The Will Rogers of shred

The concept of the Guitar Hero has left a bad taste in the mouths of critics and music fans ever since punk stressed feeling over technique. America’s appreciation for bigger-faster-harder guitar playing has waned ever since, but Dallas’ Andy Timmons may well change all that. He’s grinning hugely on the…

Roadshows

You don’t know what you’ve been missin’ Popular strummer-about-town Colin Boyd–most recently the author of “Peggy Sue Went Surfin'”–is certainly haunted by Buddy Holly’s ghost, but the former Cricket’s shade also makes it over to Austin to spook around Monte Warden’s house. You could make a case for Warden as…

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Pop goes the easel Non Pop-Specific pop poppins Carpe Diem Records It’s probably a disservice to the other guys in pop poppins to focus on Broose Dickinson, but he is the group’s hyper-creative frontman and guiding light. Pop poppins have always been the masters of an emotion-laden sonic flow, and…

More better blues

Local bluesman Pat Boyack has fully recovered from an unfortunate bit of confusion last summer when longtime Mike Morgan and the Crawl vocalist-harmonica player Lee McBee decided to stick with (actually, rejoin) Morgan & Co. rather than play with Boyack. Although Bruce Bowland, the vocalist he was working with immediately…

Out There

Sunshine daydream Bombs & Butterflies Widespread Panic Capricorn Records There was quite a bit of foofraw when Phish released Billy Breathes a few months ago. Much was made of the jam-happy group’s most convincing foray into the realm of accessible song, but that’s a space that Georgia’s Widespread Panic has…

Song of the South

Singer-songwriter Trish Murphy feels a particular warmth for Dallas. “The Dallas music scene really brought me back to life,” she says. “When I was at school [at the University of Dallas], Deep Ellum was in its beautiful early phase, this amazingly fertile, creative environment. I remember living out in Irving…

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Knowing where the lions are The Charity of Night Bruce Cockburn Rykodisc If 1994’s Dart to the Heart was Bruce Cockburn flexing the muscles he’d built up since the mid-’70s–his reputation and technique snagging T Bone Burnett as producer and a rocked-up sound heavy on horns–then The Charity of Night…

Shake your mantra maker

The axiom that history tends to repeat itself holds particularly true when it comes to music. In the summer of 1969, George Harrison recorded a catchy little tune called “The Hare Krishna Mantra,” which soon rose to the top of the British charts. At about the same time, John Lennon…

House of jazz

The red brick building sits on the high ground overlooking the intersection of Harry Hines Boulevard and Oak Lawn Avenue like a fortress, accessible only by a curving driveway that flashes past drivers almost before it’s perceived. For many it’s a phenomenon of the commuter age–something that’s seen every day…

Roadshows

Hot buttered soul Snoop may well be the Doggfather, but Isaac Hayes (pictured) is still one of soul music’s Godfathers. Few songs show up in both the form of parody and sincere tribute as often as his “Theme from Shaft,” and few rappers have personified Black Pride the way Hayes…

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Green, green grass of home who to love and when to leave Mary Cutrufello Independent release By now the more obvious aspects of Mary Cutrufello have been reduced to filler fodder, but the contrasts inherent in an African-American female from the East Coast with a Yale education attempting to play…

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Old tricks, new dogs Texas Blueswomen Chonita Turner, Jav-Lyn, and Lady Lotion TopCat Records Apart from touring acts like Buddy Guy and local blues jams, there exists a whole group of R&B/blues clubs that see few white faces but are no less valid for their self-containment (perhaps even more so)…

Battle stations, damage control

Most ’90s celebrities understand that baring their souls comes with the territory. Your average personality mag is brimming with profiles of famous people who disclose their deepest, darkest secrets as casually as they cash their royalty checks–and the few who don’t are viewed with suspicion. Eddie Vedder’s reluctance to share…

Ain’t life pop?

Tim Locke, felled by the season’s latest and nearly ubiquitous strain of flu, still manages to sound excited through the coughing and sniffling. Locke is the lead vocalist, guitarist, and main muse behind Grand Street Cryers, the Dallas pop quintet that’s enjoying the fallout of a magical bit of radio…

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As years go by 20th Century Blues Marianne Faithfull Reverso/RCA Records Berlin in the ’20s: no other phrase conjures up quite so complete a picture of decadence and doom. Denizens of the Weimar Republic had the hedonist’s perfect excuse, a traumatic past and a future that hinted at even worse,…

Roadshows

The feminine mystique There are some people who are so possessed of a love for life–and for love–that they are virtually forces of nature, blowing through situations and scenarios like some emotional Tasmanian devil. No matter how much these folks vex you–or break your heart–somehow you can’t hate them, so…

Stylistic etouffee

When Rick Reid’s will-to-Zydeco–honed in earlier bands Zydeco Faux Pas, then the Zydeco Swamptones–collided with the pop/cover-band tendencies of the Joybangers last summer, a new and wonderful thing was born: the band Hippie Gumbo. Perhaps it was a reward for finally resisting the urge to put the word “zydeco” in…

Willing to wait

Mirrors cover the walls of every room except the bedroom in Lou Barlow’s ancient Boston apartment house. Dark, wine-colored carpet and ornate woodwork line the new dwelling of the guiding auteur of lo-fi rock heroes Sebadoh. Their “Willing to Wait,” off of Harmacy–the band’s seventh album–is hitting on VH-1, and…

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It Happened One Night Holly Cole Metro Blue/Capitol Records Jazzy singer Holly Cole perfectly illustrates how cool warmth can be. Her live show is so affecting that she can make even a huge outdoor shed like Starplex seem close and intimate, so this album–songs from a single night in Montreal…

Still flying

He was an avatar of fusions to come, a trumpet man whose high-C-over-C wailings presaged the mix of rock heroics and jazz technique that would later give birth to such acts as Blood, Sweat and Tears and Chicago, and then a thousand more. When he plays, Maynard Ferguson is a…

When is a bill not a bill?

Contrary to a report in Tuesday, January 14’s Austin American-Statesman, a recommendation to restrict the presence of anyone under 21 in establishments that sell alcohol is not a bill, but that still doesn’t mean that club owners, club-goers, and musicians shouldn’t take an interest in goings-on down Austin way. The…

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Running on Ice Vertical Horizon Rhythmic Records I don’t know how you would define Vertical Horizon musically. The sound that Matt Scannell and Keith Kane make is too acoustic and soft for most contemporary pop rock; their plaintive lyrics suggest a country sentimentality, but without the rollicking fun–no sly steel…