Event: South by
Southwest Music Festival 2015, Day 5
Location: Austin,
Texas
Date: 21 March 2015
Date: 21 March 2015
Introduction: I
started my day at I Heart Local Music's day party as part of
the Midcoast Takeover at Shangri-La. They had been forced to move
inside due to continuing rainfall, but that just meant the audience
got a more intimate show and we could be closer to the performers, so
it wasn't a bad deal.
Spencer Mackenzie
Brown: Spencer and his four bandmates offered some solid music
that resided somewhere in the realm that could be called Americana. I
don't always like that term nor the musicians that are described with
it, but I thought Spencer and his band had a great blend of indie
rock, folk harmonies, and just a hint of country rhythm. The bassist
was great, the drummer was good, and the vocals were just right. They
might not be revolutionary, but they certainly put on an enjoyable
show.
[Spencer MacKenzie
Brown at Shangri-La.]
Bruiser Queen:
Although this event was focusing on Lawrence, Kansas bands, this
punky duo from St. Louis managed to sneak in. The frontwoman had a
powerful voice and great energy, and she proved it by really throwing
herself into her singing and guitar playing. She was a very physical
performer, which I think works well for a band like this. The drummer
wasn't showy but accompanied the singer perfectly, and even
contributed some backing vocals, too. The lyrics were standard fare,
but the two musicians were so tight that the music was far more than
the sum of its parts. They were fun to behold.
[Bruiser Queen at
Shangri-La.]
Psychic Heat:
These four dudes went straight for the gut with a very intense, hard,
punky style. The musicianship was decent, but it was missing an
element of depth. The audience didn't seem to mind, as a few people
started moshing in the small space they had available. I did
appreciate some of the swirling guitar sounds I heard, evidencing
traces of psychedelia. Someone has kindly put their setlist online:
1. Mortal Concept
2. Stargazer
3. How Many Licks
4. Elixir
5. Anxiety Eater
6. In Two
[Psychic Heat at
Shangri-La.]
Something and the
Whatevers: This band is quite an experience. They are nominally a
three-piece with a high-energy style, but they play as if they are
the backing band of a robot leader. Their entire set was carefully
timed with a laptop, hidden behind what appeared to be a giant
cardboard mp3 player, such that between every song, a robot voice
would speak to the audience and announce songs. They had a punky
spirit, but considering the use of a drum machine and that one of the
members played keyboards, I think punk might be too limiting here. It
was an intense performance that was hard not to want to watch every
minute of. The lyrics covered ground such as hitting the snooze
button too much, locking one's keys in the car, general
self-deprecation, and general self-description. It was probably the
most postmodern performance I saw at SXSW.
[Something and the
Whatevers at Shangri-La.]
CS Luxem:
Last on the bill for I Heart Local Music's part of the event was CS
Luxem, an indie rock three-piece with some tricks up
their sleeves. They too had punky elements, but they didn't let
themselves be constrained by that. They had
great dynamics and had more nuance than just always
being loud
and in-your-face. It did seem, though, that they played a rather
short set.
[CS Luxem at Shangri-La.]
At this point I took a
break from things to walk around downtown with a couple friends. We
walked past the Fader Fort and started hearing the many conflicted
rumors as to whether Kanye West was the surprise guest that night.
(He wasn't.) We ended up just eating some food and taking it easy for
a while before splitting up to follow our own paths. I biked across
Town Lake and headed south to Emo's, where I stayed for the rest of
the evening.
Gateway Drugs:
I thought this band had some promise, but when every song came off as
just dirty, over-distorted, heavy, hard rock, there wasn't much for
me to appreciate. The bass frequencies noisily overwhelmed the sonic
spectrum and the vocals where mixed very low. There was no nuance,
subtlety, or grace, just loud guitar rock. They also had a strange
habit of sampling
a brief section of each song as it ended and repeating it through the
PA until they started the next song. The
only parts of the set I actually liked were a
few sections where
the noise had just a shade of psychedelic beauty, but those were
infrequent moments.
[Gateway Drugs at Emo's.]
Swervedriver:
I was actually fairly interested in this band on the basis of their
original shoegaze roots, but unfortunately, they've really moved away
from that direction over the years. Instead, their sound was just a
lot of guitars in a 90s alt rock mode. It was surprisingly bland and
tame – there just wasn't a lot of melody or rhythm or really
anything that stood out. It was mildly rocking but just not exciting.
Most of their setlist has
been posted online:
01.
Autodidact
02.
For Seeking Heat
03.
Setting Sun
04.
Rave Down
05.
These Times
06.
For a Day Like Tomorrow
07.
[Unknown]
08.
Deep Wound
09.
Son of Mustang Ford
10.
[Unknown]
11.
Duel
[Swervedriver at Emo's.]
The Church:
This band is the real reason
why I was at Emo's. After the slight disappointment of seeing them
the night before, I was particularly excited at the prospect of them
playing a more traditional set length (90 minutes). Here's the
setlist (with some help from here):
01.
Is This Where You Live
02.
Delirious
03.
Laurel Canyon
04.
You Took
05.
Metropolis
06.
Toy Head
07.
Vanishing Man
08.
The Disillusionist
09.
Old Flame
10.
Reptile
11.
Block
12.
Under the Milky Way
13.
Miami
[The Church at Emo's.]
The Church were in much
better form on this night. They seemed more comfortable and in
control. They again opened with the sprawling, extended "Is This
Where You Live", and again played many long, slow-burning,
crescendoing songs, but they also played a bunch of other types of
songs, which made for a much more dynamic and enjoyable show. They
even played some of their hits! Singer/bassist Steve Kilbey was
actually fairly humorous and engaging throughout the set, unlike the
night before, where he had cited a lack of time to be able to joke or
banter. When announcing "Metropolis", he said it was the
time of the show where they were going to play their last hit, but it
wasn't the one we thought it was. ("Under the Milky Way"
has been a more persistent part of cultural history, but it was
released in 1988, whereas "Metropolis" was 1990.)
"You Took",
from their second album, The Blurred Crusade
(1982), was a major highlight, a great song with a good bass riff
which they stretched out with extensive guitar interplay. Sadly,
there were no other pre-Starfish
songs (except the aforementioned "Is This Where You Live"),
but we were treated to two consecutive tracks from the excellent
Priest=Aura (1992). Of
course, I think both "The
Disillusionist" and "Old Flame" are actually
fairly weak representatives
of that album, but they still have their nice parts.
Naturally,
the real excitement came in the form of the two best tracks from
Starfish: "Reptile"
and "Under the Milky Way". Both were extended with two long
guitar solos. The latter song actually seemed a bit mellow or tame,
almost as if they were intentionally underplaying it. It was still a
beautiful song, but the first guitar solo (the ebow/bagpipe-esque one
as heard on the recording) was unspectacular, and it wasn't until the
ending and second solo that it picked up and got more wild.
The
Church might be aging, but I admire them for following their own path
and not just playing to expectations, even if I prefer their jangly
guitars to their spacey progressive tendencies of late. The band has
lost some of their nuance with the departure of Marty Willson-Piper,
but replacement Ian Haug did a decent job of filling in for him.
Kilbey is a great semi-mystical frontperson, and Peter Koppes is an
excellent guitarist, albeit one who seems to shy away from the
spotlight. Together with
drummer Tim Powles, they played a lot of strong material and closed
the festival on a high note.
[The Church at Emo's.]
Scores:
Spencer Mackenzie
Brown: B+
Bruiser Queen: B
Psychic Heat: C
Something and the
Whatevers: A-
CS Luxem: B
Gateway Drugs: D
Swervedriver: C
The Church: B+
P.S. I Heart Local
Music's write-up of the show at Shangri-La can be found here.
P.P.S. Big thanks to
Fally!
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