  only seen Bare Jr. do acoustic in stores before so they were a little
louder
  and rocked the house.  Went across the street to the Doolittle party to
find
  that the Bottle Rockets weren't going to make the party but ate and watched
  Todd Thibaud for three good pop songs.  Back to Stubbs to catch Houndog,
the
  David Hidalgo side project.  Good greasy, bluesy sounds.   Wayne Hancock
  started his showcase outside an hour early so we got to see about thirty
  minutes of that.
  
  Next to Cheapo Discs as the rain starts to see Robbie Fulks.  Despite sound
  problems Robbie was in good form,  "Burn Together, Tears only Run one
  way",God Isn't Real", a new song that he said he just recorded with Kelly
  Willis called "Parallel Bars" where he sang both parts of the duet.  He
also
  brought up a songwriting friend, Dallas Wayne? to do a couple of songs.  
  
  Well I better get to work, more later.  



Re: SXSW Report

1999-03-19 Thread M Rubin

I just saw Devil in a Woodpile half an hour ago at the conference site.
They didn't suck. Lots of soon-to-be out of work industry hacks wandering
around in a confused daze. Quite a lovely sight really.
All for now. Gotta go get the Maraichi band ready for the Bad Liver
showcase tonight. Toodles!

___
Mark Rubin

POB 49227, Austin TX 78765
http://markrubin.com




Re: SXSW

1999-03-19 Thread JKellySC1

Howdy. 

what fun! I will do a fairly comprehensive rundown later, but a couple of
tidbits:

Stubb's lineup of Wayne Hancock, Jeff Black, Radney foster, BR5-49, Leon
Russell (with Willie Nelson) and Doug Sahm was rained out after Hancock's
short performance. Also, the Fire Dept. raided the Continental Club last
nigght, cleared a packed house and made everyone line up to get back in with a
strict head count.

Other than that, it's been a blast!

Slim



Clip: Another view of SXSW from San Francisco

1999-03-18 Thread Brad Bechtel

Music-Industry Merger Casts Shadow on South by Southwest 
James Sullivan, Chronicle Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 17, 1999 
©1999 San Francisco Chronicle 

URL: 
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1999/03/17/DD31646.DTLtype=music
 



Live music, free-flowing beer and smoking grills as far as the eye can see: The annual 
South by Southwest music conference in Austin, Texas, is the record industry's version 
of March Madness. 

This year, however, a certain sobriety threatens to dampen the festivities, which 
begin today and run through Sunday. Seagram's recent purchase of Polygram has resulted 
in the dilution of some of the industry's most highly regarded labels -- AM, Geffen, 
Island. At least a few hundred bands and as many as 3,000 employees have received pink 
slips in recent weeks. 

While nearly 30 Bay Area bands are heading to Austin for the conference, including 
Imperial Teen, the Hi-Fives, Los Mocosos, Jackpot, the Mother Hips and Neurosis, few 
of them expect to bring back much more than hangovers. 

``I think there's a general feeling of disillusionment in the music industry,'' says 
Hans Dobbratz, lead singer of Dura-Delinquent. Having missed the deadline to apply for 
a spot in the official showcases, the bratty San Francisco band plans to perform 
around Austin on a rented flatbed truck. 

The group's kamikaze appearances will be a kind of protest, Dobbratz says. ``All we 
really want to do is have fun and play rock 'n' roll. We want to give it to the people 
pure and free and unadulterated -- no middleman or business weirdness.'' 

Weirdness has been the first order of business this year in the industry. In addition 
to the merger, record companies are fretting over the new MP3 technology, a way of 
downloading music from the Internet that promises to radically alter the distribution 
of recorded music. 

But doomsday predictions are wildly premature, says Bonnie Simmons, Cake's manager and 
a founder of the music convention SFO in recent years. ``I've never seen the record 
industry get to this point, but I've certainly lived through three or four major 
purges. They seem to happen every five years or so.'' 

Simmons goes to South by Southwest (SXSW) every year with a coterie of San 
Franciscans, including staffers from Slim's and the Great American Music Hall. This 
year she's escorting her latest client, the highly touted (and unsigned) songwriter 
Etienne DeRocher. 

She says the industry's uneasiness won't keep her from enjoying herself. ``I don't 
feel like I'm going to a wake,'' she laughs. 

Actually, the shakeup might be just the thing for the big-money gathering, says Adam 
Cohen, former front man of the Geffen signee the Mommyheads. In recent years, SXSW 
began moving away from its original function as a showcase for unsigned bands, as 
record labels lobbied for appearances by established acts plugging their new records. 

``Maybe this will bring them back to square one,'' says Cohen. With the majors 
unwilling to spend as lavishly as they have in recent years, unsigned acts might find 
better venues to play than ``an ice cream parlor five miles out of town.'' 

With the Mommyheads broken up after being dropped by Geffen, Cohen's new band Adam Elk 
-- featuring members of the Kinetics and Mumblin Jim, two other groups affected by the 
industry turmoil -- has been enjoying an early surge of local interest. He's not going 
to SXSW, concentrating instead on promoting his band's forthcoming independent 
release, ``Labello,'' here in town; there's a record-release party March 25 at Slim's. 

In hindsight, he says, this might have been as good a year as any to go to SXSW. ``I 
might've missed my one year, when the integrity's back,'' he says. 

Simmons points out that getting signed is just one of many productive connections 
people make at SXSW. When Cake was in its infancy, the band played Austin and 
attracted the attention of talent buyers from clubs around the country, laying the 
groundwork for Cake's first successful tours outside California. 

``I think we sometimes give people the idea that these conventions are a peculiar, 
rigid star search,'' she says. Record company representatives ``don't just stumble 
into a nightclub, accidentally see a band and take a contract out of their pocket.'' 

Whatever the industry climate, she says, Austin's relaxed attitude will take the edge 
off. ``It's the only convention where I don't feel people are shaking my hand and 
looking over my shoulder for the next person to accost,'' Simmons says. ``It's just 
comfortable.'' 



Re: Clip: Another view of SXSW from San Francisco

1999-03-18 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 3/18/99 10:48:09 AM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 This year, however, a certain sobriety threatens to dampen the festivities,
which begin today and run through Sunday. Seagram's recent purchase of
Polygram has resulted in the dilution of some of the industry's most highly
regarded labels -- AM, Geffen, Island. At least a few hundred bands and as
many as 3,000 employees have received pink slips in recent weeks.  

Jon De Graham was quoted this morning for saying the subtitle of this years
conference should be "Job Fair '99"

Slim - having way too much fun already



*** Request for SXSW Updates ***

1999-03-18 Thread KATIEJOM

Hi folks!

Being a P2 newcomer, I don't know what the protocol is for requesting updates,
so here goes:

Anyone in attendance at this year's SXSW finding him/herself in a particularly
compassionate mood to share the vibe on-line...please, pass along highlights
of the morning, noon or evening as needed.  All updates will be appreciated.

Of special interest...Cisco, The Hollisters, Lucinda's keynote address, Vince
Bell, James Intveld, Hayseed, and Joe Ely.  As well as any "had-to-be-there"
situations.  Parties, in-stores, on-the-street encounters, etc...

distracted in Boston,
Kate





Re: Clip: Another view of SXSW from San Francisco

1999-03-18 Thread Dave Purcell

Brad "Blah Blah" Bechtel forwarded:

 This year, however, a certain sobriety threatens to dampen the
 festivities, which begin today and run through Sunday. Seagram's
 recent purchase of Polygram has resulted in the dilution of some
 of the industry's most highly regarded labels -- AM, Geffen,
 Island. At least a few hundred bands and as many as 3,000
 employees have received pink slips in recent weeks. 

I keep reading this, and still haven't seen many names, aside from 
the Decca, I think, group of Dolly Parton, Chris Knight, etc. Anyone 
heard any other names?

Dave


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



RE: Clip: Another view of SXSW from San Francisco

1999-03-18 Thread Jon Weisberger

  This year, however, a certain sobriety threatens to dampen the
  festivities, which begin today and run through Sunday. Seagram's
  recent purchase of Polygram has resulted in the dilution of some
  of the industry's most highly regarded labels -- AM, Geffen,
  Island. At least a few hundred bands and as many as 3,000
  employees have received pink slips in recent weeks.

 I keep reading this, and still haven't seen many names, aside from
 the Decca, I think, group of Dolly Parton, Chris Knight, etc. Anyone
 heard any other names?

John Anderson, Rodney Carrington and Jenny Simpson were dropped from
Mercury, and I believe Keith Harling was, too (note that he did not appear
at the CRS New Faces show, though he'd been previously scheduled).

Jon Weisberger  Kenton County, KY [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.fuse.net/jonweisberger/



SXSW and me

1999-03-16 Thread Matt Cook

Here's the deal.
I'm shooting a commercial in Nac. tommorow, so I can check my mail (I
own no Austin computer).

I'll be in Austin for SXSW.

I'd like to go to the parties, etc.
But I don't have a clue where they are.  I'd like to meet all you guys
(again, probably).

Someone help me out.

--Matt Cook



Re: SXSW and me

1999-03-16 Thread Bill Silvers

At 01:01 AM 3/16/1999 Matt wrote:

Here's the deal.
I'm shooting a commercial in Nac. tommorow, so I can check my mail (I
own no Austin computer).

I'll be in Austin for SXSW.

I'd like to go to the parties, etc.
But I don't have a clue where they are.  I'd like to meet all you guys
(again, probably).

Someone help me out.

--Matt Cook

Hey Matt,
We've never met, face to face anyway, and I know there's other P2ers in the
same boat who regret not meeting you. Why not just make it easy on us all
and show up for Cherilyn's party and get it over with?

best,
b.s.

n.p. Foster  Lloyd FASTER AND LLOUDER
"The truth ain't always what we need, sometimes we need to hear a beautiful
lie." -Bill Lloyd




Re: SXSW and me

1999-03-16 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 3/16/99 1:05:03 AM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:

 I'll be in Austin for SXSW.
 
 I'd like to go to the parties, etc.
 But I don't have a clue where they are.  I'd like to meet all you guys
 (again, probably).
 
 Someone help me out. 

Does this remind anyone of the kid who waits until the last minute to do his
school science project?

You have only had a year to plan this.

Slim



RE: SXSW and me

1999-03-16 Thread Grant, Jonathan

maybe his dog ate his party schedule?

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, March 16, 1999 9:15 AM
To: passenger side
Subject: Re: SXSW and me


In a message dated 3/16/99 1:05:03 AM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:

 I'll be in Austin for SXSW.
 
 I'd like to go to the parties, etc.
 But I don't have a clue where they are.  I'd like to meet all you guys
 (again, probably).
 
 Someone help me out. 

Does this remind anyone of the kid who waits until the last minute to do
his
school science project?

You have only had a year to plan this.

Slim



RE: SXSW and me

1999-03-16 Thread BARNARD


 maybe his dog ate his party schedule?

Na, his printer didn't work.  But he'll have it by tomorrow, really!!

--junior



Re: SXSW and me

1999-03-16 Thread JKellySC1

In a message dated 3/16/99 9:40:29 AM Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

  maybe his dog ate his party schedule?
 
 Na, his printer didn't work.  But he'll have it by tomorrow, really!! 


Matt, were just funnin' with you. hope to see you at some of the parties.
Introduce yourself.

HEY! I have a great idea! Why don't the poor unwashed without badges wear
those blue "HELLO my name is..." tags?

Slim - hopefully washed



SXSW rain?

1999-03-16 Thread Cherilyn diMond

Yeah, we'll be there. Bring your raincoats, folks. Forcast is showers.

Really? Crap. Anyone planning on being at the BBQ -- if it's raining on
Thursday at noon, call the house (number is in email invite thingy) -- I
might have to move it to Saturday.

kill me,
cherry lou.




Re: SXSW rain?

1999-03-16 Thread William F. Silvers



Cherilyn diMond wrote:

 Yeah, we'll be there. Bring your raincoats, folks. Forcast is showers.

 Really? Crap. Anyone planning on being at the BBQ -- if it's raining on
 Thursday at noon, call the house (number is in email invite thingy) -- I
 might have to move it to Saturday.

 kill me,
 cherry lou.

Yup, if the Weather Channel website is to be believed, showers and a high of
70 degrees are predicted for Thursday.Friday mostly cloudy, still 70.
Saturday partly cloudy, still 70.
Cherilyn, don't make us choose between your bash and the Saturday ND/Miles
of Music thang, please? g

b.s.




SXSW meets MP3 (from Wired News; LONG)

1999-03-15 Thread Bob Soron

Broadcast.com: MP3 Will Die by Judy Bryan

3:00 a.m. 15.Mar.99.PST AUSTIN, Texas -- Mark Cuban sees no good reason
for MP3 to be the format for delivering digital music. He thinks
distribution, not content, will be king, that pay-per-view services
will eclipse free downloads, and that in everything digital a little
babe will lead us.

In the next several years, "MP3 will die," Cuban said. "The rate of
change is accelerating to create an Internet dominated by digital media
in shapes and sizes we can't even imagine."

Animated and glib, and wearing jeans and a black company T-shirt, the
broadcast.com president delivered the keynote speech at the South by
Southwest Interactive Festival, which runs through Tuesday. Cuban's
slight southern accent betrayed his non-Silicon Valley roots.
Broadcast.com is headquartered in Dallas.

Despite its popularity, MP3 is here to be replaced, Cuban said.

When an audience member remarked the recording industry and IBM were
working out plans to use the codec, Cuban replied, "So what? Disco was
a popular culture." And it died, too.

People want audio off the Net, but MP3 is not the best delivery system
for it, he said.

One strike against the format, in Cuban's view, is that MP3 files are
similar in size to streaming files, and the average person can't
distinguish the difference in sound quality between an MP3 and a
streaming file.

"The [music industry's] marketing infrastructure will change," said Joe
Cantwell, executive vice president of new media for Bravo Networks.

"But the movement surrounding MP3, where artists can affect a greater
sense of control over their work, will not change," Cantwell said. "The
desperate and the successful are the ones who shape new markets."

Cantwell used Chuck D as an example of an artist using his success to
shape the new digital-music market. Five years ago Bravo's Independent
Film Channel could have been counted among the desperate. Cantwell said
the channel was launched by people who were passionate about building
an audience for independent films. Although some folks laughed then,
the channel has spawned a competitor, the Sundance Channel.

David Pescovitz of MTV online said Cuban only said what others were
thinking. "Someone had to be the first to say it," he said during a
panel discussion Sunday afternoon.

The Recording Industry Association of America has created a red herring
in its campaign against piracy, Cuban said. Pirates are going to find a
way to distribute illicitly, no matter what defenses companies create
to safeguard music. "I'm a pirate, I'll pay US$11.98 and buy a CD, then
copy it as much as I want to," he said.

Cuban said companies that focus on thwarting pirates actually lose
money. Protection and profits are practically mutually exclusive.

"The more effort you spend protecting, the less effort you spend
promoting and selling," he said.

It's no surprise that the broadcast.com president would back streaming
media -- it's his business. And, while he won't say whether
broadcast.com has its eyes on RealNetworks, he predicted that someone
-- probably a telco -- will buy buy the company, if for no other reason
than to eliminate a competitor from the market.

People want audio and video on the Net, Cuban said, and anyone who
doesn't deliver it will be left in the dust.

Content's reign is over, Cuban said. Content managers and distributors
-- like broadcast.com -- will profit from content, not those who create
it.

Cuban has some interesting -- and conflicting -- ideas about digital
distribution.

He advocates the Grateful Dead approach of using content as a
promotional tool: giving it away for nothing, and charging users for
something else, a concert, in the Dead's case.

So downloading will remain free, for the most part, Cuban said. But
hosting Web sites will one day cost a lot.

In an apparant paradox, Cuban said the best distributors will target
niche audiences that are willing to pay for their passions, such as WCW
wrestling fans, who pay Broadcast.com $5 to $10 to view matches they
can't get or can't afford on cable.

Cindy Cashman agreed with Cuban's prediction that a 15-year-old who
doesn't want to do his homework will develop the next major media app.
Her son, Erick Nelson, is a 17-year-old hacker who runs Cues.com, a
site where users can design their own pool cues.

"He's 17, but he's one of the geniuses [Cuban] talked about," she said.

Nelson echoed Cuban's notion that pay-per-view is on its way as the
Web's next big business model.

"I think that if people want content enough they'll pay to see it, even
if it's five frames per second and choppy," Nelson said. He and his
peers are avid Net-video watchers, and he's working on a project that
could employ the pay-per-view model.

Bob




SxSW note: Tigerlillies

1999-03-15 Thread Dave Purcell

A special SxSW note for you lucky bastards who are going. I know 
there are a zillion great bands playing and you can't possibly see 
everyone you want to see. But if you get a chance, please try to 
work the Tigerlillies into your schedule (I'm not sure when they're 
playing). 

They're a veteran band from Cincinnati, been together 10 or so 
years. Hepped up garage pop, great stuff, they have a couple 
records out on Atavistic. Anyway, they were on their way to SxSW 
last year when their van was hit by a drunk driver. The band 
members were all injured, with the worst being the drummer's 
broken wrist, but their road manager and old friend was killed. The 
conference organizers saved them a spot, so they're heading back 
down this year. They're playing in Dallas, I believe on Wed, then 
heading to Austin.

They're good guys and a great band. If you get a chance, go see 
them, and cheer like mad. They deserve it.

Dave

P.S. Are you still out here, Susan?


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



SXSW doings

1999-03-15 Thread Jim_Caligiuri

Hey in case ya missed it the first time--there's a pre-SXSW party tomorrow
night (Tuesday) at my house that starts around 6. Performing in my living
room will be Jim Roll, Ana Egge, Slim Chance and Beaver Nelson. There'll be
plenty of food and beer and a couple of surprises are in store as well. g
Let me know if you're gonna be around and I'll get you directions.
Also wanted to let y'all know that special guests on the New American Roots
Music show on KOOP (91.7 FM) this week will be Dave Schramm, Kate Jacobs
and Hillbilly Idol. Those up at 9AM on Friday (yeah, right) be sure to tune
in.
Now back to yer regularly scheduled in-fighting...
Jim, smilin and dialin




Re: SxSW note: Tigerlillies

1999-03-15 Thread Christopher M Knaus

Hey there,

Dave sez...

On Mon, 15 Mar 1999 12:02:33 -0500 "Dave Purcell" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
A special SxSW note for you lucky bastards who are going. I know 
there are a zillion great bands playing and you can't possibly see 
everyone you want to see. But if you get a chance, please try to 
work the Tigerlillies into your schedule (I'm not sure when they're 
playing). 

Since I have my elaborate SXSW matrix in front of me, The Tigerlillies
play Maggie Mae's East Thursday at 1am.

P.S. Are you still out here, Susan?

Stop calline me Susan.

Later...
CK - already in Austin and the weather is beee yooo tiful.
___
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SXSW update: final

1999-03-15 Thread Amy Haugesag

This is the final SXSW update that I'll be giving, since I'm leaving for
Austin bright and early tomorrow AM. Apologies to anyone I've left off this
or previous lists. These are the lucky P2 attendees:

Marie Arsenault
Austin Motel

Junior Barnard
I'm sure Junior mentioned where he's staying, but I fergit

Doug Baxter and his wife, Christine
Town Lake Holiday Inn (I managed to pry this info out of Doug)

Dan Bentele
Austin Motel

Rusty Berther (upping the Australian P2 quotient to 2)
accomodations ???

Sophie Best
staying at Smilin' Jim's

Jim Catalano
HomeGate Suites

Jim Cox
staying in some generic apartment he rented

John Flippo
Austin Motel

Richard Flohil
staying at Erica Wissolik's

Randi Fratkin
staying at Erica Wissolik's

Ms. Wynn Harris
staying at HER dad's

Joyce Homan
staying at a friend's house across from the Austin Motel

Chris Knaus  Meshel Watkins
Austin Motel

Jake London
Austin Motel

Barry Mazor
Omni Hotel

Alex Millar
Austin Motel, room 152

Linda Ray
accomodations to be determined

Tony Renner
HomeGate Suites

Jim Roll and Laura Eckenrod
staying at a friend's house

Bill Silvers
Austin Motel

Deb "Numbers" Sommers
staying somewhere, I'm sure

Tiffany Suiters, Kim Di Pietro
HomeGate Suites

Jamie Swedberg
Austin Motel

Stacey Taylor
Austin Motel

Jeff Weiss  Corrie Gregory
Homegate

Neal Weiss  Colleen Morrissey
Austin Motel

Sarah Wrightson and Vince Bell
who I'm mortified to have left off both previous lists

Don Yates  Deborah Malarek
staying at Laura Fowler's

me and  my husband Eric
Austin Motel

and of course, the Austinites:

Jim Caligiuri
Jayne Cravens
Cherilyn DiMond
Jim Fagan
Laura Fowler
Jerald Corder
Chad Hamilton
Lurker Cory Horan
Slim Kelly
Erika Wissolik

Due to unforeseen circumstances, Steve Kirsch will not be attending. We'll
miss him.

See y'all in Austin. We'll raise a Shiner Bock or three to absent P2 friends.




Re: SXSW update: final

1999-03-15 Thread LindaRay64

It has been determined that yours truly will have a room at the Days Inn
University-Downtown.  What good it will do anyone to know that remains to be
seen.  In my experience, there's never been live music in my hotel room so
I've generally been where there is.  Still. . .there's a first time for
everything!

See you at the P2 party!

Linda



Re: Excuse me? (was: Re: SXSW)

1999-03-14 Thread Douglas Baxter

Absolutely correct I have not been to Pittsburgh. To save a little face here
allow me to bow out gracefully by saying that I am saving Pittsburgh to the
last moment like the cherry on the icecream float.

Doug.



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