http://weepingelvis.hypervocal.com/
This story originally ran on our objectively badass music site, Weeping Elvis.
Amidst the entertainment industrys marketing barrage of prepackaged, commoditized entertainment, its sometimes hard to find a shred of true authenticity. This is particularly so in the music sector, where this years hot new act is often a reheated version of last years trend, and the term derivative is a marketing strategy, rather than an indictment. In this context, when something truly organic and highly original arises, sui generis, before your eyes, its hard not to get downright giddy.
The first night of the music portion of this years SxSW Festival, Weeping Elvis was invited by ATO Records to attend a taping of the Austin City Limits TV program showcasing the Alabama Shakes out of tiny Athens, Alabama. The taping took place at the spectacular new ACL Moody Theater, where no seat is more than 75 feet from the stage.
Even though their first LP doesnt come out until April 10, there was a ridiculous amount of buzz around the Shakes, both at South By and on the Internet. Often, when theres this much advance buzz, the actual experience is less than whats advertised. In this case, the hype wasnt nearly ecstatic enough.
As we walked into the Moody Theater, nothing couldve prepared us for what we were about to hear.
From the instant that 22-year-old lead singer Brittany Howard opened her mouth to sing the first notes of Hold On, until the band closed the hour-long set with Heavy Chevy, the studio audience was utterly mesmerized. Could something this soulful, soul-searing, and authentic really be happening? Had we been transported back to a Stax Records recording session in 1967?
Her voice is at once throaty yet ephemeral, urgent yet soft and plaintive. Over the course of a verse, she can go from howling and growling to whispering prayerfully, then back to raucous and rollicking. It is as though Janis Joplin and Otis Redding had a baby, and taught her to play Chuck Berry guitar licks on a classic Gibson SG. Backed by the thick Southern soul and vintage garage grooves of the Shakes (complete with an extra helping of Hammond organ, Booker T style), Ms. Howard took the audience through the full range of human emotions, and back again. Then they did it again the next day at Stubbs BBQ, and again later that same day at the Radio Stage in the Convention Center.
http://hypervocal.com/entertainment/...-21st-century/