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LIVE MUSIC - ALEX DUPREE + LONGRIVER

  • Lockhart Arts & Craft 113 North Main Street Lockhart, TX, 78644 United States (map)

Alex Dupree: The Texas Doesn't Care Tour Kickoff

$10 Adv / $12 DOS - Advanced tickets care be purchased HERE
Doors at 7 / Show at 8

All Ages

Alex Dupree is a published poet and songwriter. He got his musical start in Austin, Texas before moving to California to study poetry at UC Irvine. During this time, songwriting was never far from his mind, and he continued to write and perform with multiple Los Angeles country bands. He has since returned to Texas, where he is again focused on his own music.

Despite a deep love for country music, Dupree’s songs never quite settle into that category, absorbing additional influences from the likes of Laurie Anderson, Arthur Russell, Bjork, and John Cale.

His 2022 album, Thieves, was produced by Michael Krassner (Califone, Simon Joyner, Boxhead Ensemble) and features Max Knouse, Aaron Stern, Stephen Hodges (Tom Waits, Mavis Staples), Buck Meek (Big Thief), as well as longtime collaborators Aisha Burns and Matt Matherne.

This fall, Dupree is undertaking an extensive tour of Texas in anticipation of the release of his album You Winsome, You Lonesome. A “Texas Edition” of the vinyl will be available on September 6th—exclusively via Bandcamp and in-person at shows—with a worldwide release set for November 8th.

This tour takes its name from the first single off of You Winsome, You Lonesome: “Texas Doesn’t Care.” Of the song, Dupree says, “I wrote it for my sister, but I ended up living the story myself. It's a song about coming home and the perverse comfort of knowing that, no matter what has happened, Texas will always welcome you back. Because Texas doesn’t care.”

You Winsome, You Lonesome is available for pre-order at TexasDoesntCare.com

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After circulating tapes during a few years of international touring and cultivating his following in Austin, David Longoria has recorded his debut studio album as Longriver: Of Seasons, a folk-animated meditation on time, death, and whispers of transcendence. Before Longriver, Longoria played with acts diverse as . . . And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead and Bill Baird, as well as producing records such as The Blue Dirt of Paradise. But his main operation was fronting his own multi-piece rock set, The Black, whose record Sun in the Day Moon at Night got “pretty damn close to the mythical ‘cosmic American music’ that GP was trying to pin down,” according to My Old Kentucky Blog. This record was indeed a production from the vibrant center of life and activity, and it earned Longoria a national audience. The work of Longriver, however, is quieter and operates in more intimate spaces and moments. Such work could be called a breather when it comes to speed, a temporary release from our culture of acceleration. Longriver’s poetic approach to music invites listeners to let their suffering be witnessed and touched.

Of Seasons is led by Longriver’s lyrical, Fahey-styled guitar picking, accompanied by upright bass and ambient organ, piano and cello. The first track places us on a boat and sets off on the odyssey of the record. “When the ark was building Noah, and I was sitting nowhere” is the refrain of the song, and Of Seasons is full of such mythic, existential lines that make you grateful the album includes liner notes. The next song, “Wasting Time,” is direct and demanding: “I open the book of wasting time, I point and click on wasting time, wherever I look I’m wasting time,” sung with a power that encourages listeners to see our insecurities honestly and collectively. If the lyrics touch anxieties and fears, the rhythmic strength of Longriver’s fingerstyle playing–informed by Skip James, Charlie Patton, and Townes Van Zandt–keep the record moving, deftly afloat. Longriver channels the more mystical resonances of pre-war blues in “The Way That It Is,” a song that deals with illness, aging, and delusion in a surprisingly supportive tone. This song, and less directly the album as a whole, addresses inevitability of pain, and how ineptly our culture deals with that pain, whether through religion, the cult of work, material wealth, or romantic love. “Kuku Ree,” the closing track, offers no definitive answers: “You do the best with what you know, and slowly you go to the truth,” through the dream-like nature of everyday life and death.

Of Seasons releases September 6th, 2019 from Hullabaloo records. It was recorded at King Electric Recording Co. in Austin, Texas, produced by Michael Pierce and mastered by JJ Golden at Golden Mastering. Musicians on the album include: Thor Harris (Swans, Bill Callahan, Shearwater), Sarah La Puerta (Tele Novella, Thor and Friends), Lindsey Verrill (Little Mazarn), Evan Joyce (Warm Sugar), Colin Gilmore, and Alan Schaefer.

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Bookish Book Club! (WHEN THE MOON HATCHED)

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September 7

FREE WORKSHOP - COLLAGES WITH CINDY