Thursday, March 25, 2010

Hole In The Wall - March 18, 2010

SXSW is one of the largest music festivals in the United States, every Spring the city of Austin is overrun with enough bands, performers and record labels to make you go cross-eyed. This year I took a drive down to Texas with a friend of mine to see what all the fuss was about and to just outright have a blast. The journey was tedious and the nights were long but in the end I had one of the best concert going experiences of my life. Over the course of three days I took in more shows than most people do in an entire year. From big cooperate sponsored event parties like FILTER Magazine's: Showdown at Cedar Street to small college parties at the 21st Street Co-Op. I wandered all over the city taking in as much music as I could without passing out or dying. Some days it was sunny and warm, others it was cold and wet, but all were amazing.

After driving through the night, and being up nearly 36 hours straight, I hit Austin around noon on Thursday. My first destination was a bar, appropriately named Hole In The Wall, where a dizzying tag-team music event was taking place. Bands were rotating sets on two stages, one in the front and one in the back. When I arrived the New Jersey band Makeout Party were on the back stage finishing up their set. Less than a minute after they were done the Austin natives Through The Trees were playing in the front room. The bands flipped in and out like this for the rest of the event, think speed dating only with music and you'll have the idea.


One thing to understand is despite the whiplash pace of bands setting up and tearing down the overall quality of music was amazing. Through The Trees took the stage with some hard rock riffs and heavy beats before the focus switched to the back room where the guitarist from Most Ghosts was doing a solo set full of reverberating, fuzzy guitar and cryptic whispered lyrics. Later the Austin foursome Salesman took the front stage with some mesmerizing alt-rock about ghosts, sex and UFOs. Frontman Devin James Fry's searing vocals perfectly compliment the alt-country guitar riffs and twisted lyrics. Their new album is called SKULL and I highly recommend checking it out, most of the songs are streaming on their myspace page.

The Deaf Ears took the back stage next with some catchy piano-pop full of heavy Beatles/Kinks influences. One of the most polished bands to perform at this particular event, The Deaf Ears came together from the broken pieces of Joel Mullins' previous band Tammany Hall Machine. THM was booking some good shows and building a decent amount of buzz in Austin before it abruptly fell apart. Instead of calling it quits Mullins picked up Scott Oliphant on drums along with former THM bandmates Mick southerland and Geoff Dupree to form The Deaf Ears. Walking the fine line between polished rock-pop and bar band rock, TDE blend stomping rhythms and lush piano with emotion heavy lyrics about relationships and drowning your sorrow in whiskey.


Obsolete Machines took the front stage next with their engaging brand of atmospheric, experimental rock. Armed with only two keyboards, one drum set and a mic, OM are just different enough to set them apart from the rest of the pack. And once they have your attention their moody brand of dark prog-rock will seep into your mind and swirl around in your head for weeks. Think Amnesiac-era Radiohead only darker. The band has plans in the works to leave Austin on a national tour sometime in the next year, so keep an eye out for them at a venue near you. Their 'new breed' of music may be to dark or orchestral for casual listeners, but if you open your mind and give it a chance you may find something you didn't know you were looking for.

I made it through several hours of great music and a few beers before sleep deprivation caught up with me and I was forced to either hit the sack or start hallucinating. While option number two seems fun in theory I had a big day of shows ahead of me so I decided to head to the hotel and pass-out for the remainder of the day. Walking down the streets in Austin I was surrounded by great music calling from almost every open door making the decision to walk away one of the most difficult of the entire trip.

There is video of several of the sets from Hole In The Wall up on YouTube for anyone who wishes to explore these bands further.

No comments:

Post a Comment