Music of Austin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The music of Austin, Texas centers on Red River and 6th Street, where bars and clubs of every kind can be found. On any night hundreds of venues stage live music. Austin's official motto is the "Live Music Capital of the World."
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[edit] History
Austin's modern musical heritage began in the late-1960s and 1970s where the country music made popular by Willie Nelson and others was joined by a host of other music brought by the more liberal inhabitants, who migrated to Austin during these two decades.
Austin was home to the Vulcan Gas Company that featured headliners such as the 13th Floor Elevators, the Winter brothers (Johnny and Edgar), and Shiva's Headband. The Vulcan morphed into the Armadillo World Headquarters that for more than ten years featured music of all genres, from Bruce Springsteen to Bette Midler, as well as local ballet, blues and jazz. The artwork from this establishment was a part of the Austin scene and the Armadillo became the Austin city animal. Songs such as Gary P. Nunn's "London Homesick Blues" (which includes in the chorus "I want to go home to the armadillo") made this a staple of Austin. The artist that began the Armadillo logo was Jim Franklin, who is still working today.
In the following years, Austin gained a reputation as a place where struggling musicians could launch their careers in informal live venues in front of receptive audiences. A major force in this time period, was the efforts of Clifford Antone and the namesake blues club he founded at age 25 in 1975. The club, Antone's, became one of the first music venues on Austin's 6th Street and fostered the careers of a number of musicians such as Stevie Ray Vaughan. The Austin Music Foundation is one of several Austin groups that a help independent artists further their music careers. Today, 6th Street is home to hundreds of bars and live music venues, and is center stage for Austin's South by Southwest Music Conference.
[edit] Television
The live music television show Austin City Limits on PBS began in 1975 and has featured, as of 2005, over 500 artists of all genres, spanning rock, folk, country, bluegrass and zydeco. The show has been broadcast all over the world and is in part responsible for Austin's world-wide renown.
Austin was also home to the Austin Music Network (AMN), which began broadcasting April 1, 1994, ending on September 1, 2005. AMN proclaimed itself to be the only non-profit independent music television channel, AMN's programming was mostly music videos or recorded live sessions, interspersed with presenters. Although all musical tastes were broadcast, AMN emphasized non-mainstream music such as indie, punk, blues, country and jazz.
[edit] Festivals
Austin is the home of South by Southwest, an annual film, music and interactive conference and festival. In the fall, Austin hosts the Austin City Limits Music Festival. Every summer, local businesses put on a series of free blues shows in Zilker Park entitled "Blues on the Green." Numerous other music festivals occur year-round.
[edit] Venues
The Austin Chronicle offers a guide of the most common venues, but may not cover smaller restaurants and coffee shops hosting local bands on the weekends.
Below is a short list of notable venues:
- Antone's
- The Austin Music Hall
- The Backyard
- Beerland
- The Broken Spoke
- Cactus Cafe
- Central Market Cafe
- The Continental Club
- Dallas Nite Club
- The Dirty Dog Bar
- Ego's
- Element
- Emo's
- Ginney's Little Longhorn Saloon
- The Hole in the Wall
- Jovita's
- LaLa's Little Nugget
- The Oasis
- The Poodle Dog Lounge
- The Red Eye Fly
- Room 710
- Stubb's
- La Zona Rosa
[edit] Musical acts
Some acts based in, or originating from, Austin.
- ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
- The Austin Symphony Orchestra
- 13th Floor Elevators
- The American Analog Set
- Arc Angels
- Asylum Street Spankers
- Austin Lounge Lizards
- Marcia Ball
- Big Boys
- The Black Angels
- Maya Bond
- Brobdingnagian Bards
- Butthole Surfers
- Slaid Cleaves
- Shawn Colvin
- Kacy Crowley
- The Dicks
- Joe Ely
- Explosions in the Sky
- Fabulous Thunderbirds
- Fastball
- Rosie Flores
- Michael Fracasso
- Davíd Garza
- Ghostland Observatory
- Jimmie Dale Gilmore
- The Gourds
- Jon Dee Graham
- Pat Green
- Patty Griffin
- Nanci Griffith
- Marc Gunn
- Sara Hickman
- I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness
- The Impossibles
- Jack Ingram
- Janis Joplin
- Lower Class Brats
- Ian McLagan
- MDC
- Mineral
- Abra Moore
- Ian Moore
- Gurf Morlix
- Trish Murphy
- Willie Nelson
- The Octopus Project
- Okkervil River
- Ephraim Owens
- Patrice Pike
- Toni Price
- Pushmonkey
- Quiet Company
- Carrie Rodriguez
- Charlie Robison
- Shearwater
- Bob Schneider
- Sound Team
- Spoon
- Storyville
- The Sword
- Thirteen of Everything
- Union Jack and the Megatones
- Unloco
- Kathy Valentine
- Vallejo
- Stevie Ray Vaughan
- Voxtrot
- Don Walser
- Dale Watson
- Western Keys
- What Made Milwaukee Famous
- Bobby Whitlock
- Wideawake
- Lucinda Williams
- Kelly Willis
- The Yuppie Pricks
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Austin Chronicle music listings
- Austin Music Foundation
- Music & Entertainment Television - Channel 15
- Austin Music
- JamBase music listings for Austin
- Austin music photos
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