Event: South by
Southwest Music Festival 2015, Day 1
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 17 March 2015
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 17 March 2015
Introduction:
After
how exhausted I was after SXSW last year, I wasn't immediately sure I wanted to go again. But as
soon as the lineup announcements started coming, I knew there was no
way I was going to say no this year! I bought a wristband as soon as
they went on sale, so I got the early-bird $30 discount that I didn't
know about last year.
For
my first day at the festival, I figured I would just check out a
couple bands and make it an early night. It might not have been a
big, exciting day for me, but I was pleasantly surprised to run into
Fally from I Heart LocalMusic! Considering how few people I really know in Austin, I
could hardly believe that I could run into a friend on the street.
Fotogramas
(at Icenhauer's): I was really excited about this Chilean
shoegaze/indie band based on their great song "Algo", but
seeing them live, it was as if they were an entirely different band.
The singer/rhythm guitarist was in decent form, and the bassist was
solid, but the lead guitarist was low in the mix and rather
unspectacular. The atmospherics and big sound that I was expecting
were replaced with steady, unceasing guitar chords and bits of
ineffectual lead parts. Even worse was the drummer: he couldn't hold
a beat. He certainly tried to pull out a number of rhythms, but they
regularly failed, and I'm surprised some of his more obvious mistakes
didn't throw off the rest of the group.
Tellingly, the recorded
version of "Algo" featured a drum machine.
Marineros
(at Icenhauer's): I didn't have any big expectations for this
two-woman pop duo from Chile, and when they struggled with sound
problems for 15 minutes, things weren't looking good. But once they
started their set in earnest, I was immediately eased into enjoying
their honed skill. Although they relied on rather unexciting
preprogrammed backing music, the guitarist's tasteful style kept me
entranced. She had an amazing ability to get the most out of a few
simple effects without letting them overwhelm her sound. Her parts
fit the grooves perfectly, and it was a thrill to see her break into
a bigger riff when the songs demanded it. She took a single solo that
was executed perfectly. The other member did most of the vocals, and
while she was also talented, the highlight was when both members sang
in harmony. Their tunes might not be complicated or revolutionary,
but their effortless abilities had me hooked.
Dead
Leaf Echo (at Cheer Up
Charlie's): This band seems almost too deliberately caught in the
mold of My Bloody Valentine. While I love the sound of heavy, driving,
spaced-out shoegaze, I couldn't help but feel like they were copying
the classics a little too closely. Nonetheless, the ethereal vocals
of the singers fit in just right with the thick guitars. They had the
texture down to a science. For some reason, they were playing at a
deafening volume; yet again, a classic shoegaze cliché.
Scores:
Fotogramas:
D
Marineros:
B+
Dead
Leaf Echo: B
P.S.
Cheer Up Charlie's is apparently the first place in Austin to carry
Club-Mate. I had
no idea it was even available in the US! I haven't had it since I left Germany almost five years ago. What a treat!
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