Location: Austin, Texas
Date: 15 March 2017
I started out my day at
the AdHoc showcase at Cheer Up Charlie's. I unfortunately came too
late to catch Jay Som, but the rest of the afternoon looked like a
great lineup. First I saw Tim Darcy
of Ought on the inside. He played indie rock with slightly odd
arrangements, deadpan vocal delivery, and a consciously wry and arty
edge. The songs didn't stand out that much to me, but there was
something appealing in his weirdness. He played one song that he
described as "older" that was much more conspicuously
folk-oriented.
I
went outside and caught the last few minutes of Pill.
I was curious about them for their supposedly aggressively
progressive lyrics, but all I really heard was a lot of noisy sax
punk. Next up outside was Forth Wanderers,
a straightforward indie rock quintet.
Their
youthful energy was encouraging, but they played loose
and too much by the numbers.
[Forth Wanderers at Cheer Up Charlie's.]
I
got bored and went inside to see some of singer-songwriter
Aldous Harding. She
played
an acoustic guitar and sang
with a strong voice and an
intense look of focus. On some songs, she was accompanied by a
guitarist/pianist that
shared her precision.
Unfortunately, she was
somewhat drowned
out by the outside stage, and I wish I'd been able to hear more of
her words and listen in a more suitable condition.
For
a complete change of pace, the next (and last) band on the inside was
Merchandise. This was
my fourth time seeing them, and thankfully they put on a much better show
than their last SXSW appearance in 2015. This time, they appeared as a quartet
with a drummer I didn't recognize. Here's the setlist:
1. Intro jam
2. Lonesome Sound
3. Brief unknown
"special" song
4. Schoolyard
5. Become What You Are
6. Little Killer
7. True Monument
8. Anxiety's Door
They started with a
lengthy, noisy jam that made me wonder if they were just going to
fool around and use their set as an excuse to experiment on stage.
Eventually they finally settled into "Lonesome Sound", the
only song they played from their new album, A Corpse Wired for
Sound. They made some excuse
about it being hard to do the new ones at SXSW (presumably because of
a lack of a keyboardist or the setup to play samples and such), but
played a brief song that I didn't recognize as a sort of special
bonus for the festival. An updated "Schoolyard" was the
real treat, though. I was
also thrilled to hear "Become
What You Are", one of their best songs, but they played it at a
bizarrely slow tempo, such that it lost half the energy. "True
Monument" was great, and "Anxiety's Door" was
spectacular, with bassist Pat Brady even adding backing vocals. It
was a good set, even if it seemed like some pieces were missing.
[Merchandise at Cheer Up Charlie's.]
After a break for food,
I made my way to the Speakeasy Cabaret to see the folk rock band One
Week Wonder from Iceland. I was
surprised by how small the audience was compared to how nice the
venue was, but I guess that's what you get for calling yourself a
speakeasy and only admitting
entry from the back alley.
Anyway, the
band
used each instrument (electric guitar, acoustic guitar, keyboard,
bass, and drums) effectively to create an interplay that made each
song sound carefully thought out. The acoustic guitarist also
provided pleasant harmony vocals. They sang mostly in English but had
one number in Icelandic. It
seemed like they ran out of material after
half an hour, despite that I think they had more time available.
I would've gladly stayed for
more.
[One Week Wonder at Speakeasy.]
I then tried to get in
Mohawk to see Le Butcherettes, but the lines were long due to a
popular lineup including a surprise appearance of At the Drive-In. I
gave up after half an hour and walked over to Stubb's, where I
practically walked right in. I'd been expecting a long line there as
well due to a strong lineup, but I suppose it is a large venue.
Sylvan Esso was a bit late,
but I forgave them, because I was quickly won over by their charm,
ebullience, and frequent dance breaks. They played electronic music
in a minimalist, pop-oriented style that might otherwise make me
skeptical, but they pulled it off with a creativity that convinced me
that they weren't just pandering to mainstream tastes.
The singer was powerful and skilled, and while I'm not sure exactly
how much the other guy was actively contributing, I enjoyed what I
heard enough that I stopped worrying about it.
[Sylvan Esso at Stubb's.]
I went straight from
there to Barracuda's backyard to see Chastity Belt,
since I'd missed them the day before. The quartet had
a slight 90s rock vibe
but with better atmospherics. Their songs had trance-like patterns
with faded vocals that just barely kept things grounded. They largely
eschewed traditional solos, but when they did resort
to one, it was a minimalist,
noisy affair that was delightfully contrarian. They surprised me when
the drummer and one of the guitarists swapped instruments and vocal
duties for one song. It seemed all the members could sing
comfortably, but they never went so far as to grace us with
harmonies.
[Chastity Belt at Barracuda.]
I then went to Esther's
Follies, where Albin Lee Meldau
was
still in the middle of his Swedish pop/R&B mashup. I hardly knew
what to make of him and his band: they played convincingly, but there
was a weird nervous energy and a retro vibe that seemed out of place
and time. The grooves were decent and I was impressed that the
drummer managed to play keyboard parts with one hand while still
keeping the beat going.
The
real reason I was there was for Die
Heiterkeit
from Hamburg. Their austere, dramatic style fit the theatrical venue
well. I
was expecting something along the lines of serious-minded electronic
pop, but they played with a rock band lineup (guitar, bass, keyboard,
drums). If "slowcore" is a real genre that is worth
upholding, then I suppose this band fits the label. Their songs were
grand, powerful, and unconventional. The guitarist sang with
effortless finesse, and the bassist and keyboardist provided
excellent harmonies on just about every song.
[Die Heiterkeit at Esther's Follies.]
Scores:
Tim Darcy: B-
Forth Wanderers: C-
Aldous Harding: B-
Merchandise: B+
One Week Wonder: B+
Sylvan Esso: B
Chastity Belt: BAlbin Lee Meldau: C
Die Heiterkeit: A-
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