Apocalypticas Plays Metallica by Four Cellos in 1996 deserves as much blame as anything for strings cover albums from Queens of the Stone Age to Tool. Anybodys guess why Slaye-
SLAYER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Such was the sonic, testosterone boom emanating out of Headhunters at half past the witching hour on Wednesday evening. Had you been stumbling past the corner of Seventh and Red River two frigid nights ago, youd have thought human sacrifice had occurred inside the cigarette-choked tiki bar. Smoking ordinance, what smoking ordinance?
Happily, Ashley Toman hadnt been thrown to the Lions of Tsavo. Instead, the petite blond lamb, dwarfed by her acts two six-food harps crammed into the otherwise perfect wedge of a stage at Headhunters, had announced Harptallicas branching into compositional territory other than Hetfield/Ulrich/Burton/Hammett.
SLAYER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hah, hah, um, no, no not Slayer, she stuttered.
Maiden!!!!! Motorhead!!!! Cannibal Corpse!!!! bellowed the room full of hessians.
Were learning some Iron Maiden, Toman assured the still shouting throng. What about Black Sabbath? Do you like Black Sabbath?
We loved the ensuing Nativity in Black, Sabbaths N.I.B., dripping candle wax off the plucked steel strings of Harptallicas gothic pocket symphony.
Austins Jazzus Lizard whipped its tail prior to the headliners, while Powersquid blurted before that. The former act’s baritone saxophonist Tom Kimzey led his local quartet through almost an hours worth of low, reptilian instrumentals, less a jazz circle jerk of traded solos than a rockist group meshing, drummer Snoopy Melvin barking his approval from back behind his kit. Was that Puss, Nub, Boilermaker, Gladiator? Jesus Lizard guitarist Duane Denison wont be in town til Wednesday at Emos with the Legenadary Shack Shakers so he wasnt around to ID songs, but the Jazzus’ closer bore the unmistakable bass line of Lizard expressionism. Shots Skull of a German? Monkey Trick, nodded Kimzey during Harptallicas 75 minutes onstage.
Watching a couple gals wheel onstage two enormous piano slices under football player tarps equals something new on Red River. Where do you keep one of those things out on tour in the motel double bed next to you? Holy Lord of the Rings. Accompanied by music stands and sheet music reading lights, the giant wooden instruments commanded their own respect. The moment Toman and second harpist Mollie Marcuson, another professional symphony classicist and teacher, ran their fingertips across the 47 strings of their upright keyboards, the room went silent. Stairway to Heaven began. Holy Love Mongers!
This is Led Zeppelin, not Metallica, pointed out one brain surgeon at the bar.
Just warm-up it turns out. When the ladies tugged out the repeat in Master of Puppets dudes went ape shit. Fade to Black was met by drunks shushing each other, while Ride the Lightning closer The Call of Ktulu evoked nothing less than disbelief. Tomans solo bear-down on Kill Em Alls (Anesthesia) Pulling Teeth proved no less awe inspiring, head banging internalized by one big mother who silently mouthed all the non-instrumental Metallica lyrical fare with a smiling grimace in clear indication that volume bears no relation to sound interpretation. Welcome Home (Sanitarium) killed, but Whiplash sent Headhunters into frenzy. For Whom the Bell Tolls, The Unforgiven, and Master of Puppets Orion (My favorite song in the whole world, exclaimed Toman) did their parts to slow pulses down from stroke speeds.
Closer Enter Sandman met with boos Thats lame Metallica, shouted the Looney barman and yet the venue’s entire front room sang along happily, with gusto. On one hand, Toman might want to reconsider novelty that puts her in front of metallurgys underbelly night after night in dives across metaldom. On the other, you cant argue with Harptallicas string Battery.
This article appears in January 30 • 2009.



