SXSW Day 4: Mittens, Montreal, metal and mash-ups

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My assignments for SPIN.com on the final day of SXSW took me all over the map – not just the Austin street map, but the stylistic map. With temperatures around 40 and an uppity north wind chafing anything that wasn’t covered, it was a tough day for outdoor shows. Yes, I was the guy wearing the promo beer cozies as gloves:

sxsw-beercoziesThe Boxer Rebellion breathed fresh life into Brit-rock.
Karen Elson, the wife of the White Stripes’ Jack White, played a chilly outdoors set.
P.K. 14 and Carsick Cars roared at a showcase for bands visiting from China.
Black Tusk [pictured above] introduced me to “swamp metal,” in a very loud way.
‣ And the Hood Internet forged dance music from disparate sources, mashing up hip-hop and electro with indie rock.

Click here to check out my contributions to the Best & Worst of Day 4.

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Just after breakfast (that’s noon SXSW time), Montreal quartet the Besnard Lakes clambered onstage at the Galaxy Room Backyard, a tent off 6th Street that offered at least some refuge from the wind. “Thanks for coming out on a very Canadian feeling Saturday afternoon,” frontman Jace Lasek said.

sxsw-thebesnardlakesThe foursome rewarded the hardy crowd with 30 minutes of their massive soundscapes, the kind of dramatic and soaring music that, their avid following insists, puts them among the all-time heavyweights of the shoegaze genre. No argument here – with Lasek and his wife Olga Goreas trading off vocals, the music transported the modest crowd to a place other than a drab tent erected on a gravel lot. The band’s third album, “The Besnard Lakes Are the Roaring Night,” should roar into your record collection.