Thursday, April 4, 2013

Posted By on Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 7:53 AM

One of half-dozen or so widely influential songwriters who rose like a flying saucer out of West Texas in the 1980s, Robert Earl Keen brings to the Rialto a colorful array of songs about love, murder, good times, geography and the human condition. He might also sing a couple from his new record, Are You Ready for Confetti.

Last week he updated us on Guy Clark’s health, where he got his knack with a great story, some new trends in his writing and his quest for Charles Bowden.

Linda Ray: What do you remember from your previous visits to Tucson? Any anecdotes?

Robert Earl Keen: You know I've been through Tucson for a long time, from the mid-nineties. I think Tucson's … I like it it's a cool town. It's unique. The only thing that's frustrating is the grid and the lights. The downtown grid and the traffic lights.

Now what I'm really interested in, what is that play? Waiting for Godot? Or looking for somebody? I'm looking for Charles Bowden, is what I want to do now.

I almost had a revelation about Charles Bowden. Not about groundwater or bats or immigration or anything, but just the fact that how beautiful true journalism can be. (His work) completely changed my mind. Because I'd been, like, a fiction guy all my life and I love fiction. And was kind of snobbish about nonfiction and I read some of his stuff and just went “Wow!” This is the kind of writer I would like to be if I were a writer. He's fantastic.

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Posted By on Tue, Oct 23, 2012 at 5:14 PM

black_tusk_bldg_Geoff_Johnson_09-49-18.jpg

Jonathan Athon, bassist/vocalist for Savannah, Georgia, sludge-metal band Black Tusk, is a sweaty mess right now. But not because he has just wrapped up a show and stepped off the stage of an air-conditionless club. Instead he’s trapped in a stuffy, sawdust-clouded woodshop cutting rafters with a 24” reciprocating blade.

Unlike many of his pampered rock-star peers, Athon is spending the week building a pagoda for a nearby technical college. The life of a critically acclaimed, underground metal musician ain’t all roses.

“On the bright side,” he says, “swinging a hammer in the Savannah summer means we don’t need to jog. Running around in a fancy pair of New Balance shoes would be a lot less strenuous than this.”

I’m talking with Athon via phone mere days after Black Tusk—a trio that includes guitarist Andrew Fidler and drummer James May—returned to the States. The band just concluded its first-ever European headlining tour, which kicked off in Sweden and culminated with a festival appearance in Tønsberg, Norway.

The latter was, reports Athon, a calamity.

After driving through the night, they unloaded their gear, dragging it to the top of a mountain. A brick medieval tower with a black spire towered above and, as soon as they took the stage, rain poured down. Everything flooded; electrical cords started to short. But the show had to go on. The Tusk draped plastic over their myriad guitar pedals and played against a torrent. On cue, they launched into the massive opening riff of their epic song “Embrace the Madness,” right as a bolt of lightning slammed into the mountain. Athon’s howling lyrics—“Crash of lightning / summon rain / thrash the stage / into flames”—took on additional significance.

“We managed to finish the song,” laughs Athon. “Then the stage manager escorted us off very quickly. He might’ve mumbled a prayer.”

Near-death experiences aside, 2012 has been the Year of the Tusk. The band, which formed in 2005 and released its fourth album Set the Dial on Relapse last year, is still high on the adrenaline of being handpicked by Metallica to play the Orion Fest in June. It’s not every day a metalhead musician gets the nod from his heroes.

“It’s cool as hell to say you’re hanging with someone you idolized as a kid,” says Athon, giddiness in his voice. “We still walk around shouting Metallica lyrics at each other for no reason.”

But the Tusk’s growing popularity and success is double-edged. Being under the radar means the band has kept its collective head. No one tells them to do something they don’t want to do.

“Yet you always feel you want more,” admits Athon. “It gets rough keeping it real all the time. Sometimes you feel like handing over control to others and letting them pimp you for a while. But I like having our punk-rock ethics; it keeps us honest.”

That honesty is evident in the split 7-inch with fellow Savannah band Dead Yet?, released Sept. 21 on Hyperrealist Records, a Savannah indie label.

“Dead Yet? chose one of our songs to cover, and we chose one of theirs, plus an original,” explains Athon. “We always try something different. But whatever we do is going to sound like Black Tusk. We’re only fine-tuning this machine we created.”

Black Tusk
performing between headliners Red Fang and openers Lord Dying

8:30 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 31

Plush
340 E. 6th St.

$12

798-1298; plushtucson.com

This article originally appeared in LEO Weekly.

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Monday, October 8, 2012

Posted By on Mon, Oct 8, 2012 at 5:00 PM

Field Report
  • Field Report

A song, if you’ll permit Chris Porterfield the analogy, is like a dark room.

The singer-songwriter behind Field Report, which is opening for Aimee Mann at the Rialto Theatre on Friday, says he writes songs with details that emerge bit by bit, letting the whole take its shape slowly.

“A song, the first time you hear it, there’s so much info to take it. There’s the music, the words, the way things were recorded. It’s almost as if you were put blind into a big room and as your eyes adjust to the darkness, you start to pick up the little details,” he says.

Even in some of his most character-driven songs, Porterfield writes with an exceptional sense of place, working listeners into his world with small sketches that evoke so much more.

“I think anywhere you are, if you’re sensitive to it, you can have some kind of moment of awareness or some kind of sacred experience, anywhere you are. Trying to get into places in the songs is just an attempt to mostly let the listener figure out where they are. The little details help them triangulate the stories,” he says.

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