Levitation Austin – Day 3: No festival? No problem! Thanks, MR Fest!

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What do you do when you fly from Indiana for Levitation Austin and it gets cancelled due to bad weather?  You go to another music festival in San Marcos not even thirty miles away.

The Levitation coordinators and Travis County Emergency Services were putting out photos of the damaged festival site at Carson Creek Ranch by the time Saturday morning rolled around.

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You can’t levitate when you’re stuck in mud.

That’s just one photo.  Others showed vendor tents wrapped around trees.  You can see collapsed tents in the background.  The camping area was underwater.  There would’ve been many injuries and perhaps worse if campers had been there during the storm.

We got a nice breakfast, my wife got a manicure and pedicure, and we were off to San Marcos for MR Fest.  My Radio Fest (AKA MR Fest) is put on each year by Texas State University radio – KTSW.  It’s an indie rock festival taking place over one day and two nights in eight different venues in downtown San Marcos.  The best part?  All the shows are free.  They were actively Tweeting for people devastated by the loss of Levitation to come down for it.  I was sold once I learned Night Beats were playing Saturday night for free.

We got into town around 2:00pm and happened to park next door to Superfly’s – a wrecka stow that was also one of the eight venues.  We walked in and saw a three-piece rock band called Sloe Your Roll who were putting on a good set of blues jam-rock.

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Sloe Your Roll

We then wandered down to a nice underground bar called Kiva and saw a Hum-like three-piece called Sidechick.  “They could play Levitation,” my wife said.  She’s right.  They have a solid sound that mixes shoegaze with hard rock.

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Sidechick

Strange Lot played right after them.  They were a mix of psych and stoner rock and so good I picked up their two CD’s after their set.

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Strange Lot

We got a snack and then came back to see a partial set from Jumping Moons, who were a heavy two-piece that played to the back wall.

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Jumping Moons

We then headed across the street to Stonewall – a local gay bar that was hosting four different bands that night.  The first we saw was The Real Hands, who played a set of mellow rock and a lot of songs about relationships.  Another fun part about the Stonewall shows was that KTSW was giving away hundreds of CD’s from their archives.  I snagged a copy of Bob Mould‘s Life and Times.

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The Real Hands

Up next were Dayluta Means Kindness, who were the loudest band we’d seen so far.  They played a great set of instrumental heavy shoegaze / drone rock.  I need to find their material.

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Dayluta Means Kindness

We went to dinner at a local brew pub and realized the place was packed due to the NBA playoff game between the San Antonio Spurs and the Oklahoma City Thunder starting about the time our food arrived.  The pub was full of Spurs fans (as San Antonio is about 40 miles from San Marcos), so we joined in on the fun for the first quarter and then left to see the last half of the set by Mr. Lewis and the Funeral 5 (even though there are only four of them) – who play blues rock with a gothic twinge.

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Mr. Lewis and the Funeral 5

We walked across the town square to The Marc – a nice concert hall venue – to see Golden Graves open for The Night Beats.  Golden Graves played to a welcoming crowd who liked their alt-rock style.  You could tell they were having a good time, and that energy transferred to the crowd.

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Golden Graves

The Night Beats came out and put down another killer set.  They had some issues with the Marc sound crew not getting stuff right in their monitors, but they soldiered through the difficulties and wowed the crowd by the end.  It was their first time playing in San Marcos and they won many fans that night.  They are gunslingers on stage, and the crowd knew it.  “My face is melting!” yelled one college lad.

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The Night Beats

That was about the time I realized my wife and I were among the oldest people in the crowd.  Truth to tell, I’ll still be going to shows like this thirty years from now.

We left tired but happy.  It was a fun day that took us somewhere unexpected.  Plus, we got to see the Night Beats twice in three nights – and once for free.  I’d also scored tickets to a Sunday Levitation makeup show featuring Golden Dawn Arkestra – who was high on my list for the festival.  Sunday was looking good.

Next: Double sitar and tabla, killer BBQ, electric shocks, the Karate Kid, and Ra worship.

Keep your mind open.

Published by

Nik Havert

I've been a music fan since my parents gave me a record player for Christmas when I was still in grade school. The first record I remember owning was "Sesame Street Disco." I've been a professional writer since 2004, but writing long before that. My first published work was in a middle school literary magazine and was a story about a zoo in which the animals could talk.

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