museum creatures
Gig Seeker Pro

museum creatures

Dallas, Texas, United States

Dallas, Texas, United States
Band EDM Avant-garde

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


"Museum Creatures | Blixaboy | Sextape (Nightmare -old Lounge-)"

Museum Creatures | Blixaboy | Sextape (Nightmare -old Lounge-)

I like Museum Creatures alot. Just the kind of abstract pop cacophony that gets my blood boiling. Fans of Max Tundra, Múm or Tigerbeat 6 artist should keep these guys on your radar. - WESHOTJR


"Museum Creatures | Blixaboy | Sextape (Nightmare -old Lounge-)"

Museum Creatures | Blixaboy | Sextape (Nightmare -old Lounge-)

I like Museum Creatures alot. Just the kind of abstract pop cacophony that gets my blood boiling. Fans of Max Tundra, Múm or Tigerbeat 6 artist should keep these guys on your radar. - WESHOTJR


"Five NX35 highlights, from Museum Creatures to the Flaming Lips"

Five NX35 highlights, from Museum Creatures to the Flaming Lips.
Preston Jones
Like those who attended North by 35 last weekend, Denton itself is probably still recovering from the sprawling extravaganza. In its second year, NX35 was not without its hiccups. But the minifestival, meant as an appetizer for South by Southwest, also was not without its charms and promise.

Over the course of four days, a healthy selection of bands from Fort Worth, Dallas and Denton, as well as a fistful of national acts, like the Walkmen, performed in bars, coffeehouses and nightclubs throughout the city that sits where Interstate 35 splits in two. The unrushed nature of the "conferette" -- nary a start/stop time to be found on the schedule -- and the erratic nature of some of its showcases gave the weekend an air of tantalizing possibility. Here's the blow-by-blow of some of the bands I saw. For a full recap of NX35, click here.

The Hope Trust


NX35's second night got off to a bit of a slow start but with a burst of Americana-tinged rock from hometown heroes the Hope Trust, things kicked into high gear. The band sounded tight in J&J's Pizza's peculiar but charming basement. The group is working on a follow-up to 2007's The Incurable Want.

Nicholas Altobelli

Altobelli's plaintive, almost hushed folk songs demand a far more intimate environment than Jupiter House, just off the square. He grappled with talkative audience members, hissing espresso machines and street noise, all of which threatened to overwhelm his songs. He soldiered on, though, delivering a set heavy on dark, gripping tunes and spiked with some hilarious asides about all the tribulations surrounding his set.

Museum Creatures

One of the more surreal snippets of the evening, I arrived upstairs at the Hydrant to see (maybe) four people watching Museum Creatures exert themselves. Throbbing synths and stabs of drum machine made for some hypnotic moments, but mostly, it felt altogether odd to hear such propulsive music with so few people around.

Midlake

To say that Tim Smith and the fellas in Midlake were excited to be playing NX35 would be quite the understatement. More than once during their 45-minute set, the Denton collective shared its enthusiasm with the adoring crowd, which cheered staples like Roscoe and newer material like Core of Nature, from Midlake's just-released The Courage of Others. The lovely, autumnal music fit the rapidly darkening evening, with just a nip of coolness in the air, like a glove.

The Flaming Lips

The three-and-a-half-hour free party at the North Texas State Fairgrounds reached its apex with Oklahoma's own Flaming Lips. But the celebration did experience some technical snafus; frontman Wayne Coyne, in true DIY fashion, refused to be deterred by the difficulties and exhorted the crowd to give itself over to the band. The new material, from last year's Embryonic, fit snugly alongside classics like Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots. A bit messy, thoroughly original and fiercely proud: I can think of no better representation of this scrappy festival.
- dfw.com - Preston Jones


"Five NX35 highlights, from Museum Creatures to the Flaming Lips"

Five NX35 highlights, from Museum Creatures to the Flaming Lips.
Preston Jones
Like those who attended North by 35 last weekend, Denton itself is probably still recovering from the sprawling extravaganza. In its second year, NX35 was not without its hiccups. But the minifestival, meant as an appetizer for South by Southwest, also was not without its charms and promise.

Over the course of four days, a healthy selection of bands from Fort Worth, Dallas and Denton, as well as a fistful of national acts, like the Walkmen, performed in bars, coffeehouses and nightclubs throughout the city that sits where Interstate 35 splits in two. The unrushed nature of the "conferette" -- nary a start/stop time to be found on the schedule -- and the erratic nature of some of its showcases gave the weekend an air of tantalizing possibility. Here's the blow-by-blow of some of the bands I saw. For a full recap of NX35, click here.

The Hope Trust


NX35's second night got off to a bit of a slow start but with a burst of Americana-tinged rock from hometown heroes the Hope Trust, things kicked into high gear. The band sounded tight in J&J's Pizza's peculiar but charming basement. The group is working on a follow-up to 2007's The Incurable Want.

Nicholas Altobelli

Altobelli's plaintive, almost hushed folk songs demand a far more intimate environment than Jupiter House, just off the square. He grappled with talkative audience members, hissing espresso machines and street noise, all of which threatened to overwhelm his songs. He soldiered on, though, delivering a set heavy on dark, gripping tunes and spiked with some hilarious asides about all the tribulations surrounding his set.

Museum Creatures

One of the more surreal snippets of the evening, I arrived upstairs at the Hydrant to see (maybe) four people watching Museum Creatures exert themselves. Throbbing synths and stabs of drum machine made for some hypnotic moments, but mostly, it felt altogether odd to hear such propulsive music with so few people around.

Midlake

To say that Tim Smith and the fellas in Midlake were excited to be playing NX35 would be quite the understatement. More than once during their 45-minute set, the Denton collective shared its enthusiasm with the adoring crowd, which cheered staples like Roscoe and newer material like Core of Nature, from Midlake's just-released The Courage of Others. The lovely, autumnal music fit the rapidly darkening evening, with just a nip of coolness in the air, like a glove.

The Flaming Lips

The three-and-a-half-hour free party at the North Texas State Fairgrounds reached its apex with Oklahoma's own Flaming Lips. But the celebration did experience some technical snafus; frontman Wayne Coyne, in true DIY fashion, refused to be deterred by the difficulties and exhorted the crowd to give itself over to the band. The new material, from last year's Embryonic, fit snugly alongside classics like Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots. A bit messy, thoroughly original and fiercely proud: I can think of no better representation of this scrappy festival.
- dfw.com - Preston Jones


"Museum Creatures"

Video interview on Vimeo.com - WeDentonDoIt


"Museum Creatures"

Video interview on Vimeo.com - WeDentonDoIt


"Bonus MP3: Museum Creatues"

Cavern's free Wednesday night affair, Detour, hosted the live debut of local experimental electro outfit Museum Creatures. And it was a pretty entertaining display offered up by the latest project from Dallas' once-upon-a-time piano-pop musician Tommy Hernandez, most recently of sleaze dance outfit Boytap: Hernandez went to town on his two-keyboard set-up and bandmate Stephen Holmes matched him on the opposite side of the stage, managing a wide arsenal of electronics laid out before him, among them a drum machine and a Nintendo DS.

The sonic result of the band's tinkerings found the band reveling in some rather uncharted bubblegum-trance waters--kinda like if Florene discovered Prozac. Anyway, it was some pretty interesting experimental stuff--and often somewhat improvisational, too, as the band worked out its live show kinks on stage.

Hernandez freely admitted to feeling pretty down about the performance after it was completed, but, his own doubts aside, it was a promising start for a band with a rather unique sound. Hear the band's early output on its SoundCloud page, where it appears to be simply posting any and every idea it's currently with at the moment.

And, after the jump, feel free to download the band's catchiest and poppiest affair, "Song ABC." The song lies somewhere between Fizzy Dino Pop and, I dunno, maybe Islands, on the sonic spectrum, and Hernandez has been kind enough to let us pass it along your way. Check it out.
Seems you can take the musician out of pop, but you can't take the pop out of the musician.

Catch Museum Creatures next on Thursday, March 4, at Oak Cliff's Tradewinds Social Club.
--Pete Freedman - Dallas Observer - DC9 at Night Pete Freedman


"Bonus MP3: Museum Creatues"

Cavern's free Wednesday night affair, Detour, hosted the live debut of local experimental electro outfit Museum Creatures. And it was a pretty entertaining display offered up by the latest project from Dallas' once-upon-a-time piano-pop musician Tommy Hernandez, most recently of sleaze dance outfit Boytap: Hernandez went to town on his two-keyboard set-up and bandmate Stephen Holmes matched him on the opposite side of the stage, managing a wide arsenal of electronics laid out before him, among them a drum machine and a Nintendo DS.

The sonic result of the band's tinkerings found the band reveling in some rather uncharted bubblegum-trance waters--kinda like if Florene discovered Prozac. Anyway, it was some pretty interesting experimental stuff--and often somewhat improvisational, too, as the band worked out its live show kinks on stage.

Hernandez freely admitted to feeling pretty down about the performance after it was completed, but, his own doubts aside, it was a promising start for a band with a rather unique sound. Hear the band's early output on its SoundCloud page, where it appears to be simply posting any and every idea it's currently with at the moment.

And, after the jump, feel free to download the band's catchiest and poppiest affair, "Song ABC." The song lies somewhere between Fizzy Dino Pop and, I dunno, maybe Islands, on the sonic spectrum, and Hernandez has been kind enough to let us pass it along your way. Check it out.
Seems you can take the musician out of pop, but you can't take the pop out of the musician.

Catch Museum Creatures next on Thursday, March 4, at Oak Cliff's Tradewinds Social Club.
--Pete Freedman - Dallas Observer - DC9 at Night Pete Freedman


Discography

http://museumcreatures.bandcamp.com/

Photos

Bio

Museum Creatures was formed offhandedly when Stephen Holmes (a corporate heretic) volunteered some songs to Tommy Hernandez (a classical pianist) with a blank check for artistic liberties. Hernandez had played strictly symphonic pop in Dallas, TX and Holmes had done just the opposite as an experimental artist. Using a haphazard combination of samplers, synths, a Nintendo DS, and shards of endless old songs, the two created a collection of lo- meets hi-fi pop cataclysms. Three years later the Museum Creatures duo has expanded to include a live drummer Brad Brock, and another home schooled electronic musician Shawn Collins (aka sit.stay.up.)