Archives for June 2019

Texas Standard: June 13, 2019

Environmental concerns in Midland and in Brownsville. How are they different and how are they the same? The story today on the Texas Standard.

We explore the California to Texas migration. Why are so many looking for opportunity in the Lone Star State?

Another group in search of opportunity – this one detained under a bridge in El Paso. An eyewitness calls the enclosure “a human dog pound”.

A son remembers his father – on the days leading up to Father’s Day

And In other news: the E3 Trade Show. Games, consoles and hours of entertainment

Mndsgn: “Deviled Eggs”

For the past decade, L.A. experimental hip-hop producer Ringgo Ancheta has been altering the mental states of willing listeners as Mndsgn, pronounced “mind design”. And true to his name, Mndsgn’s thumping yet dreamy instrumental tracks are engaging enough to listen to for hours but still leave plenty of space to absorb, reflect, and simply be.

Tomorrow Mndsgn pays homage to one of his musical idols with a beat tape in the vain of J Dilla’s classic Donuts. Brief, eclectic and decidedly more fun than it is ethereal, the fourteen tracks on Snaxx will sate the appetites of Mndsgn fans while he works on a moodier full-length, projected for a 2020 release date. Mndsgn plays at Come and Take It Live late next month and today you can get a free sample from Snaxx with “Deviled Eggs”!

This Song: Tiarra Girls on “Just a Girl” by No Doubt

Austin based sisters Tori, Tiffany and Sofia Baltierra have been playing as the Tiarra Girls since they were in elementary and middle school. Listen as they describe how seeing the video for No Doubt’s “Just a Girl” influenced them all stylistically and helped them find their voices as young women in music. They also tell the story of the genesis of their song “Leave it to the People” and trace how that song’s release has helped them see their music as a way to empower their community and advocate for the change they want to see in the world.

Tiarra Girls will be playing Chingona Fest on June 22nd at Hops and Grains Brewing along with Tribes and Bidi Bidi Banda. Get Tickets to Chingona Fest here.

📸 Juan Figueroa for KUTX

Listen to this episode of This Song

Get more information on the Leander Arts Festival

Check out the Tiarra Girls Studio 1A Session

Listen to Songs from this episode of This Song

 

 

Bring It

San Angelo native Oscar Ornelas makes Austin his home these days – which, of course, is where he’s been working on his music. And now the songwriter and multi-instrumentalist is excited to release his new album, Some Gospel, putting the spotlight on some of his biggest musical influences, including jazz, blues, soul and gospel.

Typically, you might get to see Ornelas tearin’  down the house at Skylark Lounge, but you can check him out at his album release show tomorrow night at the Mohawk, 912 Red River, on the inside stage. Doors open nice and early at 6 p.m., and Ms. Mack and The Daddies and Nané share the bill.

Later on that evening, catch performances by Mountebank, Batty Jr. and Fertility House, also on the Mohawk’s inside stage. All the goods, all in one venue. Recommended.

-Photo courtesy of the artist.

Texas Standard: June 12, 2019

Ruffled feathers: the so called Chick-fil-A bill signed into law, which some say guarantees religious liberty, others say licenses discrimination. The implications today on the Texas Standard.

Eat it or pitch it? The FDA in a new push to get food companies to standardize expiration dates. Also, you’ve heard about boom times in the Permian Basin. But how do West Texans balance the benefits with an explosion in trash. Plus, remembering Lonesome Dove screenwriter Bill Wittliff.

Remembering ‘Beneficent Genius’ Bill Wittliff

When I hear the great musical theme of Lonesome Dove, I am immediately grateful to Bill Wittliff because I know we wouldn’t have the deeply treasured miniseries if not for him. We would have Larry McMurtry’s novel for sure, but we would not have Wittliff’s equally brilliant adaptation of that masterwork if not for his undeterred resolve to get it done.

Bill Wittliff died on Sunday. I was, like millions of his fans around the world, and especially those in Texas, sad to see his rare intellectual light and his beneficent genius leave us. He was a man who often worked his magic behind the scenes and so many people were touched by his artistic brilliance without knowing it. He wrote the screenplays for much loved movies like Lonesome Dove, Legends of the Fall, The Perfect Storm, Raggedy Man, and for highly Texcentric films like Barborosa and Red-Headed Stranger. Some say Wittliff launched the Austin film industry.

Though Renaissance man is often overgenerous in its use, it fit Wittliff to perfection. He was a novelist, and a screenwriter, a photographer, a publisher and movie producer, a collector, an archivist, a historian and a lifelong professor who generously shared his knowledge of all things all the time. In more than a few instances over the past few years I’d fire off an email to him to ask for his insights on some obscure subject and he’d invariably surprise me with an authoritative answer within five minutes, sometimes less.

Four years ago I interviewed Bill for his new novel The Devil’s Backbone. Naturally we talked a good deal about Lonesome Dove and I want to share some of that interview because it gives us insights into the making of that masterpiece and into the mind and methods of Wittliff as well.
I first asked Bill about how long it took to produce Lonesome Dove and if he knew it would be the huge hit it turned out to be?

“For me Lonesome Dove was a solid two years,” Wittliff said. “It was a year writing the script, and then it was another year from locations and casting and all of that, to actually shooting it and then editing and the scoring – all of it – and distribution. Here’s what I did know. I knew, because I saw the dailies every morning – and I knew, you know, that what was going through the cameras was incredible stuff, incredible performances. What I didn’t know was that the audience would take to it the way they did. That I didn’t know. I knew it was going to be great and I knew it was going to be well really phenomenal. It was just incredible to watch – to sit there every day and watch Duvall and Tommy Lee and all of them deliver those lines. You simply could not be there and not know. But what I didn’t know is that the audience would take to it the way the did.”

One reason for this surprise, Bill told me, is that in 1988 there was only one thing deader than Westerns and that was the miniseries. And, he said, “we were making both.”

I was curious about his method of adapting the novel for television. I asked him how, out of this tumultuous novel of nearly 1,000 pages, he could choose what to include and what to exclude.

“Here’s what I did,” Wittliff said. “At that time I was driving a pickup. Suzanne, my partner, had someone read it on tape. We have a place on South Padre Island. It’s six hours to drive down there. So I would strike out in my pickup, which is to say you were in a closed in space. And start playing that and listening to it. You could see it. In listening to it you would say oh I don’t need that or oh that’s too close to this. Because I was driving I could kind of see a version of the movie unfold as I drove along. In six hours, as it turned out, of listening to Larry’s novel was just about one episode. So I’d drive to South Padre and when I got there I then I would start adapting that six hours, boiled down to two hours. Anyway, that’s how I did it.”

Finally, since McMurtry had written a number of screenplays himself, I asked Bill why Larry hadn’t written it himself.

“When they asked me to do it, I called Larry and I said, ‘Don’t you want to do this,’ and he said, ‘no, I’m cooked,'” Wittliff said. “Larry’s always been smart about movies and his books. I don’t know what Larry had his thumb on when he wrote it, but boy it rang all the bells. And Larry got up from the typewriter and walked off from it at least three times maybe four times. He said ‘well, no, that’s enough,’ but then he always came back. And Lonesome Dove, both Larry’s book and now the miniseries, have absolutely become a part of the American fabric. It’s just astonishing. I’ve got calls from Ireland, Europe and England, caught up in the Lonesome Dove thing as much as Americans and Texans are. It’s just been astonishing.”

You notice there how he shuns credit for his success. He was a selfless man. That is why he created the Wittliff Collections with his wife Sally at Texas State University. There you can find the papers of great Southwestern writers like McCarthy, Dobie, Graves, Cisneros and some of McMurtry’s, which will be his greatest legacy, because it provides a place and resources for young writers, and artists, and filmmakers to come and dream about works they might animate and worlds they might create.

Steve Davis the curator there, said, “Bill embodied the best of Texas — he was incredibly creative and was very generous to others — as seen in this wonderful collection that he founded, which will continue to inspire others for generations to come.”

Finally, it is only fitting that we hear from McMurtry himself. Larry sent this touching note to me just yesterday.

He wrote: “I met Bill years ago when he and his wife asked permission to publish IN A NARROW GRAVE, my first volume of essays under their singular and distinctive Encino Press. It is the most impressive of my more than fifty published volumes. He was an absolute genius photographer, as you can see from his Wittliff Collection photos. Bill skillfully adapted LONESOME DOVE into a beloved miniseries, and I know he will be deeply missed by Texans everywhere.”

Bill lived a beautiful, fun and inspirational life. I believe firmly that in thinking about his life he would agree with Gus McCrae, who said, “It’s been quite a party, ain’t it?”

SadGirl: “Chlorine”

For an artist called, “SadGirl“, you may be surprised to learn that it’s actually a group, not just one person, none of whom are women, and the music itself honestly isn’t all that sad…This upbeat L.A. rock trio has been kickin’ out jams since 2014 and in a couple days they share their highly-anticipated debut album, Water.

The ten original tunes on Water embody vintage pop through analog production techniques and channel the fluidity of its namesake, so dip your head into the record’s lead single ahead of time with “Chlorine”!


Photo: James Michael Juarez

Legacy Lives On

You’ll probably see it as you read through the track list:

“FRIDA.” “EARTHA.” “MILES.” “MUDDY.” “BASQUIAT” alongside “SUN RA.” “OCTAVIA” next to “BALDWIN.”

It’s not simply the names’ familiarity that may strike a chord. These are individuals who have made an impact upon humanity, great minds who forged a path, a different way of thinking to move forward. Chicago-based artist Jamila Woods‘ second LP, LEGACY! LEGACY!, honors the inspirational figures who came before her. Each track is a thoughtfully crafted homage to the activists, the artists, the visionaries and the voices that shaped her own identity.

KUTX presents Jamila Woods tonight at Barracuda, 611 E. 7th St., featuring Queens, NY artist Duendita opening the show. Doors at 7 p.m. Very recommended.

-Photography by Bradley Murray.

Texas Standard: June 11, 2019

With Twitter flourishes and media fanfare the Governor signs new legislation declaring Texas Republicans the party of results. Why that could be fear talking. Today on the Texas Standard.
With Texas Democrats promising a record setting turnout in the 2020 election cycle, Governor Abbott’s pulling out the stops to pitch GOP unity over ideological purity.

Also, two years since the controversial Trans-Pecos pipeline went into service. Now many more projects in the pipeline- we’ll hear what’s at stake.

And, not just Central Americans but an increasing number of central Africans crossing the southern border.

Allah-Las: “Raspberry Jam”

Whatever opinions you may have about global warming, the first day of summer is almost here so get ready to ride some waves with the sun’s favorite genre: surf rock. And just in time for the heat, independent record label Mexican Summer has teamed up with outdoor brand Pilgrim Surf + Supply to create Self Discovery for Social Survival, a surreal audio-visual surf experience that pays tribute to classic surf cinema.

Commandeering the film’s integral various artist soundtrack is LA psych outfit Allah-Las, a four-piece best known for their analog production methods and driving love of ’60s counterculture. Allah-Las provided five instrumental tracks to this acid-soaked soundtrack so before you bask in the rays on its Friday release date, slather up the tanning oil and wax down the board with this well-preserved neo-retro tune, “Raspberry Jam”!

Crazy Good

Your Austin Music Minute host may have found her new theme song, thanks to this Hill Country gem who knows a thing or two about shaky ground, rattled nerves, and being driven beyond distraction. “Going Crazy” by Kathryn Legendre is the track featured on today’s AMM, from her new EP Making It Up, a perfect collection of straight-up traditional honky-tonk, delivered with Legendre’s own unique swagger, delving into equal parts weep-in-your-whiskey heartbreak (“Sit Here & Cry”), and a delightfully dark wit (“Letters From Prison”).

Take it all in when you see Kathryn Legendre tonight at The White Horse, 500 Comal. Legendre shares the bill with Jean Wranglers and the Texas Tycoons. Mondays done right. The music starts around 8 p.m. Recommended.

-Photography by Katrina Barber.

Texas Standard: June 10, 2019

Mayors selected by voters into two of Texas’ largest cities. Who they are, and what the outcomes say about the state of the Lone Star State. More on this weekends mayoral runoffs in San Antonio and Dallas.

A Fort Worth family fighting a federal law that sets adoption priorities for Native American children. The family says it’s racial discrimination, tribes say its not about race.

Also, sexual assault evidence kits gathering dust in police evidence closets for decades. Why that’s about to change.

Plus, the possible return of Wendy Davis and a whole lot more.

Robin Alice: “Sinner” [PREMIERE]

Before they joined forces in Hollywood, Kentucky multi-instrumentalist Jeff Hortillosa and California singer Kelley Jakle were both accomplished songwriters in their own right: Hortillosa supporting Austin “trashgrass” five-piece Whiskey Shivers and Jakle gaining recognition beyond her local scene with a college a cappella group. But when these star-crossed collaborators met on the set of Pitch Perfect 3, sparks flew and that chemistry gave birth to a new, diverse duo, Robin Alice.

Jakle’s pop-rock vocal tendencies mesh surprisingly well with Hortillosa’s Americana arrangement style, and the five songs on their debut EP obscure the lines between an impressive number of genres and influences. Mixed by Grammy Winner  Chris “Frenchie” Smith (and engineered by Kris Wade), Here and There is out this Friday but let’s go ahead and take a gander at the forbidden fruit with a premiere of the album’s centerpiece, “Sinner”!

Dr. Linda Burke (Ep. 27, 2019)

This week on In Black America, producer and host John L. Hanson speaks with Dr. Linda Burke, a board-certified OB/GYN and author of The Smart Mother’s Guide to a Better Pregnancy: How to Minimize Risks, Avoid Complications and Have a Healthy Baby.

Here and There

Behold this dynamic duo to keep your ears out for, combining a beautiful sound with just the right tinge of something slightly dark. Of course your Austin Music Minute maven digs this.

Robin Alice (that’s a duo, not a person) began as a meeting of musical minds on a movie set. Songwriter and actress Kelley Jakle and Jeff Hortillosa (Whiskey Shivers) crossed paths during the filming of Pitch Perfect 3and technically where Jakle and Horti played their first songs together. They continued their collaboration via email, and reunited in Austin to get their ideas recorded. With contrasting backgrounds of pop/rock and bluegrass/Americana, respectively, the two artists forged a common thread of melody and harmonies.

Robin Alice celebrates the release of their debut EP, Here and There, with a show tonight at Radio Coffee & Beer, 4204 Manchaca. The magnificent Lex Land’s project of funereal folk-core (your elder-goth AMM host is ECSTATIC), One Big Dark Room, starts out the night.

Say it with me: One. Big. Dark. Room. The music starts at 8 p.m. Recommended.

Summer Sessions – Take 2

Back in May, Scholz Garten was set to go with their Summer Sessions music series when…well, weather happened. A downpour of epic proportions led to the show’s cancellation, but a month later, all is lovely and summery! A perfect night for live music. The free series kicks off this evening with a line-up that your Austin Music Minute maven is all about: Fuzzed-up dream pop/shoegaze trio Ringo Deathstarr, electronic pop outfit The Black and White Years, and garage psych-punks OnegoodLung.

Great to see them all on this bill. The music starts at 7 p.m. at Scholz Garten, 1607 San Jacinto Blvd. Did I mention this badass baby is free? Very recommended.

-Photo of Ringo Deathstarr courtesy of the artist.

KUT Weekend – June 7, 2019

One of the issues Texas lawmakers did not tackle the legislative session: the state’s high rate of people without health insurance. Plus, could the boom-bust cycle in the West Texas oil town of Midland be over? And efforts to get more Texas women running for elected office. Those stories and more in this edition of KUT Weekend!

Subscribe at https://weekend.kut.org