
Vines |
SXSW is perfect for those afflicted
with Attention Deficit Disorder. For those with
focus and specific goals, it can be a miserable
nightmare. Conflicting
schedule entries become a lottery of choices
involving mile-long walks that often result
in a rush to a venue just to wait for a tardy
band. Or worse, you arrive to find that you
have missed the act you’re trying to see
because they decided to run early.
For those who are capable of
just shrugging it off—or better yet, just
naturally unaffected by the fact that ‘the
trains don’t run on time’—the
world is their oyster.
In Austin, as the whipping whirlwind
of festivity gets to full force, it just is
what it is; and there is no power to change
this sheer and absolute chaos. Despite a good
and productive start on Wednesday, today is
proof of this.
I arrive at the Hilton Garden
Inn a good fifteen minutes before the listening
party for Atmosphere’s
When Life Gives You Lemons You Paint
That Shit Gold and order up a
Bloody Mary. Not sure where the session is taking
place, I just post up at the bar and scout from
the stool. Eventually the thud of hip-hop bass
emanates from afar. Like Toucan Sam, I follow
my ears down a hallway and find the man behind
the music, Sean Daly, aka Slug,
collectively Atmosphere, squatting unassuming
next to the check-in desk. I don’t even
realize it’s him until the table attendant
requests to check my bag, and he mutters, “We’re
trying to stop violence in the hip-hop community.”
Sarcasm aside, the security
around the new album seems a bit over the top.
Even Atmosphere’s publicist Dana
Meyerson had to fly to New York to
hear the record.
Slug is, as always, unabashed.
Echoing Meyerson, he says, “What’s
so crazy about not wanting shit leaked early?”
He explains that as soon as the album is released,
it’s going to be everywhere; but up to
then, he’s trying to track the source
of any leaks.
“If a shitty recording
comes out two weeks before the release, then
we know that someone snuck a recorder into one
of the sessions. If a clean recording leaks
a week before the release, it came from the
plant.” It sounds like a scientific study,
or an experiment, but Slug denies that it’s
all that. “Experiment is a strong word.
It’s definitely an experience.”
Meyerson asserted in a phone
call that the secrecy is mostly a ploy to drum
up attention; but Slug counters, “If that’s
how she needs to view it, that’s cool.
No matter what we do, she still has to do her
job; so, however it makes sense.”

Chuck Reece
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Sounds ballsy, but his explanation
makes sense on some levels. “Of all of
my friends, I’m the only person who can
do something like this. I can come back and
say, ‘Ali, do this.’ Or ‘Ali,
man, don’t do this.’” In the
ear where album sales are tanking and the recording
industry is scrambling to figure out where its
next dollar is coming from, artists like Atmosphere
have a lot more stake in the game and can brainstorm
and experiment on their own with distribution
and promo concepts. At this point, anything
is worth a shot.
All the distribution politics
aside, let’s remember that there is an
album at the bottom of all of this; and what
a departure this album is. When Life Gives
You Lemons… is Atmosphere’s
first record that features almost all live instrumentation.
“Everything except the beats,” Slug
clarifies.
The style is off Atmosphere’s
beaten path as well. The music is more relaxed,
as is Slug’s vocal approach on most tracks.
He comes across as a storyteller—which
he has always been, but this time with more
composure and no force. He sounds like he expects
you to listen, not as if he’s vying for
your attention. Check out “Waitress,”
with beatbox backing from Tom Waits. It’s
a song you’d have expected Waits to write,
but Slug has done so—and done so with
reverence.
With the music disc and an accompanying
DVD nestled in a hardbound book with lyrics
and credits as well as illustrations relative
to the material from MK Larada, When Life
Gives You Lemons You Paint That Shit Gold
drops April 22, 2008 on Rhymesayers/Epitaph…
and good luck finding it before that!
After four hours and hoofing
about six miles, I finally hear my first live
performance of the day from The Wombats.
This UK trio is packed with the youthful exuberance
of rugby league. After four years of playing
together, the ‘Bats are releasing their
first LP that’s available in the U.S.,
Backfire at the Disco
April 14, 2008, after the November 2007 U.K.
full-length, The Wombats present ... A Guide
to Love, Loss & Desperation and the self-titled
E.P., which is available currently in the U.S.
from Bright Antenna/The Kids America.
It seems a bit odd that these
energetic sprites have been cultivated over
time, but bassist Tord Øverland-Knudsen
(Norwegian, if you hadn’t guessed) tells
us that the band has taken its time because
in the era of flavour-of-the-month musicians,
they want to make sure they are taking an approach
that gives them staying power. After four years,
one could say they’ve already had a good
run. But with the energy these boys unleash
live, there’s no doubt they’ll be
around a while, with all that, quirk and charm.
Check out an extended Kaffeine
Buzz interview with Øverland-Knudsen
in the coming days.
Rolling on with British Invasion’08,
I stumble upon Fanfarlo at
the Levi’s/Fader party. I popped in to
scoop up a signed copy of Punk Is
Dead—Punk Is Everything
from author Bryan Ray Turcotte;
and, at first I thought I was hearing Clap Your
Hands Say Yeah in the foreground; but in fact,
it’s Simon Aurell and
company—aka Fanfarlo. Another ex-pat from
the great north, the London-based Aurell hails
from Norwegian origins and is a vocal dead-wringer
for David Byrne—which is why I thought
of Clap Your Hands… CYHSY vocalist Alec
Ounsworth also has a remarkably similar vocal
quality to Byrne, whose tenor majesty seemed
unmatchable until these woodwork indie-rock
replicates started showing up. No dis, though,
for certain. Anyone who can hold a candle to
the stylings of Byrne can hold a candle to my
ear.
As the sun is setting, the frustration
over traipsing around to see bands that are
late or have cancelled subsides. Eventually
you have to ‘let go and just rock.’
I head into the Beauty Bar to
cash in a couple of free drink tokens I brought
from San Francisco and catch a few numbers from
Chuck Treece feat. Dubtronic.
Treece is a Philly skate enthusiast who founded
a punk band back in the day, McRad.
Since then, Treece has worked as a studio musician
with acts like Sting and Billy Joel, to name
but a few. Tonight, Treece performs as a four-piece,
emanating chilled out funk-rock.
I make a quick hike to Elysium
for Japan Nite, a touring entourage
of six Japanese outfits. When we arrive, we
catch Avengers in Sci-fi, a
three piece who do a masterful job of creating
wild electro-noise rock. The information pack
they we picked up doesn’t have any info
on Avengers, for whatever reason, so it’s
good that we caught them. Other acts include
Detroit 7 and the apparent favorite, Ketchup
Mania. Japan Nite rolls through
Denver Wednesday, March 19th at the Hi-Dive.

Avengers In Hi-Fi
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Just up the street at Emo’s,
our growing favorites, Does It Offend
You, Yeah? are just setting up for
their set. They go on to rock the packed house
with a ferociously energetic blend of electro-
hardcore. Think of an English version of The
Faint with more hardcore, less arty, Fugazi-like
vocals. Hardcore hip-shaking to the max.
After another stunner from DIOFYY,
I hustle over to Stubbs to catch a bit of MGMT
who have come highly recommended. The venue
is stuffed to its gills, and we absolutely can’t
make out a thing visually, but the sound it
a swirling, sort of psychedelic pop, reminiscent
of Swervedriver.
The Cool Kids
are to be playing back at Emo’s, but we
arrive early and take in an entire set from
the dynamic DJ duo, Flosstradamus.
These guys turn four turntables, two iBooks
and a few mixers—not to mention an occasional
microphone—into an ass shaking machine
that churns out the best live-mixed onslaught
of crowd-stoking, jamming mashes out here. So
moved is the audience tonight that an ongoing
string of crowd surfers starts landing on my
head, with a Floss member taking the final dive
at the end of the set.
The Cool Kids are coming on
soon after Flosstradamus, but we only catch
a few songs as we are trying to make it to the
Venue Pangea to see the Vines;
but the Cool Kids reputation seems solid and
accurate as they take a mesmerizing effect over
the crowd as soon as the first beat drops.
The Vines frontman Craig
Nicholls is a little, denim-clad smoke
machine as he comes out of the green room in
a plume, cigarette dangling from his face, and
goes straight into “Ride With Me”—the
bands biggest hit to date.
Like England’s counterpart,
Pete Dougherty, the Aussie Nicholls is an animated
sprite of a man; a bit disheveled, but wholly
adorable, as his gesticulates spastically and
shrieks howls like a crooner banshee. His antics
may not be for all, but we are all over it.
They belt out a full set of energetic hard rock
anthems and ballads and easily make themselves
the highlight of the day.
I hike over to Cedar Door to
round out the night with Minneapolis’s
Tapes ‘n Tapes; but they’re
played an hour ahead of schedule. I end up seeing
Nada Surf take the stage; which
is honestly not my bag. At this point it seems
best to just call it a day and get some shut-eye.
Jef Hoskins, March 15, 2008
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