edited by Raoul Hernandez

ANTONE’S 20TH ANNIVERSARY WEEKEND II

Antone’s, Friday 27- Sunday 29

If it wasn’t enough that Kim Wilson and Doug Sahm are both doing two nights at
Antone’s (Friday and Saturday) with folks like The West Side Horns, Derek
O’Brien and Rocky Morales, you’ve also got openers like Houston’s Roy Head
(Friday) and Popa Chubby (Saturday), as well as Stray
Cat-turned-rockabilly-blues leader Lee Rocker holding down the stage on Sunday.
And still I haven’t mentioned Ike Turner. Even if he had never teamed up with
Annie Mae Bullock and gone on to fame and stardom as the infamous half of Ike
& Tina Turner, the multi-talented guitarist had, by the mid-Fifties,
already earned the status of certified blues legend as a talent scout for Sun,
Chess, and Modern Records, session coordinator, musical arranger, radio deejay,
bandleader, and musician. Today, Turner is a true American original, and this
blues fan would not miss his presence at the club on Friday and Saturday for
the world. — Jay Trachtenberg

LORD HIGH FIXERS

Hole in the Wall, Friday 27

Enigmatic as this local band is, their punk blues are at the very foundation
of Austin’s “alternative” scene. Former Big Boys guitarist Tim Kerr and his
Poison 13 partner in crime, vocalist Mike Carroll, are the dark witnesses to a
blues perversion so sinister that it’ll be right at home in that corner
spiderweb at the Hole in the Wall. Paranoids and 1,4,5’s open.

COWBOY MOUTH, SEED

La Zona Rosa, Friday 27

Not a bad year for the boys in the Mouth: They shape-shifted with a new
bassist — ex-Bluerunner Rob Savoy — received over-

whelming critical praise on Hootie & the Blowfish’s West Coast tour, and
came home to ink a contract with MCA. Musically less puerile than Dash Rip Rock
and lyrically smarter than Better Than Ezra, this N.O. quartet is poised to
outshine them both with nuclear performances. — Margaret Moser

MIKE WATT,
GERALDINE FIBBERS

Liberty Lunch, Saturday 28

Kiss the ring of fIREHOSE/Minuteman bassist Mike Watt, for he is the
underworld Godfather of nearly every Foo-Fighting band out there making a
killing today — for a list of those paying their respects to the Don, check
out his first solo release Ballhog or Tugboat. Unfortunately, no one
knows who’s currently in his band, but we trust his choice to be as interesting
as Minneapolis’ Geraldine Fibbers.

SINCOLA, STARFISH, BLONDE REDHEAD

Electric Lounge, Saturday 28

A great triple bill, considering that Sincola have not let Rebecca Cannon’s
eyes bug out here in town in what seems like forever, and Starfish is getting
ready to go on tour through December. Meanwhile, NYC’s Blonde Redhead — last
seen on the Austin stop of Lollapalooza — lend their violent and distorted
guitar haze to the fracas.

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS PE�A

Chicago House, Sunday 29

Last call, curtain call… Ask not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for
thee, because with this final show Chicago House moves onto the Big
Street housing the Armadillo, Vulcan Gas Co., Raul`s, and the Cavity Club, etc.
The last show, appropriately, is one of Lourdes Perez’s magical Sunday
Afternoon Pe�as, and features Antonio Dionisio among a host of others.
Adieu

POI DOG PONDERING

Liberty Lunch, Monday 30

Last year we got two nights of Texpatriot Frank Orrall and Poi Dog. Both
nights folks walked out like they’d just been blasted by Smashing Pumpkins. Who
said you had to be the “A” word to rock? Not me. Not the eclecticos in Poi Dog.
Not opener and former Ponderer Abra Moore.

ALLMAN BROTHERS, GOV’T MULE/KING CRIMSON

Austin Music Hall, Tuesday 31/Wednesday 1

Like the Allman Brothers at the Music Hall on Halloween, King Crimson are
dinosaurs (see track three on their new Thrak), who evoke a time in
their jazz-rock fusion (again, like the Allmans) when musical improv ruled the
land like a giant carni-vorous lizard. Step back into another era and witness
how cro-mags like Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts, and Robert Fripp, Adrian
Belew, and Bill Bruford still walk among us loud and proud.

LOS JAZZ VATOS

Elephant Room, Thursday 2

Ernie Durawa’s name may not ring bells but it should crash cymbals —
he’s drummed for everyone from Delbert McClinton to the Grammy Award-winning
Texas Tornados, and recently played with Herb Ellis and Charlie Byrd. Durawa
now gives his Tex-Mex roots a brassy jazz sheen with the introduction of Los
Jazz Vatos, including Joel Guzman, Freddie Mendoza, Evan Arredondo, Joe Posada,
and Al Gomez. — Margaret Moser ALSO PLAYING

Friday: Gals Panic, Gomez, Electric Lounge

Saturday: Buick Mackane, Blind Willie’s Johnson, Hole in the Wall, 7 Seconds,
Emo’s

Sunday: Harry Connick, Jr., Austin Music Hall

Monday: Earthpig & Fire, Black Cat

Tuesday: Thunderfoot, Babes

Wednesday: Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Cactus Cafe

Thursday: 8 1/2 Souvenirs, Continental Club

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