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Sunday, March 16, 2008

Music The Wheels Fall Off (The Taco Cart) - SXSW Day Four

Posted by Ezra Caraeff on Sun, Mar 16 at 9:38 AM

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Day Four - SXSW 2008
Total Number of Bands Seen:

Only 7. Night Marchers, Thurston Moore And The New Wave Bandits, Okkervil River, The Deadly Syndrome, Georgie James, Murs, and the Make Believe.
Total Number of Tacos Consumed:
Three. Four, if you count the “lucky” one pictured above.
Notable Shows That I Was Unable to See:
Too many to mention. She & Him (took too long to set up), M1 of Dead Prez (did not perform at his scheduled time), Monotonix (heard their set, but we were trapped on the wrong side of a fence), Neon Neon (same as M1)…
Pints of St. Patrick’s Day Green Beer Consumed:
Zero. But I tried. Oh, how I drunkenly tried.

Day four, the final day of the festival, was a well-intentioned mess that involved far too much drinking, not enough taco eating, and lots of schedule confusion. Weaker men would have just crumbled from the pressure, but I carried on and just got drunker and drunker and drunker…

The hardest part of the day, and there were many, was losing the taco consumption crown to Eric Grandy at The Stranger. Despite his petite frame and small girlish hands (which are unfit to hold a fully-loaded taco), Grandy was victorious, thus cementing his legacy as the Kobayashi of taco eating.

Moving on to the music. It's no fun being the last guy on the Monotonix hype wagon, but seeing the Israeli band has been a real challenge for me. It just has never worked out. I tried my best to catch them at Waterloo Park, but due to a complete lack of signs, order, or help (common SXSW themes), we were stuck just listening to them from the other side of a fence. Not a good way to start things out.

We eventually did make it into the park, where we caught the Night Marchers, the new project from John Reis (Rocket From the Crypt, Hot Snakes, Jehu, plus he's an all-around badass). Best described as a forceful combination of every band he's ever been in, the Marchers were real troopers for roasting in the blaring Texas sun as they pounded out some jittery and raw garage punk, capped by Reis howling pipes. I can only imagine how great they'd be in a dark club with a pair of cold drinks in each hand.

I'll skip the Thurston Moore set (nothing too exciting, and far too crowded to snap a photo), or the booooring wait for She & Him, who took their sweet time setting up. They were 90 minutes late in playing, so I vanished and met some folks at a certain restaurant that had this frightening bit of art pinned to their wall.

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Seeing how they just might be my favorite modern rock band ever, a trip to Austin would not be complete without catching at least one Okkervil River performance. Opening with the assassination ode "The President's Dead," the band was in rare form as it was the final performance of guitarist Brian Cassidy, who is leaving the band to focus on being a father. Singer Will Sheff was focused on Cassidy, oftentimes leaning on him during solos (ala The Boss!) and staring at the departing guitarist during their rollicking set.

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Before the disappointment of the evening set in—as the festival ended not with a bang, but instead with a muffled whimper—I caught the D.C. pop duo Georgie James. It's amazing how effortless their pop songs are—it just seems so easy for them—and they capped things off with a fantastic cover of the Zombies "This Will Be Our Year."

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I wanted M1, but I got Murs. I'm all for Murs, and his odd hairstyle, but he didn't satisfy the militant vegan hiphop I was craving, plus, the venue's bass-heavy sound system wasn't the ideal situation if you wanted to hear a single rhyme he delivered.

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This night had to end, so why not let a Kinsella do the honors? Make Believe performed at an Irish Pub (my second of the night), and while Tim Kinsella's screetching vocals may not be the best way to celebrate St. Patrick's Day, it was a nice trip down memory lane. A Kinsella show on a Saturday night with my friends, all that was missing was my mom waiting outside, idling in the Astro Van, ready to drive us back home.

Comments

I'm guessing that ezra didn't bother to cover the last day of sxsw, since only one club is involved and none of the bands are pitchfork approved.

So here are the results of his reports:
Number of bands that Ezra made sure to note that he saw: 39
Number of bands noted in Pitchforkmedia.com's guided to SXSW that Ezra made sure to note that he saw: 27
Number of bands that Ezra made sure to note that he missed: 12
Number of bands noted in Pitchforkmedia.com's guided to SXSW that Ezra missed but made sure to note that he missed: 11
Number of Portland bands that played SXSW: 21
Number of Portland bands Ezra saw at SXSW: 0

Once again ezra makes my case for me. He doesn't give a shit about the PDX music scene, and takes most of his cues from Pitchfork.

Now will someone at this rag wake up, fire this waste of space & hire someone who will truly cover the local music scene.

Hey, my biggest fan!

First off, thanks for staying up late to crunch these numbers, I appreciate all your hard work and your keen adding ability.

Your obsession with me is quite flattering.

A few things: I didn't cover Sunday's events because my flight left in the afternoon. I needed to get home right away to devote myself to NOT covering local music.

"Number of Portland bands Ezra saw at SXSW: 0"

Um... Builders and Butchers? I believe they are from here. I also saw Panther, but didn't list them. Besides, last year I tried to cover every local band that played (except yours), and I wanted to try something new for this year's festivities.

But again, thanks for reading the blog and commenting.

ezra

I'm in a band?
That's news to me.
I have been known to play a mean dulcimer, but I never knew I was good enough to form a band around my playing. Maybe I should put up a craigslist ad and start booking shows at laurelthurst. Thanks for the inspiration.

I'll admit I made a mistake and forgot that Builders & Butchers were from PDX. You get a gold star for noting their well A&R attended set. That still leaves you at less than 5% for PDX bands at sxsw '08 coverage.

Your report from last year was mostly full of you complaining about oh how hard it was to see 17 local PDX bands. boo hoo. I thought seeing and reporting on PDX bands was your job. I'm sure that had something to do with the PM paying your way down there. I guess your personal fun should come before doing the job you're paid to do.
The list of PDX bands you stiffed last year was: Village Green, Laura Gibson, Clorox Girls, YACHT & The Misfats. None of which I am a fan of, or a member of for that matter. However, I would understand if the misfats were pissed at you since you went out of your way to dis them in your report, but being a group who wear clown makeup and wigs with only one joke, they should expect as much.
Looking back I was surprised that you skipped yacht, but then a quick search of Pitchforkmedia.com reminded me that they didn't get around to reviewing his record until a week after sxsw '07. So you were clueless about how you should feel about him at the time of the show.

If you put half as much effort into seeing bands outside of your comfort zone as you do in writing about tacos I'd stop riding your lazy ass. I don't see that changing so I will continue to point out your endless short comings.

Maybe I'm missing something, but with time constraints, doesn't it make sense not to go see Portland bands at SXSW? I mean, you can see them in Portland so why waste valuable time watching them in Texas?

re: blah

hahahahaha!
damn dude, obsessive/compulsive much?
give the meth a rest for a week and i think you'll be aight.

p.s. your solo project sucks

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