Archives for June 2020

A Night For Austin

All the stars are closer (thank you, Kendrick) to the Live Music Capital tonight, contributing their talents to a huge fundraiser to rejuvenate and – your Austin Music Minute host will even go so far as to say – rebuild so many areas of the ATX community affected by COVID-19.

Welcome to A Night For Austin, presented by Luck Reunion in partnership with some very familiar names: Paul Simon, Edie Brickell and Willie & Annie Nelson, all on board for a major benefit for the Austin Community Foundation.

When I say stars, I do mean it’s seriously star-studded madness. The performance line-up alone for this show is a ridiculously over-the-top heavy hitter, including Willie Nelson, Edie Brickell and Paul Simon, as well as Alejandro Escovedo, Black Pumas, Bonnie Raitt with Boz Scaggs, Gary Clark Jr. (featured on today’s AMM), eternal badass Flaco Jimenez, Britt Daniel (Spoon), Patty Griffin, Lyle Lovett, David Ramirez, Charlie Sexton with Doyle Bramhall II, and many, many more.

The performances kick off at 8 p.m. (Central) tonight, Wednesday June 10th, and can be viewed at A Night For Austin’s website, at the Luck Reunion Twitch channel, and on CBS Austin on the ol’ gogglebox. All proceeds benefit the ongoing philanthropic efforts of the Austin Community Foundation.

-Artwork courtesy of Luck Reunion.

Kydd Jones: “Goblin”

In recent history, the Austin music scene has been not-so-reverently labeled as a “bubble” due to the disparity between internal support and relative external exposure, regardless of genre. But for rapper Kydd Jones, that idea of a bubble has already been burst.

Going back to the top of the past decade, Jones has leant his crate-digging ear for sultry vinyl samples and gung-ho lyrical delivery to artists across the country, and has gone full force with his vision on several full-lengths and easily over a dozen standalone singles. The most recent example of the latter came last weekend with an unapologetic look at the current climate, directly referring to George Floyd and his haunting final words over a melancholy, Madlib-esque self-produced backing track, “Goblin”.


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Texas Standard: June 9, 2020

The latest chapter in the civil rights struggle and the young people at the center of it demanding change. As mourners gather in Houston to honor George Floyd, we hear from some of the voices of a younger generation who grew up hearing stories of Reverend King and the freedom riders, and now find themselves at the heart of another inflection point in the push for racial equality and justice. Also, Facebook posts and Tweets showing solidarity? A call now for action: what it means to be a real ally amid demands for reform. Those stories and more today on the Texas Standard:

Pat G: “W.I.T.” [prod. Kris Keyz]

Temple, Texas-raised singer-rapper Patrick Gamble AKA Pat G first popped up on the radar with two complete knockouts in 2018, and the following year both “Sometimes” as well as “Fight On” found themselves in a pivotal place on Gamble’s LP Whatever It Takes. Pat G’s gravitation towards bouncing, jazzy, and structurally complex beats has made Gamble an unmissable act for Austin hip-hop heads, highlighted by Gamble’s relentless onstage and in-studio energy, one that fully embodies his messages of spirituality, perseverance, and empowerment.

Yesterday Pat G dropped a video companion piece to Whatever It Takes’ acronymed title track (produced by Kris Keyz), putting him up in the pantheon of socially conscious contemporaries like Kendrick, Lupe, and Nas. So wish Gamble a happy birthday with a Spotify “follow” and a YouTube “like” on “W.I.T.”!


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KUT Weekend – June 5th, 2020

An Austin medic recalls a weekend of police violence amid peaceful protests. We hear Austinites recount police violence during protests and demand cuts to the Austin Police Department budget. And thousands rally in Austin for economic justice and an end to police violence.

Subscribe at https://weekend.kut.org

No Justice, No Peace

This week on The Breaks, Fresh and Confucius:

Listen to this week’s episode of The Breaks

Listen on The Apple Podcasts App, Spotify or Stitcher

The Breaks are on every Saturday 10pm-1am on KUTX 98.9.
You can hear the latest full broadcast of The Breaks Saturday night show.

Texas Standard : June 8, 2020

What began as protests over George Floyd mark something larger: a shift in Texas and nationwide over the use of police power. A closer look today on the Texas Standard.

In cities in Texas, as elsewhere, demonstrations against the inequitable use of police force sparks calls for defunding and or dismantling police departments as we have known them. We’ll look at the use of police force in demonstrations across Texas and demands for change.

Also, the nexus of demonstrations and a global pandemic.

Plus a profile of the man whose killing sparked this historic moment.

DWY: “Latchkey”

Having only shared a small set of singles starting with 2018’s “Over U”, not too much is known about Miami-born London-raised singer DWY (pronounced “Dewey”) other than the undeniable fact that he’s got some killer R&B chops. DWY’s impassioned vocals and poignant lyrics sync up nicely with the aesthetic of predecessors like Wyclef Jean or Frank Ocean, all the while maintaining a unique sonic identity, thanks to DWY’s production and multi-instrumental talents.

The latest offering from DWY couldn’t have come at a better time, using his gliding vocals as an avenue for pertinent, social commentary inspired by the current climate of racial tensions worldwide. So make yourself at home with your new favorite artist on his powerful fifth single, “Latchkey”!


Texas Standard: June 5, 2020

Several Texans said to be peacefully protesting seriously injured by so-called less lethal police force, what are the rules of engagement? We’ll explore and more today on the Texas Standard.

How public perceptions of the events of the past several days may well turn on word choice.

Also, some now say the time is right for a truth and reconciliation commission concerning race in America, we’ll look at how they’ve worked in North America in the past- and whether one could make a difference now.

Plus the week in politics with the Texas Tribune. Those stories and much more.

Phoenix Times

Texas Standard listener Sarah Garrett requested a poem about a phoenix rising up and overcoming adversity and hardship.

Texas Standard: June 4, 2020

A Texas police chief’s tactic for defusing tensions between demonstrators and police: join the march. As demonstrators continue protests over police tactics, Houston’s police chief talks why he’s joining demonstrators in the streets, and what he’s hearing from protesters. Also whether curfews are working to curb violence in San Antonio. Plus, despite a need for more contact tracing to combat COVID-19, why Texas is declining to use a smartphone solution. And listener questions on COVID-19 and much more today on the Texas Standard:

Texas Standard: June 3, 2020

Though a more peaceful evening across Texas, voices continue to rise over police force against African Americans and people of color. Amid days of demonstrations over policing, a former Texas mayor and one-time presidential candidate decides it’s time for a full throated endorsement of Joe Biden. Our conversation with Julian Castro on what was, for him, a tipping point. Also, the return of the Brown Berets to El Paso. And an attempt to get back to normal at Texas A&M. We’ll talk with the system’s chancellor and more today on the Texas Standard:

How Texas Became A Desert

By W. F. Strong

To much of the world, and to many people in the U.S. who have never been to Texas, the state is a vast desert. It is not the Sahara, but instead a high-plains arid region studded with rocky mesas, sweeping wall-like cliffs, dusty canyons, and sometimes adorned with thousands of Saguaro cacti – native to Arizona, not Texas. Certainly there are parts of west Texas that have some aspects of these images, but more than half the state is green with rolling hills, lush forests and vibrant coastal plains. Yet the desert images dominate minds in distant lands. For that, we can thank Hollywood. 

There are many John Wayne westerns with story lines that weave through Texas, but the films were shot in Utah and northern or southern Arizona. The most jarring example to me is The Searchers. To my mind, The Searchers was John Wayne’s best film. Here’s a clip where Mrs. Jorgensen, a tough frontier woman, defines these early Texans: 

It just so happens we be Texicans. Texican is nothing but a human man way out on a limb. This year and next, and maybe for a hundred more. But I don’t think it’ll be forever. Someday this country’s gonna be a fine, good place to be. Maybe it needs our bones in the ground before that time can come.” 

As she says this on her front porch, she is looking at a view of Monument Valley, Utah.  Wayne made five movies in Monument Valley, even though two of them, The Searchers and Rio Grande, had storylines that based them in Texas. Wayne actually said, “Monument Valley is the place where God put the West.”

Another Wayne film that is shocking to a native Texan is The Comancheros. The plot has Wayne playing Texas Ranger Jake Cutter. Great name. He arrests an outlaw for murder on a boat arriving in Galveston and tells him he will return him to Louisiana: 

Regret:   Well, I’ve committed no crime in Texas.

Cutter:    Right. But you killed a man in Louisiana. My job’s to take you to the Ranger Headquarters where a Louisiana Marshall will pick you up. They’ll take you back to New Orleans and the gallows. You know we’re getting real obliging to the states down here in Texas. A lot of folks want to join the Union. 

Regret:  I have a couple of hundred in gold in that jacket. That give you any ideas,  friend? 

Cutter:   I’ve got what you might call a weakness. I’m honest. 

As Cutter exits the boat in Galveston with his handcuffed prisoner, Paul Regret, in tow, he walks right into Southeastern Utah where the film was shot in Professor Valley and the La Sal Mountains, among other places near Moab. Stunning country for cinemascope technology to capture, but not Texas.    

Rio Bravo and El Dorado were two John Wayne Films with Texas settings shot in and around the Sonoran Desert west of Tucson. The landscape there is dominated by thousands of saguaros, enormous 40-foot cacti that look like sentinels of the desert.  Such sights don’t exist in Texas.  

Clint Eastwood’s For a Few Dollars More is set in and around El Paso, but it was actually shot in the Tabernas Desert near Almería, Spain. Fort Bravo, also called Hollywood, Texas, is a movie set town built there in the sixties and has served as a backdrop for many classic Western films like Once Upon a Time in the West and the famous Spaghetti Westerns. Not all of those have Texas storylines, but some do. For a Few Dollars More does, and at least in this case, the landscape of Almería is a good match for the El Paso region.  

Two films more true to Texas in landscape were Giant, shot almost completely around Marfa, and No Country for Old Men, filmed mostly in Texas, but some in New Mexico.  Texas Rising troubled some Texans for two reasons: one, being shot almost entirely in Mexico, which seemed sacrilegiously ironic. And two, for scenes of rugged mountains around Victoria, Texas. I think they got their Victorias mixed up. A more recent film called Hell or High Water, starring Jeff Bridges as a Texas Ranger chasing bank robbers in the Panhandle, was largely shot in New Mexico.  

So you see, movie-Texas depicts a greater land of diversity than Texas actually has within it. To much of the world, we are Arizona and Utah and New Mexico, and we are Mexico and Italy and Spain. Mostly desert. Everything is bigger in Texas because Hollywood has subconsciously created a much wider world in the collective mind of moviegoers. 

Texas Standard: June 2, 2020

The president threatens to send in federal military forces to control unrest if governors don’t take tougher steps to reign in looting. Can he do that? We’ll explore. As protests over police brutality targeting African-Americans and other people of color continue in many cities in Texas, we’ll bring you the latest. Also, amid unrest on the streets and the dangers of pandemic, Texas democrats kick off their statewide convention. And a tale of three big Texas cities set to take major economic hits. One will not fare as well as the others. Those stories and a lot more today on the National News Show of Texas:

Say Their Names

This week on The Breaks, Fresh and Confucius talk about the police killings of George Floyd in Minneapolis and Mike Ramos in Austin and the resulting protests. They touch on their experiences as black men in America, their frustration with systemic racism and the need for sustained solidarity from society at large, not just during times of tragedy.

Listen to this episode of The Breaks

 

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The Breaks are on every Saturday 10pm-1am on KUTX 98.9.
You can hear the latest full broadcast of The Breaks Saturday night show.

Texas Standard: June 1, 2020

Texans across the state join nationwide protests in the wake of the death of George Floyd, as officials try to control nighttime looting and violence. In cities large and small, peaceful protests over police brutality devolve into violent clashes, vandalism and mayhem over the weekend. And the governor calls in state troopers and national guard troops. We’ll survey the state of the state, now officially declared a state of disaster. Also a look at why some social justice activists see police contracts as central to a solution. Those stories and more today on the Texas Standard: