Tuesday, December 31, 2013 - Riverboat Gamblers * Born Liars * John Wayne Is Dead

Riverboat Gamblers (Denton/Austin, TX)
https://www.theriverboatgamblers.com/

There was a point in time before everything fit into neat subgenres, a period when rock music and the nascent punk scene were still discovering their sound and anything seemed possible. Looking back it’s hard to pinpoint the exact moment when these two genres converged but if you had to sum it up sonically it would probably sound a lot like the Riverboat Gamblers’ latest album The Wolf You Feed.

The Riverboat Gamblers did all the pre-production for The Wolf You Feed with Ted Hutt (Flogging Molly, The Gaslight Anthem) in Los Angeles and then headed down to Dallas put these ten songs to tape with Grammy-Award winning engineer Stuart Sikes (The White Stripes, Cat Power). “There’s four writers in this band and we all instantly got on the same page as far as wanting this to be a darker record that still had lots of hooks,” frontman Mike Wiebe explains. “We really wanted to go for a grittier, less polished sound to get across the true spirit of these songs because that’s what we do live anyway.”

Wiebe adds that recording the record in Dallas meant that the band could step outside of their comfort zone and create an album without worrying about external distractions. “My other bands all have different writing processes and I think it’s cool to shake it up and have completely new musical experiences whether it’s with the Gamblers or anyone else,” he explains. “Doing [the album] in Dallas really forced us to creatively get outside of our box and when you do that the results aren’t always favorable but this time around things really seemed to come together in a way that was natural.”

Listeners just need to listen to the first fifteen seconds of the Hives-worthy opener “Good Veins” to see that the band—which also includes guitarists Fadi el-Assad and Ian MacDougall, bassist Rob Marchant and drummer Sam Keir—achieved their goal largely because they weren’t trying to make a record that fits into today’s musical landscape. “I got really interested in the time when punk rock and old rock n’ roll were all converging and there wasn’t really a term for it yet, like with the Dictators bleeding over into the weirder Iggy Pop stuff,” Wiebe explains. “It’s edgy and intense but it’s still catchy and people could dance to it if they wanted to.”

Despite the fact that The Wolf You Feed perfectly captures this often-forgotten era, there’s a remarkable amount of variance inherent in these songs. From the sweetly scathing anthem “Bite Your Tongue” to the piano-driven, Murder City Devils-esque death march of “Gallows Bird” and classic Alice Cooper-esque feel of “Loser Neck,” the album juxtaposes all of these influences into something that’s got its roots in the past yet still sounds remarkably relevant. Additionally the album features contributions from Mark Ryan (Marked Men, Mind Spiders) and Sean Kirkpatrick (The Paper Chase) each of whom help the band expand their sound even further.

Wiebe not only proves how versatile of a frontman he’s become on The Wolf You Feed—whether he’s belting out the soaring chorus to “Bite My Tongue” or singing like a ‘70s glam icon on “Heart Conditions”—but he also proves what an accomplished lyricist he is on songs like the heartbreaking “Comedians.” “I think there’s a really strong connection between comedians and musicians; they’re ripping their hearts out onstage for people who might not care at all so that was my love letter to how enamored I am with comics and what they do,” he explains. Trust us, when Wiebe croons, “At the end of the day it was really only you who wanted to laugh at me,” it’s impossible not to be moved by the sentiment.
Ultimately all of this relates back to the album’s title, The Wolf You Feed. “It’s kind of referring to an old Navajo saying that you’ve always got two wolves inside you and one is good and one is evil; you have to feed one and starve one and it’s up to you,” Wiebe explains, noting that the cover art represents the constant struggle between good and evil that each of us are forced to undertake each and every day. “Where do you want to go and do you want to deliver your energy to this black horrible thing or channel it into this process of trying something new that could change everything?”

The Riverboat Gamblers can’t make that decision for you, but with The Wolf You Feed they’ve created the perfect soundtrack for it.

 

Born Liars - (Houston, TX)
https://myspace.com/thebornliars
Every time these guys hit the stage I imagine it must be similar to seeing the rock bands that came out of New York and Detroit in the late 70s–gritty and raw, guitar-fueled rock that’s big on riffs, short on substance, and the better for it. Born Liars’ tight garage rock is something no local band comes close to imitating. Frontman Jimmy Sanchez is the Joe Strummer of Houston punk–sedate but snarling–and songs like “Go Back One Day” (from one of the band’s two 7-inch releases this year) and “View From Here” from 2006’s Exit Smiling never fail to leave me with a better appreciation of music. – Houstonist

This Houston quartet’s songs combine the streetwise switchblade blues of Exile on Main Street-era Stones with some of the Replacements’ boozy entropic tendencies, and their live shows usually result in bloodshed, bail bonds or both. – Houston Press

These guys have all of the grit and songwriting chops of the Carbonas at their punk… I love bands like this who can actually write a decent pop song yet they are determined to remain punk as fuck. If you like the most rugged and straightforward of the Douchemaster-type bands you’ll be way into this. – Sorry State records

 

John Wayne Is Dead
(Sorry No verifiable info available on line)

Monday 30 December 2013 - A Couple Of Stand Up Guys Open Mic Comedy (Free!! doors 8pm)

A Couple Of Stand Up Guys (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/rudzopenmic

 

Formed in January 2012, it is a rotating group of comedic talent from the Houston area set on revitalizing the local comedy scene with new talent featuring the best of Comedy and Music culled from the Houston Open Mic scene. Currently the group is performing Bi-Monthly shows within the Houston area.
Our Free Comedy Open Mic Show Opens At 8:00. Show starts at 8:30

 

Saturday 28 December 2013 - CCSD’s Second Annual Festivus For The Rest Of Us (8pm)

 

 

It’s time for our second annual festivus party! The band lineup this year consists of Nick Gaitan & The Umbrella Man, Super-Robot-Party, The Dead End Cowboys, and Chain Reactor. the festivities will include the Airing of Grievances, and Feats of Strength where you’ll be competing for bar tabs. Drink specials will be announced the day of the party. Cover is $10 at the door. Come out for a good time with cool folks and great music!” - CCSD ( https://www.facebook.com/CCSDHouston )

 

Nick Gaitan & The Umbrella Man (Houston, TX)
https://www.reverbnation.com/nickgaitan

Nick Gaitan & The Umbrella Man is a Gulf Coast combo that incorporates many of the influential genres of the Texas- Louisiana region from Country, Jazz, Swamp pop, and Conjunto. Gaitan has won the Houston Press Music Award for “Best Bassist” from 2004 - 2008. Gaitan also won the “Local Musician of the Year” award in 2010. The band has released their debut album “Nick Gaitan & The Umbrella Man” and the CD has been getting great reviews in The Houston Chronicle and Houston Press among other radio stations in Houston. Gaitan also played bass and tours with Country music legend Billy Joe Shaver from 2007-2011. Shaver recorded a song composed by Nick Gaitan titled “I’ve Found my Weakness in You” in 2008. The band is currently touring to support their 3rd independent release titled “Bridges & Bayous” recorded at Houston’s own Sugarhill Studios.

“He funnels those experiences into this effortless, grandly entertaining disc, which captures the heart and soul of Houston life via country, conjunto, rockabilly and more….. Listen closely — your street might be mentioned in one of the terrific tunes.” Joey Guerra - Houston Chronicle

“Nick Gaitan leads The Umbrella Man, whose self-titled debut is a walking-bass Gulf Coast tour of zydeco, conjunto, swamp pop, country-soul and even dub.” Chris Gray - Houston Press

 

 

Super Robot Party (Houston, TX)

I hadn’t seen Super Robot Party, but I know the guys from 10 years ago. Matt Crow was in mytwilightpilot, and there’s a definite mtp stamp on their sound, but the vocals take the band in a decidedly britpop direction, so it comes out a little like if you slowed down and then Americanized the sound of Doves. in other words, beautiful!- Jason Smith – spacecityrock.com

Super Robot Party: This new reverb-laden five piece crafts ethereal shoegaze drones, touched with tidbits of folk. The experimental mixture sounds a lot like someone’s garage in 1991, heck even a blend of several garages on the street, full of kids and guitars. The Pasadena group has nearly three dozen tracks available on Soundcloud, or for the full experience, catch them tonight at Dean’s with Jealous Creatures and A Sundae Drive.-Marc Brubaker – The Houston Press

 

DeadEnd Cowboys (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/DeadEnd-Cowboys/40665119966

 

DeadEnd Cowboys are a band that plays Country Rock, Folk, and Americana, with a little bit of whiskey thrown in to make a cocktail of scandalous proportions.

 

 

 

 

Chain Reactor (Sorry No Info on-line)

 

 

Friday 27 December 2013 - Yppah, Brilliantes Del Vuelo, Broken Quote, Millennial Grave, Modulation Hertz, Made 322, OGT, deskwork

Come through and watch a wide range of electronic styles from guys who should perform more often than they do. Should be an interesting night of not typical awesomeness. I’ll also be doing a set of all new Yppah material.

Live Sets by:
Yppah
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVo8…

Brilliantes Del Vuelo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXmw…

Broken Quote
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfFj…

Millennial Grave (Industrial, Kosmische, Minimal Synth)
https://tempelofknives.com/

Modulation Hertz

Made 322
https://soundcloud.com/daniel-aguir…

OGT (Cumbia Craziness/ Live accordion)

deskwork (facemelting)

Flyer courtesy of Tom So

 

 

Thursday 26 December 2013 - The Well * Funeral Horse * Cursus (Free)

The Well (Austin, TX)
https://www.thewellband.com/

The Well are a power trio that have been exploring the darker side of the music spectrum through doom-laden sonic landscapes and haunting lyrics for the past two years. On the tail end of a former project guitarist Ian Graham turned to his past for inspiration, embracing his childhood passion for all things metal, all things dark. He was transported back by nostalgia to a time where his school desks were covered in pentagrams, his teachers glanced askance at his decision to read Aleister Crowley while his peers were force fed state-mandated curriculum designed to shape them into “functioning members of society”. Remembering the consistency, adventures spent laying in his bedroom, staring at a star-covered ceiling, with Black Sabbath blaring into his headphones, Ian began writing music even his angst ridden 10 year old self would approve of. Big riffs, walls of sound, slow, relentless, heavy. Teaming up with bassist Lisa Alley and drummer Jason Sullivan, the three spent months schlepping equipment to and from a local practice rental space, dialing in their sound. Their debut show came on July 4th, 2011, playing a metal-laden fest headed by Austin’s Stoner Metal mainstay, The Sword, and they haven’t stopped working since.

Their sound has been compared to everything from Electric Wizard, Wicked Lady, Sleep, Green and Wood, Saint Vitus, and of course, Black Sabbath, while managing to remain something entirely its own. One glaring innovation shines through in The Well’s vocal stylings, Ian and Lisa deliver their transcendent tales in unison so in sync that it is said to be difficult to tell whether there’s a single entity, or an entire chorus reciting each song. Supported by lyrical depth made capable from a lifetime of drawing poetic influence from the likes of Joyce, Pound, Yeats and Baudelaire, the vocals dance amongst the driving bass, war-mongering drums, and floating, merciless guitars, weaving a scene both desolate and hopeful, crushing and inspiring, unforgiving and consoling.

Based in Austin, TX, the band has worked with individuals at the top of the music industry. In the spring of 2012, they recorded their debut 7” at The Barbeque Shack with Tia Carerra’s Jason Morales. Following this self-released demo, The Well came back to the studio this fall, this time recording their first full-length LP. Produced by Mark Deutrom of the Melvins, Sunn O))), etc. and engineered at Ohm Recording Facility by Chico Jones.

 

Funeral Horse (Houston, TX)
https://funeralhorse.bandcamp.com/

 

“…what you mostly need to know about Funeral Horse and this album is that on the very first song they create an opus which could outdo a number of full length albums by other bands claiming to rock.” - Joshua Macala – Raised by Gypsies

“… the band I’m most interested to check out is newcomers Funeral Horse, which formed out of the ashes of the gone-too-soon Art Institute; they’re heavy and sludgy and slow as hell, dwelling somewhere in the realm of High on Fire or Sleep, and that’s no bad place to be.” - Jeremy Hart – Space City Rock

““We’re heavy and slow… so is our music”, this sayeth their facebook page. I can’t comment on the guys themselves, but their music certainly does live up to the claim. Funeral Horse currently have a new EP available for free download with tape copies (Tapes! Love it!) available shortly. They certainly live up to the hype. In fact, the first two words that spring to my mind listening to it are, indeed, “heavy” and “slow” – but not ponderously so. I can almost picture swathes of people with hair over their eyes, wearing black/tie-dyed clothes and nodding slowly to the beat like a crowd of metal zombies. With beer in their hands.” - Iain Purdie – Moshville Times

“There’s a cassette version of Savage Audio Demon available, which I would like to get his clammy paws on. This type of angling shows what kind of band Houston’s Funeral Horse is – vintage, loving those 70’s, and in bed with thick, rocked-up riffs, and vocals with plenty of ominous echo. The bluesy “Scatter My Ashes Over the Mississippi” is the pick of the bunch here (nice dynamics), but don’t leave “Invisible Hand of Revenge” out in the cold either. Rocking stuff.” - David E. Gehlke – Dead Rhetoric

 

Cursus (San Antonio, TX)
https://cursus.bandcamp.com/

Psychedelic occult doom metal from San Antonio

Cj Salem- guitar, vocals, samples
Sarah Ann- drums

 

 

 

 

 

Monday 23 December 2013 - A Couple Of Stand Up Guys Open Mic Comedy (Free!! doors 8pm)

A Couple Of Stand Up Guys (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/rudzopenmic

 

Formed in January 2012, it is a rotating group of comedic talent from the Houston area set on revitalizing the local comedy scene with new talent featuring the best of Comedy and Music culled from the Houston Open Mic scene. Currently the group is performing Bi-Monthly shows within the Houston area.
Our Free Comedy Open Mic Show Opens At 8:00. Show starts at 8:30

 

Sunday, December 22, 2013 - Level Up with Paul Oddo * Sarah Tollemache * Bob Biggerstaff * Matt Ingebretson (8pm)

The Level Up returns December 22nd, and it returns big for the holidays. A monthly series, the Level Up is a curation of stand up talent from both Houston, and the rest of the country. This month we are host to the brilliant

Paul Oddo (Boston Comedy Festival Winner 2012)
Sarah Tollemache (talkingtostrangers podcast)

Bob Biggerstaff (Comedy Central)
Matt Ingebretson (The Soup)

hosted by Houstons own Dusti Rhodes (the Moth Storytelling Series!)

The show is always only 5 dollars.

 

 

Paul Oddo (New York, NY) https://www.pauloddo.com/ 2012 Boston Comedy Festival Winner Paul Oddo (Oh-Dough) has been performing and obsessively creating his original style of comedy for nearly a decade. His voice and perspective are uniquely his own, making him difficult to compare to other comedians. Through his practice & study of Stand up, Improv and Sketch comedy, his stage presence is both methodical and fluid. Each of his shows are different, and have a certain “had to be there” element that makes them especially fun and memorable. Paul lives in NYC and is originally from Houston, TX. - Boston Comedy Festival

 

 

 

 

Sarah Tollemache (New York, NY/ Houston, TX)
https://sarahtollemache.com/

I’m a female. I have two arms and two legs with a head on top of my torso, well on top of my neck which is on top of my torso. I like having a few beers and shooting the shit with friends. I’m kind of flaky. I’ll make a lot of plans with you the night before, but the next day after sleeping in I probably won’t answer my cell phone if you call. That is just the way that God made me.

https://youtu.be/oYDkFAsM_FE

 

 

 

 

Bob Biggerstaff (Houston, TX)
https://www.bobbiggerstaff.com/

Bob Biggerstaff began his comedy career at the legendary Laff Stop Comedy Club in Houston, TX … as a doorman. After a few months “manning the door” he started to perform at the Laff Stop open mic night and developed his self-deprecating, sports related style. Bob quickly became one of Houston’s top comics winning the Funniest Person in Houston Contest. He has been successful in many comedy competitions becoming a national finalist in Sierra Mist’s “Search For the Next Great Comic”, HBO’s “The Lucky 21”, and Comedy Centrals “Open Mic Fight”. Bob made his national television debut on NBC’s hit show Last Comic Standing and was seen on Dave Attell’s HBO special “Captain Miserable” (he’s the guy throwing glitter on Dave at the end). Then came appearances on Comedy Central’s “Live at Gotham”, a semifinal appearance on Last Comic Standing, NESN’s Comedy All-Stars, and the nationally syndicated Bob and Tom Radio Show. Most recently Bob was part of the inaugural Moontower Comedy & Oddity Fest in Austin, TX, The Just For Laughs Chicago Festival, and The Great American Comedy Festival in Johnny Carson’s hometown of Norfolk, NE.

 

Matt Ingebretson (Los Angeles, CA)
https://www.mattingebretson.com/

I am a comedian.

I tweet jokes.

I make videos.

I perform standup comedy.

I write content for The Soup.