Results tagged “janisjoplin”

In Zach Scott’s biomusical Love, Janis, Janis makes sure the folks back home know she has no intention of becoming “the poor man’s Cher." This begs the audience to consider what kind of Garden Weasel churning old Pearl would be doing if she could see who passes for top female entertainers today. Hell, Janis, by way of comparison, Cher is Maria damn Callas! If you weren’t there, if you don’t know Janis Joplin’s music and story, it’s hard not to be stunned by the fact that this 23 year-old girl, without the benefit of a star machine, a manager mommy, winning a phone-in talent poll on the TV, or her own clothing line was able to ascend to the place she did and continue to be a subject of interest almost 40 years later. Love, Janis had a run in Austin originally over a decade ago and has also been successful in New York, Cleveland, and Chicago. A recent performance was impressively three-quarters full on a lovely Sunday afternoon, with an enthusiastic crowd of older people who had clearly been in their 20s at the same time Texas native Janis was. The crowd clearly indulged their catharsis. The stage is set up for a rock show with small sets to the left and right for break out vignettes. The dialogue, performed mostly by Sydney Andrews, comprises about half of the play and is taken from letters Janis wrote home and interviews she gave during her brief career. Interspersed are musical numbers, belted out with goose bump inducing grit by Andra Mitrovitch who has had the long-held honor of being the voice of Janis, performing worldwide with Big Brother and the Holding Company, Joplin’s original band.

Let's not mince words: when Cat Power comes to town, it's pretty much mandated by law that you attend. This is because not only will you be able to witness one of the most shockingly talented vocalists in the world, but you also may learn a thing or two. For those who don't remember, let's do a brief recap of what we learned last time the timeless (and timelessly eccentric) soulstress was in town: that Chan Marshall, the woman behind the voice, is on steroids, that she was born deaf, that she wants to shoot her monitors, that she likes to apologize to the crowd, that she was born deaf, that steroids make you angry (and that's why they make you stronger), and on and on she went with her pearls of wisdom. Pretty much, she's a spectacularly unpredictable bounty of non-sequiturs and stunning musicianship.

While a great deal of lip service is paid to “Keeping Austin Weird,” how did Austin manage to get so weird, anyway, and how far have we strayed from that great flashpoint of weirdness, the sixties? This special installment of Music Mondays at the Alamo Drafthouse will answer all this and more, with a presentation of the film Dirt Road to Psychedelia by director Scott Conn.

"UT spied on its non comformists and dissident students"Your every move is being watched. Scary thought, right? A thought we like to associate with Orwellian sci-fi or Alex Jones, but in recent years we've seen this idea become a reality. Little black boxes with blinking red lights are at traffic spots, street corners or up in trees making sure you're not up to any funny business. Now, in a democracy sans Habeas Corpus, we...

Another week, another batch of ACL bands from my Austin City Limits Festival Artist Previews Page. Here's the latest: Son Volt - After seven years and four solo albums, Jay Farrar returned to the studio with Son Volt and emerged last year with Okemah and the Melody of Riot, and proof that his group is still one of the best country-influenced rock bands out there. (full preview) The Long Winters - After about four...

John Lennon still gives Jesus a run for his money. According to a volunteer at the University Baptist Church last Friday, only one or two religious services have similarly packed the pews. By the time Austinist arrived, music worshippers were lined up around the block to catch a live performance of the Beatles' White Album of 1968, whose songs around 30 local vocalists and musicians had been invited to cover. The seating was shoulder-to-shoulder, with...

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