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Posts by adr
SATURDAY SECRET SHOWS SADLY STOPPED BY SHADY SEXIST!
Jan 12th

Perennial SSS performers Mlee Marie (Hearts of Animals), Elaine Greer and Sabra Laval
SQUALOR! According to a post on the Hands Up Houston message board, the weekly Saturday Secret Shows have come to sudden end. Citing that “you can only handle so much of a sexist asshole,” the SSS organizers lay the blame squarely at the feet of their former-venue’s owner, the Shady Tavern. So, as a weekly event, it seems to be all over. Kaput. No mas. However, the Saturday Secret Show will live on as a more occasional event, with the mysterious organizer pledging an announcement of something soon. And though it may be a typo, the mysterious mysterion of mystery claims that “the bands will be announced, the venue will not.” Uh. Nevermind.
Though of late we have been unable to crowd out the avalanche of things that keep us busy on a given Saturday afternoon in order to catch all or part, for the better part of the year we greatly enjoyed the endeavor and are sorry to see it go. However, it may have been inevitable given that Walnut Creek (of Onion Creek ownership) has absolutely exploded and is attempting to douche-ify Big Star in the process. Surely the proximate Tavern could not be far behind. We wish the organizers well in all their future stuff, and if you wish to be informed of what form that will take, be sure to get on their email list (see the HUH post above). Dayparty.
REVIEW: HEARTS OF ANIMALS – CAVE LIGHTS
Jan 12th
OK, can we talk for a few minutes about Superman 2? It’s a given that superhero films from this era have an extensive amount of camp in them, so we can set aside any discussion of that from the get go. Indeed, it’s rumored that part of the reason why the producers removed original director Richard Donner during the filming was that he refused to insert more cornballery into the movie. And while it is whips that three extremely powerful super villains would initially believe that Houston is the center of all power on Earth, the fact that Superman wanted to have his abilities removed and made human is just baloney. Let’s get in on some Jor-Real Talk: Lois Lane ain’t that great. Sure, Superman was a super guy, but he went to high-school. He went to college. He’d met girls before. And Louis Lane: kind of annoying. Surely at this point in life he would have figured that out, and maybe turned his x-ray vision towards more balanced choices. And plus, doesn’t she always seem to be getting into scrapes and fixes that he (Superman, not Clark Kent) has to get her out of? I mean didn’t he see that he practically needed to be Superman just to keep her alive so they could date for a few weeks?
Oh, and also, all those extended cuts and what nots don’t really clean things up at all either. Seriously the entire premise of the movie is flawed, and the idea that somehow an ending that involves the destruction of the Fortress of Solitude is any better is just horsehockey! That place ruled, and it seemed like it has many useful crystal gizmos which surely would be helpful in later films/battles with villains/incidents with Richard Prior. However, we gotta say, we did never like the lighting in that place: too diffuse.
Cave Lights is an appropriate title for the latest Hearts of Animals record, but not in the way we expected. We thought the cave was going to be a safe place, one where an adorable fuzzy creature rested peacefully and worked on their life and music and art in a brilliance that allowed no scary shadows or creepy bad to creep. A warm cave, one of rocks and mosses hidden behind a gently rushing waterfall. What we found instead was a cave of cold ice and knife-edge angles, with a blistering chemical luminance emanating from quartz clusters of stalactites and stalagmites, spaced so infequent that sharp shadows are prevalent and full of spelunking fear. A very disconcerting Fortress of Solitude. One with vastly different lighting.
This album opens with a trio of songs that lay out plainly a stark new direction that Mlee Marie has charted for her solo project. Instead of the distinctive and signature brand of chipper lo-fi bedroom pop that characterized the Lemming Baby and 7″ recordings, she has forged out into completely new soundscapes of ambient atmospherics, often devoid of lyrics and a verse/chorus structure. Throughout the album, HOA has taken comfort in the synthstramental, pushing the updated sounds of acts like M83 closer to their heartbreaking roots in the strings pad-heavy work of Blade Runner-era Vangelis even when vocals are present.
Heartbreaking is key here. Though there was always a serving of meloncholy with HOA’s medicine, through lyric or accompaniment the overall effect was nevertheless optimistic, even hopeful. Not so in Cave Lights. In the opening third of the record especially, a broad and inescapable landscape of solitude, danger and pessimism is pressed directly into your ears and heart. The lone lyric in that trio of tracks, “maybe,” doesn’t sound very convinced. Finally, on the fourth track, “Sit Right Here”, there’s a return to the original form, with clippidy drums, a gently plucked guitar (the first to appear on the album), harmonica and vocals with the signature effects treatment of previous outings. Yet in spite of the parallels in sound, the tone of composition is more like the other recordings on Cave Lights than what has come before. This sort of aching could only be found among these recordings and is one of the album’s real highlights.
Other evolutions abound, such as the chime and synth driven melodies on “Sister Stories” and “Sad Dancing,” the soulful and emotive guest vocals by Joe Mathlete (The Mathletes) on “Versus,” or the stripped down, acoustic guitar and unaltered vocals of “Drain Me.” The album closes with an ulisted saxaphone piece, a very mournful siren call to end an album that builds its crystal palace high on a bedrock of being bummed. That so distinct a shift has taken place in Hearts of Animals sound over the past year is particularly shocking because Mlee had nailed such a distinct sound within which there seemed to be such open space for further tinkering, experimenting, refining and evolving, to say nothing for how well recieved it was by listeners. But, that’s the great thing about art, that you aren’t tied to anything and can do whatever you please, whatever you are feeling, whatever is coming from within you. See Superman, Hearts of Animals have moved on, why can’t you?
Cave Lights is available for sale at Sound Exchange.
ATTN THIS WEEKEND: YOU’RE A LITTLE BIT COUNTRY, A LITTLE BIT ROCK ‘N ROLL
Jan 9th

FRIDAY
If you’re a fan of the kind of things like Vinyl Ranch, Wednesday nights at Big Star Bar, most of Dusti Rhodes’ outfits and 97.1 FM, then tonight is your night. Except that you have to choose. Where’s the morton’s salt girl? The Derailers have a set going at Goode’s Armadillo Palace, which is the building next to Goode Co. BBQ on Kirby. Yes, you can enjoy ribs, brisket and all the trimmings for dinner and then walk across the street to catch their set.

Junior Brown
Hardly seems fair to everyone else, frankly. Perennial favorite, Austin redeemer, master of the Guit-Steel and Dukes of Hazard-remake narrator Junior Brown brings his timeless take on country to the Mucky Duck of all places – be sure not to dance. Why not The Continental, may you ask? Well, because fellow keep it weirders The Gourds are headlining there this evening, along with Molly and the Ringwalds. Not enough choices for ya? Local Western Swing queen Miss Leslie will be playing with her Juke Jointers at Aubrey’s.
Let’s say you’re looking for an act that picks the cat-gut, but leans more towards the bluegrass and old timey breakout of things. Well, turns out you too are strikin it rich thanks to the good folks over at the Free Press, who are having a party to celebrate their 2008 Worst of Houston Issue. The Sideshow Tramps are at the top of that bill, along with Come See My Dead Person and Robert Ellis. It’s taking place at Avante Garden, and if you bring a T-Shirt they’ll have a screen on hand to create you own, handmade, Worst of Houston souvenir. Could be worse.
Also
Hunger Project Benefit, featuring Sybil, Skyblue72, The Tiles, & Gina Chavez @ Walter’s on Washington
UPDATE: Tha F%cking Transmissions are playing a warehouse party, 2010 Commerce tonight. Starts at 9 and there is free beer.
SATURDAY
As always, your Saturday can get it started right with the Secret Show, which kicks off at 2pm at the Shady Tavern on 20th in the Heights. Just up the street from Cedar Creek and around the corner from Big Star Bar, this once lonely outpost of the North is now right in the middle of the hotness. The Tavern has beer and wine and offers setups, so bring a bottle of your favorite. There’s food most weeks, hot off the grill, and the bands usually number about three and play until five. Maybe Mr. Secret will make an appearance in the comments and give us some clues as to who is playing.

Taste of Garlic
Tonight is definitely your night of rock and roll, with Broken Note Records stars Taste of Garlic coming together for a rare outing. They’ll be at Rudyard’s with Southern danger-core rockers World’s Most Dangerous and the Train Woodburns. Over at Fitz, where one might gererally expect Taste to be playing, Come See My Dead Person plays a second night in a row alongside alt-rockers The Courtesy Clerks and barrio punks Vatos Locos. Meanwhile, over at Warehouse Live Pasadena Napalm Division, a thrash metal outfit featuring members of DRI and Deadhorse will do their best to melt any remaining faces after openers Whorehound. Over at the Continental, Spain Colored Orange warms up the crowd for Graham Wilkinson and the Underground Township.
And certainly not to be overlooked, Pretty Little Flower (or PLF, which we were told they sometimes have to go by due to grinders not realizing how hardcore flowers can be) celebrates 10 years of Grind this evening with a show over at the White Swan including Dissent, Battle Rifle, and a band who’s logo we are having trouble deciphering, but we think is called 26 Beers.
Don’t feel the rock? Danse the night away over at Numbers, where Danseparc this month features their take on the best of 2008. Something Else? The Staff at the House of Blues is having a talent show. C’mon – you know you’re tempted.
SPAIN COLORED ORANGE SET LP RELEASE DATE! FINALLY! ALLEGEDLY!
Jan 8th

WELL LA DE DAH! Long the butt end of ours and no doubt others’ 713 Democracy jokes, at long last Spain Colored Orange’s first full length, Sneaky Like A Villain, has a release date. February 9th is the date when the entire city will be rewarded with a free can of Dr. Skipper, compliments of Rudyard’s. Joax. The band appears to have finally worked out their issues with former label Lucid, and are an official member of the Shout It Out Loud roster. Though the album has been out for some time, tracks have snuck out both on their MySpace, and in commercials for Olay Skin Care and a short film promoting the new 2010 Mustang. We prefer skincare:
Barring any further lineup changes between press time and Saturday, Spain Colored Orange will be opening things up at the Continental Club for Graham Wilkinson and the Underground Township. Party, and congratulations guys, it’s about time.
BUXTON REVEALS 2009 RELEASE SCHEDULE THROUGH THE POWER OF THE SCENEWIKI
Jan 8th

You know, we love the Scenewiki. And not just because it lives under our own roof. Many a lunchbreak and an evening that should have been spent eating or writing or involved in some sort of core competency task has been quickly and pleasurably whittled away by so innocent an action as clicking ‘recent changes’ or ‘random page’ from the starting block. Down into the depths we go. There are all kinds of posts there, and we love them equally, be it the highly informative overviews Space City Rock’s Gaijin has done for more than a few now defunct bands and their releases, or the simple, one sentence inside jokes which must be absolutely frustrating/inscrutable to outsiders. We love them all, especially when we learn something new. And, as clicking would have it, just the other evening we learned quite a few new things about one of our favorite flourishers of the folk, Buxton.
Turns out that fans (including ourselves) waiting for a follow-up to their whips of aces 2008 full length A Family Light will get quite a few nuggets do deliciously dip into our hot mustard sauce this year. Indeed, if these releases were as hearty as our favorite McMenu item, we’d have to say that there’s a full on 50 pack in store. Damn. That just reminds us of those happy meals that used to come in plastic boats during the summer. Those things ruled.
SPEAKING OF RULEDGE: According to their wiki entry (which we know they did not enter themselves, not being suspect and all), first up is a 7″ with two tracks tenatively titled “Jam” and “Groovin.” Dear lord, please let these names change, but nothing will remove the fact that this dubiously string-cheesy sounding duo was recorded by John Griffin at Sugar Hill (aka – will sound mighty fine). It’s scheduled to come out right around SXSW (mid March): we hope they get a showcase and have this to sell both.
Later, towards the summer, we can look forward to Morning Saints, a collection of folk gospel songs written by Sergio and his wife Amanda Trevino (Aunt Belle). This will come out on Mia Kat, the same kids that put out A Family Light. Finally, and cross your fingers on this one, they are alleged to be releasing a set of Bjork covers, the direct result of their having played as the Icelandic princess at the Twotenanny. Turns out they had as miso soup a time playing the songs as we did watching them, and so they plan to put together a batch of recordings and give them out for free. Choice.
Buxton has two shows left in January, including Saturday night (the 10th) at Notsuoh with The Goods, Lusitania and Circlebird at Notsuoh, as well as the ~shameless self promotion~ Wild Moccasins’ CD release show the 23rd at Walter’s with the WM and Teenage Kicks and our own ADR aka DJ Under Warranty on the dance commander turntable tip. FIRE.
