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The Dodos World Tour

FOURTH LP NO COLOR OUT MARCH 15


The Dodos

The Dodos are heading out
on tour starting March 10 at the Lincoln Lounge in Reno, NV in support of their upcoming album No
Color
, out March 15. Starting February 1, fans can pre-order No Color at DodosMusic.net and get an immediate download of “Black Night” off the
new album.

US + European 2011 Tour

3/10/2011 – Reno, NV – Lincoln Lounge
3/11/2011 – Las Vegas, NV – Beauty Bar

3/12/2011 – Tucson, AZ – Club Congress

3/13/2011 – Phoenix, AZ – The Duce
3/14/2011 – Santa Fe, NM – Warehouse 21

3/15/2011 – Austin, TX- SXSW

3/16/2011 – Austin, TX- SXSW
3/17/2011 – Austin, TX- SXSW

3/18/2011 – Austin, TX- SXSW

3/19/2011 – Austin, TX- SXSW

3/20/2011 – Norman, OK – Opolis
3/21/2011 – Kansas City, MO – Record Bar

3/22/2011 – Omaha, NE – Waiting Room

3/23/2011 – Minneapolis, MN – Cedar Cultural Center

3/24/2011 – Fargo, ND – Aquarium
3/25/2011 – Winnipeg, MB – West End

3/26/2011 – Saskatoon, SK – Amigo’s

3/28/2011 – Calgary, AB – Republik

3/29/2011 – Edmonton, AB – Starlite

3/31/2011 – Vancouver, BC – Rickshaw

4/01/2011 – Victoria, BC – Sugar

4/02/2011 – Bellingham, WA – Wild Buffalo
4/04/2011 – Seattle, WA – Neumo’s
4/05/2011 – Portland, OR – Doug Fir

4/07/2011 – San Francisco, CA – Filmore

4/08/2011 – Los Angeles, CA – El Rey Theater

4/09/2011 – San Diego, CA – Casbah

4/27/2011 – Donostia, Spain – Gazteszena

4/28/2011 – Vigo, Spain – University

4/29/2011 – Madrid, Spain – El Sol

4/30/2011 – Barcelona, Spain – Plaça de la Odissea (Free Outdoor show)

5/02/2011 – Grenoble, France – Le Ciel
5/03/2011 – Milan, Italy – Salumeria Della Musica

5/04/2011 – Rome, Italy – Circolo Degli Artisti

5/05/2011 – Ravenna, Italy – Bronson

5/06/2011 – Aarau, Switzerland – Kiff
5/07/2011 – Munich, Germany – 59-1
5/09/2011 – Berlin, Germany – Magnet

5/10/2011 – Hamburg, Germany – Prinzenbar

5/11/2011 – Cologne, Germany – Blue Shell

5/12/2011 – Nijmegen, Holland – Doornroosje

5/13/2011 – Amsterdam, Holland – Melkweg

5/14/2011 – Brussels, Belgium – Botanique Festival

5/16/2011 – Vendome, France – La Chapelle Vendome

5/17/2011 – Strasbourg, France – La Laiterie

5/18/2011 – Paris, France – Divan du Monde

5/19/2011 – London, UK – Scala

5/20/2011 – Manchester, UK – Deaf Institute

5/21/2011 – Glasgow, UK – Arches

The Dodos
Tour Dates

::
The Dodos News
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The Dodos
Concert
Reviews


SXSW Announces First Round of Invited Acts

MORE BANDS TO BE ANNOUNCED


Erykah Badu

SXSW has unveiled the first list of acts invited to
perform at SXSW 2011. More bands will be announced
over the coming months. Check out the massive list below.

SXSW 2011 First Round of Invited Acts

A Place To Bury Strangers
Alcoholic Faith Mission

Ancestors
Apex Manor
The Appleseed Cast
Art vs Science
Asobi Seksu
Babe Rainbow
The Bees (UK)
Beni
Black Math Horseman
Black Spiders
Bombay Bicycle Club
Braids
Brandt Brauer Frick
Brother
The Cabriolets
Calder Quartet
Candy Claws
Capsula
Cast
Chapel Club
Chico Trujillo

Chikita Violenta
Clock Opera
Cloud Nothings
Coliseum
Coolrunnings
Dam Mantle
Designer Drugs
Doctor Krapula
Dredg

Ebony Bones!

Ed Harcourt

El Hijo de La Cumbia

Erland & The Carnival
Erykah Badu
FM Belfast
Frankie and the Heartstrings
Fujiya & Miyagi

Get People

Giana Factory
Givers

Go Back To The Zoo

Gypsyblood
The Head and the Heart

High Rankin
The Holidays
In Fear And Faith
Iron Age
The Jezabels
John Vanderslice
Jon Fratelli

Jonquil
Kamp!

Kids of 88
Klaxons
L.Stadt

Le Butcherettes
Lia Ices
Liam Finn

Light Pollution
The Luyas

The Main Street Gospel
Marcus Foster

Mark Eitzel

Miami Horror

Micachu and The Shapes
Miss May I
MSTRKRFT
Mujeres

Mustard Pimp
Naam
The Naked and Famous
Nite Jewel

Parts & Labor
Plan B
PS I Love You
Pulled Apart By Horses

Reset!
Rosie and Me
Scars On 45
Schlachthofbronx
Shilpa Ray
Small Black

Sol Pereyra

Spleen United
Starfucker
Steve Mason
Sun Airway
Superlitio

Suuns

The Swiss

Tego Calderon

Telekinesis

Thiago Pethit

Those Dancing Days
Tiê

Toro y Moi
Veronica Falls
Vicente Gayo
The War on Drugs
WhoMadeWho

Wild Flag
Wye Oak
Young Legionnaire
Yuck


SXSW | 03.20.10 | Austin, TX – Day 4

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Scott Dudelson

SXSW :: 03.20.10 :: Saturday :: Austin, TX

She & Him at Rachel Ray’s Party :: 03.20.10 by Dudelson

We celebrated the first day of spring with some of the coldest weather Austin has experienced this year. With a bitter wind and temps dipping down into the 30s, the cold definitely affected the music experience on the final day of South by Southwest. Prior to the really chilly evening, I spent my day at the 40 Watt/JamBase Party located at the Side Bar. With one indoor stage and two outdoor ones, it allowed for a nice flow in-and-out of the elements that kept patrons warm(er). Each stage took the name of a departed Athens artist with the Vic Chesnutt Stage serving the headliners, the Jerry Fuchs Stage being the secondary outdoor venue and the Jon Guthrie Stage set up inside the bar.


Kayceman’s Top 3

#3 – Camper Van Beethoven

Psychedelic folk rock, alternative ska pop, alt-country and whatever else people call Camper Van Beethoven, the band was able to warm the huddled masses at the 40 Watt/JamBase Party with “Take The Skinheads Bowling.” Mixing a polka shuffle with a neat little violin line (that could have been louder in the mix), they twisted deeply into weird Americana/country rock landscapes and it wasn’t hard to pick up on the Leftover Salmon cross-breeding found through bandleader David Lowery‘s work with Salmon in Cracker. What’s even cooler, the band funded their trip to Austin by letting fans donate $100 in exchange for selecting a song to be performed at the fest.

#2 – The Tenant

Street Sweeper Social Club
Rachel Ray’s Party :: 03.20.10 by Dudelson

Named after Roman Polanski’s movie The Tenant, the quartet played inside the 40 Watt/JamBase Party to a filled bar. Working a moody, dark, dream-pop motif with warm textures, they won me over quickly, even though I’d never heard of them before. One can hear the influence of Manchester bands like New Order, Joy Division and Stone Roses, but it still came off as original. Heavy on electronics but juiced with real guitars and drums, it was easy to dance with. Another band that fans of Phoenix or M-83 should really check out.


#1 – Dead Confederate

There were a lot of big, distorted guitar squalls at the 40 Watt/JamBase Party, but none knocked the crust from our tired, cold bones more than Dead Confederate. Built upon slow, patient grooves that erupted into slamming cymbals and walls of noise, it was remarkable that they could paint such a picture in the light of day. This is dark music, both in content and delivery, and it’s best experienced in a loud room with weird lights, where you can hide in the shadows. But none of that mattered during “The Rat.” Looking around the converted parking lot, heads were slamming back and forth and fists were pumping. A serious achievement considering how freaking cold it was.

Bonus Coverage by JamBase CEO David Rosenheim – Big Star Tribute

The remaining members of Big Star joined special guests to perform an emotionally charged tribute to frontman Alex Chilton, who died suddenly on March 17. Big Star was scheduled to play a fest-closing set at Antone’s, and instead of canceling the gig they brought in friends to help celebrate Chilton and his music. The capacity crowd was treated to 100 minutes of Big Star classics from the band’s influential 70s albums #1 Record, Radio City and Third/Sister Lovers. Performing with original Big Star drummer Jody Stephens were current Big Star members Ken Stringfellow and Jon Auer of The Posies. Special guests ranged from original Big Star bassist Andy Hummel, Chris Stamey (dB’s), M. Ward, Mike Mills (R.E.M.), Sondre Lerche, Chuck Prophet, Evan Dando (The Lemonheads), John Doe (who sang a lovely version of “I’m In Love With a Girl”), Amy Speace, The Watson Twins and Curt Kirkwood of Meat Puppets.

Kayceman’s Top 3 Overall for SXSW 2010

1. Sleepy Sun at IODA Party

2. Kayceman’s Treehouse Party

3. Big Light Private Late Night Show in Hilton Suite

Continue reading for Sarah Hagerman’s SXSW Day 4 highlights…

Words by: Sarah Hagerman

The Packway Handle Band at 40 Watt/JamBase Party
03.20.10 by Hagerman

Saturday came down upon us, bitterly cold and gray. It was definitely a shock to the system after three days of gorgeous sun and mild nights. The weather seemed to cause many folks to stay indoors on the last day, which meant noticeably sparser attendance at a lot of shows, plus a fair number of cancellations and outdoor stages running late. But as the sign I spied at Green Mesquite BBQ later that day said, “It’s called Texas weather.” Texas weather means extremes that smack you in the face. So, I bundled up and rolled with the punches.

Packway Handle Band

Those in attendance at the 40 Watt Day Party (co-sponsored by JamBase) seemed to have the right idea – grab a Bloody Mary at Side Bar and huddle in the warmth of conversation. As the crowd swapped stories about the previous nights’ revelries, Athens, Georgia five-piece string outfit Packway Handle Band stepped up to their dual head mic stand, set up on the Jon Guthrie Stage inside the bar. Without so much as an introduction, they launched into a set that made a believer out of everyone by the end. Packway have a fierce stage presence, with more than a touch of dramatic brimstone. Fiddle player Andrew Heaton was especially infused with hellfire, frequently leaping from the mic huddle to run around at the front of the crowd while thrusting his bow into the air like a baton. They were just a joy to watch. I adore the single mic stand set-up for bluegrass bands – it adds an element of theater, and Packway had it down to a snappy science. The four – Heaton, Michael Paynter (mandolin), Josh Erwin (guitar), and Tom Baker (banjo) would smoothly weave in and out (bassist Zach McCoy stood coolly to the side, until the end that is), leaning in close and singing, stepping out for the solo passes and even acting out the lyrics. When they sang, “Times a-comin’ when the sinner must die,” Paynter fell to his knees and Heaton mimed shooting him in the head. With his eyes menacingly wide, Heaton drew his finger across his throat, grimacing on the word “die.” From an amped-up version of “Tell It To Me,” which kicks the shit out of OCMS’s version about five times over, and a cover of The Tiger Lillies’ “Terrible,” which featured trumpets and a couple gals on backup vocals, this is a band that knows how to own any song they set their minds to. At the end of the show, they ran into the crowd, furiously picking their instruments. McCoy raised his doghouse bass over his head, sending the bar lights swinging and wildly cheering folks ducking out of their way. They pushed the crowd back and forth, as they ran into the walls of the bar. This is how I like my bluegrass served up – dark and passionate, with a side of blood.

WhoMadeWho

Lumped in with the post-punk disco bands, but drawing equally on robotic electro and banging club pop, WhoMadeWho were ferociously fun at Encore. They laid down rubbery beats and squishy synth, as bassist Tomas Hoffding leapt from the speakers to the crowd and back again and guitarist Jeppe Kjellberg pointed directly at members of the audience, singing, “You! Your thoughts are dirty!” One of the most amusing things to me was that Hoffding and Kjellberg never cracked the glass cool looks on their faces – Kjellberg kept a slightly-sweet, slightly-pervy smile glued on the whole time, and Hoffding was absolutely unflappable, even when Kjellberg bent down and pretended to tickle his balls or reached over and grabbed his nipples. When Hoffding made a trip into the crowd, an audience member tried to get in on the titty twisting action. Unfazed, Hoffding simply ripped open the top of his shirt and let him have it. These are some seriously freaky Danes, and when they closed the set with a crushing cover of “Satisfaction” from Benny Benassi’s 2003 album Hypnotica (you know, “Push me/ And then just touch me/ Until I get my/ Satisfaction”), you felt like they really wanted you to push them in some very unseemly ways.

Titus Andronicus

Pretty Lights at La Zona Rosa :: 03.20.10 by Aaron Bach

I’m a total Shakespeare nerd, so I had to see a band named after one of The Bard’s more obscure tragedies. I shivered in the cold and darkness of the Red 7 patio, through the end of the utterly unmemorable Crystal Antlers. Titus Andronicus was worth every minute of that wait. You can just tell when a band fervently believes in what they are doing, and lord, does this group write some new gospel. Anthemic punk with definite touches of The Hold Steady, Springsteen and The Pogues, you just want to pump fists to this. Note to self: Get their recorded stuff, so I can scream the lyrics next time. They had bucket loads of energy and are unapologetically brainy. Their latest album, The Monitor, is a loose concept album about the Civil War. They also have an album called The Airing of Grievances, which is a reference to “The Strike” episode of Seinfeld and the holiday Festivus. I’m glad there’s a band of fellow pop culture, literature and history geeks out there to freak out with, who also have the balls to write 15-minute punk songs. I think I’m in love.

Pretty Lights


Utterly beaten to a pulp, I ended my SXSW 2010 with Pretty Lights at La Zona Rosa. Although not normally my thing, I got to hand it to him – Pretty Lights is definitely on top of his game. There’s a reason he’s blown up as of late. He has a seamless sensibility as he layers and melts bits and pieces together. It’s real craftsmanship, and I was well impressed. He also had a mind-blowing light show, and drummer Cory Eberhard added a real thrust behind the sonic palette. Glitchy, dubby and heavy, with moments of exuberant flight, it was the perfect way to sweat and dance down the last hours of SXSW 2010 before 2 a.m. fell upon us. SXSW can be a harsh mistress, but, as I looked around at the beaming faces and hands raised in the air, I knew she’d already called me back for 2011.

Continue reading for more pics of SXSW Day 4…

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Rachel Ray at the Rachel Ray Party :: Stubb’s :: 03.20.10

Dr. Dog at the Rachel Ray Party :: Stubb’s :: 03.20.10

Chapin Sisters at the Rachel Ray Party :: Stubb’s :: 03.20.10

Tom Morello – Street Sweeper Social Club at the Rachel Ray Party :: Stubb’s :: 03.20.10

Andrew WK at the Rachel Ray Party :: Stubb’s :: 03.20.10

Priestess at the Harley Davidson Party :: 03.20.10

The New Harley Davidson at the Harley Davidson Party :: 03.20.10

Exene Cervenka at Bloodshot Records Party :: 03.20.10

Big Light at Relix Showcase :: 03.20.10

The Like at Stubb’s :: 03.20.10

Click here for coverage of SXSW Day 1.

Click here for coverage of SXSW Day 2.

Click here for coverage of Day 3.

JamBase | On The Mend

Go See Live Music!


SXSW | 03.19.10 | Austin, TX – Day 3

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Scott Dudelson & Kayceman

SXSW :: 03.19.10 :: Friday :: Austin, TX

Kayceman’s Top 3

#3 – Miike Snow

Dr. Dog :: 03.19.10 :: SXSW by Kayceman

Sweden’s Miike Snow (no one named Mike, Miike or Snow in the band) took the stage in black jackets and white masks around 12:30 a.m. From the first subsonic bass rattle it was near impossible to stand still and it wasn’t hard to imagine talents like this working with Madonna and Britney Spears, with whom band members Christian Karlsson and Pontus Winnbergwon won a Grammy for Best Dance Recording on “Toxic.” These were dance tracks made by a live band that’s not afraid to rock. Heavy on hooks and dusted with slightly strange vocals, if things break right for Miike Snow they could find success like Phoenix or Justice.

#2 – Dr. Dog

Dr. Dog slayed a very packed crowd at the Filter Party with their workmanlike charm. Mixing touring staples “The Old Days,” “Worst Trip” and “Fate” with a few new numbers, including a cool one that read “Mirrors” on the setlist that chased its own tail with an increasing tempo, everything about this band screams future classic. Bassist/vocalist Toby Leaman was a monster, powerfully belting out vocals and digging his heel deep into the stage to drive the machine. Watching the joy this band finds in their music is contagious and I saw more uninhibited dancing in the crowd at this set than at any other all weekend. It all wound down with a psychedelic gospel rave-up that started with a Prince tease and wound up sounding like a relative of My Morning Jacket.

#1 – Big Light Private Hotel Suite Party

Big Light :: Hilton Suite Party :: 03.19.10 :: SXSW by Kayceman

In all my years of attending SXSW I’ve seen a lot of bands in a lot of very interesting places. During the fest Austin turns every possible location into a venue, and no one thinks twice about raging an abandoned supermarket, rocking in a taco shack or taking over an airplane hanger. But never have I seen a full-on rock show in a hotel room. Starting at around 1:15 a.m. in a giant suite at the Hilton (the hub of the festival/conference), Big Light broke new ground at SXSW. Having just covered Big Light in yesterday’s review it was not my intention to cover them again, but this party was the stuff of legends. In addition to all the managers, press, booking agents and big wig industry types, the suite (and adjoining rooms) were stuffed with about 100 people, including the Talking HeadsJerry Harrison, Blues Traveler‘s John Popper, DJ Logic, Papa Mali and the Barr Brothers. We had given the over-under on how many songs they’d actually get to play before security shut them down at around three, but the stars were aligned and Big Light played an entire hour-plus rock show at full volume. The set even included a nice sit-in by The Slip‘s Brad Barr on guitar. Big Light blew it up and confirmed their place as a serious buzz band at this year’s SXSW. This was easily one of the best parties I’ve been to at South by, or anywhere for that matter.

Continue reading for Sarah Hagerman’s SXSW Day 3 highlights…

Words by: Sarah Hagerman

Jonathan Tyler & The Northern Lights

Jakob Dylan and Three Legs (Featuring Neko Case)
03.19.10 :: SXSW by Dudelson

“Baby it’s been too long/ Since rock and roll turned you on,” Jonathan Tyler cried. ‘Nuff said. Fervent believers in the power of music to get our juices flowing, Tyler and his band The Northern Lights had the crowd getting down at the Relix day party at Antone’s. Channeling The Black Crowes with touches of Zeppelin, The Lights had a magnetic stage presence, stomping with their instruments and exuding rock star confidence. They are damn good, and they know it, but they’re ultimately here to have fun and make your ass move. They were tight as hell, too. When the lovely backup singer stepped to the mic to lead a song, throwing some very Erykah Badu-esque R&B and hip-hop into the mix, the band didn’t miss a beat behind her, tying the whole thing together with some Roots-like grooves. I would have liked to see more of her, but hot damn, this was a flat out great show. When they left the stage, Relix Editor-in-Chief Josh Baron wiped his brow as he took the mic, declaring, “I don’t know about you, but I just got run over!”

Trampled by Turtles

Some bands just have an uncanny sense of how to write songs that stick with you. Although they get well-deserved props for their cathartic and energetic live shows – you’ve never seen so much sweat pour from five guys sitting down – it’s the songwriting that sets Trampled by Turtles apart. They’ve got positively addictive hooks, and on quieter numbers, like the beautiful sigh of “Trouble,” they let them unwind with a natural ease. This set at Red-Eyed Fly flew by at a breakneck pace. I got a couple personal favorites, including “Empire” and a vicious “Burn for Free,” plus some killer new material from the upcoming Palomino. Ryan Young (fiddle) and Erik Berry (mando) practically folded into their chairs as they attacked their instrument with red-faced intensity that had the crowd whooping and shrieking. “I like your beards!” I heard someone shout. At this point during SXSW, I’ve seen enough ironic facial hair to last the rest of my life. But TbT offer genuine scruff. You get the sense that no matter how far they climb they won’t ever forget where they came from. It’s that grounding that keeps them so real and keeps their music so warm, even in the midst of the fury they can unleash when they take the stage.

Quasi

Janet Weiss (of now defunct Sleater-Kinney) is one of the fiercest, most versatile drummers in indie rock royalty. She was flexing serious muscle during Quasi’s set at Antone’s, with pin-sharp machine gun rat-a-tats and crescendos that built to brain-pulping levels. Quasi are pure, stripped-down garage adrenalin. They don’t fuck around or have a lot of pretension – they keep it lean, but draw it out in decidedly rough lines. Joanna Bolme‘s bass was chewy, and Sam Coomes‘ guitar work could break down into anarchy at any moment. Closing out their set with “Bye Bye Blackbird,” they destroyed some eardrums as they let it all hang loose with feedback buzzes, squeals, and washes of thick noise.

Velvet Truckstop

Trampled by Turtles :: 03.19.10 :: SXSW

There comes a moment at every SXSW. Your feet hurt. You can’t bear to over hear one more name-dropping conversation or see one more person glued to their iPhone while a band is killing it a few feet away. You are tired of wading through the mess on 6th Street. You are just plain tired, only averaging about four hours of sleep a night. That’s when you need something to remind you why you’re here, and I couldn’t have asked for better medicine than Velvet Truckstop. Crammed into a sweaty Nuno’s, VT laid down rock and roll salvation of the highest order. With their lofty electric blues, driving southern rock jams and echoes of The Band and Wilco, they gave me, and several others, the will to dance down the last hours until closing time. Readers, you need to get acquainted with Velvet Truckstop. These cats are cut from some genuine cloth, the kind of band that pulls you through the rough times and sends you out into the night with a romping “Hallelujah!” Guitarist Dorsey Parker was especially tapped into something huge, making it look so damn easy but one glance at his fingers moving across his axe left your head spinning. They got songwriting skills that bow towards the classic, such as the asphalt-scarred “Carolina Way,” where Jamie Dose sings about the “broken dreams and guitar strings” that litter the highway while you’re chasing a dream. But you keep pushing on regardless, because you believe in what you’re doing. If that’s not what SXSW is ultimately all about, then I don’t know what is.

Continue reading for more pics of SXSW Day 3…

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Billy Bragg and Wayne Kramer at Ghost Bar

Mike Mills (R.E.M.) at Ghost Bar

Wayne Kramer at Ghost Bar

Audible Mainframe at Spin Party

Billy Bragg at Don’t Mess With Texas Party

Frightened Rabbit at Don’t Mess With Texas Party

Citizen Cope at SXSW Day Stage

Diane Birch at SXSW Day Stage

Dead Confederate at Little Radio Party

Foxy Shazam at Spin Party

Fucked Up at Spin Party

Rogue Wave at Spin Party

Miike Snow at Spin Party

Wooden Birds at Mohawk

Metric at Stubb’s

Emily Haines – Metric at Stubb’s

Steel Train at Encore

Click here for coverage of SXSW Day 1. Click here for coverage of Day 2.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of SXSW 2010…

JamBase | Tejas

Go See Live Music!


SXSW | 03.18.10 | Austin, TX – Day 2

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Scott Dudelson & Kayceman

SXSW :: 03.18.10 :: Thursday :: Austin, TX

Kayceman’s Top 3

#3 – Broken Social Scene

Band of Horses at Stubb’s
03.18.10 by Dudelson

If we let them, Broken Social Scene will heal us. One of the most innovative and influential indie rock bands of our time, they’ve pulled off the very difficult trick of being super-indie-hipster chic but so totally void of pretense or posturing that the music always feels real, genuine and from a deep place. When they tell us to fight for joy or they crank out triumphant, celebratory music and tell us it’s how our lives should sound, it works. This is the power of music. Melody, notes and words combined and organized in ways that illicit profound emotion, thoughts and even actions – these are the waters that BSS swim in. Though Feist performing at Stubb’s on Thursday night was just a rumor (there’s lots of rumors at SXSW – did you hear Jay-Z and Mötley Crue are gonna do surprise sets?) it didn’t matter. Brendan Canning, Kevin Drew, Apostle of Hustle, Jason Collett and the other dozen or so musicians (I believe the stage maxed out at 14 people) put on a life-affirming set of loose jams and soaring harmonies. New track “World Sick” from the forthcoming Forgiveness Rock Record (due May 4 on Arts & Crafts) featured one of the most infectious bass lines at SXSW and old standouts “Fire Eye’d Boy” and “7/4 (Shoreline)” wrapped us tight in a sheet of distorted guitars and warm horns.

#2 – Band of Horses

Another group with a new album coming soon (Infinite Arms out May 17 on Columbia), Band of Horses also toil in emotion’s murky waters. Ben Bridwell and his Horses aren’t afraid to get their hands dirty digging through dark soil, but like Broken Social Scene, there’s resolution and joy in the end. Starting their set at Stubb’s with “Is There A Ghost” and “Great Salt Lake,” it didn’t take long for the giant guitars and powerful vocals to capture the sprawling crowd’s attention. And when the girl next to me grabbed her boyfriend’s arm and said, “I’m sooo excited. I love this band,” it was clear this music speaks to people. Like art in general, it’s a difficult thing to quantify or explain. Why does a certain selection of notes or set of words make us feel what it does? What is it about certain songs that allow them to touch us so deeply? Hard to say, but when you feel it, there’s no mistaking it. Band of Horses staples “The Funeral,” “No One’s Gonna Love You” and “Marry Song” were coupled with a Yo La Tengo cover and two new songs. The first new track was a mid-tempo burner pulled tight with emotion and the second was a foot-stomping country rock number with a heavy dose of organ; both show great promise for the upcoming album. More than even the sweet material Bridwell is coming up with, what makes Band of Horses so great right now is that they are a real band and they’re finding their power. The lineup went through a number of changes before arriving at this unit and every time I’ve seen this band over the past year or two they’ve gotten better and better.

#1 – Kayceman’s Treehouse Party

Paz Lenchantin – Entrance Band
03.18.10 by Kayceman

Kayceman’s Treehouse Party was really fun. Perched up on a deck framed against the Austin skyline and packed with some of my favorite bands, it was an honor to have my name associated with such talent. Showing up to my own party just a little late due to a work commitments, I, unfortunately, missed Any Day Parade and The Fresh & Onlys, but when The Moondoggies started all worries washed away. Like an 18-wheeler headed down a steep slope, The Moondoggies’ three-part harmonies, tent revival energy, and gospel-baked roots rock was impossible to deny. If you dig The Band and The Byrds and don’t know this Seattle group then you have to check out their stunning 2008 debut Don’t Be a Stranger (JamBase review).

Following The Moondoggies was perhaps my favorite set of the day: The Entrance Band. Guitarist/vocalist/leader Guy Blakeslee is a psychedelic guitar shredder. Shirt off and standing on speakers, he played lefty with a right-handed guitar strung upside down a la Hendrix, and this is one follower Jimi would surely approve of. As difficult as it was to steal any of Blakeslee’s thunder, bassist Paz Lenchantin (A Perfect Circle) stole the show. Sexier than all hell in her high heels and tight jeans, she was rolling on the stage, playing over her head and rubbing against the speakers. But none of it would have mattered if she weren’t such an over-the-top monster bassist. Blakeslee and Paz are a remarkable team, and with drummer Derek James they dig deep into the psych-rock woods – feeling, living every note and squeezing the juice from every moment of their glorious journey.

Entrance Band was a hard act to follow, but Red Cortez fears no stage. Built around gifted frontman Harley Prechtel-Cortez, there’s an early U2 vibe that hints at what’s possible for this band, and based on the new material we heard in Austin and with a new album produced by the legendary Ethan Johns coming soon, one gets the impression this band is just starting to hit their stride.

Big Light :: Kayceman’s Treehouse
03.18.10 by Kayceman

The Mother Hips did what they do and burned the Treehouse down. One of the most consistently great live acts around, they don’t disappoint. Playing to the largest crowd of the day, burly rockers like “Grizzly Bear” and “Third Floor Story,” and the dirty hard funk-rock of “Magazine” were razor sharp but never too tight. Frontman Tim Bluhm and guitarist Greg Loiacono are a true dynamic duo, and this band is enjoying a true renaissance period right now that finds them better than at any point in their 20 year career.

It’s clear Everest are on the rise. Touring with Neil Young has taught them how to flex their muscles, and when they lean into crunching guitar jams it hits hard. But they also show a delicate, acoustic side and bandleader Russell Pollard is shaping up to be a remarkable songwriter. The tracks from their upcoming sophomore album, On Approach (due April 20 on Vapor Records), indicate a band that’s nowhere near their ceiling. It should be fun to watch them climb the mountain.

Hosting San Francisco local boys and JamBase darling Big Light was a real treat. Playing to a deck full of industry folks there to see them, BL did the job with four hard hitting power-pop nuggets of rock & roll. There were several conversations overheard about how this band is “really getting their shit together,” and the interplay between drummer Bradly Bifulco and guitar stud Jeremy Korpas during “Heavy” was just awesome.

Closing down the festivities was Knoxville, TN’s Royal Bangs. Pumping out woozy keyboards and inventive guitar lines, they were a jolt of energy that reinvigorated anyone who might have gotten a bit too much sun up at the Treehouse. Hitting pleasure zones like !!!, they’ve described their music as “easy shred computer jam,” and even though they’ve trimmed from a five-piece to a trio there appears to be little if anything lost in transition.

Continue reading for Sarah Hagerman’s SXSW Day 2 highlights…

Words by: Sarah Hagerman

Those Darlins :: 03.18.10 :: SXSW

Yacht

I’d heard vaguely of Yacht going in, and honestly probably would have skipped them if it weren’t for the urging of a buddy. Based on the name alone, I had assumed they were going to be more along the lines of some kind of ironic hipster “yacht rock,” with boat shoes and Kenny Loggins-style falsettos. Oh how wrong I was. Although they certainly were dressed to the nines, this wasn’t no champagne-sipping in the sunshine sail. They laid down a dirty, post-punk, disco ass-shake-a-thon at the Spaceland Day Party at Palm Door. Jona Bechtolt and Claire L. Evans held court at the front of the stage as their band offered up lead-heavy beats and screaming punk aggression. They were the picture of cool as they strutted back and forth, working the crowd into a jumping mess with steely stares and sneers that said, “If you don’t dance, someone’s gonna get hurt.” Evans would twist her mic cord around her body and fiercely pose by the pole in the center of the stage, with a vibe that couldn’t help but remind me of Debbie Harry. I could see these cats going over well at Camp Bisco. If you dig !!! or Gossip, climb on board.

Fool’s Gold

Heaving and buckling with the weight of sardine-packed jumping bodies, the narrow side porch of the Palm Door (which was serving as a makeshift second stage) threatened to give way during Fool’s Gold’s early evening set. This band puts on a tribal, tropical dance party that grabs your sweaty hand and drags you into a conga line. They really stretched out, too, moving between blasting sax funk and tight drumming with snappy ease, keeping those floorboards quaking under their brilliant shine.

The Entrance Band

The setting for the stacked lineup at Kayceman’s Treehouse Party felt like an awesome little secret, set high above the rumble of 6th Street below. As the hot midday sun beat down on our heads at the upstairs patio at Cheers shot bar, Entrance Band melted our brains. Playing psychedelic scattershot guitar like Hendrix (he even busted out the behind-the-head move), frontman Guy Blakeslee had the rock star thing down to a science. Pure organic chemistry, as badass bassist Paz Lenchantin crushed the low end and drummer Derek James seemed hypnotized behind his wall of hair. Drawing out washes of feedback while bent over their instruments, Blakeslee and Lenchantin looked about ready to fold up and meld with the stage. They rose up, to end the set with a tremendous roar. Note to self: earplugs exist for a reason.

Those Darlins

Man Man :: 03.18.10 :: SXSW

“If you don’t want a wild one/ Don’t hang around with me” might as well be tattooed on these girls’ forearms. Look out, fellas, you might well find yourself handcuffed to a bed with your wallet missing and your car long gone. Riot girl rockabilly queens-to-be, these gals are like the delinquent granddaughters of Wanda Jackson (guitarist Jessi Darlin‘s voice even had a similar high-pitched gritty wail). With songs about getting drunk and eating a whole chicken and having phone sex with prank callers, they aren’t afraid to get raunchy and bloody and then wake up with questionable bruises. Nikki Darlin dropped her baritone ukulele towards the end of the set and stomped around the front of the stage at the Billboard.com Bungalow, spitting gulps from her pint of whiskey sky high. At one point, she balanced herself on some folks in the front row, and it looked like an older, bald gentleman got pretty well acquainted with her crotch for a minute. It was chaos by the end of their set, with Nikki and bassist Kelley Darlin wrestling, and Jessi strangling and tossing her guitar around, before all three dissolved into a pile, rolling and kicking in the center of the stage. This shit was totally badass, oozing confident in-your-face sexuality and dirty south pride. I want to rage with these gals, but I think things would get pretty damn messy.

Man Man

With Man Man, I don’t know if I want to have whatever they are having, but I sure do love the contact high. This band brings out something positively primal in you, puts you in touch with some feral base elements growling in your blood, makes you want to howl at the moon. Let me put it this way – it was the first honest to god slam pit and stage push I’d seen at SXSW. If you were in the front for this show, you were part of the chaos. No standing back and taking notes or texting on your Blackberry here. Like a marching band on the elevator to hell, or a birthday party from your Jungian shadow, their stage set-up is always impressive, as they leap from brass to xylophone to noise makers. Frontman Honus Honus stalked around with a wild, possessed look in his eyes, contorting his face as he sang, wrapping himself in a hooded cloak and red Christmas lights one minute, donning a glittery dress the next. “You make me feel like a zombie!” he shrieked during “Big Trouble.” There’s a monster inside all of us, and you can always count on Man Man to drag it out from under the bed. It’s pretty damn exciting, and a little bit scary.

Dead Confederate

Equal parts grungy and hypnotic, Dead Confederate gave us one final shot of adrenaline in our veins as we gathered the last pieces of the night. The enormous sound was all encompassing, gluing you to the pavement, so that all you could do was violently shake your head in its wake. Hardy Morris has a wail that reminded me a little bit of Perry Farrell, cutting through the dark fuzz of the band to soar over those of us still upright. It shot shivers straight through my bones. As 2:00 a.m. crept up, Morris said the band had two more songs. They slew one, and then halfway through their last song, the plug was pulled. It was an abrupt and jarring end, and it’s unfortunate the Billboard.com Bungalow wouldn’t have let them see it through an extra few minutes instead of unceremoniously sending us out into the night to dodge the wasted and the lost winding their way back towards beds or searching for that last, secret party pumping somewhere in the Austin night.

Continue reading for more pics of SXSW Day 2…

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Athlete at Billboard Bungalow Party

Bear In Heaven at Mohawk

Besnard Lakes at Emo’s Annex

Broken Social Scene at Stubb’s

Drive-By Truckers at Stubb’s

Camper Van Beethoven at Encore

Cocoon at French Party

Jason Collett at Little Radio Party

Dead Sexy Inc. at French Party

Damion Suomi at Paste Party

Gringo Starr at Habana Calle

Local Natives at Emo’s

Lovely Feathers at Emo’s Annex

The Mother Hips at Encore

The Moondoggies at Kayceman’s Treehouse Party

Oh Mercy at Emo’s Annex

Quest For Fire at Habana Calle

Sara Haze at Billboard Bungalow Party

Sondre Lerche

The Bewitched Hands at French Party

The Walkmen

Vivian Girls at Club Deville

Surfer Blood at Club Deville

Click here for coverage of SXSW Day 1.

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of SXSW 2010…

JamBase | In Deep

Go See Live Music!


SXSW | 03.17.10 | Austin, TX – Day 1

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Scott Dudelson & Kayceman

SXSW :: 03.17.10 :: Wednesday :: Austin, TX

With almost 2,000 bands performing on 80 stages throughout downtown Austin, the South by Southwest Music Conference is a music marathon fueled by Lone Star Beer and tacos. Now in its 24th year, SXSW might not be about signing new bands as it once was (the internet has really changed the game in how we discover music), but it still offers the opportunity to see a shitload of bands, some of whom will be stars before long, in a short period of time. The dynamics of SXSW may have changed as the festival has grown, but one thing hasn’t changed: This long weekend in Texas can still break bands.

Kayceman’s Top 3

Lissie at Galaxy Room :: SXSW :: 03.17.10 by Kayceman

#3

First set on the first day and Lissie was awesome. Reminiscent of a more rocking Neko Case or younger, more psychedelic Bonnie Raitt, Lissie filled the room with her powerful voice and flowing golden locks. More than singing songs it often felt like Lissie was opening windows into her life. One gets the impression these are confessionals, and when she hit the big notes it sent shivers down my spine. Lissie on electric guitar was backed by a strong lead guitarist who took some searing solos and a bass player who sat on a stool and also played high-hat and kick drum (no drummer in this band), the power this three-piece cooked up was impressive. She closed her set with a soul-rock, gospel tent revival rave-up called “Little Lovin’” off her wonderful debut EP Why You Runnin’, which won over every pair of ears in the room.

#2

If you can make the hipsters dance you are doing something really special. San Francisco’s psychedelic warriors Sleepy Sun are looking more and more like a “special” band, and their set at the IODA party uncorked some seriously good times. A close cousin to bands like Brightblack Morning Light and The Black Angels, the female counter-point vocals helped ease the heaviness of the music to create a welcoming haze. Like really good drugs where you feel opened up by the experience, like your learning something unspoken, this set was deep. The unquestionable highlight occurred when they brought out the Austin Children’s Choir and finished the set with a cover of The Guess Who’s “No Sugar Tonight/New Mother Nature” that stripped the crowd of their cool and ushered in an honest to goodness dance party.

Sharon Jones at Stubb’s :: SXSW
03.17.10 by Scott Dudelson

#1

Number one slot on the first day: Stubb’s. Between another wicked set from Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Austin’s own Spoon, and a set by the biggest buzz band of the fest, Broken Bells, this bill was tough to beat. Only unfortunate thing was that Broken Bells (featuring Danger Mouse and The ShinsJames Mercer) wasn’t very good. They weren’t bad, and the songs are really great, but you could tell the live show was just an extension of the album’s success. There were a few high points, like opener “The High Road,” but overall the live show was a sloppy second to one of the best albums of this young year.

Sharon Jones on the other hand killed it. Her band is ridiculously tight and Jones is simply one of the best bandleaders around. Every single time I see this act I’m impressed, and at Stubb’s it was no different. Playing to the largest crowd of the night, she had the audience in the palm of her hand with songs like “100 Days, 100 Nights,” new one “She Ain’t A Child No More,” and a very cool reworking of “This Land Is Your Land.” For anyone who says the golden days of soul music are gone, I say listen to Sharon Jones. Stax, Motown and Muscle Shoals got nothin’ on Ms. Jones and her Dap-Kings.

Strange enough to keep it interesting but built on brilliant songs with inventive hooks, Spoon is a true leader in the modern rock world. Bathing in psychedelic splashes of sound at times, it felt like we were in an echo chamber, and the guest percussionist was a nice touch, too. Songs like “Written In Reverse,” “Don’t Make Me a Target” and “My Mathematical Mind” captivated the crowd with relentless rhythms and perfect precision, while “I Turn My Camera On” made a case for what disco could have been. This is a band of efficiency. No wasted notes or gratuitous solos (there wasn’t a traditional solo all night), everything serves the song. Spoon continues to dish out the goods, and seeing them on their home turf on a big night like this was reason to celebrate.

I’d love to tell you more, but there is quite literally a party with my name on it that has already started. I need to get there. Let that be a glimpse into SXSW: There’s always too much to do…

Continue reading for Sarah Hagerman’s SXSW Day 1 highlights…

Words & Images by: Sarah Hagerman

Wanda Jackson & Green Corn Revival

Wanda Jackson :: 03.17.10

SXSW is geared towards pushing what’s up-and-coming, but it also provides exciting chances to see legends in intimate settings. When the MC strolled out onto the Palm Door stage to announce Wanda Jackson – “The newest member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The first lady of rock and roll! The queen of rockabilly!” – a gal that had roses tattooed from her wrist to her shoulder screeched in excitement and a dude with a pretty fierce wedge haircut and checkered jacket pumped his fists in the air. “I love singing to a pole!” she declared with a laugh, eyeing the rather unfortunately placed pillar smack dab in the center of the stage, before launching into “Mean Mean Man.” As Green Corn Revival laid down rough-and-ready country, with slinky steel guitars and the occasional peppy trumpet, she wailed in her high, hundred proof voice. Armed with yodels, a kick ass pink guitar and stories about dating Elvis, at 72, Jackson is one feisty firecracker in a red fringe blouse. With classics such as “I Gotta Know,” one of the first rockabilly songs ever recorded from 1956, and a killer version of “Heartbreak Hotel,” she oozed timeless rock and roll attitude. But this was no nostalgia set. With a new album produced by Jack White, Jackson is still a force to be reckoned with. During her fantastic take on Amy Winehouse’s “Trouble,” she leaned suggestively against the pole, posing and pointing to folks in the audience as she drew out the lines, “I told ya I was trouble/ You know I’m no good.” I overhead someone behind me declare, “Yeah, she’s still trouble.” I would suggest to anyone that comes to SXSW to try and catch at least one such show to realize, even in the midst of flash in the pan culture, there are artists who endure, and even stay fresh, after decades in the music industry.

Anais Mitchell

Anais Mitchell currently has an ambitious project, Hadestown: A Folk Opera. Based on the Orpheus Tale and set in a post-apocalyptic, depression-era America, folks like Justin Vernon, Greg Brown, and Ani DiFranco play the roles of Orpheus, Hades and Persephone, respectively. But tonight, it was just Mitchell and her guitar. She hushed the intimate crowd at The Ale House, some of whom sat frozen on the floor, causing Mitchell to remark, “I feel like it’s story time in the library.” With the Guinness and Lone Star-soaked mayhem of 6th Street’s rage-a-thon pumping a block away, it was a welcome slice of peace, though her words touched on places that shook you to the core. For example, “Why We Build the Wall,” where Hades asks a series of rhetorical questions to a group of children living in his walled city. “Why do we build the wall?/ We build the wall to keep us free.” Freedom in this case means protection from the starving, poverty-stricken masses outside the gate. It was a bit Orwellian, and at a time where the social problems that confront us are often met with hostile indifference by those that feel entitled to clutch their piece of the pie, it hit a nerve. I couldn’t help but imagine the stark, barbaric wasteland of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, and woke up this morning unable to escape this image below, sung by Persephone in another tune:

The earth is a bird

On a spit in the sky

How long?

How long?

How long?

Bowerbirds

Danny Barnes :: 03.17.10

You had to feel for Bowerbirds. The crew running the Brooklyn Vegan showcase at Club De Ville took over half an hour to sound check the band, and after the first song, “Silver Clouds” from their stunning album Upper Air, guitarist Phil Moore broke both his pick and one of his strings, causing keyboardist and accordion player Beth Tacular to sigh, “Disasters everywhere.” But the band took it in stride, playing a set that positively glowed, with a warm, inviting folk sound that you just wanted to join under the covers. “House of Diamonds” is Zen philosophy set to music, a reminder that true freedom exists inherently in our mind and once you open yourself to that place, you have the strong heart to let the world inside: “Yes, you own the stars/ You own the thunder/ But you have to share it all.” This is the kind of band that builds you up into something stronger and reminds you, “Hey, shit happens.” It’s all strikes and gutters, ups and downs, and all you can do is abide.

Danny Barnes & Honky

It’s a rare artist that can slip their material into different mediums and have it work just as well. But when you’ve got a set of songs as strong as the ones on Danny Barnes’ latest, Pizza Box, the work speaks for itself. Although he usually plays his solo shows with his banjo and laptop, using Ableton software to loop and create texture, this night Barnes was backed by Honky – Jeff Pinkus (Butthole Surfers) on bass and Justin Collins on drums, later joined by Bobby Rock on guitar. It was an amped-up approach that suited the songs to a tee, as Barnes’ latest work travels from the sincerely touching to the unabashedly badass. At one point, he had us all verklempt during love song “Overdue,” his banjo dancing lightly over Pinkus’ melodic low end. Later, he picked up a flying-V guitar and wailed with a beaming Bobby Rock on “Road,” his tale of a methamphetamine dealer hell bent on destruction. The latter was the perfect lead-up to an end cap of Honky songs. Running on pure diesel, where even the girls on the mud flaps would be giving you the middle finger, Honky took us for a whirlwind ride as they stretched their time to the max. There’s a dirty grind with a rough-and-tumble heart in their sound, and Barnes’ wild guitar freakouts fit perfectly. The grins on their faces and laughter as they would catch each other’s eyes said it all – these cats were having a hell of a party up there, ripping it apart for those of us left standing at the brink of 2 a.m. at The Palm Door. Although he hasn’t called Austin home for awhile, at one point a gentleman in the back cried, “Welcome home, Danny!” A true original who has never fit in anyone’s box, Barnes’ presence is certainly a welcome addition to SXSW this year.

Continue reading for more pics…

Images by: Scott Dudelson

Danger Mouse – Broken Bells at Spinner Party

James Mercer – Broken Bells at Spinner Party

Broken Bells at Spinner Party

The Asteroids Galaxy Tour at Emo’s Annex

Leo Rondeau at Club Deville

Doll and The Kicks at Emo’s Annex

Drake Bell at St. David’s Hall

Freelance Whales at Paste Party

Henry Clay People at Little Radio Party

Hollarado at Canadian BBQ Party

Javelin at Buffalo Billiards

Mando Diao at Mohawk

Will Shef – Okkervil River at Paste Party

Roky Erickson at Paste Party

Suckers at Paste Party

Titus Andronicus at Force Field Party

Trespassers William at Hilton Gardens

Visqueen at Stubb’s

Dawes at Club Deville

Check back tomorrow for more coverage of SXSW 2010…

JamBase | Texas

Go See Live Music!


SXSW Introduces Huddlehub, Phonebooth and Tungle

A number companies as well as app developers introduced some apps at SXSW. One can take advantage of Montreal-based Tungle which is considered to be a new calendaring service, due to it you are able to set up meetings with coworkers and friends.
You are enabled with your own custom URL and personal profile. It displays [...]

Microsoft Launches User Experience Kit at SXSW

At the South by Southwest (SXSW) conference in Austin, Microsoft launched its new User Experience Kit.
– At the South by Southwest (SXSW) conference in Austin, Microsoft launched its new User Experience Kit.
In a March 12 blog post on the Microsoft Silverlight team blog,
Microsoft said the quot;Microsoft User Experience Kit is targeted at
technical and creative leads who want to better understand t…


Geolocation and Social Media Are the Main Subject to be Discussed at SXSW

Such things as social media and geolocation are discussed in the closed-door sessions as well as in the hallways. A lot of attention is drawn towards the geolocation moves of big players like Nokia and Google. The two companies develop huge databases that associate location data with places in the real world by means of [...]

New Project From Deer Tick Delta Spirit & Dawes at SXSW

NEW PROJECT FROM MEMBERS OF DEER TICK, DELTA SPIRIT AND DAWES TO DEBUT AT SXSW

MG&V stands for McCauley, Goldsmith, and Vasquez / More specifically

John McCauley – frontman of Deer Tick, Taylor Goldsmith – frontman of Dawes
And Matt Vasquez – frontman of Delta Spirit

John McCauley by Pavan

Notoriously adverse to sitting still, John McCauley felt the urge to write and record during some of Deer Tick‘s recent downtime. Deer Tick chose Dawes to support a leg of their summer 2009 tour, during which McCauley and Goldsmith developed an affinity for each other’s songwriting. McCauley decided that Nashville would be the perfect location to write some new songs, and invited Goldsmith to join him. As the project began to take shape, McCauley and Goldsmith decided Matt Vasquez was the man to complete their vision for the project. A few days after tape started rolling, Vasquez arrived in Nashville – never having met McCauley. The three songwriters immediately bonded and proceeded to make a timeless masterpiece. Dawes drummer Griffin Goldsmith also joined the group to contribute percussion.

MG&V will make their world debut at the Coda Agency SXSW Showcase at the Ale House on Friday, March 19 at 1 a.m.

Album details will be released later in the year. Expect MG&V announcements at
twitter.com/MGandV.


Kayceman’s Treehouse Party SXSW: Hips, Cortez, Everest, BL

Kayceman’s Treehouse Party

Featuring: The Mother Hips, Red Cortez, Everest, Entrance Band, Big Light, Moondoggies
Thursday, March 18 / Noon to 8 p.m. / Cheers on 6th St. / Free – No Badge or Wristband Required

In addition to filing daily reports from Austin’s SXSW music marathon, JamBase Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce will be helping to put on Kayceman’s Treehouse Party. Set for Thursday, March 18 at Cheers (416 E. Sixth St.) things get going at noon and won’t stop until 8:00 p.m. Featuring a bunch of JamBase favorites including The Mother Hips, Red Cortez, Everest, Big Light and more it’s sure to be a stand-out event in the haze of South by Southwest. The party is free and everyone is welcome; no badge or wristband is required.

Kayceman’s Treehouse Party (in order of appearance)

Any Day Parade

The Fresh & Onlys

Leslie and the Badgers

The Moondoggies

The Entrance Band

Red Cortez

The Mother Hips

Everest

Big Light

Royal Bangs

JamBase is also co-sponsoring the 40 Watt Party on Saturday. That event features The Whigs and Dead Confederate. Details on that free party can be found here.

An overwhelming list of official SXSW showcases is available at sxsw.com/music/shows/byvenue. Two helpful links for day parties (mostly free, though many require RSVP) can be found at austin360.com/music and do512.com. And you can of course always check JamBase for concert information.

The music portion of SXSW begins Wednesday, March 17 and runs until Sunday, March 21. Keep an eye on JamBase as we’ll be crawling through Austin all week with pens in hand and cameras charged ready to report back on what we find.


SXSW: 40 Watt/JamBase Party Whigs, Dead Confederate, Camper

SXSW: 40 Watt/JamBase Party

Featuring: The Whigs, Dead Confederate, Camper Van Beethoven

Saturday, March 20 / Noon to 8:00 p.m. / The Side Bar

SXSW is just around the corner and JamBase will be there. Not only will we be reporting daily on our musical discoveries, but we’ll be helping to sponsor a party with Athens, GA’s 40 Watt. Set for Saturday, March 20 from noon to 8 p.m. at the Side Bar, located at 602 E. 7th Street in Austin, TX, the show will feature The Whigs, Dead Confederate, Camper Van Beethoven, Warpaint, Twin Tigers, Modern Skirts, Packway Handle Band and a bunch of other great bands. Below is the lineup in order of appearance, first to last. Set times TBD.

This party is open to the public, no badge or wrist bands required. So if you’re anywhere near Austin come by and say hi!

Vic Chesnutt Stage

Modern Skirts (Athens, GA)

James Husband (Athens, GA)

Warpaint (Los Angeles, CA)

J Roddy Walston & The Business (Baltimore MD)

Camper Van Beethoven (Santa Cruz, CA)

Dead Confederate (Athens, GA)

The Whigs (Athens, GA)

Ruby Isle (Minneapolis, MN / Athens, GA)

Jerry Fuchs Stage

Lera Lynn (Athens, GA)

Holy Liars (Athens, GA)

Jonny Corndawg (Nashville, TN)

Futurebirds (Athens, GA)

Gift Horse (Athens, GA)

Twin Tigers (Athens, GA)

Ponderosa (Athens, GA / Atlanta, GA)

Jon Guthrie Stage

Spring Tigers (Athens, GA)

Quiet Hooves (Athens, GA)

Reptar (Athens, GA)

Packway Handle Band (Athens, GA)

Venice is Sinking (Athens, GA)

The Tenant (Vancouver, BC)

American Cheeseburger (Athens, GA)

Savagist (Athens, GA)

JamBase’s Editor-in-Chief Aaron Kayce is also hosting Kayceman’s Treehouse Party on Thursday March, 18 at Cheers. Details on that party can be found here.

As always, there are a plethora of official showcases and unofficial parties happening during SXSW. A few links we’ve found helpful in planning our attack have come from sxsw.com/music/shows/byvenue, do512.com, austin360.com/music/sxsw and of course our very own JamBase!


Festival NRMAL in Monterrey Like a Mexican SXSW!

Inaugural Festival/NRMAL Takes Over Monterrey, Mexico March 13

YACHT

The first-ever Festival NRMAL (F/N), organized by NRMAL and Alianza Francesa de Monterrey, is introduced to the world March 13, 2010 in Monterrey, Mexico, on the grounds of the Alianza Francesa de Monterrey during the weekend prior to SXSW.

F/N brings a collection of emerging artists and musicians together to showcase their work in a small, intimate setting framed by a Mexican cultural landscape. Four stages with a capacity of 700 people each showcase independent bands on the rise to a young Mexican audience who would otherwise not have the opportunity to see them.

The festival is an opportunity for artists and audiences of all nationalities to visit Monterrey, get exposure to Mexican culture, and potentially establish artistic collaborations with the international community. The bands slated for F/N come from countries such as Argentina, Spain and Mexico, just to name a few. F/N also helps position Monterrey as a stopping point within the touring circuits of American and international bands.

Full Lineup
YACHT
Daedelus
Banda de Turistas
Death Set
Nite Jewel
Yellow Fever
Julianna Barwick
Juiceboxxx
White Rainbow
The Keyishe
Los Amparito
Chico Sonido
Yppah
Awesome Color
Capsula
Tyvek
Golden Triangle
Poirier
Toy Selectah
Rebolledo
Cousin Cole
Electric Electric
Sebastien Schuller
Robot Koch
Ghost Beard
PDP
The Volture
She´s a Tease
60 Tigres
Quid Comba
Los Erres
Yo! Linares
El Cuarto
White Ninja
Black Fo
Uvi Love
Lady Hustle
Sonido San Francisco
La Musique Pop
Milkman

Art Lineup
Equipo Plástico (España/Francia)
Nuria Mora
Nano4814
Sixe
Eltono
Los Contratistas (Maf, Skrew, Huizar)
Colectivo Zenzontle (Blast, Sanez, Dose)
PROJECT PROJECTIONS (Virtual Exhibition of 30 Artists)
Carlos Olvera
Pablo Moreno, PM!


SXSW: Partial Band List/Panels

SOUTH BY SOUTHWEST ANNOUNCES PARTIAL BAND LIST, PANEL INFO, STAGE NEWS

Pretty Lights

The South by Southwest (SXSW) Music Conference and Festival, scheduled to take place March 17-21, 2010 in Austin, Texas, is pleased to announce a few of the bands scheduled to perform, artists that are participating on panels and exciting changes at the SXSW Day Stage.

This year’s SXSW Music Conference will feature some notable artists that will be speaking on panels taking place in the Austin Convention Center. Judy Collins shares her thoughts on Where Goes English Folk Music?, John Doe joins Ian Rogers‘ panel The Cultural Significance of Direct-to-Fan Marketing, DJ Spooky encourages the spread of music into established cultural institutions in Performing Arts: New Frontier for Live Acts, Melissa Auf Der Mar exhibits her photographic side on Image Makers Of Rock and Soul, Suzanne Vega kicks MP3 butt on Music Artists: Getting A Digital Ass-Kicking, Andrew WK dissects rock star myths on What Becomes A Legend Most, Chris Walla highlights his studio work on Producers Adapt & Survive, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth recall early gigs on CBGBs Stories, and Anya Marina talks soundtracks on Case Study: New Moon.

Join these artists and over 350 other speakers for an enlightening look at the past, present and future of the music industry.

The SXSW Day Stage also in the Austin Convention Center, will be partnering with six great radio stations from around the country who will present Day Stage performances on their airwaves. These are KCRW, KEXP, WXPN, The Current, KUT, and Mexico City’s Reactor.

Each station will present a three hour block of music. Highlighting KCRW‘s block on Saturday March 20 will be Rogue Wave, Middle East and Lissie. More artists will be announced soon. SXSW Day Stage performances take place in Ballroom D from 12:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, and 12:00 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. on Saturday.

SXSW Initial Band List (selected from over 10,000 entries)

!!! (Brooklyn, NY)
Amaral (Madrid, SPAIN)
Anita Tijoux (Santiago, CHILE)
Apoptygma Berzerk (Oslo, NORWAY)
Athlete (London, ENGLAND)
Bajofondo (Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA)
Balkan Beat Box (Tel Aviv, ISRAEL)
Band of Skulls (London, ENGLAND)
Bear In Heaven (Brooklyn, NY)
Black Milk (Detroit, MI)
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (Los Angeles, CA)
Bomba Estereo (Bogota, Colombia)
Broken Social Scene (Toronto, CANADA)
Chalie Boy (Hearne, TX)
Chamillionaire & Paul Wall (Houston, TX)
Cymbals Eat Guitars (New York, NY)
Deer Tick (Providence, RI)
Evan Dando (New York, NY)
Frightened Rabbit (Selkirk, SCOTLAND)
Fucked Up (Toronto, CANADA)
Grant Hart (St. Paul, MN)
Hauschka (Dusseldorf, GERMANY)
Here We Go Magic (Brooklyn, NY)
Hudson Mohawke (Glasgow, SCOTLAND)
Invincible (Detroit, MI)
jj (Gothenburg, SWEDEN)
Killer Mike (Atlanta, GA)
LA Riots (Los Angeles, CA)
Les Savy Fav (Brooklyn, NY)
Maldita Vecindad (Mexico City, MEXICO)
Marina & The Diamonds (London, ENGLAND)
Mayer Hawthorne & The County (Ann Arbor, MI)
Midlake (Denton, TX)
Miike Snow (Stockholm, SWEDEN)
Mr Hudson (London, ENGLAND)
Mundo Livre SA (Recife, BRAZIL)
Murs (Los Angeles, CA)
Natalia Lafourcade (Mexico City, MEXICO)
Pretty Lights (Charlottesville, VA)
Rye Rye (Baltimore, MD)
Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Brooklyn, NY)
She & Him (Los Angeles, CA)
Shwayze (Malibu, CA)
Spoon (Austin, TX)
Steve Aoki (Los Angeles, CA)
Systema Solar (Taganga, COLOMBIA)
Texas Tornados (San Antonio, TX)
The Drums (Brooklyn, NY)
The Middle East (Townsville, AUSTRALIA)
The Soft Pack (San Diego, CA)
The Very Best (New York, NY)
The xx (London, ENGLAND)
Trae (Houston, TX)
VV Brown (London, ENGLAND)
Wolfgang Gartner (Austin, TX)

This list is subject to change. This is only a portion of the bands that will be performing at the SXSW Music Festival.

For more on SXSW, check out our 2009 coverage here.