Maximum Performance
  • Saturday was my last SXSW hurrah, my final day of the Texan musicfest South By Southwest before returning to my regular, everyday life. Once this long lost weekend was over, I'd be eating veggies again (no, nutrition-conscious SXSWers, potato salad doesn't really count as a vegetable); kickstarting my morning with a mug of green tea instead of a couple cans of Sparks; and, most depressingly, probably seeing a whole lot fewer bands during the course of any given day. So I knew I had to make Saturday count and go hard before going home--even if my poor feet, head, and liver were already begging for a respite from this week's rock 'n' roll revelry.

    The afternoon began over at the Feedback BBQ hosted by celebrity chef Rachael Ray, a calorie-laden event that ensured I'd be forgoing leafy greens and tofu for yet another day. But I worked off those calories boogie-ing in earnest to the about-to-blow-up-bigtime Fitz & The Tantrums, a supercool Motown-style combo in the Mark Ronson/Sharon

    Read More »from SXSW 2011, Round 3: One Last Beer/BBQ/Buzz-Band Binge
  • Only at South By Southwest do I attend two brunches before it's even noon. But hey, when in Texas, do as the Texans do, right? Day three of the Austin musicfest SXSW started off for me with a long-honored tradition, the 10th annual BMI Acoustic Brunch on the lawn of the posh Four Seasons hotel--a pleasantly fancy-schmancy affair, and a refreshing change of pace after the previous greasy days' taco trucks and mac 'n' cheese spooned onto soggy Styrofoam plates. China! Real silverware! Bloody Marys! And, of course, a slew of easy-on-the-ears, hangover-alleviating unplugged acts. I was most impressed by Mumfordy British alt-folkers Dry The River, who admitted to having hangovers themselves (and didn't seem all that thrilled with their 11am set time) but didn't let any morning-after fatigue prevent them from putting on a lovely lawn concert, filled with sweet rustic harmonies, that gently eased me into another marathon music day.

    Then, over at the scenester central known as the Fader Fort,

    Read More »from SXSW 2011, Round 2: “OMG, It’s OMD!” (And Other Friday Highlights)
  • Although this is often forgotten amid the haze of Shiner Bock and BBQ grill fumes, the annual South By Southwest conference is supposed to be work. It is a business convention, after all (the music industry's biggest), on the surface hypothetically no different from networking conventions for medical supply salespeople, dental hygienists, or morticians. Business cards are exchanged, hands are shaken, backs are slapped, industry panels are attended, expense accounts are maxed out, etc. And at the same time, this weeklong whirlwind of conspicuously branded hipster soirees, open bars, and Texas-sized barbeque buffets isn't all that different from the mythical seven-day weekend known to frat boys the world over as "Spring Break" (or "Spriiing Breeeaaak!!!!"). But South By Southwest (or SXSW, as it is affectionately nicknamed by those too lazy to type out the whole thing) is different, because in the end, this much-hyped Texan pow-wow is really all about the music, man. At least to me, it

    Read More »from SXSW 2011, Round 1: ’80s Icons, ’90s Nostalgia, and 100 Pounds of BBQ
  • I was forewarned, and I should have listened.

    When someone from a rowdy group of drunk teenagers behind you taps you on the shoulder and says, "FYI, we're gonna push when the Strokes come onstage," it's probably wise to move. It had been a long time since New York-based band had performed in the U.S., so any warning of chaos--however calmly delivered--should have been well-heeded. We were in the fancy, carpeted ballroom on the fourth floor of the freshly opened Cosmopolitan Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Cups and lemon slices littered the floor, and various kinds of smoke billowed around us. These people were ready. But alas, this Y! Music writer thought she could roadblock in five-inch heels when the time came...

    This year, the Strokes return with their fourth album Angles, five years after their last release, First Impressions Of Earth. Before their Vegas show last March 12, they hadn't performed much since their 2006 tour, save for the 2010 Outside Lands and Lollapalooza festivals

    Read More »from The Strokes Hit Vegas For Their First U.S. ‘Angles’ Concert
  • Lady Gaga may be headlining stadiums these days, but she clearly still likes to stay in touch with her clubby roots. This past weekend, she paid no less than three surprise visits to gay bars along her tour route, where the pop queen vamped it up alongside the very drag queens who were paying tribute to her.

    On Saturday, March 12, after playing the KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Kentucky, Gaga rode her disco stick over to a gay bar called the Connection, where the crowd understandably erupted when, a little after 1am, she bumrushed the club's drag revue and joined Gaga impersonator Vanessa DeMornay for an impromptu performance of "Born This Way."

    The following night, Gaga and her entourage of shirtless male backup dancers hit the dance floor at the Round-Up club in Dallas, for another unannounced performance of her new hit single.

    And finally, later that same evening in Dallas, she crashed a party in the Rose Room at the S4 club across the street, for another on-the-fly Gaga revue:

    Read More »from Lady Gaga Plays Surprise After-Hours Shows At Three Drag Clubs
  • "What The Hell," the first single from Avril Lavigne's fourth album, Goodbye Lullaby, is reminiscent of her signature upbeat, tongue-in-cheek boy-bashing anthems "Sk8er Boi," "Complicated," and "Girlfriend." But it isn't reflective of the entire album.

    "The rest of the album overall is more raw and vulnerable and deep," Avril explained during an interview with Yahoo! Music at the SLS hotel in Beverly Hills. "It's more acoustic guitars and pianos, so it kinda showcases another side that people maybe haven't seen."

     

     

    Last year, Lavigne suggested a new focus when she debuted the power ballad "Alice" on the Alice In Wonderland soundtrack. A few of the Goodbye Lullaby songs ("Not Enough," "Remember When," "Goodbye") go after a similar massive pop vocal performance backed with prominent pianos.

    "I love to rock out and have fun," Lavigne explained, "but I also love to sit down at a piano and sing."

    The timing is perfect, considering the pop market has become crowded with a slew of new

    Read More »from Avril Lavigne Transcends Boy-Bashing Pop On New Album
  •  

    When a Plain White T showers, is that called doing laundry? Despite a long day of interviews that left the boys craving a refresher, the Chicago-based quintet--singer and guitarist Tom Higgenson, lead guitarist Tim Lopez, rhythm guitarist Dave Tirio, bassist Mike Retondo, and drummer De'Mar Hamilton--breezed into the Yahoo! music room dressed like sharp lads off a vaudeville caravan or the (pre-rioting) Gangs Of New York set. Alas, the sartorial efforts were not for us, but for an on-camera fashion discussion earlier that day. But we'd like to think they got a little snazzy for Yahoo!, too.

    Whether it was their long day or just their natural charisma, the band came into the music room with such a relaxed demeanor, it felt like we were just hanging out in someone's living room. It was interesting to see the band's dynamic: As one began to wander, another pulled him back on task. Once everyone was settled their professionalism took over, and without prompting they jumped right into

    Read More »from Acoustic To A T: Plain White T’s Regale At Yahoo! Music
  • Well-known married musical couples who perform together are few and far between--but for Herb Alpert and Lani Hall, that's just one of many unusual aspects of their distinguished careers.

    The pair just released I Feel You, their first studio album in nearly 10 years, which reinterprets several well-known classics of the past few decades, including the Beatles' "Here Comes The Sun" and "Blackbird," Peggy Lee's "Fever" and Van Morrison's "Moondance," among other similarly venerable tunes.

    Also covered: a reinterpretation of "What Now My Love," a hit for Alpert back in 1966 with his revered Tijuana Brass outfit.

    In fact, the storied history shared by Alpert and Hall--he not just as the co-founder of A&M Records but the recording superstar who rose to fame in the '60s and sold over 75 million albums worldwide, she as a Grammy winner and member of Sergio Mendes' much-respected Brasil 66--is part of what makes the pair unique: They make music not for commerce but purely for the love of it.

    Read More »from Herb Alpert & Lani Hall: Once More, With Feeling
  • I was just 6 when I first heard Les Paul play his signature tune on the radio "How High The Moon," and it blew my mind! I didn't know what the sound was and my mum said it was the electric guitar. I wasn't sure how it was different to an ordinary guitar. I thought you plugged it straight into the voltage in the wall. However my mum told me that "it was all tricks." I knew, at that very moment, that I wanted to play the electric guitar. I made my first guitar with some wood I bought from the local wood shop. It was horrible but I played that thing as much as I could and never looked back. The sounds that Les made on his guitar, and what he did later with multi-tracking, were a revelation and completely excited every part of me.

    My mum loved classical and jazz music. She first introduced my sister and I to the sounds of the '30s and '40s, but it was my sister's connection with a college pal that really cemented my future. She introduced me to Jimmy Page and we became inseparable. Jamming

    Read More »from Jeff Beck: ‘Les Paul Was My Inspiration’
  • In late November last year, the great city of San Francisco suddenly found themselves with some new additions to twenty strategically chosen bus stops--giant digital touch screens. The Yahoo! Bus Stop Derby campaign installed touch screens with four different interactive games that gave residents an opportunity to win points for their community. The ten-week program was launched to promote public transportation usage and neighborly competition. Certainly made waiting for the bus much less painful, but the big incentive for the winning community: a full blown block party featuring a free performance by viral video kings OK Go. No wonder over 100,000 games were played!

    Earlier this month, Yahoo congratulated the residents of North Beach for winning the most points out of the whole city and threw a huge rooftop party on top of the SF Art Institute. 800 lucky people lined up for games, food, performances and of course for OK Go. In an act of true confidence, one fan had his night, week

    Read More »from OK Go Shakes The Roof For Yahoo! Bus Stop Derby Winners

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