Roadshows

Rhymes with ‘bored’ Now that Jerry Garcia has switched bands, gone to join that extended jam session in the sky, it looks like the Dead are just that. But what luck: Just as the Grateful have decided to bow out gracefully (for the fall tour, at least, though once the…

Trio of one

Ty Macklin stands in front of his Ensoniq Advanced Sampling Recorder, holding a computer disc that contains samples from six different songs from such artists as Al Green, Dexter Gordon, and Wes Montgomery. He slides the disc into the keyboard and, as he touches the keys, each piece of music…

Off the record

Throughout the last decade, James “Big Bucks” Burnett has celebrated the oddball (Tiny Tim), befriended the famous (Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page), and championed the dead (Mr. Ed, the eight-track tape). At a time when the wise and the savvy were peddling compact discs, Burnett stocked his record-store bins with…

Welcome to Hell’s Lobby

Although he doesn’t claim to know everything about the Denton music scene, Wanz Dover likes to say he’s trying. Clad in a well-worn My Bloody Valentine shirt and dark jeans, the tousle-haired leader of newly formed band Mazinga Phaser talks eagerly about the Denton underground and its emerging space-rock trend…

Reviews

Mashmellow valentine King of America Elvis Costello Rykodisc It’s a reissue, and it’s not. The first of Elvis C.’s 1986 “comeback” albums, this one with the Attractions traded in for Elvis P.’s band, it marked a departure from which he’s yet to veer–the pop traded in for swing, the rock…

Roadshows

Sleeps with angels Many of the observations about the woman known as Bjork–that she is a “pixie,” “the girl who fell to earth,” “the ice princess,” a child in a woman’s clothing–are totally surface. They are based upon the obvious observations: She has been captured in photographs as a woman…

Roadshows

Four for Texas It’s easy to take for granted men like Ronnie Dawson, Junior Brown, Joe Ely, and Butch Hancock. It has always seemed as though these four Texas-born musicians–best-known as singer-songwriters, revered as legends, admired for clinging to tradition–have been around forever and would never disappear from the landscape…

Unsung diva

About halfway through Rage To Survive, the new autobiography of Etta James, one thought hits you smack between the eyes: This is not the kind of life story that’s written while the subject is still alive, much less by the subject herself. The book is a harrowing page-turner that chronicles…

Reviews

Warehouse of wonder Besides Sugar Rykodisc With the band on so-called hiatus–recent word comes from Austin that Bob Mould has actually dissolved Sugar–Ryko cleans out the warehouse of songs and stories for good: 17 tracks of odds and sods, plus a “bonus” live disc for the first 25,000 who show…

Junior or joke?

Bob Wills Jr. cannot come to the phone. He is too sick to speak, his wife Elizabeth explains, the victim of a recent series of strokes that have left him incapacitated and near death. Through her lawyer, Elizabeth insists she will not leave his bedside–not to speak to a reporter,…

Too punk to f–

Turner Van Blarcum is perhaps the most easily recognized figure seen stalking Deep Ellum’s streets. With his shaved and mohawked head, he is a lumbering rail of tattoos and energy–a punk-rocker, to be certain, but no punk. When he speaks, his voice rattles around in his throat as if being…

Reviews

In utero Foo Fighters Foo Fighters Roswell/Capitol Dave Grohl has no illusions: “I was always going to be ‘that guy from Kurt Cobain’s band,’ and I knew it,” he says, and so he and Pat Smears do not go out of their way to sever the ties that bind; rather,…

Only the lonely

Love songs are, of course, the heart–or, more accurately, the broken heart–of popular music. Whether they are autobiographical stories or thinly veiled tales or imagined fantasies and failures, songs about love (or the promise of love, or the departure of love) constitute the bulk of the popular song catalog, followed…

Don’t call it a comeback

“Did anybody tell you you have a voice like Joan Baez?” The crowd in the Dark Room on this Wednesday night after the Fourth of July is atypically small, the sort of intimate setting that engenders banter between audience members and performers. On stage, Meredith Louise Miller and Bruce Dickinson…

Roadshows

Good enough, Wells enough Twenty-three years after its release, Buddy Guy and Junior Wells Play the Blues stands as one of the turning points in the history of modern blues; it’s the crossroads at which the authentic and the commercial meet, a project that began with good intentions (to make…

Collyers of the wild

As Matt Hillyer and Steve Berg welcome their guest into the living room-cum-rehearsal space in which Lone Star Trio and the Collyers practice and hang out, they bring out three cans of Lone Star beer. The gesture could not be more welcome, or appropriate: As two-thirds of Lone Star Trio–Hillyer…

Roadshows

Sing out Given the reluctance of the recording industry’s homosexuals to come out of their respective closets, it’s ironic that Melissa Etheridge’s rising popularity coincided with her proudly proclaiming her same-sex preference. Her timing, during the last presidential campaign, couldn’t have been better: her three albums released till that point…

Mekons, you Rhett

When Old 97’s frontman Rhett Miller calls from a Chicago recording studio, where the band is recording the follow-up to last year’s Hitchhike to Rhome, he cannot contain his enthusiasm. He speaks quickly and a little breathlessly, bursting with the news that labelmate (on the Chicago-based Bloodshot Records) and Windy…

Reviews

Red hot and boo hoo Red Hot + Bothered, Vols. 1-2 Various artists Red Hot/Kinetic/Reprise The latest installment in the “Red Hot + …” series stops off in the indie-rock world, with the big names (Guided By Voices, Sebadoh, Breeders, Lois, Spinanes, Lisa Germano, Uncle Tupelo’s Jay Farrar, Grifters) joining…

Fight the power

At the end of a two-hour interview, during which he has amiably recounted a story of a life spent traveling the world only to end up becoming the man who cuts the paychecks for Neil Young and Green Day and Eric Clapton, Reprise Records president Howie Klein suddenly becomes very…

Deep roots

James McMurtry has always returned home, no matter how far he strayed from it. He was born in Fort Worth in 1962, but left the city when he was young after his parents divorced: his mother moved to Richmond, Virginia, to take a job as an English professor, and James…

Two-drink minimum

The band plays in the corner–near the front door, just a few feet away from the bar. Sometimes, when the music is quiet enough, they can hear a patron place a drink order even if it’s whispered to the bartender; the gurgling of the cappucino machine, the plops of ice…