Paul Wall

Three Houston veterans–Mike Jones, Slim Thug and Paul Wall–helped our not-so-neighbors in southern Texas slowly invade the rap world in 2005. But Mike Jones dropped the ball with a platinum-selling (but notoriously redundant) CD, and Slim Thug’s album, though one of the best of the year, lost its Texas shine…

Jackson Browne

Poorly recorded with oddly muffled vocals and an overemphasized, enthusiastic audience, Jackson Browne’s late-in-the-game “unplugged” recording will come as a shock to all who thought the well-tanned West Coast icon had retired or simply become irrelevant. At 57, Browne brings a morose sense of purpose to 12 songs spanning his…

The Hunchback of Notre Dame

Every few years, 90.1 At Night’s Paul Slavens charms local music fans with a special movie-related concert that would make even Cameron Crowe blush. With the help of local rockers from bands like Baboon, Mission Giant and local American Idol favorite Daron Beck, Slavens puts on infrequent live performances of…

La Femme Qui Rock, with The Happy Bullets, Knife in the Water, more

For Spune Productions’ second woman-focused showcase, local music kingpin Lance Yocom has extended his space-rock arms not only outside his favorite genre but also his favorite city. Three stand-out Austin bands lead the way in this must-see concert, starting early in the evening with the incredibly surreal One Umbrella, an…

The Dwarves

No doubt, gentle reader, reports of violence elicit in you the appropriate sense of sympathy for the victim. Queens of the Stone Age’s Josh Homme, however, has pleaded no contest to two charges of misdemeanor battery against the Dwarves’ Blag Dahlia, the singer known for drunken 15-minute shows, sexist cover…

Sage Francis

“I’m the motherfuckin’ Bill O’Reilly of this hip-hop shit,” Sage Francis claims on A Healthy Distrust, his first release from punk staple Epitaph Records. He may not be too far off the mark. With a journalism degree and a passion for political wordplay, Francis has seamlessly combined aggressive battle rhymes…

The Beatdown

If turntables outsell electric guitars and everyone and their mother is a DJ, then what exactly sets the Terry Mullans of the world apart? Hailing from Chicago’s fervent dance scene is a start, as Mullan was exposed from an early age to true dance originators such as Farley “Jackmaster” Funk…

Llano Avenue

“With music, you think it’s a young man’s game,” local country crooner Darryl Lee Rush says. “But at 39, it’s like I can finally make some moves.” With his graying beard and receding hairline, Rush looks more like a middle school teacher than a country up-and-comer, but his dark eyes…

Bono Fide

At the Dallas Observer, we can’t always speak with big stars, but that doesn’t stop us from conducting interviews with them. Here, with the help of every U2 album’s liner notes, is an interview with Bono himself. Sort of. Dallas Observer: Good afternoon, Bono. Bono: Hello, hello. DO: Why are…

So You’re Oates

It’d be pretty easy to have a laugh or two at Daryl Hall & John Oates’ expense. After all, the band (they insist they’re not a duo) hasn’t had a big hit in at least a decade, and in the wake of Internet cult hits like “Yacht Rock” (go on,…

Ween-ie Roast

Put that copy of “The Monster Mash” away, Pops. We hate when backyard haunted house organizers bore kids’ ears on Halloween with cheesy sound effects and campy songs. Instead, why not scare the Father, Son and Holy Ghost out of the little buggers? Create a truly haunted house with these…

Settling Score

Because I was an ’80s kid, MTV glowed in the background for many of my most formative moments. The first time I bonded with my father was while watching Robert Palmer’s “Addicted to Love” video together. My first taste of rebellion came in kindergarten when I stayed up late and…

Odds & Ends

Deep Trouble: On Friday, October 14, the Entertainment Collective, owners of Gypsy Tea Room, Trees, Jeroboam and the Green Room, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Chapter 11 allows a company to continue operating while it reorganizes to repay its creditors (rather than, say, sell off the trees inside of Trees),…

Rogue Wave

Rogue Wave’s Out of the Shadows was last year’s great indie-pop debut–a bittersweet album of ’60s-inspired pop ideal for melodists and English lit students who had gone too long between Shins albums. It was the work of one man–Oakland’s Zach Rogue (born Zach Schwartz), who recorded the album before even…

Dangerdoom

Of late, hip-hop supergroups have fared better than their rock counterparts. C’mon–Madvillain? Handsome Boy Modeling School? Incredible stuff, especially in comparison to Velvet Revolver. Now let’s add Dangerdoom to that distinguished list. A collaboration between it-producer Danger Mouse and Madvillain rhymer MF Doom, The Mouse and the Mask goes high-concept…

Services

Tristan Bechet and Christopher Pravdica, veterans of New York’s Flux Information Society, one of the city’s seminal techno bands, regrouped as Services to mix a little more rock in with all of the computers. Using a cut-and-paste editing technique clearly imitative of Zappa, the pair piece together tape loops and…

El Gato, Belafonte, Salim Nourallah and the Polaroids, I Love Math

Despite logistical and personnel complications, local legends El Gato nailed a rare Thursday night appearance so well that it reinforced questions of why the formerly Denton-based band wasn’t headlining a Saturday show instead. It shouldn’t have been this good–band manager Kirk Dixon replaced longtime bassist/keyboardist Evan Hisey not too long…

John Cale

Leave it to Snoop Dogg of all people to put Velvet Underground co-founder John Cale in his place. “I realized I had gotten entirely away from my minimalist background,” the 63-year old Welshman says. However, the inspiration he drew from “Drop It Like It’s Hot” wasn’t Snoop’s rapping, but Pharrell…

Liz Phair

There is a joke to be made about Liz Phair performing on Halloween. The woman is a little scary, whether swinging her sexuality like a pair of nunchucks or making a second-act grab for mainstream success. A Liz Phair show on the 31st is also scary because, as a performer,…

Iron and Wine with Calexico

For Calexico’s Joey Burns and John Convertino, agreeing to collaborate with Sam Beam of Iron and Wine was a no-brainer. It’s an indie dream come true, a fantasy mating of Beam’s sepia-toned Southern folk with the instumental fireworks of Calexico’s widescreen technicolor West. Logistical hassles delayed the project, with both…

Heartless Bastards

n 2005, Erika Wennerstrom saved South by Southwest. Thanks to record-setting attendance, most of the Austin music fest’s big-name shows were reduced to laminate-only status, leaving real music fans in the cold…that is, until Wennerstrom’s Heartless Bastards snuck in with a ’70s rock blast that any casual fan could attend–and…