Scene, heard

The last time we wrote about a benefit concert, we were publicly denounced from the stage at the Curtain Club by co-owner Doug Simmons. We didn’t mean any harm by what we wrote, we just felt it necessary to point out the irony of loud rock bands playing Black Sabbath…

Scene stealers

It’s been a full six months since Swivel and Blush last played together. Simply billed as the July 3 Show, it was the last of several set up by the kids in the bands and their friends at the Bishop Arts District’s Oak Cliff Coffee House. With vocals sent out…

Smells like Leif Garrett

The Melvins, legendary innovators of brutal intelli-sludge heavy rock, like to challenge their audience as much as they do their drum heads and amplifier outputs. As vocalist and guitarist Buzz Osborne says, the band’s modus operandi is to “screw with people. That’s what I like.” Speaking from his Los Angeles…

Rave on

More a Legend Than a Band. That was the fitting title bestowed on the one album made by The Flatlanders when it was finally released in 1990, nearly 20 years after the group formed by Joe Ely, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, and Butch Hancock actually recorded it. Now, a decade later,…

Calla the doctor

Sean Donovan knows better than most people about the kind of support musicians need. He spends his days sending money to songwriters, making sure they all get what they deserve. The money belongs to the publishing house he works for in New York (the highly regarded Harry Fox Agency), and…

Out There

Michael Penn MP4 (Days Since a Lost Time Accident) (57 Records/Epic Records) Turns out it’s possible to admire, even cherish an album without really liking it — no, make that feeling it, deep within that unknowable place only music can reach. There’s no escaping the effort that went into this…

Out Here

Ty Herndon Steam (Epic Records) Ten or so spins in (OK, maybe one), and it’s still hard to find something to say about Ty Herndon’s latest that someone else hasn’t used before to condemn Nashville for its absolute lack of originality. Every clever metaphor and analogy is already spoken for,…

Ray Charles

Ray Charles Just once, it would be nice if Ray Charles came to town and didn’t play some swank, million-dollar shrine to old money. Plop him in the Meyerson Symphony Center or Bass Performance Hall, and you might as well stick him behind a glass case and let the blue-hairs…

Groobees kind of love

There are literary theorists who propose that there are but a few basic stories in the world, perhaps little more or even less than can be counted on the fingers of both hands. Hence every novel — or, for that matter, every story told by a movie or reported in…

Please kill me

Nothing like arriving at work on a Monday morning to find an e-mail inbox full of questionable advice from even more questionable sources, such as one scrappy reader who wanted me to rip out my own tongue and hang myself with it. Thanks for the kind words, buddy, but I…

Out There

Fire & Skill: The Songs of the Jam Various artists (Ignition/Epic Records) This probably seemed like a good idea back in the old days, when the world gave a steaming crap about Oasis: Bros Noel and Liam Gallagher would assemble and bookend a tribute to their rave fave that isn’t…

Out Here

Stumptone Stumptone (Two Ohm Hop Records) On first listen, Stumptone’s self-titled debut is as all over the place as you’d expect from a batch of songs recorded all over the place (singer-guitarist Chris Plavidal’s living room, Dave Willingham’s studio, the stage at Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios) at various times during…

Beck

Rock critics shouldn’t be allowed to review albums till the 19th go-round — long after the initial buzz has worn off, long after the thrill (or, for that matter, terror) of listening to something for the first time has dissipated. Beck Were such a rule in place, there wouldn’t exist…

James McMurtry

James McMurtry For the past 10 years, James McMurtry has spent his energy penning great songs and trying to avoid a certain Dallas sports-radio talk-show host. We both wish things were different. “Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome James McMurtry.” David Lettermen then motioned to a long-haired fellow in round glasses…

Macy Gray

Macy Gray Much has been made of Macy Gray’s come-from-behind tackle: out of nowhere, a new voice, a new attitude, a new sound for our tired ears — all contained in one remarkable debut, On How Life Is. Well, not entirely new — the former USC film student’s tunes pack…

Lost legends

Wavy gray hair and translucent-rimmed glasses restore the aura of an archivist to Tary Owens. His soft, raspy voice and deliberate words temporarily hush as he closes his eyes to catch the music, the vision of that first prison experience: It is again the summer of 1963. Owens turns his…

Ohm sweet Ohm

There are seven songs on Voices, the second disc from Fort Worth’s Ohm, but you won’t ever hear the band play one of them. They probably couldn’t even if they wanted to, mainly because they never thought of them as songs in the first place. And, for that matter, the…

Fry Street, fair for everyone?

We’re pretty sure that Shannon Sutlief, Dallas Observer calendar editor and frequent contributor to the music section, didn’t mean any harm when she wrote about Denton’s annual Fry Street Fair in her year-end round-up of the shows and bands that made 1999 great, or at least some reasonable facsimile (“Hometown…

Freaks of the industry

The news had hit the Internet: Beck’s latest album, Midnite Vultures, a little less than a month away from its proper release, was already available in downloadable MP3 form from various bootleg FTP sites covering and smothering the World Wide Web. With a little luck and lots of patience, one…

Along comes Gary?

Unless you’re a diehard fan, working with a former rock star isn’t all that memorable an experience. Most likely your co-worker resembles one of the great unwashed instead of a big-time idol. And depending on the hourly wage he’s pulling down, our rocker’s probably a bitter and sullen old fellow…

On the Road, again

Jim Sampas means well. He’s a fan of literature and of music, particularly of the ’50s variety: bop jazz and beat poets, mainly. So not surprisingly, much of his life revolves around making records with a literary bent. In 1997, he produced kicks joy darkness, a Jack Kerouac tribute album…

Scene, Heard

The Deathray Davies will tour with the Old 97’s during the first couple of weeks of February, hitting various clubs along the East Coast, including a stop at Irving Plaza in New York on February 11. We’re guessing at least a few clubs will make the same spelling gaffe with…