About Lolaspalooza VI - Wreck Room Wrevival
Birthed in 2005, RTB2 has released two EPs, two full-length LPs, a live album, an exclusive 8-track tape, and they have toured Texas and the Midwest. Their current release, 2, was produced by Stuart Sikes (Cat Power, Loretta Lynn, The White Stripes) and is available on vinyl/CD/digital download.
Rather, Sally Majestic's music is a melodic and approachable blend of alternative pop/rock, punk, and reggae. Formed in 2001, Sally Majestic is hardly the only alterna-rock combo that has been inspired by Jamaican sounds. The music of Sally Majestic is at once both challenging and engaging, and can be described as The Police meets Weezer. And while The Police and Weezer have a more polished sound, Sally Majestic tends to favor a rawer, more rugged approach.
The early history of experimental duo PINKISH BLACK is as mournful and tumultuous as the band's music. The Fort Worth, TX band originally formed in 2005 as a threepiece doom/jazz project known as The Great Tyrant, but The Great Tyrant never got the chance to release any music – in February 2010, midway through a battle with technical problems, the band's bassist Tommy Atkins tragically committed suicide, bringing the album's recording and production processes to a halt.
After Atkins's passing, remaining members Jon Teague (drums/synths) and Daron Beck (vocals/synths/ keyboards) set out to redefine current conceptions of heavy music with an unorthodox and forward-thinking synth- driven approach, furthering the work they had started with The Great Tyrant. The band, now a duo, changed their name to PINKISH BLACK in 2010, and released their self-titled debut that same year on Handmade Birds. Pinkish Black was critically acclaimed, as was the band's 2013 follow-up on Century Media, Razed to the Ground. In its review of the former, Pitchfork called PINKISH BLACK "a band that exudes promise," while Stereogum called the latter album "an absolute stunner."
Since Razed to The Ground, PINKISH BLACK have solidified both their confidence and their direction – they signed to Relapse in December 2014, and have steadily refined their songwriting and style over the course of the last two years. Though usually associated most closely with the metal scene, PINKISH BLACK have demonstrated an unflinching capacity to dip their toes in all sorts of disparate musical markets, from doom metal and industrial to post-punk and no-wave.
October 2015 will see the release of PINKISH BLACK's newest opus, Bottom of the Morning,a 7-track dark music journey that runs the full gamut of influences PINKISH BLACK have touched on in the past as well as many new experimentations added to their palette. From the gothic, horror-movie-esque organ intro of opener "Brown Rainbow" to the wistful, fuzzed-out conclusion of final track "The Master Is Away," Bottom of the Morning is simultaneously dark and catchy, dissonant and melodic, smothering audiences with heavy layers of distorted, repressive gloom that still end up as earworms despite their pessimism. It's as if Scott Walker and John Carpenter were having a bad acid trip with the Melvins, or if someone dipped PINKISH BLACK's ambling, psyched-out space-rock influences in a vat of molten iron. Recorded at Echo Lab Studios in Argyle, TX by Matthew Barnhart and mastered by James Plotkin (Cave In, Electric Wizard), Bottom of the Morning stands to see PINKISH BLACK affirm themselves as one of the most interesting and far-thinking experimental duos currently active.
Gosh, is Lee Allen still doing Impulse of Will? His improv/cover band featuring a rotating cast of local heavies but anchored by him, drummer Lucas White, bassist John Shook Jr., and guitarist Ron Geida started out at The Wreck Room –– we're talking circa 2004-05. It's not like the guys have to rehearse or anything. They just get up and jam. Still, I'm happy they're still at it. Other than the random Stoogeaphilia reunion gig, there's no other place in town other than an IOW show where you'll hear the likes of "Maggot Brain."
- FW Weekly
Videos
Comments
Explore Nearby
-
1
National Cowgirl Museum
Attractions -
2
Rafain Brazilian Steakhouse - Fort Worth
Restaurants -
3
Pop's Safari Cigars & Fine Wines
Restaurants -
4
Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Attractions -
5
Residence Inn by Marriott Fort Worth Cultural District
Hotels
-
1
National Cowgirl Museum
1720 Gendy St -
2
Amon Carter Museum of American Art
3501 Camp Bowie Blvd -
3
Kimbell Art Museum
3333 Camp Bowie Blvd -
4
Omni Theater, an IMAX Dome - Ft Worth Museum of Science & History
1600 Gendy Street -
5
Fort Worth Botanic Garden
3220 Botanic Garden Blvd.
-
1
Rafain Brazilian Steakhouse - Fort Worth
2932 Crockett St -
2
Pop's Safari Cigars & Fine Wines
2929 2929 Morton St -
3
Saint Emilion
3617 W 7th St -
4
Jazz Cafe
2504 Montgomery St -
5
Fred's Texas Cafe
915 Currie St -
6
Gloria's Restaurant
2600 W Seventh St #175
-
1
Residence Inn by Marriott Fort Worth Cultural District
2500 Museum Way
© 2025 Dallas.com: A City Guide by Boulevards. All Rights Reserved. Advertise with us | Contact us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Site Map