AINJEL EMME, THE RED RIVER, AND SXSW PLANS
Posted in Austin music on 12/30/2010 02:14 am by Duggan FlanakinFirst off, I want to thank Kevin Harney and the entire staff at the Iguana Grill in Lakeway for agreeing to host the FLANFIRE AMERICA SXSW DAY PARTY AT THE IGUANA GRILL on Saturday, March 19th – all day long and into the night. We will be announcing the lineup soon, but for starters, Flanfire has secured a commitment from a band called The Red River, whose CD “Little Songs about the Big Picture” was named one of National Public Radio’s top ten recordings of the year. And if she is not in L.A. working, but in Austin for SXSW, we may also have the incredible Ainjel Emme, who just blew away an enthusiastic audience at Momo’s Club.
AINJEL EMME – Everyone Is Beautiful
Ainjel, who has been in town for the holidays and played a dynamite show at Momo’s Club on Christmas night, will be formally releasing her brand-new (first in nearly eight years) recording, “Everyone Is Beautiful,” out on the coast in early January, but she was kind enough to bring a few copies for her Austin friends .. and I cannot stop listening. The divine Miss Emme plays guitars, keyboards, bass, organ, drums (and loops), and percussion and of course sings … but she was wise enough to add a few touches from some of her friends, including one vocal track from Austin’s Ray Prim.
My favorite cut has to be “Broken Legged Waltz,”an eerie, slow waltz in which Ainjel tells of going “inside to the point of infinite density,” comes to the point that “you can’t help but think that there is still something worth living for, then asks, “What in the world will you do now.” But I absolutely love the entire record from “The Down Song” through “Receiver.” And, okay, Ainjel is beautiful in soul, spirit and body … and very much loved by those who know her. At her Momo’s show, Sheboygan’s Chris (Rusty) Gebhard and Johnny Vogelsang shared guitar leads, Jeff Botta played drums and sang harmonies, and the incomparable Brad Houser was on bass – Suzanna Choffel sang harmonies on one song, and the powerful Kacy Crowley graciously offered up the title track from her recent CD, “Cave,” with Ainjel singing harmonies.
I remember seeing Ainjel at the Speakeasy years ago when they were having these Monday nights with female singer-songwriters … even then people spoke her name with reverence and love and friends knew she was hurting from even more than the tragic loss of a dear friend. Healing has come for Ainjel out in the warm California sun, yet she misses her hometown and reportedly is having a blast hanging out with her myriad of friends and family here – but no mo’ shows here till SXSW (and even that is still a “maybe”).
It’s not so much that Austin is fickle, but there have been so many people moving here of late to play music that anyone not regularly out there in the local clubs may be forgotten or never even known of. Those who know Ainjel and her music will want to know when and where she is playing (or just hanging out) in town, and those who do not should this time just trust Flanfire to know classy quality. The title cut actually describes what is on the disc as you listen – everyone IS beautiful ,and this song cycle reveals a lot about the struggles we all may have as we seek redemption and renewal in our lives. For her show’s finale (after a rousing version of Southern Man), Ainjel sat the band down and played a brand-new song of hers, “The Brutal Truth,” and you knew she has dealt with what none of us really wants to hear coming our way.
THE RED RIVER – Little Songs about the Big Picture
You ought to get what this music is all about from the balloons on the CD jacket. Songwriter Bill Roberts, who hails from Long Beach (CA), and this strange assemblage of musicians from various bands scattered all the way up to Portland (OR), swept into Austin a few weeks ago to play at show at the Scoot Inn. The band stopped by Romeo’s Italian Grill, where my pal Kullen Fuchs was holding forth with his band, The Saddle. Somehow he had agreed to provide at least a floor for some (surely not all?) of the band to sleep on the night before their show.
I started talking with a couple of the band members and somehow KNEW I could not miss that show. And I was dead on right. They started off singing in unison a cappella (there is a YouTube of the song somewhere in cyberspace) and from then on the audience had their rapt attention. Songs like “Morning Routine” are, well, about just daily life – little songs (as Mo McMorrow calls her own beautiful poems) that do tell us a lot about what really matters in our lives (if we are paying attention, as my pal Jeff Lazaroff would say). Another song, “Apple Valley,” begins with “We drove to your parents’ house in the desert, You gave us a tour, your history. This is where I had my first kiss, here is the corner where my dad had his accident ….” Yeah, sort of like journaling set to music – but the spirit of the songs is so vibrant that you get it – and you FEEL better just being in the room with this band.
The Red River will be playing at ND 501 (that’s 5th and Brushy, just east of IH-35, and one of the best music venues in Austin that nobody knows about) on January 6th. GO and get your heart washed, and then be looking forward to their many appearances during SXSW, notably at the Flanfire America SXSW Day Party at the Iguana Grill. We will have more about music I have heard during 2010 – and about the music you will hear at the aforesaid Day Party – in coming reports. And, OBTW, we MAY just be having some artists displaying their works (for sale, of course) during the big event at the Iguana.










