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This week: Norah Jones (encore)

Singer/songwriter/pianist Norah Jones returns to the ACL stage, showcasing songs from her bestselling album Not Too Late. See details

Did you miss it?

Did you miss the Pearl Jam broadcast? Watch it online! See details

Watch ACL online!

Season 35 episodes are available NOW! Watch online. See details

What you got cooking?

Check out recipes by your favorite ACL artists! See details

It is official!

The Austin City Limits studio has been designated a rock and roll landmark by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. See details

This week: Norah Jones (encore) Did you miss it? Watch ACL online! What you got cooking? It is official!

Schedule

Find out when Austin City Limits airs on your local PBS station

National Broadcast Schedule (suggested airdates)


Saturday, March 20th
Norah Jones (encore)

Saturday, March 27th

Saturday, April 3rd
Wilco (encore)

Saturday, April 10th

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New Photos

Featured Videos

  • This week: Norah Jones
This week on ACL: Norah Jones

The multi-talented Norah Jones returns to the ACL stage with songs from her acclaimed CD Not Too Late..

Archive for August, 2008

Music Buzz

Friday, August 29th, 2008 by Emily_Blog

The Pretenders are putting out a country record called Break Up the Concrete, due October 7th. They are currently featured on the CMT website.

Paul Westerberg keeps putting out more music. His latest is called 3oclockreep and is available here for $3.99.

According to Paste Magazine, Fountains of Wayne member and movie soundtrack whiz Adam Schlesinger is currently working on songs for Stephen Colbert’s Christmas special, among other projects.

Have a great Labor Day Weekend!

Drawings from the Iron and Wine taping

Thursday, August 28th, 2008 by Emily_Blog

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Look what we found on flickr…

Austin Kleon, an Austin artist and writer, drew these during the Iron and Wine taping last night. Check out his own blog entry to read his account of the taping and to learn a little about his love of the pedal steel. He also located a couple other blogger reviews here and here.  It just so happens that Austin won tickets to see the taping right here on this very blog! So keep trying, and when you win, please draw awesome pictures and send them to us.

(more…)

Iron and Wine Review

Thursday, August 28th, 2008 by Emily_Blog

Last night’s taping was one that I had hoped would happen for a long time. The ACL studio provided the perfect venue for Iron and Wine’s music and the audience remained captivated from the first strains of opener “Each Coming Night” throughout the 90-minute set. It was a magical night;  everyone and everything seemed to come together perfectly and the result was beyond gorgeous. While Sam’s lovely songs and soothing voice provided the foundation, I particularly noticed how Sara’s backing vocals, the marimba, and the pedal steel lifted the songs to their full beauty.

Don’t miss this one when it airs on November 15.

Here’s another review of last night’s taping by Joe Gross from the Austin360 Austin Music Source blog.

Aimee Mann interview

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008 by ACL_Blogger

Aimee Mann riffs on…well, you’ll see in the headline. Go here for an interview with one of our favorite songwriters.

Yes with cowboy hats?

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 by ACL_Blogger

“Yes with cowboy hats” - that’s how a rock critic buddy of mine described My Morning Jacket a few years ago, when I was asking him if he thought this band I’d read so much about lately was worth seeing at the Parish here in Austin. He meant it derisively, but with that intriguing turn of phrase, how could I resist?

When I saw MMJ that night, the band’s latest record was the atmospheric At Dawn, though some of the tunes that would populate their major label debut It Still Moves were already in the set. Outside of a tendency towards both epic song lengths and countryish feel, I don’t know that the band particularly fit my friend’s description. But I was impressed with the group’s depth and range, not to mention how hard they rocked their songs into the ground. By the end of the set I couldn’t see anything but beards and long hair flying everywhere, and I became a fan for life.

Since then, MMJ has expanded way beyond the boundaries of being the indie rock answer to Southern rock. The band’s latest record Evil Urges has upset a lot of core fans - not everyone appreciates the group’s seemingly sudden turn toward psychedelic funk. But the R&B-flavored eclecticism has been hinted at for years; anyone who didn’t see this coming after hearing “Wordless Chorus” from the prior album Z wasn’t listening. In any case, I imagine many of those disappointed devotees will have a change of heart once they hear the Urges tracks live. To me, at least, the new stuff sounds of a piece with the rest of the band’s catalog, especially at their usual in-concert volume.

For their ACL taping, MMJ played every Urges song but “Remnants,” adding “Wordless Chorus,” a trio of tunes from It Still Moves (including a pulverizing, encore-closing “One Big Holiday” that would have been impossible to follow), a couple of numbers from their debut The Tennessee Fire and even an excerpt of “Cobra,” from the Chocolate & Ice EP. Personally, I dig the Urges tracks, and the band sounded like they were having a grand old time playing them. “Evil Urges” was a great, gauntlet-throwing opener, while “Librarian” was appropriately lovely. “Highly Suspicious” got its groove on with a wink and a smile, while “Touch Me I’m Going to Scream Pt. 2″ rode its Omnichord-addled disco beat smoothly and gracefully. “I’m Amazed” and “Aluminum Park” both proved that MMJ hasn’t abandoned their talent for anthems.

Throughout the show, frontperson Jim James shifted from sleazy falsetto to heartfelt tenor to inchoate shout as needed, mastering them all, even when wearing a Dracula cape or a towel on his head. The unsung hero was drummer Patrick Hallahan, who’s so adept at leading the band at rapid rhythm changes he should get as much credit as James does as bandleader.

Of course, everything was bathed in a sea of reverb, so much so that our audio engineer gave it its own track on the recording.

This was a nearly 2-hour show, so not everything will make the final edit, alas. But there’s so little fat to be trimmed that whatever we end up with will be a strong, tight program that will show My Morning Jacket at the peak of their powers. This episode will feed to PBS station on November 1; check with your local stations for airdates.


Funding for Austin City Limits is provided by the following:

AMD BudweiserAustin Convention Center

 

Photos by Scott Newton.