Event: South by
Southwest Music Festival, Day 3: Levitation Showcase
Venue: Hotel Vegas
(outside stage)
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 17 March 2016
Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 17 March 2016
Introduction: As
previously mentioned, this was a long day, so I've split it into two
reviews. The previous post covers the various day parties I attended, and this one covers the
Levitation
showcase at Hotel Vegas. I've come to really treasure the ability of
the people who run Levitation to curate the bands they sponsor. The
lineup of this year's Levitation Festival might look rather populist,
but they still find lots of great bands. Last year's Levitation SXSW showcase was so
impressive that it was an easy choice to return this year.
I got through the gate
with what I thought was just a few minutes to spare before Elephant
Stone started. However, things were running obviously late, and
Vaadat Charigim was just starting. I didn't complain, except
that almost every band of the evening was forced to play a truncated
set. Anyway, Vaadat Charaigim are a noisy, shoegazing power trio from
Tel Aviv, Israel. Their preferred sound was a thick, heavy, solid
wash of guitar. It was actually rather nice to get lost in, but the
lack of variation was disappointing. Since they sung in Hebrew, there
was no additional thread for me to follow in the lyrics, although to
be fair, meaningful lyrics are rarely important for shoegazers.
[Vaadat Charigim.]
After a long break came
Yonatan Gat, another rock trio originally from Israel. Their
gimmick is to set up right in the middle of the audience and let the
crowd encircle them as they flail about. The music was purely
instrumental and focused primarily on the improvisational guitar of
the frontman. The drummer was wild and intense, but I wasn't even
sure there was a bassist for the first half of the set. I liked the
energy level and the creative, tense, spindly guitar runs, but I
wasn't up for fighting through the crowd, and I suffered from a lack
of a view. It got a bit tiring to just listen when I really wanted to
see.
Elephant Stone
finally went on and immediately delivered some great psychedelic
grooves. The frontman alternated between bass, keyboard, and sitar,
while two other members handled guitars and keyboards (and some bass)
and a fourth drummed. Alex Maas of The Black Angels joined them on vocals for one song as well. The mix
was frustratingly terrible, but I still enjoyed what I could hear.
The bass in particular was smooth and skillful, and when the sitar
was audible, it added a great dimension to the sound. The music was
just barely danceable, as if it begged to soar and be heard in a more
pure setting.
[Elephant Stone with Alex Maas.]
After another long
break, Noura Mint Seymali of Mauritania began playing. It was
a little unclear where the soundcheck stopped and the set began, but
their first extended piece featured the frontwoman playing an ardin,
a type of harp, while seated. Her husband accompanied on guitar, and
a bassist and drummer completed the band. I was disappointed that
Seymali didn't continue with the ardin after the first song, but the
guitarist increased the intensity of his playing to fill in the void.
Between her vocals and his blistering guitar, they made for quite a
powerful, twisting, contrapuntal musical experience. By the end, they
were doing some kind of funky blues, but they were cut short by the
limitations of their set length.
[Noura Mint Seymali, playing the ardin.]
The appropriate
successor to Seymali was Bombino, who I've seen wield his
guitar like a blazing hammer once before. The Tuareg bandleader had his own share
of sound problems, including his guitar dropping out a few times, but
did his best to bring an incredibly funky and infinitely groovy set.
The bassist could be a star in his own right, and his solo was
unbelievably good. Bombino even gave the drummer and rhythm guitarist
their own turns at brief solos that were also no disappointment. The
band was tight and the blistering guitar of Bombino was as
mesmerizing as ever.
[Bombino.]
Finally, the main
reason I was there: Faust, the storied, pseudo-mythical,
avant-garde, German band from the early 70s. This particular
configuration of the band features just two of the original five or
six members: Jean-Hervé Péron on bass, vocals, and samples, and
Werner "Zappi" Diermaier on drums. (Hans Joachim Irmler
fronts another version.) They were joined by French synthesists Éric
Débris (of Métal Urbain fame) and Maxime Manac'h (although the
latter was absent for the first half of the set). After an
infuriatingly long soundcheck, they fumbled into a song mostly
consisting of repetitive vocal samples and aimless drumming. Péron
would occasionally shout-sing seemingly disconnected phrases into the
mic or veer into a flurry of rhythmic bass work. These trends
continued for the remainder of the set. Most songs were apparently
unstructured, and whatever message may have been intended was
unclear. However, knowing this band's roots in dada, improvisation,
and sonic experimentation, they might be more interested in the
method than the result. The only attempt made to appeal to the
audience was the inclusion of the refrain to the classic "Mamie
Is Blue", but even that sounded little like the original other
than sharing the same words. Their obstinate artistic sensibility and
general joie de vivre was somewhat endearing, but I felt like
I was missing the joke.
Here's my best guess at
the setlist:
1. French National
Anthem
2. Dada Hierarchy
(written by Jean-Marie Drot?)
3. Fresh Air
4. Mamie Is Blue
5. Listen to the Fish
[Faust.]
I was exhausted but
still hoped to see one more band: Electric Eye, the Bergen,
Norway psych band I'd seen on the inside stage of Hotel Vegas two years prior. They were an absolute highlight of
my first SXSW and I still enjoy their debut record. This time, they
were playing inside on the Volstead Lounge stage, but as things were
not running late on the inside, I only caught the last ten
minutes of the their set, which included part of a new song and all
of "Tangerine". They were going strong but it was over all
too soon.
Scores:
Vaadat Charigim: C+
Yonatan Gat: B-
Elephant Stone: B+
Noura Mint Seymali: B-
Bombino: A-
Faust: C
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