http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase ... d%3A756211
Echo & the Bunnymen
12:30am, Emo's Main (Also: Sat., Rusty Spurs, 12mid)
"I want people to realize that I'm a real musician and not just a big mouth," says Ian McCulloch, the somewhat salty frontman of Echo & the Bunnymen, who turns 50 this year.
With three decades in the can, the Bunnymen have already outlived their chief inspiration, Jim Morrison, who, like Janis and Jimi, was in the ground at age 27. With original songwriting team McCulloch and guitarist Will Sergeant intact, the band staged a powerful orchestral rendition of 1984's seminal Ocean Rain last year and plans to release its new album, The Fountain, in August. Anyone who caught the free Auditorium Shores gig at SXSW 06, when McCulloch conjured Morrison's ghost on "L.A. Woman," knows the Liverpool legends revere the Doors.
"The Velvet Underground is me favorite band of all time," McCulloch explains, his accent intact and his attitude still defiant. "But, as a band, the Doors always sounded the most perfectly in-sync with each other. What they were brilliant at were the 3½-minute nuggets of pure tune and hooks. You could hear a song like 'Hello, I Love You' and 'Love Me Two Times' just once, and you'd be singing it the rest of your life. With that atmosphere, you could make out to them, too.
"If somebody else said that, it might sound twee," chuckles the singer.
The same could be said for the Bunnymen's moody, pristine brand of post-punk. McCulloch maintains that his current efforts aren't driven by nostalgia or greed.
"It's not a bad thing to be the influencers rather than the billionaires." – Dan Oko