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The Live Music Scene in Austin Texas

Posted by Concert List | Posted in live music | Posted on 30-09-2009

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There is more live music going on in Austin, Texas on any given night than there is in any other city in the world. That’s why the city has put a trademark on it’s message “Live Music Capital of the World.”

There are hundreds of live music Venues in the city and its immediate environs.  A lot of are situated in three central entertainment districts: Sixth Street/Red River, the Warehouse district and South Austin. Sixth Street/Red River is the famous sector in downtown Austin that is known around the world for it is live music scene and regularly boisterous crowds that fill Sixth Street on the weekends when it is closed to traffic. The Warehouse district runs west from Congress Ave. along Fourth and Fifth Streets. That’s where Antone’s is located, the Venue that USA Today has named the best blues venue in the country. In South Austin, there are a number of clubs on South Congress, South first St. and South Lamar that offer up some of the best new and original music in town.

The road to its live music capital status began way back in the 1960’s when a spirit of eclecticism appeared with the hippies and anti-war protesters of that era. Inclusion has been in and exclusion has been out, no pun intended. With the 70’s, this eclectic spirit gave birth to a form of music that has been again and again called progressive country. Joe Ely, along with co-Lubbockites Jimmy Dale Gilmore and Butch Hancock, brought this music down to Austin and hooked up with Marcia Ball and Delbert McClinton and cosmic cowboys like Jerry Jeff Walker, Michael Martin Murphy, Rusty Weir and Ray Wiley Hubbard. Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings came back from Nashville during that time to performance tle in Austin where they can take control of the production of their songs. A wild and compelling musical vortex formed that saw psychedelic rock and roll mix with straight out country and blues at Clubs such as the Armadillo World Headquarters, Threadgill’s, the Soap Creek Saloon and the Broken Spoke. It has been cool to dig the psychedelic sound of the 13th Floor Elevators and the uncompromising country licks of Alvin Crow at the same time.

Then, in 1975, a 30-minute University of Texas music program has been accepted by a number of PBS affiliate stations and Austin City Limits has been launched and has become the longest running program in the history of PBS. It has propelled Austin to the forefront of the music industry’s consciousness in the USA and around the world. That first program featured Willie Nelson, but has since put Texas music notables such as Marcia Ball, Lyle Lovett, Robert Earl Keen, Asleep at the Wheel and many, many others in the national and world spotlight.

In more recent years, the South by Southwest showcase every Spring that brings nearly 1500 musicians and musical acts to town to be seen and heard by industry executives and AR types, along with the Austin City Limits Festival in September, have kept the city on the national music map.  In addition,  dozens of other smaller festivals are held each year, as well as a number of nationally meaningful ones in the surrounding Hill Country such as the Kerrville Folk Festival and the Old  set tlers Reunion in Buda, just south of town.

The Austin music scene has always been a free-wheeling, break-the-mold, think-out-of-the-box kind of affair. That early eclecticism lives on in the current scene, although some characteristics of the town’s soundscape seem to have become entrenched. Sixth Street/Red River attracts a young, event animal kind of crowd with it is rock and roll, blues and punk scene. The Warehouse district caters to a bit older and more professional crowd in general. And South Austin retains the feel of Austin in the 70’s with its nouveau hippie coffeehouses and crowds and its prefer ence for wonderful singer/songwriters. Still, there are always exceptions to those general tendencies just about anywhere you go.

Austin remains a city where musical creativity and skill thrive and defy expectations. That may be experienced close up and personal in any number of live music Clubs on any given night.

Comments (1)

A great artist by the name of Hope Sandoval is playing two shows in Texas (one in Austin and one in Dallas) on the 18th and 19th of October. If your against super-ego artists and want to experience some great live music, CHECK OUT HOPE SANDOVAL. This will be a MUSICAL EXPERIENCE, not some typical commerical concert.

check her out… http://www.myspace.com/hopesandoval

-Josh

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