Tag: SXSW 2010 Recap (Page 4 of 6)

SXSW 2010 Quick Hits, Day 3: “When You’re Strange” panel

As a journalist, I was originally thinking I should really attend the panel on “Music Journalism in the Post-Print Era,” which was billed to explore the depressing economic decline in both the music and journalism industries. But as a huge Doors fan who was still buzzing off of Robbie Krieger’s guest appearance with Stone Temple Pilots the previous night at the Austin Music Hall, I couldn’t resist the chance to see him again on his own panel.

This 2:00 pm panel featured Doors guitarist Robbie Krieger and current Doors business manager Jeff Jampol discussing “When You’re Strange,” the upcoming feature documentary on the Doors set for release on April 9. Jampol said that Tom DiCillo was brought in to direct, and anyone who recalls DiCillo’s brilliant indie-film satire “Living in Oblivion” has to like the choice. Jampol told of how DiCillo had marveled at the vintage footage and said the the film needed to lose all the interviews, because the vintage footage puts the viewer there in the era, but the interviews take the viewer away. So the modern interviews will now only appear on the DVD release.

Jampol said that the reaction of original Doors manager Bill Siddons was telling. “What I saw, that’s what happened, you guys got it,” Siddons said after viewing the film, according to Jampol. Krieger noted that original Doors engineer Bruce Botnick did the audio engineering for film and that “the sound is amazing.” When asked about the writing of The Doors’ breakthrough hit “Light My Fire,” Krieger said he went all out.

“I had to compete with Jim, so I thought I’d write about the four elements,” said Krieger. “I liked the Stones’ ‘Play With Fire’ so I thought write about fire. I didn’t want it to be a simple blues, so I said I’m gonna put in every chord I know, there are like 15 chords in the tune… and somehow it worked out.”

When asked how singer Jim Morrison wrote music for his songs when he didn’t play an instrument, Krieger said that the singer “had this great pot,” and that after smoking it he heard the music in his head. Later on, Krieger said, the band would pull lyrics out of Jim’s journal and this is where “Peace Frog” came from, for example.

Jampol also noted that actor Johnny Depp provides the narration for the film, including the reading of some of Morrison’s poetry, which is weaved into the soundtrack by Botnick. “I was in tears when I heard it,” said Jampol. “I’m as proud of that [soundtrack] as anything we’ve done together.”

Queried about Morrison’s general feelings about the band, Krieger said the singer was always pushing for more. “Jim was never really satisfied with how big the Doors got, he wanted to be as big as The Beatles or The Stones,” said Krieger.

Asked about his favorite album, Krieger cited the band’s last one, LA Woman. Probably because we produced it ourselves and it was done really quickly without a lot of BS, and it was fun.”

SXSW 2010 Quick Hits, Day 2: The Mother Hips, interview with guitarist Tim Bluhm

These veteran Bay Area rockers threw down a jamming set of their melodic psych-roots rock. The band loves to play in Austin and it showed. Bassist Paul Hoagland played his custom 12-string Hamer bass for the entire set, which helped pump up the groove on dynamic tunes like “Magazine” and “Third Floor Story.” Guitarists Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono were in fine form, trading riffs and harmonizing vocals throughout the high-energy set, which featured one melodic rocker after another. “Time-Sick Son of a Grizzly Bear” brought the short but sweet set to a rousing conclusion with a furious assault of fuzzy riffs and pounding rhythms.

“Our whole approach to touring these days is to find cities we like to play and go there all the time,” said Bluhm, whom I interviewed at the bar earlier in the afternoon. Bluhm said the band almost broke up in 2005-06, but couldn’t help but come back together. This has a been a boon for music fans, since the band’s last two albums have been among the best work of their career. 2009’s Pacific Dust was recorded at Bluhm’s own Mission Bells Studio in San Francisco, where he also produced the upcoming album from pal Jackie Greene.

mother hips

The band also seems to be jamming a little more these days, and Bluhm said that had been a back and forth process.

“We used to jam a lot, then spent a bunch of years intentionally not jamming, trying to shake these distasteful associations we were getting. But then, we always want to change, keep evolving, so right now we are jamming out more and enjoying it, it’s fun,” said Bluhm. Regarding SXSW, Bluhm said he loves to play it but finds trying to go out a bit much.

“I honestly find it’s overwhelming at SXSW, and I never have the patience to stand in line,” said Bluhm when asked about what other bands he wanted to see at the festival. He did say he’d enjoyed seeing Spoon the previous night and was looking forward to Or the Whale, whom the Mother Hips would share a bill with the next day.

SXSW 2010 Quick Hits, Day 2: Red Cortez

After a quick lunch it was over to Cheers Shot Bar on 6th Street, where Jambase was presenting Kayceman’s Treehouse Day Party. This was a small stage, but out on a rooftop deck on a sunny day, very nice setting. Red Cortez out of Los Angeles rocked a two-guitar vintage sound, with vocalist Harley Prechtel-Cortez providing a gritty delivery that grabbed attention. One song sounded a bit like the Airborne Toxic Event, who Red Cortez are friends and former tour mates with. But Red Cortez has a darker and edgier overall sound.

red cortez
Photo by Sonia Onate

SXSW 2010 Quick Hits, Day 2: “Music and the Revolution” panel

This panel featured former Weather Underground leader Bill Ayers, Wayne Kramer of the MC5, Country Joe McDonald and Kent State 1970 shooting survivor Alan Canfora in a wide-ranging discussion of how music intersected with revolutionary politics and activism in the late ’60s and early ’70s. It was only a shame there weren’t more young musicians in the audience.

“There seemed to be an agreement among everyone that something was wrong [with society],” said Kramer. “Music fit in… because we tell the stories of it… We had a zeitgeist going.”

McDonald said that it was natural for him to put political lyrics in his music because of his radical upbringing, as opposed to most of his contemporaries who were rebelling against straight parents. He said it was this upbringing that enabled him to write his famous “Fixing to Die Rag.”

“Music empowers people… My song didn’t end the war, but it validated your feelings… ‘Four Dead in Ohio,’ wow, it releases your feelings and empowers you… It [music] is addicting, it’s like a drug.”

Ayers said the stomach-turning stories of G.I.s that came home from the Vietnam War were what had energized him and his peers to become active in the anti-war movement and that music was a constant in that movement

“Whenever we came together, we sang,” said Ayers. “It brought us the courage.”

Canfora said he and his classmates never imagined they might actually get shot at in the peaceful May 4, 1970 anti-war protests that saw four students killed and himself among nine wounded.

“We always had the idea that if we kept our distance, we’d be okay,” said Canfora, labeling the May 4 shootings a “barbaric crime which still remains a grievous injustice to this day.”

Ayers called it a “horrible wake-up call to the sewer we lived in,” and went on to describe the lessons of the era. “A mass movement starts with one person, two, three in your own neighborhood… This is the lesson… You fight and lose, you fight and lose, fight and lose, and then you win one.”

Canfora said music was a key part of the activism at Kent State that he felt helped eventually end the Vietnam War.

“Our goal was a strategy to bring the war home… We helped stop a criminal, imperialist war. We rose to that task and we won and that revolution continues today, and it was inspired by music,” said Canfora, who cited Country Joe & the Fish, the MC5 and Jefferson Airplane as key influences.

A line in Jefferson Airplane’s 1969 classic “We Can Be Together” was cited by both Canfora and Ayers as one of the most inspiring and on-point lyrics of of the times – “We are forces of chaos and anarchy…and we are very proud of ourselves.” Canfora cited modern punk bands the Casualties, the Unseen and Anti-Flag as current acts following in the revolutionary tradition, saying the lyrics now are much more powerful than what his generation had.

“It’s still going on today… The fact that SXSW is thriving is a good example of how we have won this revolution,” said Canfora in reference to the way that rock ‘n’ roll has become a huge part of American culture instead of just the counterculture.”

SXSW 2010 Quick Hits, Day 1: Spoon

I’d passed on Spoon’s headlining set at Stubbs to see Nas & Damian Marley, but the Austin-based indie rockers were still playing when the Emos’ show let out, so I went back in to catch the end of the set. I’ve been lukewarm on the band, although they have certain tunes I dig. I guess I just don’t understand their formula of playing two or three songs that are kinda blah, then throwing down a hard-hitting rocker, then two more blah, then another rocker. So the set was kind of up and down to this reporter’s view, as opposed to last year’s Wednesday night headliner set at Stubbs when the Decemberists captivated the crowd with a full performance of their Hazards of Love album.

spoon

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