NOTE: THIS SHOW IS SOLD OUT
Doors: 7:00 pm / Show: 8:00 pm
This event is 18 and over.
Newport Folk presents.
Die Hard Tour
***
âThe first album was me wanting to burn down my life, cut my hair off, and run screaming into the woods,â says Alejandro Rose-Garcia. âThis album is the trials and tribulations of becoming domesticated, letting people into your world and letting go of selfishnessâthe story of becoming a pair, losing that, and reconciling with the loss and gain of love.â
Rose-Garcia is professionally known as Shakey Graves, and with his new record, And the War Came, he extends the groundâemotionally and sonicallyâbroken by his 2011 self-released debut album, Roll the Bones, which brought him national acclaim and, three years later, still ranks near the top of Bandcampâs digital best-seller charts.
Roll the Bones established the powerful, mesmerizing Shakey Graves sound of Rose-Garcia accompanying himself on guitar and a handmade kick drum built out of an old suitcase. NPR Music named him one of 10 artists music fans âshouldâve known in 2012,â describing him as âastonishingâŠunclassifiably original. And frighteningly good.â Paste included him in a âBest of Whatâs Nextâ feature, praising his âgnarly composite of blues and folk,â while The New York Times observed that Shakey Graves âmakes the one-man band approach look effortless.â
But while this distinctive arrangement continued to earn him an ever-expanding fan base on the road, Rose-Garcia knew that he wanted the follow-up to achieve something different. âWith the first album, I didnât have any expectations except my own,â he says. âThis time, I was making something people were going to listen to out of the gate. I tried to maintain everything I enjoy about recording, the weird homemade aspect, but I was seeking a new, shining sound quality. The concepts for the songs are a little bigger. This is not the âMr, Folk, Hobo Mountainâ albumâitâs more of the Cyborg Shakey Graves. Itâs definitely the next step in the staircase.â
An experienced actor who had a recurring role on Friday Night Lights and appeared in several of Robert Rodriguez films, Rose-Garcia started making music as part of New York Cityâs âanti-folkâ scene. While knocking around the underground music community in Los Angeles, he saw a performance by one-man band Bob Log III that pointed his work in a new direction. Since returning to Austin, Rose-Garcia has become so closely associated with his hometown that for the last three years, Austin has celebrated âShakey Graves Dayâ by mayoral proclamation.
To record And the War Came, co-producer/collaborator Chris Boosahda brought all of his gear to Rose-Garciaâs house and converted the space into a big, open studio. Though the signature Shakey Graves set-up remained the starting point, other instrumentalists came in and multiple, wildly different arrangements of the songs were attempted for what was initially planned as a double album.
Most notably, Rose-Garcia wrote and sings three of the albumâs songs with Esme Patterson, a solo artist and member of the Denver-based band Paper Bird. âWe started out just having fun and writing, and then that turned into some of my favorite songs on the album,â he says. âWe actually wrote âDearly Departedâ on Halloween as a tongue-in-cheek, haunted house sex joke, and then we played it that night and people went bonkers. Esme and I write so similarly it kinda freaked us out, and I really learned the power of writing music with someone you get along with.â
Soon enough, Rose-Garcia found that the experience of making the record was being mirrored in the songs themselves. âI was letting go of that one-man everything,â he says. âI did need peopleâs help, and my control freak nature had to subside a bit. It meant learning collaboration, but also knowing when to stick to my gunsâall of that was the experience of this year, and the songs were some of the more genuine experiences; some of them even became sort of prophetic.â
âOnly Son,â a meditation on solitude (âI used to be an only son/My heart was like a strangerâ), became the opening track and âthesis statementâ for And the War Came. âHard Wiredâ is not, as it may first appear, about a relationship falling apart, but âabout having friends with problemsâwatching a friend struggling and not doing anything about it.â
The themes of these ten songs, explains Rose-Garcia, return over and over to the idea of the âother.â âItâs not about any single person, itâs about being that second, other person. Even the titleâI never thought about whether I was able to handle that aspect of things, of having these relationships. And the War Came is a little bit of, be careful what you wish for.â
Songs like âThe Perfect Partsâ and âFamily and Genus,â meanwhile, represent a very different sound for Shakey Graves. âThose have a lot more aggression, theyâre heavy and big,â he says. âIâm a little worried because it is a new step out, and people have gotten really precious about the stuff Iâve doneâwhich is a huge compliment, and a dream come trueâbut Iâm interested in what a Shakey Graves song is to people.â
Another crucial influence on the direction of And the War Came has been Rose-Garciaâs lengthy and far-flung touring schedule (which has recently included stops at the Winnipeg and Newport Folk Festivals, prior to a headlining run this fall). âIâm constantly flying places and moving at a fast rate,â he says. âImagining what it was like a year ago is almost incomprehensible to me now. I feel like Iâve almost seen too much this yearâbands, music, places. And if that doesnât affect you in certain ways, then youâre doing it wrong.â
While his remarkable success story continues to unfold, Alejandro Rose-Garcia sees And the War Came as a pivotal step in the evolution of Shakey Graves. âThis is a doorframe album, as weâre going into a new building,â he says. âItâs taste of everythingâwhat might come in future, which might include just guitar or the one-man band thing, but not pigeonholed to any one sound. I wanted to open some stuff up and get people ready for wherever itâs going.â