Austin American-Statesman

Waxahatche­e makes us feel — a lot — on final night of Levitation Fest

- By Chad Swiatecki Special to the American-Statesman

You can’t call it a disconnect. But it was certainly an odd juxtaposit­ion to watch couples embraced and swaying back and forth in reverie Sunday night at Mohawk while Waxahatche­e frontwoman Katie Crutchfiel­d spent a good chunk of her hour on stage reliving the tales of romance crashed on the rocks that fueled her latest album, “Out in the Storm.”

It says a lot about the power of Crutchfiel­d as both a singer and live performer that she’s able to connect with her audience and stir their own emotions so deeply. And it helps that she seems to have put some emotional distance – or maybe just time – between herself and the parties on the other end of her “What went wrong?” lyrics. Her songs aren’t open wounds so much as scars that provide character and memories of things best left in the past.

Sunday’s concert – the band’s last of a tour with Hurray for the Riff Raff — came on the final night of this year’s reconfigur­ed Levitation Fest, which put a few dozen shows in clubs all over downtown over four days.

With the festival’s expanded scope in recent years after its start roughly a decade ago as Austin Psych Fest, hosting distinct shows in different venues made it possible for a night of femalefron­ted pop-rock bands to seem of a piece with other Levitation attraction­s like industrial legends Ministry or Austin’s Black Angels.

Starting the night alone onstage with her acoustic guitar, it didn’t take long for Crutchfiel­d’s versatile and arresting vocals to take the spotlight. Whether in a solo and sparse setting or cutting through the swirl of melodies provided by her bandmates for the majority of the show, the singer has one of the most distinct and impressive vocal instrument­s in music right now, and she puts it to maximum use.

New songs like “Recite Remorse” and “Sparks Fly” seemed to shine the best – Waxahatche­e’s latest album is its most sturdily produced, feeling at times like the best possible marriage of Neil Young songwritin­g heft with Sheryl Crow’s pop ear – but there wasn’t a duff note on the evening.

Over the course of 60 minutes the band showed a strong, fluid control of the material and framed Crutchfiel­d as a performer who should be regarded as among the best of her peers. And it didn’t hurt that she closed the night as she began; solo and acoustic, with a kind of raw run through “Fade” giving the lovebirds in the crowd one more chance to hold tight to their partners and the moment they were sharing.

 ?? JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Waxahatche­e plays Levitation Fest on a shared bill with Hurray for the Riff Raff on April 29.
JAY JANNER / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Waxahatche­e plays Levitation Fest on a shared bill with Hurray for the Riff Raff on April 29.

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