Tag Archives: southwest

Mumford & Sons Announce Summer Tour Dates

The band’s June jaunt will follow their vintage rail car tour of the U.S. kicking off in April. By James Montgomery Mumford & Sons Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Mumford & Sons are perhaps the most unconventional British act to break through in the States in quite some time, so it made sense when they announced an equally unconventional Railroad Revival Tour last month. That jaunt will see them, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, and Old Crow Medicine Show travel from show to show (and slowly through the Southwest) using only vintage trains … a nod to the barnstorming days of old. And, in an age of mobile-phone-sponsored mega-tours, it is a rather unique idea, to say the very least. Of course, their fans responded to the news quickly, and since most of the Railroad Revival dates are already sold out, Mumford have announced another run of U.S. shows, though these are of the more traditional variety (i.e., they will not be traveling via the power of the locomotive). Their new tour kicks off June 3 in Kansas City, Missouri, and runs until June 16, when they’ll conclude a two-night stand at the Fillmore Auditorium in Denver. Support for the trek will come from a number of bands, including Matthew & the Atlas, Nathaniel Rateliff, Cake and the Low Anthem. Tickets for all dates go on sale Friday, April 8, through Mumford’s official site . Mumford’s Railroad Revival Tour gets under way April 21 in Oakland, California, and wraps on April 27 in New Orleans. On April 13, the band will be in New York to film an episode of VH1’s “Unplugged,” and they’ll play the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 16, along with the likes of Kanye West, the Kings of Leon and the Arcade Fire. Mumford & Sons summer tour dates, according to the band’s website:

Hanson Teaming With SXSW For Japan Benefit Livestream

Event will stream live from South By Southwest On Saturday. By James Montgomery Photo: VH1 Hanson have announced plans for a 12-hour benefit livestream set for Saturday (March 19) at South By Southwest, to aid victims of the massive earthquake and subsequent tsunami in Japan. The event, which will stream live at VH1 the event came together at the last minute, with the band and the festival putting a call out to all the acts still in Austin for SXSW. “We’re really excited,” Isaac Hanson said, “We’ve got a lot of bands that are going to be a part of this event, bands that are recording stuff, bands that are going to be live …” “It’s a massive, massive issue that’s really crippling a whole nation and a lot of people just like you and me,” Taylor Hanson added. The SXSW 4 Japan livestream begins at 12 pm CT at

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Hanson Teaming With SXSW For Japan Benefit Livestream

SXSW Turns 25, With Help From Kanye West, Foo Fighters And More

A look at the most imperfectly perfect musical festival in history, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl performs at SXSW on Tuesday Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images The South by Southwest Music Festival turns 25 this year, and much like any other 25-year-old, it acts as if the world revolves around its every move. That’s just part of its appeal. And that’s important to note, because while you can argue the relative merit of a fest like SXSW — especially in an era where “getting discovered” no longer entails bands slogging it out in Texas bars while industry execs get sloshed on Shiner Bock — you really can’t debate its charms, of which “cloying self-importance” is just one. Simply put, SXSW is unlike anything else: a rite of passage for any music lover, on par with Glastonbury or Bonnaroo or selling promo CDs on Half.com, a whirlwind week (give or take) of bands and BBQ and brutal hangovers, a self-contained world of promoters and pamphlets, tattoos and tacos, and, perhaps most important of all, an absolute blast. In other words, it’s the kind of thing you really need to experience at least once in your life. And sure, there’s no shortage of complaints to be made about SXSW. The lines are too long, the badges are too expensive, the parties too innumerable, the bands too big. But to waste your time nitpicking the fest’s foibles (and believe me, I nitpick a lot) is missing the point: South By Southwest isn’t perfect, and it’s never going to be. It just likes to think it is. Which is why folks come back year after year. There’s a comforting sameness to the South By experience, after all. There will always be a band you see play 17 times (the first year I was here, it was the Go! Team; this year it appears to be Yuck), and a band playing a poorly attended afternoon showcase that you feel sorry for, and a band with a stupid name (Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr., everybody!). You will most definitely eat at that crappy Mexican place across from Stubb’s, only because the line outside Stubb’s is too long. You will probably throw up at least once, either from booze or sunstroke or both. Sure, the can’t-miss acts (Odd Future) and the headliners (Kanye West, the Foo Fighters, Bright Eyes, the Strokes, etc.) may change, and the parties may get further and further out of town, but at its very core, SXSW remains blissfully faithful to its imperfect roots. And most people wouldn’t have it any other way. To wit, I complain about everything … all the time. And yet, on a Tuesday night, I got to see the Foos play their new album in its entirety, watch a bunch of guys jam out on a street corner for no apparent reason and eat a hot dog. It is 1:25 in the morning and, as I sit in my hotel room writing this, there is still a metal band playing loudly, defiantly into the night. You would think I’d find something wrong with all of that, only, I don’t. Because it’s a sequence of events that can only happen at South by Southwest. It wasn’t perfect, but it was close. Over the years, detractors have accused SXSW of being pointless (probably not true), corporate (veering slightly towards truthfulness) and inspiring too many tweets (100 percent true). They like to hearken back to the halcyon days when Kanye didn’t perform at power factories and Perez didn’t throw parties, and decree that they will never again attend the fest because “things have changed.” And, sure, they have, at least on the surface. But deep down, South by Southwest’s spirit remains unchanged. It still takes itself way too seriously. It is still a total clusterfrick. And it is still a music fan’s ultimate paradise. So, if you don’t mind putting up with imperfection, can operate on little-to-no sleep, and can exist solely on smoked meats, SXSW is your Valhalla. Deep down, it’s mine too, no matter how many times I say I’m never coming back. Who knows? Maybe I’ll see you here in 2012. Bring sunscreen. Related Artists Kanye West Foo Fighters

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SXSW Turns 25, With Help From Kanye West, Foo Fighters And More

REVIEW: Curse of the Werewolf Haunts Red Riding Hood — Or Is It Just ‘The Curse’?

An alternate title for Red Riding Hood might have been “Catherine Hardwicke’s Revenge”: This might have been the director’s chance to restake her claim on the territory of steamy teen fairytales, after New Moon, the sequel to Hardwicke’s enormously successful (and, for my money, effective) Twilight , was removed from her plate and given to Chris Weitz. Red Riding Hood certainly reads like a faux Twilight, only this time a werewolf, not a vampire, is the stand-in for the terrifying unknowability of sex. There’s no reason that little tweak shouldn’t work. One set of fangs is as good as another, right?

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REVIEW: Curse of the Werewolf Haunts Red Riding Hood — Or Is It Just ‘The Curse’?

VIDEO: Latest Clip From Win Win Provides Sheen-Free Winning

Sundance lit up at Win Win , an indie comedy about a failing wrestling coach (Paul Giamatti) who works out shady dealings to collect on an old man’s health-care wages. In this new clip from Moviefone , we pick up on the slight cynicism of Giamatti’s character Mike Flaherty — and the fact that he may exhibit less valor than, say, John Adams.

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VIDEO: Latest Clip From Win Win Provides Sheen-Free Winning

Movies, Breakfast Tacos, and Karaoke: Follow Movieline at SXSW!

Austin is a place that likes to think of itself as strange — as in the city’s motto, “Keep Austin Weird.” But it really seems more nerdy than weird when the massive film-music-tech bonanza that is South by Southwest kicks off every year, drawing thousands of geeks of all stripes to congregate. And for the next week or so, Movieline will be among the crowds of geek illuminati reporting on film goings-on from the ground. Join us, with the magic of technology!

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Movies, Breakfast Tacos, and Karaoke: Follow Movieline at SXSW!

Kevin Smith weight loss before and after

Kevin Smith, 40, recalled being asked to get off a Southwest plane on Feb. 13, 2010 – but not because of his size. He said he fit in his seat, with the seatbelt buckled and armrests down. “They pulled me off the plane even though I was fitting in it for a reason they still to this day never made clear,” he told Behar. Kevin Smith has lost 65 lbs., but by his own admission, he#39;ll “never be thin.” The filmmaker made the claim during an interview on “The Joy Behar Show,” where he explained ho

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Kevin Smith weight loss before and after

Mud-Eating Miracle Fish Holds Together Ecosystem in Southwest Africa

Photo via Wikipedia The coastal waters off southwest Africa is going through troubling times, becoming effectively a dead zone with fish populations collapsing, jellyfish populations booming, and oxygen levels dropping. But one tiny fish, the bearded goby, seems to be perfectly adapted to these otherwise dead-end conditions, and is helping hold together and entire ecosystem by acting as an integral link in the food chain. As anchovies and sardine populations are wiped o… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Mud-Eating Miracle Fish Holds Together Ecosystem in Southwest Africa

Val Kilmer Apologizes to New Mexico

After calling Santa Fe residents drunks and nicknaming his county “the homicide capital of the Southwest,” Val Kilmer has finally made nice with San Miguel County. Flanked by a six-person security detail, the Tombstone actor apologized to county commissioners and explained, “I have the same concerns as anyone else when you hear negative things about a place you love.” Kilmer hopes to obtain a permit to turn his Pecos River Ranch house into a bed and breakfast. Now if only he would apologize to Vietnam veterans for calling them “borderline criminals.” [ AP ]

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Val Kilmer Apologizes to New Mexico

Cassi Colvin Dallas Supermodel photos

Ever since Cassi Colvin was a child in Texas, Cassi Colvin wanted to be a model. Her understanding dad didn’t impede her progress and helped her achieve her goal at a tender age of 13. She has worked for big names in the business like Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom, and JCPenney and has appeared in several magazines including Marie Claire, Allure, and Esquire. Cassi Colvin is a 21 yr old model from Dallas who has built quite a career in that market, and the Southwest. She began modeling at age 12 wit

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Cassi Colvin Dallas Supermodel photos