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Austin City Limits is the longest running musical showcase in the history of television, spanning over four decades and showcasing the talents of musicians from Willie Nelson and Ray Charles to Arcade Fire and Eminem. The show is a testament to the evolution of media and popular music and the audience’s relationship to that music, and to the city of Austin, Texas. In Austin City Limits: A History, author Tracey E. W. Laird takes us behind-the-scenes with interviews, anecdotes, and personal photographs to pay homage to this landmark festival. In doing so, she also illuminates the overarching discussion of the US public media and its influence on the broadcasting and funding of music and culture. This year, the festival celebrates its 40th anniversary with guests such as Bonnie Raitt, Jimmie Vaughan, Sheryl Crow, and Alabama Shakes, which will air on PBS on Oct. 3 at 9pm ET.
Unveiling the plaque designating Austin City Limits a music landmark by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Shown here in 2009, promises a powerful experience.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
First of 5-page early press release that position Austin City Limits within the “Austin Renascence of Country Music.”
From Radio and Television, Folder 77, Austin City Limits, Southern Folklife Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
Willie Nelson performed on the television pilot for Austin City Limits in 1974 when the show was initially celebrating music like country, blues, and rock n’ roll. In 2014, he is still playing shows to tremendous crowds several football fields deep. Here his image is shown projected on the large screens to either side of the stage, at the 2006 ACL Music Festival. Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
in 1974 when the show was initially celebrating music like country, blues, and rock n’ roll. In 2014, he is still playing shows to tremendous crowds several football fields deep. Here his image is shown projected on the large screens to either side of the stage, at the 2006 ACL Music Festival.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
Scott Newton’s famous image of Ray Charles performing in 1984 on Austin City Limits.
Photograph by Scott Newton. Courtesy Austin City Limits/KLRU-TV.
Arcade Fire rehearses in Studio 6A on taping day.
Doug Robb practices shots on the ped cam to the left, Gary Menotti sits at his small round table with a stop watch out front, while Scott Newton studies the scene looking for angles of his own. Over the past decades, the music performed at ACL has evolved to include alternative rock artists like Arcade Fire, to rap and hip-hop artists like Eminem (who will be performing on the 2014 ACL Festival) and Mos Def.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
In a photo taken during Mos Def’s rehearsal, the paint and lightbulbs screwed into the faux-Austin backdrop look so much different than they do on TV.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
The crowd waits before a double taping for K’Naan and Mos Def in Studio 6A.
Terry Lickona is standing on the bleacher steps to the right in the photo.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird.
Matisyahu performing at the 2006 ACL Music Festival.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
The audience out front takes in Gillian Welch and David Rawlings along with the new skyline backdrop.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
Scott Newton photographed The Decemberists during their 2007 performance on Austin City Limits.
Photograph by Scott Newton. Courtesy Austin City Limits/KLRU-TV.
That same night, Newton also photographed Ghostland Observatory.
Photo by Scott Newton. Courtesy Austin City Limits/KLRU-TV.
Longtime camera operator Robert Moorhead
stands before the Austin City Limits signing wall on the fifth floor of station KRLU, a memorial to a long-cherished tradition for staff members and artists.
Photo by Tracey E. W. Laird
“An intersection where places and sounds and people and images and words and ideas about...
…music take on intangible meanings, there lies the musical phenomenon Austin City Limits”—Tracey E. W. Laird. Austin City Limits Music Festival, 2009.
Photo by Steve Hopson, www.stevehopson.com. CC BY 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Featured image: Night view of Austin skyline and Lady Bird Lake as seen from Lou Neff Point. Photo by LoneStarMike. CC BY 3.0n via Wikimedia Commons.
Children’s book illustrators, artistrators, writers take note: These guys kind of say it all. The trailer is by animator, web designer, online comics creator Erik Kuntz (who also happens to be our SCBWI chapter’s webmaster.) Briefly, the Second Annual Austin SCBWI Digital Symposium is October 6 at St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas. But for the [...]
3 Comments on What the heck is an e-book, anyway?, last added: 9/8/2012
Thank, Mr. Mitchell that was simple and explained alot of things. I have a question
for you . In your online course will there be videos like the one I just watched or
will it all be written? I really like to see what I’m learning. Explain your course
in simple terms I would so like to take it. Gabi
Mark Mitchell said, on 8/19/2012 11:14:00 AM
Hi Gabi,
Thank you for asking about the “Marks and Splashes” course.
It has both written/illustrated lessons and video versions of the lessons, along with video interviews with successful children’s book artists, monthly online group critique sessions and an online community and resource sharing site that’s active with students from around North America and the world.
Come join us! You can read more about the course (and sign up for it, if you like) on this page. http://howtobeachildrensbookillustrator.com/NewCoursehome2/
the course has both written (and illustrated) lesson
Rocío Conesa said, on 8/26/2012 1:57:00 AM
That’s the futur! (or the present)
Great post!
<3
Rocío C.
We first interviewed children’s illustrator Karien Naude of South Africa back in May 2009. Back then she was basically just starting, completely self-taught as an artist, working as a paralegal at a law firm in downtown Johannesburg.
Art by Karien Naude
She was among the first batch of students to sign up for the Make Your Splashes Make Your Marksonline course on illustrating children’s books. Somehow we were friends from the start — because Karien is, well, that sort of a person. Even my mother wants to adopt her. (Unofficially she has, with Karien’s bemused consent — though I should say Karien has loving parents and family in South Africa.) She’s very much a citizen of the world, with a network of artist friends that extends to the Austin, Texas SCBWI illustrators’ community, to New York, the UK and New Zealand to mention just a few places.
Karien's telling of a Sherlock Holmes tale
A lot has happened since 2009. She’s gone full time as a free-lancer, for one thing. Along the way she’s learned, taught herself, tons about the craft and business of illustration. So it really is time for another visit.
She agreed two years ago to serve as a bit of a guinea pig for the ongoing experiment of my online course and so she’s actually been ready for us to check in with her.
She’s a huge Tolkien and Terry Pratchett fan. She’s been on safaris. She loves to cook and loves music so much so that you’ll rarely catch her drawing or painting without her earphones on
2 Comments on Karien’s Creative Cache, last added: 10/6/2011
My friend JP told me about this and I wanted to share it because I think it's a wonderful project. It's called "Handbags For Hope"
On Mother's Day, countless moms will receive purses as gifts. But for hundreds of Austin-area domestic violence victims, the purses they receive could contain a lifeline.
The Texas Advocacy Project and the Travis County Sheriff's Office announced Thursday that they are collecting new or gently used purses as part of a campaign, Handbags for Hope, to put information on domestic violence into more women's hands. The handbags, which will be given to the women by their children as gifts, will have the Texas Advocacy Project's domestic violence hot line number stitched inside.
"Many victims of domestic violence leave their partner in the middle of the night," said Heather Bellino, the nonprofit's spokeswoman. "Usually they bring nothing with them except their children and purse." Bellino said pamphlets with phone numbers and resources often end up in the trash or taken away by an abuser. Discreet information stitched into a purse could make a difference in finding legal help, she said, adding that the Texas Advocacy Project offers its services for free.
Thank, Mr. Mitchell that was simple and explained alot of things. I have a question
for you . In your online course will there be videos like the one I just watched or
will it all be written? I really like to see what I’m learning. Explain your course
in simple terms I would so like to take it. Gabi
Hi Gabi,
Thank you for asking about the “Marks and Splashes” course.
It has both written/illustrated lessons and video versions of the lessons, along with video interviews with successful children’s book artists, monthly online group critique sessions and an online community and resource sharing site that’s active with students from around North America and the world.
Come join us! You can read more about the course (and sign up for it, if you like) on this page.
http://howtobeachildrensbookillustrator.com/NewCoursehome2/
the course has both written (and illustrated) lesson
That’s the futur! (or the present)
Great post!
<3
Rocío C.