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Singers bash sponsors, stop traffic in
Austin
Aidin Vaziri, Chronicle Pop Music Critic
Saturday, March 17, 2007
• Affordable payroll deductions
(03-17) 04:00 PDT Austin , Texas -- The hardest
part about covering the South by Southwest music
festival is trying to be everywhere at once. With nearly
1,500 bands playing around the clock at more than 60 venues for a four-day stretch that extends into
Sunday, there's always a nagging sensation that the big breakthrough act is playing just across town while
you're stuck watching some third-rate busker emulate James Blunt (who, incidentally, was discovered here
just three years ago after playing in a small room to about two dozen people). Plus, there's always the
constant distraction of free beer and barbecue. So the best thing to do is keep moving -- and take lots of
notes.
The sightings
Primus front man Les Claypool and producer Jerry Harrison (formerly of the Talking Heads) shared our
flight into Austin. Flaming Lips ringleader Wayne Coyne stopped traffic near the Convention Center,
simply by standing on the corner (it may have had something to do with the fact that he was wearing a
three-piece suit in 80-plus-degree weather).
Around every corner, there were shaggy-haired men with thick accents and tight-fitting jeans dragging
around guitar cases. David Byrne and Brazilian singer Gilberto Gil gave lectures during the day, and Isaac
Hayes stopped by to mark the Stax Record Label's 50th anniversary. Filthy rapper Peaches was set to take
the decks at the Factory People party later in the night, while Los Angeles scenesters Steve Aoki, Perry
Farrell, a shirtless Cisco Adler and Internet gossip guru Perez Hilton (real name Mario Lavandeira) and
his bright pink hair (a sighting in itself) made the scene at the Playboy event across town. That's also
where we ran into San Francisco's DJ Omar. "It's been a congested experience," he said of his first day at
the festival. "But if you love music, then this is paradise."
The speech
By all accounts, Pete Townshend's keynote address at the Hilton ballroom Wednesday was a dud. Instead
of offering young bands advice on how to best propel furniture out of hotel room windows and pillage
small Third World countries, he used it as an opportunity to announce his idea for a new-music Web site
called the Method, which sounds nearly as boring and convoluted as the Who's most recent album,
"Endless Wire." Actually, nothing sounds that boring and convoluted, but you get the drift.
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