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August 28, 2009

Video: Tigercity Plays Leonard Cohen

by Bob Boilen

This week, we're featuring video performances of various artists playing the songs of Leonard Cohen. The video was recorded live at this year's South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas.

Of all the bands performing at "Happy at Last," the NPR/SXSW Tribute to Leonard Cohen, Tigercity was the band that surprised me the most. To start with, it tackled the song "Suzanne" -- Cohen's most emblematic song, besides "Hallelujah." The band also took this slow and gorgeous tune and rebuilt it as a slow-burning rocker. Now, if you'd told me that a version of "Suzanne" would rock, I'd have guessed it would be awful. But this Brooklyn band made it work.

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August 27, 2009

Video: The Hours On Leonard Cohen

by Bob Boilen

This week, we're featuring video performances of various artists performing the songs of Leonard Cohen. The video was recorded live at this year's South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas.

Members of the London-based band The Hours decided to tackle a Leonard Cohen tune from his 1967 debut album, The Songs of Leonard Cohen: "Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye." There is cinematic simplicity in this version.

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August 26, 2009

Video: Laura Gibson Sings Leonard Cohen

by Bob Boilen

This week, we're featuring video performances of various artists singing the songs of Leonard Cohen. The video was recorded live at this year's South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas.

Laura Gibson's recent album, Beasts of Seasons, showcases the singer's stark narrative voice and flair for poetic songwriting. It's no wonder that she's attracted to the music of Leonard Cohen. At Waterloo Records, she performed a song from Cohen's 1988 album I'm Your Man. The track, "Take This Waltz," features accordion, a saw, some percussion and Gibson's gorgeous voice.

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August 25, 2009

Happy At Last: A Tribute To Leonard Cohen, Part II

by Bob Boilen

This week, we're featuring video performances of various artists playing the songs of Leonard Cohen. The video was recorded live at this year's South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas.

David Garza chose one of the best-known songs from one of Leonard Cohen's lesser-known albums: "Dance Me to the End Of Love," from the 1985 album Various Positions. Garza nails the Spanish and Portuguese influences in Cohen's music, though he may be coming to it as a Texas-based musician influenced by Mexican musicians.

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August 24, 2009

Happy At Last: A Tribute To Leonard Cohen, Part I

by Bob Boilen

Back in February, Leonard Cohen played his first U.S. concert in 15 years. Just a few weeks later, inspired by Cohen's resurgence, a group of artists at the South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas, paid tribute to the legendary singer-songwriter by performing some of his work.

The event functioned as an open mic of sorts, and took place at a store in Austin called Waterloo Records. NPR Music and Sony Music went to Waterloo and captured the event. I've chosen five of the artists who played there, and this week, while All Songs Considered producer Robin Hilton and I are on vacation, we'll post a new video performance each day.

We start with "Here It Is," from the album Ten New Songs, performed by the French folk duo Herman Dune. Like all of Cohen's work, the poetry is potent.

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April 1, 2009

More St. Vincent Video From SXSW

by Robin Hilton

You may recall that Bob and I sat in with St. Vincent during one of the band's practice sessions for this year's South by Southwest festival and conference. We shot video of the session as Annie Clark and her band worked through some fantastic new songs from St. Vincent's upcoming new album, Actor.

We finally got the full video edited and up for you to see. Check it out and let us know what you think of the band's new songs.

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March 31, 2009

Tell Us Your Music Discoveries

by Robin Hilton

Bob and I (and Stephen and Carrie) are always bloviating about all the wonderful music we've discovered, and this year's South by Southwest festival and conference gave us even more to talk about than usual: The Phenomenal Handclap Band, Passion Pit, The Shackeltons, Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, and many more.

Now it's your turn. Tell us your favorite music discoveries so far this year. If you attended SXSW and found some great new artists, let us know. Tell us what you know about the groups and, if possible, add a link to where we can hear them.

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March 27, 2009

Wow, They're Good! Never Mind; It's Just A Backing Track

by Bob Boilen

The Decemberists did it. Loney Dear did it, and so did K'Naan. They all used prerecorded performances to enhance their own live appearances at this year's South by Southwest music conference and festival.

Backing tracks are the anabolic steroids of live music. They add muscle where there otherwise might just be a bunch of humans doing the best they can. And there's no denying that they can make something average sound pretty over-the-top.

When you go to a show and hear prerecorded backing tracks, does it bother you? Would you rather hear the climax of The Decemberists' new record without the children's choir? (It's admittedly nearly impossible to pull off live, since you can't expect a bunch of kids to tour with the band.) Would Loney Dear be less Loney without the pizzicato strings? (They're probably sampled anyway.) Would K'Naan be less K'Naan without the invisible drum ensemble?

For me, it's an old question without an answer. I used to perform my electronic music in the early '80s with sequences I had composed ahead of time on my Atari 1040. It always seemed a bit weird to be in front of an audience and start the song by pressing the letter "A" on my computer to start the first sequence, and then hitting other letters to change reverb settings, randomize the start of other sequenced loops, and so on. I always had this nagging feeling that I was cheating, even though this is the way I made my music.

I seem to remember some story about how the backing track to the Electric Light Orchestra went awry and revealed the man behind the curtain, so to speak. I also remember hearing that fans sued the band for what they viewed as a scam; after all, they came to hear live music and not a good stereo system.

So where do you fall on this? Is it the honesty you seek when you hear a live band, or is it the spectacle you want -- along with whatever it takes to make that happen? Or is it something else?

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March 26, 2009

Video: Grandaddy's Jason Lytle At SXSW

by Robin Hilton

We're back from Austin and still recovering from last week's orgy of amazing music at the South by Southwest conference and festival. In addition to all the concerts we webcast and broadcast, Bob, Stephen and I were lucky enough to find time to record some of our favorite artists giving solo performances. We're still cutting up the video, and will get these out to you as quickly as we can, starting with Jason Lytle.

Lytle, the singer, songwriter and creative force behind the band Grandaddy, met us at the historic Driskill Hotel in Austin for this shoot. He was joined by Rusty Miller, singer for the band Jackpot, who offered some nice harmonies.

This first cut is a new track from Lytle's debut solo album, Yours Truly, The Commuter. It's called "Brand New Sun." The area where we were sitting is pretty cavernous, so you can really hear the echoes of people walking and talking nearby.

This cut is also from Lytle's new album. It's called "Birds Encouraged Him."

One of the things I love most about Lytle's music is his storytelling: Few songwriters can craft a tale as well as he can, and they always cut to the bone. This song, which is actually a Grandaddy tune, is a good example of that. It's not very well-known -- it was only released as a B-side to a single in 2003 -- so it was a real treat to get to hear him do it. It's called "Derek Spears."

Since it's a pretty rare cut, Miller said he didn't know the song. It's nice to watch him listen and see the look on his face as he follows Lytle's story.

More videos to come, including PJ Harvey, Asa and Mirah.

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March 23, 2009

Warped And Wrapped

by Carrie Brownstein

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I'm back home in Portland after four days at the SXSW music festival in Austin. I was ready for the following to end: beer, bad drumming and Facebook updates. (Admittedly, I fell prey to two out of the three). On the other hand, I wasn't quite prepared for the reality check that accompanies a return home.

The strangest aspect of this year's festival was the excitement I felt leading up to it. And I wasn't alone. From emails to texts to blog posts, it seemed that there was a collective enthusiasm surrounding SXSW. I suppose it could have been on account of the long winter -- for some of us, that meant snow on the first day of spring -- but I have a feeling that the eagerness had to do with disparate parts coming together in a single locale. As much as I love the choose-your-own-adventure aspect of computers and the Internet (sample some MP3s, read music news and reviews, cue up a mix I made on iTunes), every once in a while, I like my music consumption to be a bit more "no assembly required." And at SXSW, all you really have to do is show up. A short walk down 6th Street or along any of its tentacles will leave your head crackling long after you've gone to bed.

So here, then, is a summation of my final day in Austin: I tried, I really did, to make a schedule. The Pains of Being Pure of Heart at some place at some time, followed by the Vivian Girls at some other place at some other time. The events were circled and highlighted, memorized, ingrained and just short of tattooed. But none of that happened. Instead, I ended up on S. Congress in search of good coffee and food. Then, I walked back downtown and over to the French Legation Museum. I had already messed up the first half of my day -- at least music-wise -- so my plan was to now see Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson. And I did see him, three hours later, after a series of false starts, truncated sets, and a band who had sabotaged another one of my nights began to unravel this day, as well. But it was all worth itm for a few reasons. For one, it was a day spent out on the lawn with a friend watching what barely constituted a breeze give sway to a pinata. Second, there was free ice cream handed out with a smile from an Airstream trailer. Finally, Miles Benjamin Anthony Robinson was worth the wait. Even his backing band was worth it, with a carrot-topped bass player and a tight-jeans-clad violinist who together (and beautifully) sang "Single Ladies" by Beyonce while waiting for Benjamin to take the stage.

I have but one regret from SXSW, and that was never witnessing The Phenomenal Handclap Band, whom I previewed both on our All Songs Considered show and during our festival broadcasts. So it would really be fantastic if TPHB would come to Portland and play a show in my backyard. Please and thank you. No, really, I mean it.

Until the next SXSW, or until I feel like messing with Robin and Bob, this will be my last post on the All Songs blog, but you can always find me over at NPR's Monitor Mix.

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March 22, 2009

Saturday's Daily SXSW Podcast

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen and NPR Music editor Stephen Thompson sit up at 4:30 a.m. on Sunday morning to share Saturday's events at SXSW music festival.

Listen below or subscribe to the All Songs Considered podcast to download.

Download full concerts from The Decemberists, K'Naan, Dirty Projectors and more by subscribing to the All Songs Considered Live Concerts podcast.

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Friday's Daily SXSW Podcast

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

All Songs Considered host Bob Boilen shares the day's events at SXSW music festival with NPR Music editor Stephen Thompson and All Songs Considered producer Robin Hilton.

Listen below for another late night roundup, or subscribe to the All Songs Considered podcast to download.

Download full concerts from The Decemberists, K'Naan, Dirty Projectors and more by subscribing to the All Songs Considered Live Concerts podcast.

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March 21, 2009

A Waning Bonanza

by Stephen Thompson

After a seemingly endless bonanza of big events -- our terrific run of archived concerts, the video sessions Bob and Robin have been recording, an assortment of parties big and small -- Saturday finds SXSW slowing down a little bit. Today's festival lineup will feature big shows with PJ Harvey and others, as well as high-profile daytime parties thrown by the likes of Rachael Ray (with food and The Hold Steady, among others) and Perez Hilton (with Ladyhawke and, sadly, Perez Hilton), but today marks the beginning of the festival's end.

Some of us have already begun trickling back home to feed pets and soak feet, but we'll still employ a small pocket of hardy gluttons, who are only too happy to soak up more shows, record video of a performance we're dying to see but can't talk about yet, and rock the Twitterverse @allsongs. (How I managed to avoid Tweet-gloating about the Badgers' NCAA tournament thriller last night, I do not know.)

So, for those following Saturday's festivities, any recommendations?

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March 20, 2009

Video: Richard Swift, The Asteroids Galaxy Tour, Passion Pit

by Robin Hilton

A few quick videos to share before heading out to shoot an acoustic solo performance by Grandaddy's Jason Lytle:

We featured Richard Swift on All Songs Considered a few years ago. He's sort of a 21st century Harry Nilsson. Swift plays with the same kind of bouncy piano pop as Nilsson, but he throws in some wonderful psych-synth textures. This clip is from one of his performances at the Mowhak.

Recently we also featured the Asteroids Galaxy Tour on Second Stage. It's a fantastic synth-pop group from Denmark with one of the year's most infectious songs, "Lady Jesus." They get serious props for being the loudest of all the bands I've seen so far.

We talked about Passion Pit on our recent SXSW preview show on All Songs Considered. It's a band I hadn't heard of before this year's SXSW, and given the extraordinarily long line of fans waiting to get into last night's show, I'd say Passion Pit will be one of this year's breakout groups. I spent most of the show waiting with everyone else to get in, but managed to catch the band's last few songs.

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Which Belter Is Better? It's A Cinch.

by Neda Ulaby

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For the past few years, it seems a new female soul singer is crowned at SXSW. Almost without exception, the hype builds up around a white woman from the Commonwealth. Amy Winehouse, of course, and Duffy are obvious examples, with Sharon Jones as the welcome exception.

This year, please let it be Alice Russell. The shaggy blonde from Brighton bounded around onstage last night at Maggie Mae's rooftop in a sparkly black dress and cobalt tights -- voice booming like a cannon, utterly unpretentious, and forging, note by ringing note, a pure, unforced connection with her band and audience. With a big helping of saucy on the side.

Russell could get lapped by Gabriella Cilmi, a modelly Australian 17 year old with big, throaty pipes, obvious mainstream appeal and a limited imagination. (Her cover of Justin Timberlake's "Cry Me A River" last night beautifully illustrated all three.) Cilmi's publicist says she's booked for a few talk show appearances next week. But boy, I hope a booker or two was in Alice Russell's crowd last night when the power went off in the middle of her exuberant set. It seemed almost plausible that she had overwhelmed the grid. But Russell is a giver, not a taker, and she kept her crowd dancing, shine undiminished by darkness. When the lights blew back on, it seemed almost an excess of electricity.

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Reading the Tea Leaves at the Trade Show

by Neda Ulaby

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I've been really interested how SXSW has been affected by the economic downturn, an issue addressed by my colleague Stephen Thompson today in a piece for Morning Edition. Stephen took an incisive look at how one band grappled with the decision to finance their trip to Austin this year. I conducted a little field research of my own: at the trade show.

And while you can still stock up on enough company-embossed guitar picks to hold you through the next financial quarter, truly, it seemed sparse compared to years past. Roomy. Besides inevitable repeat offenders like ACAAP and Sound Exchange, it seemed you could break many of the vendors this time round into four categories: international, Austin, gear and musician-oriented social network sites. So the folks who can afford to come either have government arts/tourism commissions backing them (New Zealand, Ireland, Japan, regions of Canada and Spain, etc), or they're local and they don't have to worry about housing and shipping costs (Austin Chronicle), or they're feeling somewhat stressed.

I asked a smiley rep for a high end audio equipment company if there'd been any debate about coming this year and his demeanor instantly changed. He looked around furtively and shrugged. "Not so much this year," he said. "Next year, we'll see."

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Crystal Women Furs

by Carrie Brownstein

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It's Friday morning and I shouldn't actually be awake considering that just a few hours ago the NPR music team was sitting in the courtyard of the Presbyterian Church -- also a SXSW venue -- recording a podcast that sounded like one long hiccup. But with the magic of editing (thanks, Stephen!) that hiccup will be transformed into a mellifluous yowl of enthusiasm.

Yesterday was a bit of a marathon. NPR presented our second and final showcase at The Parish. I really love that venue: great sound, lanterns, a variety of vantage points from which to view the stage, and a heat that builds and smolders. I'm a bit talked out about the showcase, you can hear my immediate thoughts about the bands here and even more about it on the aforementioned podcast.

Quickly, however, I will add that highlights included watching Bob rush to the front of the stage during K'Naan (who wouldn't?), meeting Blind Pilot for the first time in Austin even though they live in my hometown, and seeing Blitzen Trapper play a packed house after watching them five times at SXSW last year, sometime playing only to a few hippies dancing with invisible scarves.

After an hour of rest back at the hotel, I ventured out into the warm Austin night with the intention and hopes of seeing about six more artists. Considering that I'm averse to large crowds, long lines, roving groups of drunkards, and spring break "fashion" a.k.a "is that a mini skirt or just a belt you're wearing because it's barely covering your ass?" I'm surprised I enjoyed myself as much as I did.

My first stop was to see The Entrance Band. I love their song "Grim Reaper Blues" and wanted to see the guitar playing in a live setting. The two front people were clad in white and looked like extras from Dario Argento's Suspiria. I stayed for a few songs but realized that I wasn't yet in the mood for such a labyrinth of sound. Never the less, I'm not done with The Entrance Band.

Next, I saw The Crystal Stilts. Actually, that's not entirely true. The band was late and the venue threw on a local band that through the din I kept thinking was called "Etta James." I wish it had been Etta James, so that I could say that I saw her on a filthy outdoor patio in Austin under a tin shed surrounded by Port-o-Potties. Instead, "Etta James-not-their-real-name" was a three piece band that shrank to a two piece by the second song, a song that they made up on the spot. The best part of the "Etta James-not-their-real-name" show was the couple in front of me, who danced to the music -- knee dancing, I'll call it -- as if this were the band they had come here to see.

Then came the Crystal Stilts, claiming they had no idea they had a show that night. Were they just in Austin by coincidence? Who cares, actually, because this band was amazing and I felt blissful after the first note. Jangly guitar, minimal drums (Mo Tucker, fine, I'll say it), a lanky keyboardist devouring a tiny keyboard as if it were his only meal in days, and a singer who looked as transfixed by the music as I was. Crystal Stilts! Yes!

That performance was followed by a trek over to the Jagjaguwar/Secretly Canadian/Dead Oceans showcase, a label vying for MVP if the music industry was prone to those sorts of sport-inspired accolades. I really wanted to see the Calgary band, Women. I squeezed into the tiny room at the Mohawk and was immediately surrounded by tall men, as in seven-feet tall. In fact, it was the biggest sausage party of the festival thus far with only about fifteen females in the crowd. I guess dudes love Women. Here is a band whose music is hard for me to classify. But I can tell you what I love about them: Their voices, echoing and strange, the bassist who plays the lead riffs high on the neck, the way the songs have space and breaks and fall as seamlessly apart as much as they come together. I did, however, leave a bit early on account of the man coffin.

And last but not least (I can't believe there is anything else!) I saw Handsome Furs. One word: married. I don't really need to say more, imagine a lot of figurative and literal togetherness.

What now? Breakfast.

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Thursday's Daily SXSW Podcast

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Wandering around Austin's 6th Street to see and discover new bands is the name of the game at SXSW, and that's exactly what our NPR crew down in Texas did as Thursday night became Friday morning. Once again, Bob, Carrie, Robin and Stephen gathered in the wee hours, this time to recap NPR's SXSW showcase featuring Thao, Blind Pilot, BLK JKS, K'Naan, Dirty Projectors and Blitzen Trapper.

Standing in the streets of Austin, they also run down the other bands they heard as the night wore on -- a few favorites (Crystal Stilts, Grizzly Bear, Women, Laura Gibson, Akron/Family), some new discoveries (Sgt. Dunbar and the Hobo Banned, Passion Pit, Vijay Kishore), a couple of chance encounters and many, many more.

Listen below for the full late night roundtable, or subscribe to the All Songs Considered podcast to download.

Remember, all the NPR performances will be made available in the All Songs Considered Live Concerts podcast.

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Navigating Through The Chaos

From colorful wristbands to laminated badges, Monkey See contributor Elizabeth Nelson discusses the politics that govern SXSW and the hectic mash-up of sounds, empty PBR cans, and smelly bearded hipsters that surrounds her.

Early on Day 2, we descend upon downtown Austin. It is very hot here, and our walk is a two-mile trail of tears. I pass the pawn shop/check-cashing place near the cottage and head towards 6th Street, towards the action. Dubious-looking entrepreneurs who stop us to "just ask a quick question" give way to shrugging, hung over, skinny kids with green or yellow bracelets hanging off of their bony wrists.
Civilization turns to havoc shortly thereafter, with city streets closed to car traffic and monitored by non-threatening-looking city police. It is here that I first peep an unkempt beard and plaid shirt worn by the non-homeless and a preponderance of low-cut jersey tank tops worn with little else besides a pair of slouchy boots. It is exactly like being on either the set of Pirates of the Caribbean or on the ride of the same name, take your pick. Yo, ho, indeed.

To continue reading about Elizabeth Nelson's experience at SXSW, click here.

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March 19, 2009

Some Words Before The Rocking Of The Rabbit

by Stephen Thompson

We've finally, after weeks of planning and logistics, pulled off two blockbuster SXSW concert presentations: shows featuring The Decemberists, Blitzen Trapper, K'Naan, The Avett Brothers and so on. They're all on the site now, ready to be re-lived, but that doesn't end our coverage of SXSW.

For starters, our friends in public radio have amazing lineups streaming online in the next few days, starting with Austin's KUT (with PRI's The World) presenting a showcase with Asa, Pato Fu, Kingman and Jonah, Monareta and Ximena Sarinana tonight. (Click here for more information.)

As for the NPR Music gang, we'll be fanning out, seeing as many bands as humanly possible, Twittering (@allsongs) while trying not to over-Twitter, and eventually podcasting as a group at some ungodly hour. I may even be brave enough to seek out the late-night, Playboy-sponsored "Rock the Rabbit" party, which last year provided one-stop shopping for those who enjoy alcoholic energy drinks, Elijah Wood sightings, and scantily dressed women who appear to have been dipped in some sort of polymer.

Oh, and tonight's show is slated to feature a performance by a certain long-defunct super-secret famous band, but keep their identity a secret! Don't tell anyone! I am a man of my word, mostly because the code to the band's secret identity can be cracked by any sleuth capable of typing "Twitter" into a search engine.

And now, to put away the laptop (at long last!) and watch some bands.

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SXSW Photo Gallery: What's Happened, So Far

For those people experiencing SXSW vicariously from their desk at work or the comfort of a home computer, be sure to check out today's photo gallery.

Performer at SXSW

 

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Why SXSW Day Parties Rule

The Current's Jim McGuinn has this short missive on why day parties at SXSW allow more fans a chance to hear the bands most in demand during the festival.

Day parties rule. It used to be back in the day that you came to SXSW and had one shot to see a band play - at their showcase. Nowadays, the hottest and hardest working bands end up being invited to gig non-stop day and night, to be seen by as many audiences as possible. When you look through the official and unofficial day party schedules, you really see who is in demand -- and suddenly you have 8 or 10 chances to see School of Seven Bells or Handsome Furs or even the Hold Steady, who have been harped on for playing Rachael Ray's day party (haha!) but are playing about 5 other gigs this week while they are here. And if you are a band and you can't get extra gigs, it almost becomes not worth it to come here at all. In fact, many bands these days get passed by the official SXSW screening committee but show up anyway and if they can play a bunch of day party and extracurricular events make it worth their while.

Read the full post here.

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Possessed By The Decemberists Inside The Fog Of Sudafed

by Carrie Brownstein

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Day three of SXSW and I'm wearing bright yellow in order to wake myself up every time I begin to nod off from lack of sleep. Despite having a cold (sorry, co-workers) or perhaps allergies (better for everyone, I think) I've managed to cram in a few shows and to help broadcast -- from inside the fog of Sudafed -- a live performance last night. Which, by the way, you can listen to here.

Speaking of last night, I had never seen two of the three bands that we presented: Heartless Bastards and The Avett Brothers. The former was the loudest of the three bands on the bill, a feat for an opener and thus totally ballsy, which I love. When I first heard HB a few years ago, I couldn't distinguish them from a better-than-average bluesy bar band, but something magical has emerged from their core--or perhaps a haunting -- and it's very effective. The Avett Brothers are folkies with teeth. And fierce folk beats freak folk any day.

The Decemberists, who I have seen a few times, premiered their new album, The Hazards of Love. Some words you are likely to read or hear about their new endeavor: Prog, risky, and epic. Here's my take on it, it's joyful; it's a band having fun with the methods of songwriting, with the notion of character and story, with genre, and with volume. The set began tentatively but ended anything but timid. My hopes are that as the tour progresses, the band will be possessed from the very first note.

Something else I did yesterday, and a first for me at SXSW, was to sit in a dark movie theatre for about 30-minutes and watch music videos. Seeing the videos on the big screen made not only the images but the songs themselves feel bigger; which is why I'm here, after all, to feel dwarfed by the sheer amount of sound.

Check out two of the better videos:

The Saturday Knights "Count it Off"


The Saturday Knights - "Count It Off" from Lincoln Leopard Films on Vimeo

Gnarls Barkley "Going On"

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The Elephant In The Festival

by Neda Ulaby

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Ben squinted in spite of his sunglasses into the fading Austin sunset. "Man, this is my fourth SXSW and I keep saying I'm never coming back," he said.

"There's four thousand musicians here and you're in direct competition with all of them," he said. "You don't get enough time to set up and just a few seconds to sound check."

With a yellow bandanna fading into his wavy blonde hair and his Japanese-inspired fish scale sleeve tattoo, Ben Hasselbeck looked like -- well, almost every young musician at SXSW. He's here backing up Los Angeles chanteuse Juliette Commagere.

"We've got a string section and a horn section," he said. "It creates a dilemma. Do you risk showing up and not sounding any good, or making the best of it and hope everyone's too drunk to notice?"

Ben has a good point. The awful truth is that the sound at most SXSW shows is pretty muddy. Setups are fast and sloppy. When you see a band you like, sometimes you long to hear them at their home club, where the mics and amps are perfectly calibrated, where the guitars aren't drowning out everyone else and where the singers don't sound like they're wailing through thick bolts of woolen cloth.

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Wednesday's Daily SXSW Podcast

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Sometime around 2 a.m. Thursday morning, after a full day of music and NPR's nighttime showcase featuring The Decemberists, The Avett Brothers and The Heartless Bastards, Bob, Robin, Stephen and Carrie sat down to give a recap of what bands they saw, who they're excited to hear on Thursday and what's to come the rest of the week.

Take a listen to the daily podcast update below.

Subscribe to the All Songs Considered podcast for more updates. All of our concerts will be made available to download as podcasts. Subscribe to the the Live Concerts from All Songs Considered podcast for details.

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March 18, 2009

St. Vincent Rehearses New Song

by Robin Hilton

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

We're actually chest-deep in some serious rock and roll right now with The Heartless Bastards, but I wanted to take a minute to share this video Bob and I shot earlier this afternoon of St. Vincent rehearsing for SXSW. The band rented out a small practice space on the outer edges of Austin for the day to run through some material. We got to hear a couple of fantastic new tunes from the band's upcoming album, including this one, "An Actor Out Of Work."

(This version is the video I shot myself on my cheapy camera and the lighting wasn't great. We'll post a much better video with better sound, plus more music, later).

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Strategies And Revelries

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Jim McGuinn of The Current discusses SXSW techniques and reminisces about past festivals as he sits aboard his plane bound for Austin.

Ah yes, Austin Texas and the annual pilgrimage to South By Southwest, the biggest music conference in the world. Over 1800 bands from as many homelands as the UN, and four days and nights to try to see as many as you can catch.
For many years I used to feel bad if I didn't maximize my band time, but a few years back I started to give up on the quantity issue and instead focus on a combination of seeing what I want to see, and allowing for the delicious accidents - which in years past enabled me to wander into venues and discover a young Neko Case or an unheralded band like Fanfarlo or We Are Standard, both of whom I hope to see again this year.

Click here to continue reading the rest of McGuinn's post about SXSW strategies and revelries.

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Judging A Band By Its Name

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Over at Vanity Fair's VF Daily blog, Jennifer Turner has come up with her own method for choosing bands to hear at SXSW: band names.

Back when I was an undergrad at the University of Texas (hook 'em!), the South by Southwest Music Festival was something that happened at night, in official showcases held at Austin's motley venues. In those days, an affordable wristband took you almost anywhere you needed to go. Now, you need a $550-695 festival badge, a gold-plated Rolodex, and/or a full-time personal assistant to keep up with the dizzying array of day parties, lounges, post-parties, and who knows what else.
So how does one choose between the competing blocks of red on the iCal? I, for one, have decided to take a scientific approach: I'm choosing based on band names. More precisely, I'm looking for bands whose names fall into aesthetically pleasing patterns.

Click here to read the full post about this year's emerging band name patterns emerging at SXSW.

Carrie Brownstein also blogged about this very topic on her own blog while listening to some 900 songs in the weeks leading up SXSW.

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Picturing 2,500 People In Their Underpants

by Stephen Thompson

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

It's only five and a half hours until I'm expected to take the stage at Stubb's BBQ in Austin and introduce NPR Music's lineup at SXSW: The Heartless Bastards (going on first), followed by The Avett Brothers and The Decemberists. I have to give a spiel in front of roughly 2,500 people, which ranks on the Terror Alert scale somewhere around "Pants-Wetting Fear," so I'm sure it's going to go just dandy.

So, what to do? Tell a joke? Rattle off the 45 seconds of information I have to impart and then beat a hasty retreat? Filibuster for 20 minutes until the crowd is whipped into a frenzy of hatred, and thus ready to rock? Tune in live at 11 p.m. ET to find out!

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The Here We Go Phenomenal Handclap Band Magic

by Robin Hilton

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Here We Go Magic was scheduled to go live at the Mohawk at 12:30. The five members of the group shuffled in at 12:45, looking a little ragged out, and began to set up their gear. When they finally started playing, the drummer said "we literally just got up." They only did a handful of songs, but I was in love. This could become one of my favorite new bands of the year.

When the show ended I had just enough time to drop by Emo's for the much-anticipated Phenomenal Handclap Band set. What can I say? It was just amazing. Thanks to Carrie for turning me on to this group. The band is a perfect mix of everything from the past 40 years of popular music: '70s funk, '60s soul and psychedelia, hard rock, hip-hop. So much more going on.

Breathlessly, I'm off to interview St. Vincent with Bob.

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A Glitch In The Twitterverse

by Stephen Thompson

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

I understand that I'm not the first to comment on the effect that Twitter and Facebook have had on social interaction; if anything, as topics go, they're today's played-out equivalent of airplane food or the differences between men and women. As in, the next time someone says, "Whoa! People used to call their friends on the phone instead of writing on their Wall!" balloons will fall from the ceiling to commemorate the one trillionth time that observation has been made.

But still. I haven't even been here a day, and I've already 1) friended someone on Facebook and had her accept the friend request while we were standing next to each other, each holding a laptop; 2) co-authored a SXSW haiku, which was published to Twitter and then discussed, hours later, with other people, who used their phones to immediately access it; and 3) attended an NPR Music panel discussion, during which I gauged the audience reaction by following its tweets online in real time.

What have I not yet done in my 22 hours in Austin? See a band. Thank goodness the actual music part of this madness starts today, at long last.

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Head Full Of Screams

by Carrie Brownstein

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

SXSW has begun! I knew I was off to a good start this morning at 4:45, when the cabbie came to pick me up from my house to take me to the airport, took one look at me, started playing air-guitar and said, "You're the girl from that one band." Then, in the backseat of his car -- despite operating on a mere two and a half hours of sleep -- I just couldn't help myself and had to establish my cred by correctly identifying Bad Brains on his iPod. This comment was rewarded by him asking if he could turn it up (what could I do? I had to say yes). Bad Brains was followed by Viva Voce, which was followed by Elliott Smith and -- tada! -- I was at the airport. Portland cab rides are the best.

Once I landed in Austin, I went directly to the Hilton, where I participated on a panel about both the genesis and future of NPR Music. During the Q&A that followed, someone asked about whether NPR music's focus should be narrow or broad. Personally, I think it should be both, like microscopes and satellites. And here at SXSW, the effects are much the same, immediate and long-lasting. I'm really excited to be inside the cacophony for a few days, but only because I know that a few of the sounds will cut through and stay with me for the trip back home.

I'm going to rest tonight, but there is much to look forward to: The Entrance Band, The Phenomenal Handclap Band, Garotas Suecas, Women, St. Vincent and so much more.

Finally, though I didn't begin filling my head with music tonight, I did go out and see a film that showed here at the SXSW Film Festival. It's called Sissyboy, directed by Katie Turinski, and you should see it if you get the chance.

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March 17, 2009

Austin By Day And Night

by Robin Hilton

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

The South by Southwest music festival really kicks off Wednesday, but the streets were already filling with fans and bands this afternoon. While Bob and the other suckers were giving some sort of panel discussion thing today, I was out strolling through downtown Austin, taking in the distinct smells and sounds of this beautiful little town, just before it busts open with more music than anyone can take in at once.

I love how some bands just show up with nothing booked and no real game plan, short of setting up on the sidewalk somewhere and turning their guitars up to 11. The name of this group, according to the handwritten lettering on its CDRs, is "Gay Duo."

Go, Gay Duo!

Later, after dinner, Bob and I were heading back to the hotel when we came across this group, Wino Vino.

That's some seriously infectious energy.

This time tomorrow, the entire downtown will be one big wash of sound, with countless bands playing and overlapping one another, and music pouring from every corner.

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Four Bobs Better Than One At SXSW

By Bob Boilen

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Well, I've been plotting out my schedule, and I realize that all I need is four more of me.

Luckily, there'll be NPR Music editor Stephen Thompson, All Songs Considered producer Robin Hilton and Monitor Mix blogger Carrie Brownstein to be the eyes and ears for me and for you.

The plan is this: We all know the bands we must see, and we'll all write what we've seen here. We'll put pictures online and some video clips. We'll also get together and record a podcast right on the streets of Austin. At least, that's the plan.

Wednesday, I hope to see Micachu and the Shapes and The Phenomenal Handclap Band and interview BLK JKS before heading over to St. Vincent's rehearsal space and shoot some video. Then it's off to Waterloo Records for an open mic of artists performing Leonard Cohen songs. We'll record that and post it on our SXSW page. I'm not sure I'll make it to Pink Nasty, but I trust Stephen will. I'll go to Stubbs and set up for our live webcast with The
Decemberists
, The Avett Brothers and The Heartless Bastards.

If you are at SXSW, I'd love to know what you're going to see, so post it here. And if you aren't here, then tell us who you think we ought to check out.

More to come very soon.

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March 11, 2009

The Austin 100: Picking The Best Of SXSW

by Stephen Thompson

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

We're constantly launching new projects at NPR Music: concerts at Bob Boilen's desk, songwriting experiments in our studios, blogs by musicians we love and admire, and so on. Some involve more labor and logistics than others, but each invariably requires a days-long process in which we try to name the damn thing. (The fact that our holiday-music stream was called "Jingle Jams" is still the source of tension around the office.) (Mostly because I refuse to let it go.)

Aaaaanyway, we just kicked off yet another new initiative: a 100-song continuous music mix highlighting some of our favorite artists who'll perform at the South by Southwest music festival next week. This involved a good deal of winnowing -- picking through MP3s by roughly 1,100 of the bands scheduled to play -- but actually resulted in a surprisingly useful listening experience. Whether or not you're attending the festival, the mix opens a nice portal into six and a half hours of music discovery.

After rejecting countless names -- "Songs We Could Stand"! "Bands in Bulk"! "South by SouthBEST"! -- we finally settled on "The Austin 100." I like to think it captures the sheer size of the listening experience, while also hinting at another feature of SXSW: The whole thing feels a little bit like a race, an attempt to fit as many experiences as possible into an all-too-brief window.

So, whether you're attending SXSW or listening from home, I dearly hope you listen to The Austin 100 -- and feel free to add your comments, recommendations and favorites below. What do you want to hear at SXSW this year?

[Click here to view the playlist, and here for NPR Music's full coverage of the festival.]

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March 10, 2009

Free Album Download: A SXSW Primer

by Robin Hilton

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Next week, we'll load up the wagon and head to Austin, Tex., for our coverage of the annual South by Southwest music festival. We'll live webcast a bunch of great concerts (The Decemberists will premiere the new album The Hazards of Love), send out Twitter updates, blog about the shows we're seeing and much more.

To help you get ready for our coverage, we've put together a great mixtape for you with some of the bands we'll be featuring. You can download the whole thing for free from iTunes. It's got music from The Decemberists, Blitzen Trapper, BLK JKS, The Dirty Projectors and six others.

So go get your free copy of the mixtape now, and check back later for our complete SXSW coverage.

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March 2, 2009

Band Name Discrimination: Culling The Herd At SXSW

by Carrie Brownstein

Full SXSW Coverage for Live Concerts and Exclusive Performances

Our subtle ways of casting judgment:

Recently, I was sent a disc of 900 songs -- a sort of SXSW preview, if you will. My task is to listen to the bands and figure out whom I might want to see at the festival, so that I might pass the recommendations on to you. Nine hundred songs! That's like purchasing 75 new albums, except that it's not. It's worse, because you don't get the cohesion of a full-length record, one singer, one band. Basically, 900 MP3s is the musical equivalent of a penny jar -- yes, it adds up to the same amount of money as dollars, but you still feel broke, and the weight of it is overwhelming.

As much as I'd like to think I will sit down and listen to all 900 songs, that idea is simply unrealistic. Instead, I must find ways of making snap decisions, instinctive decisions, based on arbitrary rules. But are these rules merely of my own design, or are there universal principles that draw us to one artist and make us reject another?

When we enter a record store or read music blogs and Web sites, we cannot merely ingest each and every artist with wholehearted enthusiasm; the prospect is too overwhelming. Thus, in order to save ourselves energy, we come up with ways of determining good from bad, and of ascertaining what endeavors are worthy of not just our time, but also our curiosity.

The quickest way to pre-judge is easy: band names. This is the first and easiest means by which -- not hearing the music yet, of course -- we can weed out the weak kids. Some of it is based on personal taste. For instance, maybe you're sick of bands with animals in their names, or you can't stand band names culled from French New Wave film titles, or perhaps you're particularly drawn to alliteration. Some confounding monikers fall to the wayside once you hear their music; Death Cab For Cutie comes to mind. Others, however, remain perennial deal-breakers. I mean, how great would Hoobastank have to be before you actually bought a T-shirt or uttered its name out loud, followed by the phrases "personal favorite" or "life changing"?

I've often tried to go back retroactively and separate the band name from the music, an impossible and frivolous task for sure, but an interesting exercise. For example, if my friends said, "We're going to call our band Led Zeppelin," would I balk and suggest that they rethink it? What this game always reveals, of course, is the force of the music and how it obliterates doubts by marrying what was once an arbitrary name with a sound. (Or perhaps my interest in this idea stems from the fact that my own band name sounded like a law firm, and always involved an explanation.)

The opposite conundrum, of course, is that a lot of band names are inherently cool -- so much so that, before you hear them, you hope that the music lives up to the title: Sonic Youth, Television, Buzzcocks and The Strokes are all great band names, whether or not you've heard a note. Unfortunately, a lot of bands with fantastic names are awful (present company in this paragraph excluded, of course).

So, to make sense of the voluminous SXSW MP3s, I did begin with the name game. For the most part, it worked! Fortunately, I also don't have to stare at a bunch of album artwork, which presents a whole other set of problems. As you know, after the band name, if you don't know the music, all you have to go on is the cover art, And when it looks like this...

poodle%20chicken.jpg

Well, let's just say it's hard to know what to make of it.

Feel free to share your own experiences with the pre-judging of band names and artwork.

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February 18, 2009

NPR Music Presents at SXSW 2009

by Bob Boilen

Here's the news: We will be webcasting, recording, photographing, videotaping and blogging from the South by Southwest Music Festival again this year. We'll also present a lineup of hand-selected bands, which you'll be able to hear live from the comfort of your home.

Headlining our coverage at SXSW on March 18 at Stubbs Bar-B-Q:

The Decemberists, premiering The Hazards of Love in its entirety
The Avett Brothers, premiering music from a new, Rick Rubin-produced CD
The Heartless Bastards, playing songs from The Mountain

Then, on March 19 at the Parish, starting at around 12:30 p.m. ET, we'll have:

Blitzen Trapper
Dirty Projectors
K'NAAN
BLK JKS
Blind Pilot
Thao Nguyen and the Get Down Stay Down

This should be a thrill ride. I'll be there with NPR's Monitor Mix blogger Carrie Brownstein, NPR's Song of the Day editor Stephen Thompson and All Songs Considered producer Robin Hilton. We'll be ready with recording devices, cameras and blunt blogging instruments, finding the best new music, interviews and videos to send along.

This blog is how we'll keep you most informed. There will also be Twitter, on which you can follow me @allsongs. Also on Facebook under Bob Boilen or the All Songs Considered fan page.

And so the process begins. We've started listening to 900-plus MP3s from the bands in attendance to figure out what we want to hear from the 18th of March until the last band plays in the wee hours of the 21st. You can do the same by going here.

Let us know which bands most excite you: Tell us what you want from our coverage, and we'll do our best to deliver. Please don't pitch your own band here -- we get plenty of that already. We want to know your passions and current obsessions.

Let the SXSW Madness begin.

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January 16, 2009

SXSW 2009: Who's Coming, Who's Going?

by Bob Boilen

The other day, I was driving home with Song of the Day editor Stephen Thompson. Before we got into the car, he mentioned that he'd recently put out a request to his music-business contacts to get a sense of what acts are coming to Austin's South by Southwest music festival in 2009. NPR Music will not only cover SXSW in March, but also as we did last year, we plan to present a handful of artists in a few different showcases. (When we have a firm lineup, we'll let you know.)

Anyway, Stephen and I got into the car, and I asked him if he remembered any of the bands that were coming. He said the list was long, but that he'd read them to me. For the next 25 minutes -- the entire car ride -- Stephen read nothing but artist names from his laptop. (Note: He was not the one driving.)

I'd say that I knew maybe 30 percent of the bands. SXSW is the ultimate in music discovery, with a band at every bar, storefront or piece of open concrete. It is beyond a feast of music: Think blowout plus gorge, and you're getting close.

Below is a list of acts that are officially coming to the festival so far. What percentage would you say you''ve heard? From this list and beyond, who would you like to see us cover? Are you going to be there? Got a good story from a past SXSW?

The Abrams Brothers (Kingston ON)
Absinthe Minds (Madison WI)
ABSU (Dallas TX)
Ace Enders (Hammonton NJ)
A Classic Education (Bologna ITALY)
Acoustik Wire (Thessaloniki GREECE)
Action Action (New York NY)
Act Of Congress (Birmingham AL)
A Day To Remember (Ocala FL)
Adventure (Baltimore MD)
Afghan Raiders (Las Vegas NV)
Afterhours (Milano ITALY)
AIDS Wolf (Montreal QC)
The Aimless Never Miss (San Francisco CA)
The Airborne Toxic Event (Silverlake CA)
Akron/Family (Williamsport PA)
Alash (Milwaukee WI)
Alexandre Grooves (Sao Paulo BRAZIL)
Alexisonfire (St Catharines ON)
Tom Allalone & The 78s (Gravesend UK-ENGLAND)
Allison (Mexico MEXICO)
Gabi Almeida (Sao Paulo BRAZIL)
Dave Alvin (Los Angeles CA)
Anathallo (Chicago IL)
Ancestors (Los Angeles CA)
Anchorsong (London UK-ENGLAND)
Angela Desveaux & The Mighty Ship (Montreal QC)
Angry Vs The Bear (Essex UK-ENGLAND)
An Horse (Brisbane QLD)
Amy Annelle (Austin TX)
Annihilation Time (Oakland CA)
Annuals (Raleigh NC)
The Answering Machine (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Anti-Pop Consortium (New York NY)
Apollo Sunshine (Boston MA)
Arabrot (Oslo NORWAY)
The ARC Angels (Austin TX)
Arkells (Hamilton ON)
Bomani Armah & Project Mayhem (Washington DC)
Arms and Legs (Croton Falls NY)
Arms and Sleepers (Cambridge MA)
Artefacts For Space Travel (London UK-ENGLAND)
Asakusa Jinta (Tokyo JAPAN)
Ashu (Mumbai INDIA)
The Asteroid No. 4 (Philadelphia PA)
The Asteroids Galaxy Tour (Denmark DENMARK)
Asylum Street Spankers (Austin TX)
Pugs Atomz (Chicago IL)
Melissa Auf der Maur (Montreal QC)
Aun (Montreal QC)
Au Revoir Simone (Brooklyn NY)
Autons (TX) (Austin TX)
Autozamm (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Awkward I (Amsterdam THE NETHERLANDS)
Babydick (Austin TX)
Baby Robots (Austin TX)
Back Door Slam (Douglas ISLE OF MAN)
Backseat Goodbye (Murfreesboro TN)
Baddies (Southend UK-ENGLAND)
Mike Badger (Liverpool UK-ENGLAND)
Sam Baker (Austin TX)
Balmorhea (Austin TX)
Volodja Balzalorsky (Ljubljana SLOVENIA)
Bam Bam (Monterrey MEXICO)
The Band of Heathens (Austin TX)
Bang! Bang! Eche! (Christchurch NEW ZEALAND)
The Baptist Generals (Denton TX)
Barcelona (Seattle WA)
Barn Owl (San Francisco CA)
Baskery (Stockholm SWEDEN)
Beach House (Baltimore MD)
Beans on Toast (London UK-ENGLAND)
Bear in Heaven (Brooklyn NY)
Beautiful Nubia (Lagos NIGERIA )
Bedouin Soundclash (Toronto ON)
Beep Beep (Omaha NE)
Kim Beggs (Whitehorse YT)
Belladonna (Roma ITALY)
Chris Bell (Austin TX)
Belong (New Orleans LA)
Benny Crespo's Gang (Reykjavik ICELAND)
Chris Bergson (Brooklyn NY)
The Besties (Brooklyn NY)
Jim Bianco (Los Angeles CA)
Big Sam's Funky Nation (New Orleans LA)
Binary Audio Misfits (Toulouse FRANCE)
Diane Birch (New York NY)
Andrew Bird (Chicago IL)
Martina Topley Bird (London UK-ENGLAND)
Birds Of Tokyo (Brunswick VIC)
Birds of Wales (Toronto BC)
Wallis Bird (Dublin IRELAND)
Bisc1 (Queens NY)
Bishi (London UNITED KINGDOM)
Bitter End (San Antonio TX)
Black Acid (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Black Angels (Austin TX)
Black Cherry (London UK-ENGLAND)
Black Diamond Heavies (Chattanooga TN)
Black Drawing Chalks (Goiania GO)
Black Gold (Brooklyn NY)
The Black Hollies (Jersey City NJ)
Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears (Austin TX)
Black Lips (Atlanta GA)
Blacklisted Individuals (Austin TX)
Black Math Horseman (Los Angeles CA)
Black Skies (Chapel Hill NC)
Bleeders (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Blind Pilot (Portland OR)
BLK JKS (Johannesburg SOUTH AFRICA)
Bloodgroup (Reykjavik ICELAND)
Blood Red Throne (Kristiansand NORWAY)
The Bloodsugars (New York NY)
Blu (Los Angeles CA)
Blue Giant (Portland OR)
Blue King Brown (Melbourne VIC)
Blue Scholars (Seattle WA)
BM Linx (New York NY)
BOAT (Seattle WA)
The Boat People (Brisbane QLD)
Boats (Winnipeg MB)
B.o.B (Atlanta GA)
Bogan Dust (New York NY)
Bo-Keys (Memphis TN)
Haley Bonar (St Paul MN)
Bonjour Brumaire (Montreal QC)
BO-PEEP (Tokyo JAPAN)
Sarah Borges and the Broken Singles (Boston MA)
Bottle Rockets (Festus MO)
Boxcar Satan (San Antonio TX)
Bonnie Bramlett (Nashville TN)
Cory Branan (Memphis TN)
Jay Brannan (New York NY)
Brigade (London UK-ENGLAND)
Jackie Bristow (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Broken Records (Edinburgh UK-SCOTLAND)
The Bronx (Los Angeles CA)
Tom Brosseau (Los Angeles CA)
David Thomas Broughton (London UK-ENGLAND)
Cliff Brown Jr (Austin TX)
Trey Brown (Austin TX)
The Brunettes (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Nell Bryden (New York NY)
Buck 65 (Halifax NS)
Buff1 (Ann Arbor MI)
Andy Bull (Sydney NSW)
Buraka Som Sistema (Lisbon PORTUGAL)
Grecco Buratto (Los Angeles CA)
Mama Burger (Monterrey MEXICO)
Joby Burgess (London UK-ENGLAND)
Steve Burns (and The Struggle) (Brooklyn NY)
Lee Burridge (London UK-ENGLAND)
Bushwalla (San Diego CA)
Butterfly Boucher (Nashville TN)
Cactus's (Franklin TN)
Cadence Weapon (Edmonton AB)
Cafe Funque (Rio de Janeiro RJ)
Cage (New York NY)
Callers (Brooklyn NY)
Chanel Campbell (Nashville TN)
Greg Camp (Santa Cruz CA)
Candy Coated Killahz (Toronto ON)
Canja Rave (Porto Alegre RS)
Canopy (Austin TX)
Capsula (Bilbao SPAIN)
Loene Carmen (Sydney NSW)
Carolina Chocolate Drops (Raleigh NC)
Cash Cash (Roseland NJ)
Cashier No.9 (Belfast UK-N. IRELAND)
CASIOKIDS (Bergen NORWAY)
Cassim & Barbaria (Florianopolis BRAZIL)
Castledoor (Los Angeles CA)
Gavin Castleton (Portand OR)
Catpeople (Barcelona SPAIN)
Slim Cessna's Auto Club (Denver CO)
Charlie Everywhere (Saratoga Springs NY)
Cheeky Cheeky And The Nosebleeds (Woodbridge UK-ENGLAND)
Cheeseburger (New York NY)
The Chevelles (Perth WA)
The Chicharones (Portland OR)
Suzanna Choffel (Austin TX)
Margaret Cho (Los Angeles CA)
Choo Choo (Bern SWITZERLAND)
Chris T-T (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
Chuck Mead (Nashville TN)
The City Lives (Oklahoma City OK)
CKY (West Chester PA)
Cla (Oporto PORTUGAL)
Classixx (Los Angeles CA)
The Cliks (Toronto ON)
Closure In Moscow (Melbourne AUSTRALIA)
CLP (Berlin GERMANY)
The Coathangers (Atlanta GA)
Coliseum (Louisville KY)
Colossus (Raleigh NC)
Colourmusic (Stillwater OK)
Colour Revolt (Oxford MS)
Coma in Algiers (Austin TX)
Come On Gang! (Edinburgh UK-SCOTLAND)
Common Market (Seattle WA)
Conil (London UK-ENGLAND)
Connan Mockasin (London NEW ZEALAND)
Contramano (Brooklyn NY)
Coreysan (Tacarigua TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO)
Murali Coryell (Boiceville NY)
The Courteeners (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Cousin Cole (Brooklyn NY)
Paul Couture (Austin TX)
Samantha Crain & the Midnight Shivers (Shawnee OK)
Crash Kings (Los Angeles CA)
Crazy P (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Creature (Montreal QC)
AJ Croce (San Diego CA)
Crocodile (Oklahoma city OK)
Crown City Rockers (Oakland CA)
John Cruz (Honolulu HI)
Crystal Antlers (Long Beach CA)
The Crystal Method (Los Angeles CA)
Alex Cuba (Vancouver BC)
Cubismo Grafico Five (Tokyo JAPAN)
Austin Cunningham (Nashville TN)
Cursive (Omaha NE)
Cut Off Your Hands (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Daddy a Go-Go (Atlanta GA)
DADDY (Will Kimbrough & Tommy Womack) (Nashville TN)
Floyd Dakil Combo (Dallas TX)
David Dallas (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Micah Dalton (Chattanooga TN)
Damero (Berlin GERMANY)
Dananananaykroyd (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
Dan Le Sac Vs Scroobius Pip (Stanford Le Hope UK-ENGLAND)
Danny And The Champions Of The World (London UK-ENGLAND)
Dappled Cities (Sydney NSW)
Dark Captain Light Captain (London UK-ENGLAND)
Darker Florida (Tallahassee FL)
Darshana & Sowmya (Chennai INDIA)
Dash Rip Rock (New Orleans LA)
Guy Davis (New York NY)
Davy Jones' Locker (Kristiansand AZ)
Dawes (Los Angeles CA)
Dead Luke (Madison WI)
deadmau5 (Tornto CA)
Dead Sexy Inc (Paris FRANCE)
The Dead Trees (Portland OR)
Dear and the Headlights (Tempe AZ)
The Death Set (Philadelphia PA)
Debayres (Buenos Aires ARGENTINA)
The DeBretts (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Deep Dark Woods (Saskatoon SK)
Deer Tick (Providence RI)
Deichkind (Hamburg GERMANY)
Delco (Madrid SPAIN)
DeLeon (Brooklyn NY)
Delhi 2 Dublin (Vancouver BC)
De los Muertos (San Antonio TX)
Delta Spirit (San Diego CA)
Brigitte DeMeyer (Burlingame CA)
Descartes A Kant (Guadalajara MEXICO)
The Details (Winnipeg MB)
The Devil Wears Prada (Dayton OH)
Kevin Devine & the Goddamn Band (Brooklyn NY)
Alela Diane (Portland OR)
Andreia Dias (Sao Paulo BRAZIL)
Madi Diaz (Nashville TN)
Tina Dico (London UK-ENGLAND)
Dignan (McAllen TX)
Dikes of Holland (Austin TX)
Diplomats of Solid Sound (Iowa City IA)
Dirtblonde (Liverpool UK-ENGLAND)
The Dirt Drifters (Nashville TN)
Dirty Old Men (Tochigi JAPAN)
Disappears (Chicago IL)
Diva Gash (Bogota COLOMBIA)
Dixie Witch (Austin TX)
DJ Ipek (Berlin GERMANY)
DJ Jester the Filipino Fist (San Antonio TX)
Dlugokecki (Southampton UK-ENGLAND)
DM Stith (Buffalo NY)
D.O. (Toronto ON)
B. Dolan (Providence RI)
Dommin (Los Angeles CA)
The Donkeys (San Diego CA)
Doomtree (Minneapolis MN)
Dorp (London UK-ENGLAND)
Luke Doucet (Toronto ON)
The Downbeat 5 (Boston MA)
Lila Downs (New York NY)
The Drams (Denton TX)
Dredg (San Francisco CA)
Drink Up Buttercup (Horsham PA)
The Drones (Melbourne VIC)
Ducktails (Ridgewood NJ)
The Duhks (Winnipeg MB)
Earthless (San Diego CA)
Tim Easton (Joshua Tree CA)
Easy Star All-Stars (New York NY)
Eat Skull (Portland OR)
Ecstatic Sunshine (Baltimore MD)
8-Ball and MJG (Memphis TN)
Elastic Band (Granada SPAIN)
The Electric City (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Electric Diorama (Rome ITALY)
Electricity In Our Homes (London UK-ENGLAND)
Electric Touch (Austin TX)
Elemeno P (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Carrie Elkin (Austin TX)
Ella (Bristol UK-ENGLAND)
Elliot Brood (Toronto ON)
The Elms (Seymour IN)
El Tule (Cedar Park TX)
The Elysian Quartet (London UK-ENGLAND)
Emma Lee (Toronto ON)
Empire Isis (Montreal QC)
The Enright House (Chicago IL)
Enter Shikari (St Albans UK-ENGLAND)
Eol Trio (Paris FRANCE)
The Escape Frame (Montgomery AL)
Ali Eskandarian (Brooklyn NY)
Eskimo Joe (Perth WA)
Esser (Essex UK-ENGLAND)
The Ettes (New York NY)
Evaline (Modesto CA)
The Evaporators (Vancouver BC)
The Everyday Visuals (Boston MA)
Evil Bebos (Murfreesboro TN)
Evil Nine Live (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
Tim Exile (Berlin GERMANY)
Explosions in the Sky (Austin TX)
Factums (Seattle WA)
Mickey Factz (Bronx NY)
John Fairhurst (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Fake Problems (Naples FL)
Fanfarlo (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Fashion (Copenhagen DENMARK)
Fastball (Austin TX)
Felix Cartal (Vancouver BC)
FemBots (Toronto ON)
Douglas Ferguson (Austin TX)
Ferraby Lionheart (Nashville TN)
Benjy Ferree (Washington DC)
Melissa Ferrick (Boston MA)
Fight Bite (Denton TX)
Fighting With Wire (Derry UK-N IRELAND)
Fight Like Apes (Dublin IRELAND)
fiN (London UK-ENGLAND)
Final Flash (Montreal QC)
Tim Finn (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Rodney Fisher (New Plymouth NEW ZEALAND)
Five Times August (Dallas TX)
Floating Action (Black Mountain NC)
Flood Of Red (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
Paul E Flynn (Johannesburg SOUTH AFRICA)
FNU Ronnies (san francisco CA)
Fol Chen (Highland Park CA)
David Fonseca (Lisbon PORTUGAL)
Foreign Born (Los Angeles CA)
Foreign Legion (Oakland CA)
Jen Foster (Nashville TN)
Ruthie Foster (Austin TX)
FOUND (Edinburgh UK-SCOTLAND)
Fox Cubs (Newbury UK-ENGLAND)
Francis and The Lights (New York NY)
Eugene Francis Jnr & The Juniors (Cardiff UK-WALES)
Karima Francis (Blackpool UK-ENGLAND)
Robert Francis (Los Angeles CA)
Sage Francis (Providence RI)
Adam Franklin (of Swervedriver) (New York NY)
Kam Franklin (Houston TX)
Ron Franklin (Memphis TN)
Freeland (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
French Horn Rebellion (New York NY)
Jessie Frye (Arlington TX)
F---shovel (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Fumes (Sydney NSW)
Fun (New York NY)
Futomomo Satisfaction (Tokyo JAPAN)
Future Of The Left (Cardiff UK-WALES)
Future Virgins (Chatanooga TN)
Dmitry Fyodorov (Stockholm SWEDEN)
GAGAKIRISE (Tokyo JAPAN)
The Gala Band (Bristol UK-ENGLAND)
Benny Gallagher (West Wickham UK-ENGLAND)
Gang Gang Dance (New York NY)
Gary War (Brooklyn NY)
Gaybomb (Washington DC)
Geeks (Tokyo JAPAN)
General Fiasco (Belfast UK-N. IRELAND)
Genia (London UK-ENGLAND)
Gentleman Reg (Toronto ON)
Gerald G. (Austin TX)
J. Matthew Gerken (Sacramento CA)
Get Cape Wear Cape Fly (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Ghost (Torshavn FAROE ISLANDS)
The Ghost Frequency (London UK-ENGLAND)
Laura Gibson (Portland OR)
Colin Gilmore (Austin TX)
Pepi Ginsberg (Brooklyn NY)
Monica Giraldo (Bogota COLOMBIA)
The Girls (Seattle WA)
Glambilly (San Antonio TX)
Gloria Cycles (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
Glossary (Murfreesboro TN)
Goes Cube (Brooklyn NY)
Steve Goldberg and the Arch Enemies (Philadelphia PA)
The Golden Arm Trio Does DUKE! (Austin TX)
Golden Boots (Tucson AZ)
Golden Boys (Austin TX)
The Golden Dogs (Toronto ON)
The Golden Filter (New York NY)
Golden Hornet Project (Austin TX)
GoldieLocks (London UK-ENGLAND)
Golem (Brooklyn NY)
Robert Gomez (Denton TX)
Lesser Gonzalez Alvarez (Baltimore MD)
Good Old War (Philadelphia PA)
Goot (Poughkeepsie NY)
Gorevette (Detroit MI)
John Gorka (Marine MN)
Johnny Goudie and The Little Champions (Austin TX)
The Gougers (Austin TX)
Kara Grainger (Sydney NSW)
Sebastien Grainger (Toronto ON)
Grampall Jookabox (Indianapolis IN)
Grand Analog (Winnipeg MB)
Grand Archives (Seattle WA)
Grande (Oslo NORWAY)
Jenn Grant (Halifax NS)
Grapevine (Tokyo JAPAN)
The Grates (Brisbane QLD)
Great Lakes Myth Society (Ann Arbor MI)
Great Northern (Los Angeles CA)
Liz Green (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Green River Ordinance (Ft Worth TX)
Grizzly Bear (Brooklyn NY)
Grouch & Eligh (Los Angeles CA)
The Guggenheim Grotto (Dublin IRELAND)
Guillamino (Barcelona SPAIN)
Gunslingers (Grenoble FRANCE)
Hacienda (San Antonio TX)
Ha Ha Tonka (Springfield MO)
The Hall Monitors (Washington DC)
Hamell On Trial (Ossining NY)
Charles Hamilton (New York NY)
Murry Hammond (Los Angeles CA)
The Handsome Family (Albuquerque NM)
Handsome Furs (Montreal QC)
Hangmas (Budapest HUNGARY)
Hank IV (san francisco CA)
The Happy Hollows (Los Angeles CA)
Ed Harcourt (London UK-ENGLAND)
Harlem Shakes (New York NY)
James Harries (Prauge CZECH REPUBLIC)
Kylie Harris (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
Grant Hart (South Saint Paul MN)
Austin Hartley-Leonard (Los Angeles CA)
Hatcham Social (London UK-ENGLAND)
Sara Haze (Lake Forrest CA)
The Hazey Janes (Dundee SCOTLAND)
Head Automatica (Long Island NY)
Roy Head (Houston TX)
HEALTH (Los Angeles CA)
Healthy Minds Collapse (Fife UK-SCOTLAND)
The Heavenly States (Oakland CA)
The Heavy (Bath UK-ENGLAND)
Heels Catch Fire (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
He Is Legend (Wilmington NC)
Adam Heldring (Stockholm SWEDEN)
Hello Seahorse! (Mexico City MEXICO)
Heloise and the Savoir Faire (Brooklyn NY)
Here Holy Spain (Dallas TX)
Herman Dune (Paris FRANCE)
Hermano L backed by Ranking Soldiers (Barcelona SPAIN)
Hesta Prynn in Civil Shepherd (New York NY)
Heybale (Austin TX)
Hey Negrita (London UK-ENGLAND)
Hickoids (Austin TX)
The Higher State (Kent UK-ENGLAND)
The High Strung (Detroit MI)
Matt Hires (Tampa FL)
Hockey (Portland OR)
Hold Fire (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
Holger (Sao Paulo NULL)
Holy Hail (Brooklyn NY)
The Homosexuals (London UK-ENGLAND)
HoneyHoney (Venice CA)
Honey Ryder (London UK-ENGLAND)
HONEY SAC (Osaka JAPAN)
The Hooks (San Francisco CA)
Hopewell (Brooklyn NY)
Horse Feathers (Portland OR)
Hot Club of Cowtown (Austin TX)
Hot Kicks (Ascot Vale VIC)
Hot Panda (Edmonton AB)
The Hours (London UK-ENGLAND)
HOWL (Providence RI)
Jedd Hughes (Nashville TN)
Human Highway (Toronto ON)
Hymns (Brooklyn NY)
Hyperpotamus (Madrid SPAIN)
I Am David Sparkle (Singapore SINGAPORE)
Iglu & Hartly (Echo Park CA)
Igudesman & Joo (Vienna AUSTRIA)
I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness (Austin TX)
Immaculate Machine (Victoria BC)
Infusion (Victoria VIC)
Innercity Pirates (Cardiff UK-WALES)
Insite (Mexicali MEXICO)
Intuitive Music Orchestra (Moscow RUSSIA)
Invincible (Detroit MI)
Inward Eye (Winnipeg MB)
IO Echo (Los Angeles CA)
Ipso Facto (London UK-ENGLAND)
Ironweed (Altamont NY)
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit (Muscle Shoals AL)
Joseph Israel (Ukia CA)
It's Not Not (Barcelona SPAIN)
It Hugs Back (Maidstone UK-ENGLAND)
Jaakko & Jay (Tampere FINLAND)
Sarah Jaffe (Dallas TX)
Nate James (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Japanese Motors (Costa Mesa CA)
Japanther (Brooklyn NY)
Jason Reeves (Iowa City IA)
Javelins (Detroit MI)
Jay Jay Pistolet (London UK-ENGLAND)
Jay Nash (Los Angeles CA)
JC & Co. (Austin TX)
J*DaVeY (Los Angeles CA)
Ben Jelen (New York NY)
Jeremy Jay (Los Angeles CA)
Jerusalem (Austin TX)
Jewdyssee (Berlin GERMANY)
Ryan Jewell (Columbus OH)
Johnny Foreigner (Birmingham UK-ENGLAND)
Duquette Johnston (Birmingham AL)
Cotton Jones (Cumberland MD)
Denis Jones (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
The Joy Formidable (Wales UK-WALES)
The Joys (London ON)
The Juan Maclean (New York NY)
Jump Back Jake (Memphis TN)
Junk Science (Brooklyn NY)
Justin Townes Earle (Nashville TN)
Jypsi (Nashville TN)
Kaka (Malmo SWEDEN)
Kakkmaddafakka (Bergen NORWAY)
Kamikaze Queens (Berlin GERMANY)
Kap Bambino (Bordeaux FRANCE)
Al Kapone (Memphis TN)
Kaskade (San Fransisco CA)
Katie Stelmanis (Toronto ON)
Jon Kennedy Live (Bristol UK-ENGLAND)
Doug Kershaw (Louisana LA)
Keys N Krates (Toronto ON)
Khan Of Finland (Berlin GERMANY)
Christian Kiefer (Rocklin CA)
Killola (Los Angeles CA)
Kingman and Jonah (Lucea JAMAICA)
Maurice Kirya (Kampala UGANDA)
Vijay Kishore (Birmingham UK-ENGLAND)
Kissy Sell Out (London England UK UK-ENGLAND)
Kittens Ablaze (Brooklyn NY)
Kraak & Smaak (Leiden THE NETHERLANDS)
The Krayolas (San Antonio TX)
Kreisor (New York NY)
Kuadrumana (Shiraz IRAN)
Kuroma (Athens GA)
La Carrau (Barcelona SPAIN)
Lady Dottie and the Diamonds (San Diego CA)
LAKE (Olympia WA)
Jen Lane (Saskatoon SK)
Jon Langford And The Pine Valley Cosmonauts (Chicago IL)
La Pupuna (Belem BRAZIL)
La Snacks (Austin TX)
Greg Laswell (Los Angeles CA)
The Latebirds (Helsinki FINLAND)
Laundry Room Squelchers (Miami Beach FL)
Alessi Laurent-Marke (London UK-ENGLAND)
Layabouts (Madrid SPAIN)
Lazywall (Tangier MOROCCO)
Vander Lee (Belo Horizonte BRAZIL)
Legendary Tiger Man (Coimbra PORTUGAL)
Le Le (Amsterdam THE NETHERLANDS)
Josiah Leming (Morristown TN)
Le Nombre (Montreal QC)
Les Breastfeeders (Montreal QC)
Les Fauves (Modena ITALY)
Les Handclaps (Montreal QC)
Let's Wrestle (London UK-ENGLAND)
Sylvie Lewis (Rome ITALY)
The Life And Times (Kansas City MO)
Light FM (Los Angeles CA)
Lights (Toronto ON)
Like A Bird (San Diego CA)
Tita Lima (Sao Paulo NULL)
Eric Lindell (New Orleans LA)
Lions In The Street (Vancouver BC)
Lissie (Los Angeles CA)
Littl'ans (London UK-ENGLAND)
Little Miss Higgins (Nokomis SK)
The Little Ones (Los Angeles CA)
Loch Lomond (Portland OR)
LoCura! (Oakland CA)
LoneLady (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Longview (London UK-ENGLAND)
Longwave (Brooklyn NY)
The Long Winters (Seattle WA)
Lord T and Eloise (Memphis TN)
Los Bad Apples (Austin TX)
Los Claxons (Monterrey MEXICO)
Los Fancy Free (Mexico City MEXICO)
Los Llamarada (Monterrey MEXICO)
Los Pirata (Sao Paulo SP)
los super elegantes (los angeles ARGENTINA)
Lost Bayou Ramblers (Lafayette LA)
The Lost Brothers (liverpool UK-ENGLAND)
Los Utrera (El Hato Veracruz MEXICO)
Loudmouf (Austin TX)
Love:Fi (Kristiansand NORWAY)
The Love Language (Raleigh NC)
The Love Me Nots (Phoenix AZ)
The Lovetones (Sydney NSW)
Lovvers (Nottingham UK-ENGLAND)
The Low Anthem (Providence RI)
Lucas Santtana (Salvador BA)
Lucky Fonz III (Amsterdam THE NETHERLANDS)
Jessica Lurie (Seattle WA)
Terry Lynn (Kingston JAMAICA)
Macaco Bong (Cuiaba NULL)
Erika Machado (Belo Horizonte NULL)
Polly Mackey (Wrexham UK-ENGLAND)
Mad Juana (New York NY)
The Mae Shi (Los Angeles CA)
Magic Christian (San Francisco CA)
Magic Lantern (Long Beach CA)
MAGIC WANDS (LOS ANGELES CA)
Magno aka Magnificent (Houston TX)
Mahjongg (Chicago IL)
Pouya Mahmoodi (Tehran IRAN)
The Maids Of Honor (Santa Cruz CA)
Willem Maker (Turkey Heaven Mountain AL)
Malajube (Montreal QC)
Ben Mallott (Austin TX)
Manana (Basel SWITZERLAND)
Maneja Beto (Austin TX)
ManooghiHi (Seattle WA)
Ida Maria (Stockholm NY)
Anya Marina (San Diego CA)
Carolyn Mark (Victoria BC)
Marli (London UK-ENGLAND)
Laura Marling (London UK-ENGLAND)
David Martell (Montreal QC)
Maserati (Athens GA)
Lorrie Matheson (Calgary AB)
John Matthias & Nick Ryan (London UK-ENGLAND)
Angie Mattson (Los Angeles CA)
Max Tundra (London UK-ENGLAND)
Dent May & His Magnificent Ukulele (Oxford MS)
The May Fire (San Francisco CA)
Mayyors (Sacramento CA)
Erin McCarley (Nashville TN)
Melissa McClelland (Toronto ON)
Joe McDermott (Austin TX)
Ian McLagan & the Bump Band (Austin TX)
Shawn David McMillen (Austin TX)
Kiernan McMullan (Limerick IRELAND)
Medi And The Medicine Show (Paris FRANCE)
The Medic Droid (Phoenix AZ)
Meese (Denver CO)
Mekaal Hasan Band (Lahore PAKISTAN)
Meliss FX (Santa Monica CA)
Pedro Menendez JazzTango Ensemble (Buenos Aires ARGENTINA)
Metronomy (London UK-ENGLAND)
Mi Ami (San Francisco CA)
Micachu (London UK-ENGLAND)
Michna (Brooklyn NY)
Midnight Peacocks (Tel Aviv ISRAEL)
Midnight Youth (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
The Mighty Stef (Dublin IRELAND)
Mika Miko (Los Angeles CA)
Milow (Leuven BELGIUM)
Miniature Tigers (Phoenix AZ)
Gabriel Minnikin (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Miracle Fortress (Monreal QC)
Mirah (Portland OR)
Mirrorkicks (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Miserable Rich (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
Mishka (Halifax CANADA)
Mixtapes & Cellmates (Stockholm SWEDEN)
The Moaners (Chapel Hill NC)
Modex (Buenos Aires ARGENTINA)
Mojoe (San Antonio TX)
Mom (Denton TX)
Monareta (Bogota COLOMBIA)
Moneen (Brampton ON)
Monokino (Amsterdam THE NETHERLANDS)
Monotonix (Tel Aviv ISRAEL)
Monte Negro (Los Angeles CA)
The Moog (Budapest HUNGARY)
Moonlight Towers (Austin TX)
Colin Moore (Montreal QC)
Daniel Martin Moore (Cold Spring KY)
Tony Moore (London UK-ENGLAND)
Tanya Morgan (Brooklyn NY)
Moriarty (Montreuil FRANCE)
Motel Motel (New York NY)
Mother Mother (Vancouver BC)
Moth!Fight! (Austin TX)
Mr Lif (Philadelphia PA)
Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band (Seattle WA)
Muck and the Mires (Boston MA)
Krista Muir (Montreal QC)
Mumford & Sons (London UK-ENGLAND)
Mundo Livre Sa (Recife BRAZIL)
Colin Munroe (Toronto ON)
Murder (Copenhagen DENMARK)
Ramiro Musotto (Salvador BA)
My Disco (Melbourne VIC)
My Education (Austin TX)
My Federation (Hove UK-ENGLAND)
Myka 9 (Los Angeles CA)
My Sad Captains (London UK-ENGLAND)
Mythical Beast (Kansas City MO)
Nacho Vegas (Gijon SPAIN)
Nacional (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
Naked On the Vague (Sydney AUSTRALIA)
Nancy (Brasilia DF)
Terra Naomi (Los Angeles CA)
Nashville Pussy (Atlanta GA)
Natalie Portman's Shaved Head (Seattle WA)
Navel (Erschwil SWITZERLAND)
NeckBone (Austin TX)
Paula Nelson Band (Austin TX)
Nevertheless (Chattanooga TN)
NID & SANCY (Ghent BELGIUM)
Night Horse (Los Angeles CA)
NLF3 (Paris FRANCE)
No Kids (Vancouver BC)
NOMO (Ann Arbor MI)
Notekillers (Philadephia PA)
Novalima (Lima PERU)
Obits (Brooklyn NY)
Ocelot (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
The Officers (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
Ohbijou (Toronto ON)
Oh Land (Copenhagen DENMARK)
Oh Sees (San Francisco CA)
Oh Susanna (Toronto ON)
Ohtis (Bloomington IL)
ok city ok (Tokyo JAPAN)
Okou (Paris FRANCE)
Valeria Oliveira (Natal RN)
Fionn O Lochlainn (Brooklyn NY)
Olympus Mons (Vaucresson FRANCE)
1001 Nights Orchestra (Austin TX)
Operahouse (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Orchid Highway (Vancouver BC)
Orphan (Brooklyn NY)
orquesta tipica fernandez fierro (Buenos Aires ARGENTINA)
The O's (Dallas TX)
Other Lives (Stillwater OK)
Outasight (New York NY)
Out From Animals (Chester UK-ENGLAND)
Craig Owens (Davison MI)
Ox.Eagle.Lion.Man (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Pack A.D. (Vancouver BC)
Chase Pagan (Mountain Home AR)
Doug Paisley (Toronto ON)
Ruth Palmer (London UK-ENGLAND)
Paolo "Apollo" Negri (Milan ITALY)
Paper Lions (Montague PEI)
Papertrigger (Philadelphia PA)
The Paranoid Critical Revolution (New York NY)
Parenthetical Girls (Portland OR)
The Parlotones (Johannesburg SOUTH AFRICA)
The Parties (San Francisco CA)
Past Lives (Seattle WA)
pate de fua (Mexico City ME)
Patrick Park (Los Angeles CA)
Patty Hurst Shifter (Raleigh NC)
Jared Paul (Providence RI)
Howard Eliott Payne (Liverpool UK-ENGLAND)
Pearl and the Puppets (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
PEDESTRIAN (LOS ANGELES CA)
The Peekers (Shreveport LA)
Peelander-Z (New York NY)
The Pepper Pots (Girona SPAIN)
Elvis Perkins In Dearland (Germantown NY)
Mandi Perkins (Los Angeles CA)
The Perpetrators (Winnipeg MB)
Pete Philly & Perquisite (Amsterdam THE NETHERLANDS)
Peter Bjorn and John (Stockholm SWEDEN)
Peter's Songs (Buenos Aires ARGENTINA)
Pictures And Sound (Burlington VT)
Pierre de Reeder (Los Angeles CA)
Pink Mountaintops (Vancouver BC)
The Pink Noise (Burlington ON)
The Pink Spiders (Nashville TN)
Pin Me Down (New York NY)
Jefferson Pitcher (Flesherton ON)
The Plastic Wave (Tehran IRAN)
+/- {Plus/Minus} (Brooklyn NY)
Pocahaunted (Los Angeles CA)
Poet In Process (Barcelona SPAIN)
Po' Girl (Vancouver BC)
Poison Arrows (Atlanta GA)
Leon Polar (Mexico City MEXICO)
Polka Madre (Mexico City MEXICO)
Pompeii (Austin TX)
Pong (Austin TX)
Pop Levi (Los Angeles CA)
Popular Damage (Berlin GERMANY)
Port Amoral (Winnipeg MB)
porterdavis (Austin TX)
Port O'Brien (Cambria CA)
The Postelles (New York NY)
Post War Years (London UK-ENGLAND)
Powell St. John (Austin TX)
PowerSolo (Aarhus DENMARK)
The Pragmatic (St Louis MO)
Precious Blood (Austin TX)
Princeton (Eagle Rock CA)
The Proclaimers (Edinburgh UK-SCOTLAND)
Project Jenny, Project Jan (Brooklyn NY)
Gabriel Prokofiev (London UK-ENGLAND)
Prolyphic (Providence RI)
Matt Pryor (Lawrence KS)
Joe Pug (Chicago IL)
Vince P (Chicago IL)
Josh Pyke (Sydney AUSTRALIA)
Masha Qrella (Berlin DE)
Quaff (Tokyo JAPAN)
The Quarter After (Los Angeles CA)
The Queers (Portsmouth NH)
Question (San Antonio TX)
Rabid Rabbit (Chicago IL)
Alicia Jo Rabins (Brooklyn NY)
Radio Luxembourg (Aberystwyth UK-WALES)
Rafter (San Diego CA)
Kristoffer Ragnstam (Sweden SWEDEN)
Ra Ra Riot (Syracuse NY)
Ratas del Vaticano (Monterrey MEXICO)
The Raveonettes (New York NY)
The Reaction (San Francisco CA)
Red Cortez (Los Angeles CA)
Rediscover (Los Angeles CA)
Red Light Company (London UK-ENGLAND)
Red Red Meat (Chicago IL)
Red Riders (Sydney NSW)
Eli Paperboy Reed & the True Loves (Boston MA)
Reef The Lost Cauze (Philadelphia PA)
Republic of Loose (Dublin IRELAND)
The Republic Tigers (Kansas City MO)
The Rescues (Los Angeles CA)
Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band (Nashville IN)
Brandon Rhyder (Austin TX)
Mia Riddle (Brooklyn NY)
Right Away, Great Captain! (Atlanta GA)
Right Or Happy (Austin TX)
Valerio Rinaldi (Buenos Aires ARGENTINA)
Ringo Deathstarr (Austin TX)
Riotous Brothers (Portsmouth UK-ENGLAND)
Rita Redshoes (Lisboa PORTUGAL)
Rival Schools (New York NY)
River City Tanlines (Memphis TN)
The River Phoenix (Copenhagen DENMARK)
The River Raid (Recife BRAZIL)
Robedoor (Los Angeles CA)
Rocco Deluca and the Burden (Long Beach CA)
Rokhsan (London UK-ENGLAND)
RokkaTone (New York NY)
Roll The Tanks (Los Angeles CA)
Rolo Tomassi (Sheffield UK-ENGLAND)
Eileen Rose (Boston MA)
Rosie And The Goldbug (Launceston UK-ENGLAND)
Anni Rossi (Chicago IL)
Ross Royce (Wellington NEW ZEALAND)
Round Table Knights (Bern SWITZERLAND)
Royal Bangs (Knoxville TN)
Ruby Coast (Aurora ON)
Ruido Rosa (Mexico MEXICO)
Russian Futurists (Toronto ON)
Rye Rye (Baltimore MD)
Sagapool (Montreal QC)
Sakin (Istanbul TURKEY)
Salt & Samovar (Brooklyn NY)
SambaDa (Santa Cruz CA)
Samba de Rainha (Sao Paulo SP)
Sanguine Piss (Philadelphia PA)
San Saba County (Austin TX)
Satin Dolls (Mexico City MEXICO)
Savia (Madrid SPAIN)
Mathew Sawyer And The Ghosts (London UK-ENGLAND)
Say Hi (Seattle WA)
Bryan Scary and The Shredding Tears (Brooklyn NY)
Danny Schmidt (Austin TX)
Scissors for Lefty (San Francisco CA)
Scorpion Child (Austin TX)
Scotland Yard Gospel Choir (Chicago IL)
Scram C Baby (Amsterdam THE NETHERLANDS)
Screaming Tea Party (London UK-ENGLAND)
Scribe (Christchurch NEW ZEALAND)
The Sea (Newquay UK-ENGLAND)
Seabird (Cincinnati OH)
Sealife (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Kevin Seconds (Sacramento CA)
The Secret Life of Sofia (Brooklyn NY)
Selma Oxor (Monterrey MEXICO)
Jay Semko (Saskatoon SK)
The Service Industry (Austin TX)
Sgt Dunbar and the Hobo Banned (Albany NY)
The Shackeltons (Chambersburg PA)
Shad (London ON)
The Shaky Hands (Portland OR)
Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros (Los Angeles CA)
The She Creatures (Bristol UK-ENGLAND)
Shellshag (New York NY)
Samantha Shelton (Los Angeles CA)
The Shitsez (Oslo NORWAY)
Sholi (San Francisco CA)
Shelley Short (Portland OR)
Shout Out Out Out Out (Edmonton AB)
The Shys (Los Angeles CA)
SICKBOY (Dublin IRELAND)
The S.I.G.I.T. (Bandung INDONESIA)
The Silos (Flagstaff AZ)
Kristoff Silva (Belo Horizonte MG)
Ana Silvera (London UK-ENGLAND)
Alina Simone (Brooklyn NY)
SIMPLIFIRES (Mexico City MEXICO)
Skavenjah (Regina SK)
Skibunny (Belfast UK-N. IRELAND)
Sky Larkin (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
The Slants (Portland OR)
Slaves to Gravity (London UK-ENGLAND)
Sleep (Portland OR)
Sleepercar (El Paso TX)
The Sleepover Disaster (Fresno CA)
Langhorne Slim (Brooklyn NY)
Sloth Scamper (Taipei TAIWAN)
Slough Feg (San Francisco CA)
Slow Club (Sheffield UK-ENGLAND)
Amber Smith (Budapest HUNGARY)
Drew Smith's Lonely Choir (Austin TX)
Smokekiller (Saskatoon SK)
Snake & Jet's Amazing Bullit Band (Copenhagen DENMARK)
Anthony Snape (Sydney NSW)
Snoblind (Hong Kong HONG KONG)
The Soft Pack (Los Angeles CA)
Soko (Paris NY)
Solace (KY) (Richmond KY)
Solange and the Hadley Street Dreams (Houston TX)
Solid Gold (Minneapolis MN)
S.O.M.B.A. (Belo Horizonte MG)
Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin (Springfield MO)
Somi (New York NY)
The Sonics (Seattle WA)
Sonpub (Tokyo JAPAN)
Sons of Albion (London UK-ENGLAND)
Rosalie Sorrels (Boise ID)
sorry-ok-yes (Italy ITALY)
Soulico (Tel Aviv ISRAEL)
Sounds Under Radio (Austin TX)
SpecialThanks (Aichi JAPAN)
The Spinto Band (Wilmington DE)
Spiral Stairs (Seattle WA)
Sprengjuhollin (Reykjavik ICELAND)
Stardeath and White Dwarfs (Oklahoma City OK)
Starsailor (Wigan UK-ENGLAND)
Stars of Track and Field (Portland OR)
Steed Lord (Reykjavik ICELAND)
Jeffrey Steele (Nashville TN)
Adam Stephens (of Two Gallants) (San Francisco CA)
Stereo Pony (Okinawa JAPAN)
Leni Stern (New York NY)
Steso Songs (Malmo SWEDEN)
Stoney (Sheffield UNITED KINGDOM)
Stupid Party (Brooklyn NY)
St. Vincent (Dallas TX)
Sub-division (Mexico City MEXICO)
The Subjects (New York NY)
Alyssa Suede (Glendale CA)
Peggy Sue (Brighton UK-ENGLAND)
The Summer Wardrobe (Austin TX)
Sun Araw (Long Beach CA)
Superdrag (Knoxville TN)
Superguidis (Guaiba RS)
Supersonic (Budapest HUNGARY)
Surinder Sandhu Band (Birmingham UK-ENGLAND)
Sway Machinery (Brooklyn NY)
Fernanda Takai (Belo Horizonte BRAZIL)
Talk To Angels (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
The Tallest Man On Earth (Karlstad SWEDEN)
Sofia Talvik (Stockholm SWEDEN)
David Tamaoka (Honolulu HI)
TarantisT (Tehran IRAN)
TAT (London UK-ENGLAND)
Kim Taylor (Cincinnati OH)
Maria Taylor (Los Angeles CA)
T-Bird & The Breaks (Austin TX)
Teenage Bottlerocket (Laramie WY)
The Teeners (Austin TX)
Telekinesis! (Seattle WA)
Telerama (Fortaleza BRAZIL)
The Temper Trap (Nth Fitzroy VIC)
Here We Go Magic feat. Luke Temple (Brooklyn NY)
Owen Temple (Austin TX)
Temposhark (London UK-ENGLAND)
Ten Out of Tenn (Nashville TN)
Gordie Tentrees (Whitehorse YT)
Don Tetto (Bogota COLOMBIA)
That 1 Guy (Los Angeles CA)
Thee Headliners (Portland OR)
Theodore (St Louis MO)
Theoretical Girl (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Right Ons (Madrid SPAIN)
These Arms Are Snakes (Seattle WA)
The Third Man (Memphis TN)
13ghosts (Birmingham AL)
This Bike is a Pipe Bomb (Pensacola FL)
This Drama (Tenerife Canary Islands SPAIN)
neil thomas (London UK-ENGLAND)
Rod Thomas (London UK-ENGLAND)
Sandi Thom (Brechin UK-ENGLAND)
Those Dancing Days (Stockholm SWEDEN)
3oh!3 (Boulder CO)
Throw Me The Statue (Seattle WA)
Thunderheist (Toronto ON)
J. Tillman (Seattle WA)
Timothy Bracy's Collection Agency (Brooklyn NY)
The Tiny (Stockholm SWEDEN)
Tiny Masters of Today (Brooklyn NY)
Tiny Vipers (Seattle WA)
T!Katz (Atlanta GA)
Shugo Tokumaru (Tokyo JAPAN)
Tokyo Sex Destruction (Barcelona SPAIN)
Tom Cary (Malaga SPAIN)
Tony's Hotel (Dayton OH)
Torngat (Montreal QC)
To The Bones (Winsford UNITED KINGDOM)
The Toxic Avenger (Paris FRANCE)
Toy Horses (Barry UK-WALES)
The Transpersonals (Bristol UK-ENGLAND)
TRE9 (Houston TX)
Triple Cobra (San Francisco CA)
True Widow (Dallas TX)
Lissy Trullie (New York NY)
Truthlive (Berkeley CA)
Tulsa (Boston MA)
Tungsten Coil (Austin TX)
Turbo Fruits (Nashville TN)
Turbowolf (Bristol UK-ENGLAND)
Frank Turner (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Tutts (Auckland NEW ZEALAND)
2020Soundsystem (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
Twilight Hotel (Winnipeg MB)
Twin Atlantic (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
Two Dollar Bash (Berlin GERMANY)
Two Hours Traffic (Charlottetown PEI)
2Mex (Los Angeles CA)
The Uglysuit (Oklahoma City OK)
Uncle Lucius (Austin TX)
Underwater Tea Party (Madrid SPAIN)
U-N-I (Inglewood CA)
The Upsidedown (Portland OR)
U.S. Girls (Philadelphia PA)
Francisca Valenzuela (Santiago CHILE)
Valis (Seattle WA)
David Vandervelde (Nashville TN)
Vandex (Salvador BRAZIL)
Vanguart (Sao Paulo BRAZIL)
The Vaselines (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
Venice Is Sinking (Athens GA)
Venison Whirled (Austin TX)
Verde3 (Bogota COLOMBIA)
Very Be Careful (Los Angeles CA)
Vessels (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
Vetiver (San Francisco CA)
Via Audio (Brooklyn NY)
Vinil Laranja (Belem BRAZIL)
VINILOVERSUS (Caracas VENEZUELA)
Violens (New York NY)
Virgin Passages (London UK-ENGLAND)
Viva Voce (Portland OR)
Patricia Vonne (Austin TX)
Ann Vriend (Edmonton AB)
Amy Wadge (Pontypridd UK-WALES)
Brooke Waggoner (Nashville TN)
The Wailing Wall (New York NY)
Seth Walker (Austin TX)
Wallpaper. (Oakland CA)
Lucy Walsh (Los Angeles CA)
Warmer Milks (Lexington KY)
The War on Drugs (Philidelphia PA)
Money Waters (Dallas TX)
The Wave Pictures (London UK-ENGLAND)
Wax Fang (Louisville KY)
Sean Wayland (Brooklyn NY)
We Are Balboa (Madrid SPAIN)
Mitch Webb and the Swindles (San Antonio TX)
Randy Weeks (Austin TX)
The Week That Was (Sunderland UK-ENGLAND)
We Have Band (London UK-ENGLAND)
The Weird Weeds (Austin TX)
Josh Weller (London UK-ENGLAND)
Emily Wells (Los Angeles CA)
Paris Wells (Melbourne VIC)
Tyrone Wells (Los Angeles CA)
We Should Be Dead (Limerick IRELAND)
Westbound Train (Boston MA)
Western Keys (Los Angeles CA)
We Were Lovers (Saskatoon SK)
We Were Promised Jetpacks (Glasgow UK-SCOTLAND)
What's YR Damage? (West Palm Beach FL)
Wheat (Taunton MA)
When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth (Austin TX)
When Girls Collide (San Francisco CA)
The Whip (Manchester UK-ENGLAND)
Andy White (Belfast IRELAND)
Whitechapel (Knoxville TN)
White Circle Crime Club (Antwerpen BELGIUM)
White Ghost Shivers (Austin TX)
White Lies (London UK-ENGLAND)
Ralph White (Austin TX)
White Shoes & The Couples Company (Jakarta INDONESIA)
Who Shot Hollywood (Amherst MA)
Wild Beasts+ (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
Wildbirds & Peacedrums (Gothenburg SWEDEN)
Wildchild (Oxnard CA)
Wild Moccasins (Houston TX)
Wild Sweet Orange (Birmingham AL)
Wild Weekend (San Diego CA)
Astrid Williamson (Shetland Islands UK-SCOTLAND)
Elizabeth Wills (Austin TX)
Wine and Revolution (Austin TX)
The Woggles (Atlanta GA)
Wovenhand (Denver CO)
The Wrens (Teaneck NJ)
XYX (Monterrey MEXICO)
Yak Ballz (Edison NJ)
Yarah Bravo (New York NY)
Year Long Disaster (Los Angeles CA)
The YellowDogs (Tehran IRAN)
YellowFever (Austin TX)
Don Yojan & La Frescura (Austin TX)
Andy Yorke (Oxford UK-ENGLAND)
You Me and Everyone We Know (Washington DC)
Gabby Young And Other Animals (London UK-ENGLAND)
Young Galaxy (Montreal QC)
Young Mammals (Houston TX)
Your Vegas (Leeds UK-ENGLAND)
Youth Group (Newtown NSW)
Yuppies (Omaha NE)
Zion I (Oakland CA)
Zola Jesus (Madison WI)

This list subject to change.

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