Culture

The San Marcos Music Scene Runs Deep

Story published as the cover story for August 3rd, 2018 edition of The Austin Chronicle. Online version here.

ACL Fest hip-hop headliners Brockhampton might just be the tip of the iceberg from our neighbors south on I-35

On a March evening in 2016, inside the Dahlia Woods Art Gallery in San Marcos, a mixtape release party transpired unassumingly. Hosting such events regularly, the community exhibition center acts as a headquarters for local artists of the small college town. Bumping through the speakers was All-American Trash, debut release from local rap group Brockhampton.

Kevin Abstract, the song cycle's chief creative, stood at the center of the room wearing his signature motorcycle helmet. The rest of the project's producers, from UT student Merlyn Wood to Texas State music major Russell Boring, aka Joba, scattered themselves around the lightly attended event. Attendees scrolled through their phones, others sold merch, while the rest listened, sang, and danced.

By summer, the group had relocated to Los Angeles, landed a TV show on Viceland, and proceeded to drop three smash-hit albums within the span of six months.

In the process, Brockhampton redefined the mainstream's definition of a boy band. By trading bland pop for righteous rhymes intertwined with catchy choruses and cosmopolitan production, the crew brought the novelty genre under the umbrella of modern music's pre-eminent sound. And yet, on that night more than two years ago, few could have expected that the biggest hip-hop act at ACL Fest this Oct­ober – likely the most anticipated rap crew to hit a Zilker Park stage since Outkast in 2014 – would have emerged from San Marcos.

Thirty minutes down I-35, the Texas State University hub sits in the shadow of Austin. Nevertheless, its fertile music scene is thriving in its own right. Only 30 square miles and numbering some 60,000 inhabitants, the town where Stevie Ray Vaughan once sequestered himself to record has begun defying narrow city limits with raw talent and homemade support even as Austin and San Antonio inch toward becoming one metropolitan area.

Texas State University

Witness a man with no shoes jump onto the back of a moving, rainbow-painted school bus and it's easy to feel like you've receded several decades in San Marcos. For­tunately, over the last several years, that retro quirk has begun to fade. Between 2013 and 2015, San Marcos notched the fastest-growing city in America, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Texas State sparks much of the surge. Servicing 38,000 students, it became a research institution in 2016 after 19 straight years of enrollment growth. The school characterizes its hometown much like Denton is defined by the University of North Texas, the first institution in the country to offer a jazz degree. UNT remains the top choice for young musicians in the state.

Credit, in part, Thomas Clark. Before becoming the director of Texas State's School of Music, Clark held down a faculty spot at UNT.

"I had an impression all those years when I was living in Denton about San Marcos being a sleepy little college town," says Clark.

Things started to change in 2008 with Clark's arrival. At the time, Taylor Wil­kins, frontman of Austin metal act Otis the Destroyer, put together his first band, the Couch, while in his second year at Texas State.

"There weren't many people in bands that were in the Texas State music school," says Wilkins. "Denton had that, the combination of incredible jazz musicians and bands, but it was more punk rock in San Marcos – not as many musicians focused on the music."

Lack of venues to play proved one major obstacle. Case in point: After hosting 6,887 straight nights of live music, the Triple Crown closed in December 2015.

"That scattered the scene," says Steve Jones, a radio personality at Texas State radio frequency KTSW and publisher of the city's concert listing website SanMarcosTonight.com. "People at small venues picked up the slack."

Valentino's Pizza, Kiva Lounge (now named the Morgue), and Tantra Coffeehouse led the charge of local businesses adding stages to their footprint. However makeshift, this abundance lent musicians low-pressure environments to learn their practice. Accessibility thus invigorated San Marcos' live music scene.

"Austin is the live music capital of the world, but San Marcos is starting to be its younger cousin," says Clark, adding that Texas State's population now exceeds that of UNT. "A lot of that is coming from our program."

Groups such as the neo-soul quartet Blumoon and indie rockers Lantic are coming together in Texas State music classes.

"There's been a recent increase in talent in this new crop of young bands," says Troy Vita, producer of KTSW's Studio C series, which features live performances from local bands. "We have a really good crop of student bands right now."

Sarah Street

San Marcos' proximity to Austin is beginning to attract musicians the way the state capital has over the past quarter-century.

"It's between ATX and STX to where we can get gigs in both places," offers Andrew Harkey of Blumoon. "That's a pulling factor for a lot of musicians coming here. Also, it's not Austin. Austin is very popular, musicians on every corner, but it's saturated."

Much of the scene's vibrancy occurs outside of the downtown square. From Rock Bottom's bluegrass fusion to Attic Ted's freak psych, many of San Marcos' defining acts make a name for themselves through DIY shows.

"The music scene thrives because people bust ass to put on their own shows," affirms Mackenzie Dart of Rock Bottom String Band.

While performance spaces continue multiplying, many reside in restaurants and coffee shops where families go for meals and live music stays in the background. Homemade shows remain the workaround.

"Valentino's would try to have rap shows, but it's a family pizza shop, so rappers can't be going in there flipping tables," acknowledges Kenny Casanova, rapper in the city's fast-rising rap group Pnthn. "We really had to create our own venues."

Spaces range from basements and yoga studios to bamboo forests. Anywhere that's big enough to mosh can be a venue.

"The most successful shows around town are house parties because most people are underage or they just don't wanna go to bars," says Blumoon singer Kendra Sells.

Until just recently, Sarah Street constituted the epicenter of the DIY scene. A few blocks from campus, its house parties jolted the surrounding neighborhood into the wee hours. One conductor of that energy was student-led collective Chapter 12 Records. Founded as a record label for Texas State musicians, the venture caught momentum when co-founder Michael Howard stumbled upon a string band house party show in 2014 and subsequently threw his own musical bacchanal.

"I had never seen bluegrass, never seen people doing percussion with strings and a washboard," reminisces Howard. "I thought, 'I want to showcase this as much as possible.'"

Howard and a couple of buddies moved into a house on Sarah Street and started organizing afternoon jams and evening gigs. Business bustled. The party soon sprawled out onto the block, with Chapter 12 organizing themed parties for Halloween, MLK Day, and Christmas.

As with most house parties, police soon killed the buzz. "Cops started coming around 10pm and swiftly shut down house shows," laments Casanova.

In 2017, Chapter 12 launched the Martian Arts Festival, a two-day camping experience at High Road Rocky Ranch, which sits about 20 minutes outside of downtown San Marcos. A stacked bill of local musicians and artists culminated in 500 attendees its first year and close to 900 people marked the second annual event in April. Its success prompted Chapter 12 to rebrand as Apogee Presents, a promotions company they hope becomes "the Margin Walker of San Marcos."

Still San Marcos, Not Austin

San Marcos is the 59th largest city in Texas. The music scene is young and promising, but financing careers it isn't.

"There is essentially no way to sustain a music career there," says Wilkins.

Spaces such as the Morgue and Tantra aren't Hotel Vegas or Swan Dive. They're not going to spend much on music because it isn't the lifeblood of their business. People are going to have a slice of pizza or a beer regardless of if there's a band playing.

The San Marcos Music Scene Runs Deep

ACL Fest hip-hop headliners Brockhampton might just be the tip of the iceberg from our neighbors south on I-35

BY JEREMY STEINBERGER, FRI., AUG. 3, 2018

printwrite a letter

Pnthn

On a March evening in 2016, inside the Dahlia Woods Art Gallery in San Marcos, a mixtape release party transpired unassumingly. Hosting such events regularly, the community exhibition center acts as a headquarters for local artists of the small college town. Bumping through the speakers was All-American Trash, debut release from local rap group Brockhampton.

Kevin Abstract, the song cycle's chief creative, stood at the center of the room wearing his signature motorcycle helmet. The rest of the project's producers, from UT student Merlyn Wood to Texas State music major Russell Boring, aka Joba, scattered themselves around the lightly attended event. Attendees scrolled through their phones, others sold merch, while the rest listened, sang, and danced.

By summer, the group had relocated to Los Angeles, landed a TV show on Viceland, and proceeded to drop three smash-hit albums within the span of six months.

In the process, Brockhampton redefined the mainstream's definition of a boy band. By trading bland pop for righteous rhymes intertwined with catchy choruses and cosmopolitan production, the crew brought the novelty genre under the umbrella of modern music's pre-eminent sound. And yet, on that night more than two years ago, few could have expected that the biggest hip-hop act at ACL Fest this Oct­ober – likely the most anticipated rap crew to hit a Zilker Park stage since Outkast in 2014 – would have emerged from San Marcos.

Thirty minutes down I-35, the Texas State University hub sits in the shadow of Austin. Nevertheless, its fertile music scene is thriving in its own right. Only 30 square miles and numbering some 60,000 inhabitants, the town where Stevie Ray Vaughan once sequestered himself to record has begun defying narrow city limits with raw talent and homemade support even as Austin and San Antonio inch toward becoming one metropolitan area.

Texas State University

Witness a man with no shoes jump onto the back of a moving, rainbow-painted school bus and it's easy to feel like you've receded several decades in San Marcos. For­tunately, over the last several years, that retro quirk has begun to fade. Between 2013 and 2015, San Marcos notched the fastest-growing city in America, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Texas State sparks much of the surge. Servicing 38,000 students, it became a research institution in 2016 after 19 straight years of enrollment growth. The school characterizes its hometown much like Denton is defined by the University of North Texas, the first institution in the country to offer a jazz degree. UNT remains the top choice for young musicians in the state.

TSU School of Music Director Thomas Clark (Photos by David Brendan Hall)

“Austin is the live music capital of the world, but San Marcos is starting to be its younger cousin.” – Texas State University Music School Director Thomas Clark

Credit, in part, Thomas Clark. Before becoming the director of Texas State's School of Music, Clark held down a faculty spot at UNT.

"I had an impression all those years when I was living in Denton about San Marcos being a sleepy little college town," says Clark.

Things started to change in 2008 with Clark's arrival. At the time, Taylor Wil­kins, frontman of Austin metal act Otis the Destroyer, put together his first band, the Couch, while in his second year at Texas State.

"There weren't many people in bands that were in the Texas State music school," says Wilkins. "Denton had that, the combination of incredible jazz musicians and bands, but it was more punk rock in San Marcos – not as many musicians focused on the music."

Lack of venues to play proved one major obstacle. Case in point: After hosting 6,887 straight nights of live music, the Triple Crown closed in December 2015.

"That scattered the scene," says Steve Jones, a radio personality at Texas State radio frequency KTSW and publisher of the city's concert listing website SanMarcosTonight.com. "People at small venues picked up the slack."

Valentino's Pizza, Kiva Lounge (now named the Morgue), and Tantra Coffeehouse led the charge of local businesses adding stages to their footprint. However makeshift, this abundance lent musicians low-pressure environments to learn their practice. Accessibility thus invigorated San Marcos' live music scene.

"Austin is the live music capital of the world, but San Marcos is starting to be its younger cousin," says Clark, adding that Texas State's population now exceeds that of UNT. "A lot of that is coming from our program."

Groups such as the neo-soul quartet Blumoon and indie rockers Lantic are coming together in Texas State music classes.

"There's been a recent increase in talent in this new crop of young bands," says Troy Vita, producer of KTSW's Studio C series, which features live performances from local bands. "We have a really good crop of student bands right now."

Sarah Street

San Marcos' proximity to Austin is beginning to attract musicians the way the state capital has over the past quarter-century.

"It's between ATX and STX to where we can get gigs in both places," offers Andrew Harkey of Blumoon. "That's a pulling factor for a lot of musicians coming here. Also, it's not Austin. Austin is very popular, musicians on every corner, but it's saturated."

Much of the scene's vibrancy occurs outside of the downtown square. From Rock Bottom's bluegrass fusion to Attic Ted's freak psych, many of San Marcos' defining acts make a name for themselves through DIY shows.

"The music scene thrives because people bust ass to put on their own shows," affirms Mackenzie Dart of Rock Bottom String Band.

While performance spaces continue multiplying, many reside in restaurants and coffee shops where families go for meals and live music stays in the background. Homemade shows remain the workaround.

"Valentino's would try to have rap shows, but it's a family pizza shop, so rappers can't be going in there flipping tables," acknowledges Kenny Casanova, rapper in the city's fast-rising rap group Pnthn. "We really had to create our own venues."

Spaces range from basements and yoga studios to bamboo forests. Anywhere that's big enough to mosh can be a venue.

"The most successful shows around town are house parties because most people are underage or they just don't wanna go to bars," says Blumoon singer Kendra Sells.

Chapter 12 Records founders Eli Zablosky (l) and Michael Howard

Until just recently, Sarah Street constituted the epicenter of the DIY scene. A few blocks from campus, its house parties jolted the surrounding neighborhood into the wee hours. One conductor of that energy was student-led collective Chapter 12 Records. Founded as a record label for Texas State musicians, the venture caught momentum when co-founder Michael Howard stumbled upon a string band house party show in 2014 and subsequently threw his own musical bacchanal.

"I had never seen bluegrass, never seen people doing percussion with strings and a washboard," reminisces Howard. "I thought, 'I want to showcase this as much as possible.'"

Howard and a couple of buddies moved into a house on Sarah Street and started organizing afternoon jams and evening gigs. Business bustled. The party soon sprawled out onto the block, with Chapter 12 organizing themed parties for Halloween, MLK Day, and Christmas.

As with most house parties, police soon killed the buzz. "Cops started coming around 10pm and swiftly shut down house shows," laments Casanova.

In 2017, Chapter 12 launched the Martian Arts Festival, a two-day camping experience at High Road Rocky Ranch, which sits about 20 minutes outside of downtown San Marcos. A stacked bill of local musicians and artists culminated in 500 attendees its first year and close to 900 people marked the second annual event in April. Its success prompted Chapter 12 to rebrand as Apogee Presents, a promotions company they hope becomes "the Margin Walker of San Marcos."

Still San Marcos, Not Austin

San Marcos is the 59th largest city in Texas. The music scene is young and promising, but financing careers it isn't.

"There is essentially no way to sustain a music career there," says Wilkins.

Spaces such as the Morgue and Tantra aren't Hotel Vegas or Swan Dive. They're not going to spend much on music because it isn't the lifeblood of their business. People are going to have a slice of pizza or a beer regardless of if there's a band playing.

BluMoon

"It's really hard in San Marcos, because no one wants to pay," grouses Cold Tony's frontman Michael Martinez.

The Tony's are among a crop of San Marcos bands that boast an established following through ample local gigging, but in a college town, most won't progress beyond that. Patrons are on student budgets, so few shell out more than a couple of dollars for a meal, let alone a cover charge.

"There's this weird gap where bars can't book bands because no one will pay a cover charge and then established bands don't want to play because they don't get compensated," reveals Eli Zablosky, head of marketing and promotion for Chapter 12/Apogee Presents.

Musicians hope a dedicated venue will bridge the gap.

"We're hurting for a good, small, indoor venue," says Alex Schultz of Rock Bottom String Band. "Young bands need a place that books shows on Monday, Tuesday, and Wed­nesday to work out their live performance on an actual sound system and an actual stage."

Before that happens, business owners need proof young San Mar­tians have room for live music in their time and budget. The city has no dedicated music store, and the only record shop in town, Superfly's Lone Star Music Emporium, closed last year.

"You gotta think about the rest of the students that don't dress like us and don't think like us," says Harkey. "The EDM culture is more widespread than the live music scene."

Not seeing cash from live gigs is a reality for most musicians in 2018. Expecting San Marcos to become a performance powerhouse that funds lives might be asking the scene to grow in ways those within it are wary. Much of San Marcos' ethos is shaped by its defiance against becoming Austin.

"San Marcos does not want to be Austin," says Rock Bottom String Band vocalist Tara Miller. "I've lived close enough to Aus­tin to see how money has destroyed what people fell in love with Austin [for] in the first place."

"We have something really authentic coming from a bunch of kids playing their hearts out simply for the love of it," adds Dart. "Just because we don't get a bunch of 'big' bands coming through I feel like many folks tend to discount us right off the bat."

Inside the Bubble

No stretch to predict another hip-hop endeavor from San Marcos hitting ACL Fest stages soon. Pnthn, a forceful 10-man rap group, have burst onto the national radar from the same small college scene Brock­hampton emerged out of just two years ago.

Where the latter coddles singable melodies, Pnthn goes for the throat with a constant stream of sharp flows over bobbing and weaving, Southern-fried production. Formed only last year, the crew's string of successful DIY shows in San Marcos has hoisted them upon a wave of momentum yet to crash. Prominent publications including Pitchfork and Lyrical Lemonade have caught on, and this weekend the MC syndicate opens for cult rap hero Lil B at Mohawk.

Although still a small scene largely built in homes, pizza shops, and espresso bars, San Marcos stakes a larger claim in trending acts Pnthn and Brockhampton, who reflect what makes the music scene exciting right now. Like a farm system in baseball, the city remains intimate enough for any local act to captivate fans and close enough to urban action for raw talents to become stars.

"San Marcos is a bubble, but any act can burst through with the support of the city," says producer Por Vida. "The people will support great music acts because they know they deserve more than to be playing in the same college town."

10 Emerging San Marcos Acts

1) Pnthn A rap group with a 10-man rotation, Pnthn has no clear starting five. From Tony Tone's coolheaded flows to Por Vida's southerly production, everyone brings a different flavor to the table. This act is deep and ready to consume.

2) Blumoon Futuristic neo-soul with hints of bossa nova and extended jazz breakdowns.

The San Marcos Music Scene Runs Deep

ACL Fest hip-hop headliners Brockhampton might just be the tip of the iceberg from our neighbors south on I-35

BY JEREMY STEINBERGER, FRI., AUG. 3, 2018

printwrite a letter

Pnthn

On a March evening in 2016, inside the Dahlia Woods Art Gallery in San Marcos, a mixtape release party transpired unassumingly. Hosting such events regularly, the community exhibition center acts as a headquarters for local artists of the small college town. Bumping through the speakers was All-American Trash, debut release from local rap group Brockhampton.

Kevin Abstract, the song cycle's chief creative, stood at the center of the room wearing his signature motorcycle helmet. The rest of the project's producers, from UT student Merlyn Wood to Texas State music major Russell Boring, aka Joba, scattered themselves around the lightly attended event. Attendees scrolled through their phones, others sold merch, while the rest listened, sang, and danced.

By summer, the group had relocated to Los Angeles, landed a TV show on Viceland, and proceeded to drop three smash-hit albums within the span of six months.

In the process, Brockhampton redefined the mainstream's definition of a boy band. By trading bland pop for righteous rhymes intertwined with catchy choruses and cosmopolitan production, the crew brought the novelty genre under the umbrella of modern music's pre-eminent sound. And yet, on that night more than two years ago, few could have expected that the biggest hip-hop act at ACL Fest this Oct­ober – likely the most anticipated rap crew to hit a Zilker Park stage since Outkast in 2014 – would have emerged from San Marcos.

Thirty minutes down I-35, the Texas State University hub sits in the shadow of Austin. Nevertheless, its fertile music scene is thriving in its own right. Only 30 square miles and numbering some 60,000 inhabitants, the town where Stevie Ray Vaughan once sequestered himself to record has begun defying narrow city limits with raw talent and homemade support even as Austin and San Antonio inch toward becoming one metropolitan area.

Texas State University

Witness a man with no shoes jump onto the back of a moving, rainbow-painted school bus and it's easy to feel like you've receded several decades in San Marcos. For­tunately, over the last several years, that retro quirk has begun to fade. Between 2013 and 2015, San Marcos notched the fastest-growing city in America, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Texas State sparks much of the surge. Servicing 38,000 students, it became a research institution in 2016 after 19 straight years of enrollment growth. The school characterizes its hometown much like Denton is defined by the University of North Texas, the first institution in the country to offer a jazz degree. UNT remains the top choice for young musicians in the state.

TSU School of Music Director Thomas Clark (Photos by David Brendan Hall)

“Austin is the live music capital of the world, but San Marcos is starting to be its younger cousin.” – Texas State University Music School Director Thomas Clark

Credit, in part, Thomas Clark. Before becoming the director of Texas State's School of Music, Clark held down a faculty spot at UNT.

"I had an impression all those years when I was living in Denton about San Marcos being a sleepy little college town," says Clark.

Things started to change in 2008 with Clark's arrival. At the time, Taylor Wil­kins, frontman of Austin metal act Otis the Destroyer, put together his first band, the Couch, while in his second year at Texas State.

"There weren't many people in bands that were in the Texas State music school," says Wilkins. "Denton had that, the combination of incredible jazz musicians and bands, but it was more punk rock in San Marcos – not as many musicians focused on the music."

Lack of venues to play proved one major obstacle. Case in point: After hosting 6,887 straight nights of live music, the Triple Crown closed in December 2015.

"That scattered the scene," says Steve Jones, a radio personality at Texas State radio frequency KTSW and publisher of the city's concert listing website SanMarcosTonight.com. "People at small venues picked up the slack."

Valentino's Pizza, Kiva Lounge (now named the Morgue), and Tantra Coffeehouse led the charge of local businesses adding stages to their footprint. However makeshift, this abundance lent musicians low-pressure environments to learn their practice. Accessibility thus invigorated San Marcos' live music scene.

"Austin is the live music capital of the world, but San Marcos is starting to be its younger cousin," says Clark, adding that Texas State's population now exceeds that of UNT. "A lot of that is coming from our program."

Groups such as the neo-soul quartet Blumoon and indie rockers Lantic are coming together in Texas State music classes.

"There's been a recent increase in talent in this new crop of young bands," says Troy Vita, producer of KTSW's Studio C series, which features live performances from local bands. "We have a really good crop of student bands right now."

Sarah Street

San Marcos' proximity to Austin is beginning to attract musicians the way the state capital has over the past quarter-century.

"It's between ATX and STX to where we can get gigs in both places," offers Andrew Harkey of Blumoon. "That's a pulling factor for a lot of musicians coming here. Also, it's not Austin. Austin is very popular, musicians on every corner, but it's saturated."

Much of the scene's vibrancy occurs outside of the downtown square. From Rock Bottom's bluegrass fusion to Attic Ted's freak psych, many of San Marcos' defining acts make a name for themselves through DIY shows.

"The music scene thrives because people bust ass to put on their own shows," affirms Mackenzie Dart of Rock Bottom String Band.

While performance spaces continue multiplying, many reside in restaurants and coffee shops where families go for meals and live music stays in the background. Homemade shows remain the workaround.

"Valentino's would try to have rap shows, but it's a family pizza shop, so rappers can't be going in there flipping tables," acknowledges Kenny Casanova, rapper in the city's fast-rising rap group Pnthn. "We really had to create our own venues."

Spaces range from basements and yoga studios to bamboo forests. Anywhere that's big enough to mosh can be a venue.

"The most successful shows around town are house parties because most people are underage or they just don't wanna go to bars," says Blumoon singer Kendra Sells.

Chapter 12 Records founders Eli Zablosky (l) and Michael Howard

Until just recently, Sarah Street constituted the epicenter of the DIY scene. A few blocks from campus, its house parties jolted the surrounding neighborhood into the wee hours. One conductor of that energy was student-led collective Chapter 12 Records. Founded as a record label for Texas State musicians, the venture caught momentum when co-founder Michael Howard stumbled upon a string band house party show in 2014 and subsequently threw his own musical bacchanal.

"I had never seen bluegrass, never seen people doing percussion with strings and a washboard," reminisces Howard. "I thought, 'I want to showcase this as much as possible.'"

Howard and a couple of buddies moved into a house on Sarah Street and started organizing afternoon jams and evening gigs. Business bustled. The party soon sprawled out onto the block, with Chapter 12 organizing themed parties for Halloween, MLK Day, and Christmas.

As with most house parties, police soon killed the buzz. "Cops started coming around 10pm and swiftly shut down house shows," laments Casanova.

In 2017, Chapter 12 launched the Martian Arts Festival, a two-day camping experience at High Road Rocky Ranch, which sits about 20 minutes outside of downtown San Marcos. A stacked bill of local musicians and artists culminated in 500 attendees its first year and close to 900 people marked the second annual event in April. Its success prompted Chapter 12 to rebrand as Apogee Presents, a promotions company they hope becomes "the Margin Walker of San Marcos."

Still San Marcos, Not Austin

San Marcos is the 59th largest city in Texas. The music scene is young and promising, but financing careers it isn't.

"There is essentially no way to sustain a music career there," says Wilkins.

Spaces such as the Morgue and Tantra aren't Hotel Vegas or Swan Dive. They're not going to spend much on music because it isn't the lifeblood of their business. People are going to have a slice of pizza or a beer regardless of if there's a band playing.

BluMoon

"It's really hard in San Marcos, because no one wants to pay," grouses Cold Tony's frontman Michael Martinez.

The Tony's are among a crop of San Marcos bands that boast an established following through ample local gigging, but in a college town, most won't progress beyond that. Patrons are on student budgets, so few shell out more than a couple of dollars for a meal, let alone a cover charge.

"There's this weird gap where bars can't book bands because no one will pay a cover charge and then established bands don't want to play because they don't get compensated," reveals Eli Zablosky, head of marketing and promotion for Chapter 12/Apogee Presents.

Musicians hope a dedicated venue will bridge the gap.

"We're hurting for a good, small, indoor venue," says Alex Schultz of Rock Bottom String Band. "Young bands need a place that books shows on Monday, Tuesday, and Wed­nesday to work out their live performance on an actual sound system and an actual stage."

Before that happens, business owners need proof young San Mar­tians have room for live music in their time and budget. The city has no dedicated music store, and the only record shop in town, Superfly's Lone Star Music Emporium, closed last year.

"You gotta think about the rest of the students that don't dress like us and don't think like us," says Harkey. "The EDM culture is more widespread than the live music scene."

Not seeing cash from live gigs is a reality for most musicians in 2018. Expecting San Marcos to become a performance powerhouse that funds lives might be asking the scene to grow in ways those within it are wary. Much of San Marcos' ethos is shaped by its defiance against becoming Austin.

"San Marcos does not want to be Austin," says Rock Bottom String Band vocalist Tara Miller. "I've lived close enough to Aus­tin to see how money has destroyed what people fell in love with Austin [for] in the first place."

"We have something really authentic coming from a bunch of kids playing their hearts out simply for the love of it," adds Dart. "Just because we don't get a bunch of 'big' bands coming through I feel like many folks tend to discount us right off the bat."

Inside the Bubble

No stretch to predict another hip-hop endeavor from San Marcos hitting ACL Fest stages soon. Pnthn, a forceful 10-man rap group, have burst onto the national radar from the same small college scene Brock­hampton emerged out of just two years ago.

Although still a small scene largely built in homes, pizza shops, and espresso bars, San Marcos stakes a larger claim in trending acts Pnthn and Brockhampton

Where the latter coddles singable melodies, Pnthn goes for the throat with a constant stream of sharp flows over bobbing and weaving, Southern-fried production. Formed only last year, the crew's string of successful DIY shows in San Marcos has hoisted them upon a wave of momentum yet to crash. Prominent publications including Pitchfork and Lyrical Lemonade have caught on, and this weekend the MC syndicate opens for cult rap hero Lil B at Mohawk.

Although still a small scene largely built in homes, pizza shops, and espresso bars, San Marcos stakes a larger claim in trending acts Pnthn and Brockhampton, who reflect what makes the music scene exciting right now. Like a farm system in baseball, the city remains intimate enough for any local act to captivate fans and close enough to urban action for raw talents to become stars.

"San Marcos is a bubble, but any act can burst through with the support of the city," says producer Por Vida. "The people will support great music acts because they know they deserve more than to be playing in the same college town."

10 Emerging San Marcos Acts

1) Pnthn A rap group with a 10-man rotation, Pnthn has no clear starting five. From Tony Tone's coolheaded flows to Por Vida's southerly production, everyone brings a different flavor to the table. This act is deep and ready to consume.

2) Blumoon Futuristic neo-soul with hints of bossa nova and extended jazz breakdowns.

Lantic

3) Lantic Anchoring an established indie rock group on the scene, drummer Dakota Carley says their upcoming album heads forward sonically as they've learned to treat music "like nurturing a little baby."

4) Bogan Villa Psychedelic petal metal, guitarist William Wells electrifies.

5) Samantha Flowers New to music, Flowers already opened for two of her contemporary influences. Her feel-good indie-pop debuted in front of sold-out crowds for Cuco and Boy Pablo earlier this year.

6) Rusty Dusty Soulful indie with Dr. Dog and My Morning Jacket sensibilities, though hints of Americana throw a pleasant twist.

7) Moon Dunes San Marcos folk-rock that could flow from the river, this fourpiece conveys the desert psychedelia of the Doors with the earthy tone of the town they reside in.

8) Poolboi Blu Deep sample hip-hop guaranteed to keep you cool in the summer heat.

9) The Cold Tony’s Mainstay within San Marcos' house party scene, the Tony's surf rock will soon become more jazzy with the addition of sax player Jamal Edwards, who emerged from Texas State's jazz school with guitarist/vocalist Michael Martinez and bassist Andrew Harkey.

10) Clever Heads Prevail Some Red Hot Chili Peppers in a San Marcos rock band best suited for Texas road trippin'.

Review: George Brainard’s Library Photo Exhibit Excavates the Roots of Austin Culture

The 11 Portrait by George Brainard show those who have made Austin so unique.

There’s a lot to take in at the new Austin Central Library. The 200,000 square-foot building is nearly 600 feet tall and has over 350,000 items to enjoy in one of its 589 seats. However, it only takes 11 portraits on the 6th floor by George Brainard to discover some of the cities most important and influential figures.

Austin Originals, Portraits of the People That Shape Our City explores the roots of Austin’s rich cultural history. Brainard is a sixth generation Texan whose images capture ordinary people and experiences in their most raw form; looking to excavate the soul in every moment and everything. In Portraits of the People That Shape Our City, Brainard adjusts his style to fit the task. Rather than extracting the extra from the ordinary, Brainard captures the humanity of the powerful. To do so he relies on his ability to frame subjects in their comfort zones. The images are so well done they seem underserved by their placement on the library’s sixth floor.

From 2013 to 2017, Brainard’s portraits of iconic locals were published in Austin Monthly for a photo-interview series called “The Things I’ve Learned.” In January they were installed at the library as part of FotoATX, a citywide photography festival that celebrated the work of local artists.

Instead of being placed in the library’s art gallery on the second floor,  they’re in the “Living Room” on the library’s 6th floor.

This specific location within the library isn’t too big of a hindrance to the exhibit’s success, however. The bigger issue is their presentation. The exhibit’s first two portraits hang on a small wall in the southwest corner of the room. A hallway separates these images from the rest that hang on the adjacent wall. The procession of these images, though, is fractured by wall indents to give way to a copy machine, a computer, and a library staff help desk. For an exhibit intended to reveal those “That Shape our City,” it should be presented cohesively. Instead, they’re placed in such a way that makes it tough to distinguish the images from cookie-cutter wall decor from afar.

Many library goers didn’t even see the images on the wall, while others simply walked by, paying more mind to their phones or getting to one of the other attractions the library offers. Those who did stop to look at the images could realize it was an installed exhibit by coming closer to read its label and wall text. This explains that Brainard is a famed local photographer who has had images featured in Rolling Stone, The New York Times, and more.

The first portrait adjacent to the wall text is also the most choreographed. It’s of Puerto Rican native Cynthia Lee Fontaine, one of Austin’s most famous drag queens. She poses formulaically with her hands on her hips. It’s Fontaine’s job to pose, though, and Brainard celebrated that.

 

His style more patently reveals itself a few portraits down. Musician Kevin Russell, A.K.A. “Shinyribs,” holds his arms out to the camera with open palms suggesting a stop in the action. Russell describes himself as a classic punk rocker who wears his emotion on his sleeve on stage but says he’s pretty inexpressive everywhere else. His portrait evokes that with ease.

The exhibit gains momentum with portraits of Armadillo World Headquarters founder Eddie Wilson and designer Mark English next. That is all but killed, however, by the adjacent library equipment separating the show from its final two portraits.

The penaultimate reaffirms the exhibit’s success. It’s of Richard Overton, the world’s oldest World War II veteran who has lived in Austin for over 69 years. Brainard captures him wearing a war veteran hat with a small grin and his hands in his pockets. It’s the look one makes when their success speaks so loudly words are no longer needed. The shot comes together with those before it to remind you just how diverse and unique Austin’s cultural roots are. With this, the exhibit sends a message that there really is no criteria for success in this town.

Although the location on the sixth floor is a little bewildering, the images belong in the Central Library. Brainard displays those who have shaped Austin’s culture in a building meant to cultivate minds that will do so in the future. He brings out the character in his subjects, allowing the portraits to capture the personality of the city. With this, one walks away with a closer connection to what makes this city so “weird.”

Austin Originals, Portraits of the People That Shape Our City will be on display until May

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The Face Plant That Woke an Austin Bus


The Number 5 bus brings together students, shoppers, seniors and the blind, normally quietly. But on Sunday afternoon, one face plant got everyone talking.

“Oh shit!” the man yelled as he tripped onto the bus stopped at 45th and Guadalupe.

A ponytailed man in the back woke up. He had fallen asleep reading the book now in his lap. The woman next to him took out one of her headphones and looked up.

“I’m not normally a slip and fall guy,” the man said as he picked himself and his sunglasses off the ground. He placed them on his head, combing back his long thin curly hair, and reached in his pockets for change.

“I mean, I do slip every now and then I guess,” he continued.

“You alright?” the driver asked.

“Yeah, these boots have no god damn traction,” he muttered while paying the fare.

He was a stocky guy, probably in his 30’s, but it was hard to tell. A scruffy beard consumed much of his face.

“Are you okay?” I asked.

“Yeah, it’s just these boots,” he said, eying the open seat next to me before introducing himself as Aaron.

“Feel free, man,” I said. Aaron sat down and started to explain why he was wearing boots at all. They used to be part of his uniform as a construction worker. He quit two months earlier because it was getting too cold for him to work outside.

“So, what are you up to now?” I asked.

“Eating pancakes, reading, and riding the bus,” Aaron replied.

I looked around. Previously everyone was lost looking at the outside world or that within their phones. Now many were listening to our conversation.

“I’m from Chicago, though, I should be used to the cold,” he continued.

“Chicago?” a passenger chimed in. “I’m from Chicago!” she said. “63rd and Chappel!”

“Me too!” another man said.

The Chicagoans proceeded to talk about the weather in their hometown, increasing rent prices, and the Bulls. Typical small talk seemed not to interest Aaron much.

He turned back towards me and reached for the stop request cord.

“I’m going to get off at the next stop,” he said.

I asked him where he was going. “Not sure, but I did want to give you something,” he replied.

“This is my favorite book ever,” he said while the Chicagoans were now talking about Obama. He dug into his backpack and took out a book with yellowed pages and a wrinkled green cover.

“It’s part of this series about a superhero named Flashman,” he explained. “This one is called ‘Flashman’s Lady.’”

 “Are you sure you want to give this to me?” I asked taken aback. “You should keep your favorite book.”

“Yes,” he said as the bus slowed to a stop in front of Northcross Mall. “I, Aaron, am giving you this book.”

He got up and told me that the book was about a fictional character in a real world. As he stepped off the bus, this time holding onto the door, I wondered if he was too.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Press Fest ATX Showcases the Power of Zines

How zines bring diversity to the media industry.

Camille Simonelema believes a zine can be really anything, as long as it’s self-published. Camille is a co-founder of Free Rent ATX, the local Austin art collective behind Press Fest Austin at The Vortex on November 11th.

The event was an exhibition for independent publishers, zine makers, comics and more. With no single definition of what a zine can be, Camille said while drinking a Kombucha at the 2nd rendition of Press Fest Austin, the medium attracts a mixed bag of publishers.

“That’s the cool part of this community. There are literally all different kinds of people with different backgrounds and interests,” Simonelema said. “We all have one thing in common, though, and that’s loving to share our expression with others through self-publishing.”

Simonelema had the idea to start Press Fest Austin after the city lost its only other zine festival, Austin Zine Fest, in 2015. Her goal was to create an outlet for independent publishers in Austin so they could come together to meet other independent creators and celebrate their art.

On a gloomy Saturday afternoon, exhibitors traded Instagram handles, art, and love as they displayed their work over a soundtrack of Velvet Underground and Radiohead gently playing in the background.

Beth Comics was stationed across the Vortex’s brown rubble courtyard from POMEgranate Magazine, two exhibitors who were a microcosm of the wide range of minority communities represented at the event.

On Press Fest Austin’s website, Beth Comics is self-described as “super queer, super witchy, super horny comics” and POMEgranate Magazine as a feminist publication for “thoughtful and sensitive weirdos.”

Simonelema said she realized this kind of diversity is central to zine culture after attending Denver Zine Fest last year.

“The Denver Zine Fest was mostly queer comics and zines,” she said. “Going to that zine fest showed me that zine culture is for everyone, any person, from people of color to queer, to transgender, to straight.”

Tolerance and inclusion are not so prominent in the larger print and news industry, however. Minorities make up just over 12 percent of the newspaper workforce, according to a 2015 study by The American Society of News Editors. The census also showed that Women made up just 35 percent of newspaper staff in 2015, a percentage that hasn’t increased past 35 since the turn of the century.

This issue originates from the difficulties minority journalists face after graduating college. Minorities are 17 percentage points less likely than non-minorities to find a full-time journalism position within their year of graduation, according to a 2013 study by the University of Georgia.

Associate journalism Professor George Sylvie studies media diversity at the University of Texas at Austin. He diagnosed this discrepancy as a multifaceted issue but stressed embedded media racism, a lack of opportunities, and the meager entry-level salary of journalists as its main symptoms.

“People of color often don’t want to be journalists because journalist’s don’t get paid nearly as much as public school teachers or doctors,” he said. “Also, in this country, we still have substantial amounts of racism in various walks of life and that extends to media hiring.”

After being turned away by the industry, minorities have historically responded by building their own publications autonomously, Sylvie said.

“Minority press has gone back as far as the late 1800’s,” he said. “Freedom’s Journal and publications of that kind sprang up to give people of color a voice so they could cover issues that they were actually interested in.”

This history reflects the power and importance of independent publications such as zines in any media landscape. They play an important role in developing young writers’ voices so they can inform their community about important issues otherwise lost in the homogenous shuffle of mainstream media.

But how wide an audience can these independent publications really reach? Professor Sylvie questioned how much space if any, zines take up within a regular person’s daily news consumption routine.

“That’s part of the problem of zines and independent publications,” he said when asked about the reach of zines. “News is still dominated by mainstream publications because there’s still that notion for what news is that hasn’t changed,” he said.

While this highlights the small informing power of independent publications, Sylvie went on to discuss the important role zines still play in diversifying the news cycle.

“They are the ones mainly involved in civil rights areas of news,” he said. “They’re going to be the one that covers police brutality or they’re going to cover whether the poor neighborhood has good streets.”

This optimism for the importance of independent publications was shared by many on hand at Press Fest Austin who felt they play an important role in the media landscape.

“I like to think of zines as a platform for un-capitalized voices to reach wider audiences,” Jess Hogan, owner of Neither Nor Zine Distro, said behind her table at the event. “Instead of just staying in your journal, by self-publishing these people get noticed who would otherwise be left behind by history.”

With the potential demise of net neutrality looming, internet regulation is imminent. Although it’s tough to call this a win for media, it is possible that it could spark an even greater resurgence of zines and magazines. They could become one of the only platforms for independent publishers to write and share, and if that’s the case, those like the creators on hand at Press Fest Austin will transition from media outcast to media pioneers.

BROCKHAMPTON is Pioneering a Shift in Internet Behavior


BROCKHAMPTON is changing the way young people use the internet.

The rap-group/boyband/collective, met online, and use the digital realm as a forum for honest self-expression and connection. This type of behavior is difficult in today’s hyper-social era where users curate their online personas to maintain omni-positive perceptions.

But that kind of utopian life is unattainable, and BROCKHAMPTON wants to show people that that’s okay.

“Accepted. It’s OK to be insecure,” rapper Ameer Vann said in an interview with DAZED when asked what he wants people to feel when they listen to BROCKHAMPTON. “It’s OK to have vulnerabilities and to learn from your mistakes, and just keep growing.”

BROCKHAMPTON’s core members met on Kanye2The, the Reddit page for Kanye West fans. Since then, they’ve used their online community to find solace in their struggles. Kevin Abstract, the group’s brainchild, openly expresses his sexuality on tracks and videos. Rapper, Dom Mclennon, wrote an open letter about his struggles with self-harm, and shared it online along with a link to an anonymous chat room for self-harm victims.

Burdened by insecurity, they turned to the web to find people to connect with. There, they formed a community that facilitates each other’s passions and supports their vulnerabilities. This manifests into music that drips with blunt self-expression and honesty.

This display is important because the internet is often a place where differences are exacerbated more than they’re accepted. With so many lives to measure up with and compare to, we’re pressured to adopt curated personas when our individuality fails to fit in. Self has been annihilated by like-fueled empowerment.

With their success using the internet as a platform for vulnerability, BROCKHAMPTON has shifted youth culture. They’ve become a living example that having an online presence shouldn’t automatically compromise the authenticity of your expression there.

The impact BROCKHAMPTON is having on fans was evident at their sold-out “Jennifer’s Tour” show in Austin this month.  Hundreds of fans, all young, and of every creed and color, lined up hours before the show to celebrate their individuality with those who are helping them find it, their favorite American boy-band.

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“Anyone with a computer can be huge,” a 15-year-old fan named Mason (pictured above) said to me. “If they can do it, you can fucking do it.”

A few moments later I spoke with a group of friends who met on their University of Texas class page after one asked who was going to the show that night. Amongst them was Yesmine, who said,“it’s a good reminder to always express yourself, even if at first people are unsure how to react, you still have to stand tall and keep pushing.”

These fans were just a small microcosm of the movement BROCKHAMPTON has sparked. It’s one made up of those who now see the internet as a tool for self-exploration and a platform to connect with others who share their interests.

Like BROCKHAMPTON, these people are teaming together after meeting online. The 17-year-old musician, Jelani Aryeh, started his art collective, “Raised By The Internet,” after linking with 20 other creatives on BROCKHAMPTON’s Reddit fan forum. Aryeh’s solo debut EP, “Suburban Destinesia,” explores many themes that BROCKHAMPTON’s projects do, namely the struggle of overcoming self-doubt and social alienation.

Nearly everyday a new thread on BROCKHAMPTON’s Reddit is made by a passionate individual seeking like-minded people to create new things with.

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For fun, I decided to respond to one of the thread’s a few months back asking BROCKHAMPTON fan’s where they live. After saying Austin, I received this amusing response:

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While this answer was probably a joke, it speaks to the evolved perception many BROCKHAMPTON fans now have for the internet. It can be a place that facilitates passions through connections amongst those whose only resource is their internet access.

Tomorrow, if I wanted to, I could discuss plans to form a band with someone I met online as we both munch on Honey Butter Chicken Biscuits at Whataburger. What a world.

In the words of the great Merlyn Wood, “I NEED A HONEY BUTTA!”

The Destructive Legacy of Pablo Escobar

AUSTIN — Earlier this month, former DEA agents, Steve Murphy and Javier Pena spoke about the rise and fall of Pablo Escobar; one of the most influential drug kingpins of all time.

Today, thanks in large part to Murphy and Pena, Pablo Escobar and the Medellin Cartel he pioneered are dead, but their legacy remains alive and impactful.

“Death and Destruction. That is the legacy of Pablo Escobar,” Murphy said to a packed Hogg Auditorium at the University of Texas.

“Pablo Escobar was the inventor of Narco terrorism. In his lifetime he killed between 10,000 to 15,000 innocent people,” Pena said.

Murphy and Pena are portrayed in leading roles on Narcos, the Netflix hit series about the rise of cocaine trade in Columbia.

U.T. students, including Dreia Carrillo, an Astronomy Ph.D. student, were ecstatic to see the DEA agents in real life after watching them on TV. “I was the first person in line. I couldn’t believe I would have the chance to see and hear my favorite DEA agents in-person,” Carrillo said.

Seeing the real Murphy and Pena shed a new light on Narcos and Pablo Escobar for many in the audience including Carrillo. “I left the show with a different perspective on Escobar. The talk helped me understand the human toll of his operation, beyond just those who were killed,” she said.

Because the narrative in Narcos is exaggerated for T.V., it may inadvertently glorify the luxuries of Escobar’s lifestyle while failing to convey the humane consequences of his destruction.

“About a third of the show is actually true. The 2nd third, well those events happened but not quite the way it’s depicted in the show. Then that last third, that’s just straight up Hollywood make-believe,” Murphy said.

Murphy and Pena told multiple stories about meeting people who have been impacted by Escobar while giving speeches on the road.

In 1989, Escobar and the Medellin cartel orchestrated the bombing of a Colombian domestic plane in route to Cali, Columbia, in hopes of killing presidential candidate César Gaviria.

It turned out that Gaviria wasn’t aboard, but many innocent Colombians were, including the Uncle of a woman Murphy and Pena met while speaking in Germany this year.

“After the show, a young lady came to us and said her uncle had been on that plane…There’s always a human side to the story,” Pena said.

In Norway, they met the nephew of Columbian Minister of Justice, Rodrigo Lara, who was killed for threatening to extradite Escobar. “He told us about how Pablo Escobar wanted all of his family killed. 20 members had to leave Columbia for Norway," Pena said.

Narcos just aired its 3rd season and there are several movies due to come out this year about the Columbian drug scene. Although the entertainment world continues to embrace it,

many remain burdened by the legacy of Pablo Escobar and the culture of drug trafficking he helped create.