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    Music Matters

    Houston's music festival grows up: The star acts of the new Free Press Summer Fest lineup are . . .

    Elizabeth Rhodes
    Feb 12, 2014 | 1:59 pm

    The much-anticipated 2014 lineup for Free Press Summer Fest is out. With everyone from folk-favorite Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros to country crooner Dwight Yoakam included this year, there really seems to be something for everyone.

    Since starting six years ago, Free Press Summer Fest has grown from an estimated 30,000 attendance in 2009 to nearly 100,000 last year. Houston's premier music festival takes place May 31 and June 1 at Eleanor Tinsley Park.

    Here are the highlights of the new lineup:

    Jack White

    Since parting ways with Meg in 2011, Jack White has been, well, rather all over the place. Going from The Raconteurs to The Dead Weather and now focusing on his solo career, White has done it all. With a blues-y type of rock-and-roll that anyone can appreciate (see: "Sixteen Saltines"), the Detroit darling is the ultimate festival headliner (you really can't afford to miss him).

    Vampire Weekend

    This indie rock four-piece band, known most widely for its 2008 self-titled album which featured hits "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa," "Mansard Roof" and "Oxford Comma," actually started at New York's Columbia University. Vampire Weekend took that initial success and ran with it, releasing two more albums in only two years, both receiving critical and popular acclaim.

    If you're headed to Summer Fest to have fun, nothing makes a better soundtrack than the pop-rock of Vampire Weekend.

    If you're headed to Summer Fest to have fun, nothing makes a better soundtrack than the pop-rock of Vampire Weekend.

    Lauryn Hill

    Perhaps best known as a member of 1990s hip-hop group, the Fugees, Lauryn Hill has had quite the solo career as an R&B singer, including the 1999 smash hit single, "Doo Wop (That Thing)" (not to mention her incredible rendition of "Killing Me Softly"). In spite of her truly one-of-a-kind vocal skills, Hill only recently returned to the stage after taking a long sabbatical from performing, so don't miss this amazing opportunity to see her live.

    Childish Gambino

    While you may know Donald Glover by his Community name, you ought to know him as Childish Gambino since he's bound for hip-hop stardom. His second studio album, Because the Internet — replete with electro-hip-hop stunners like "Crawl" and "Sweatpants" — is more than enough to convince you to check him out.

    Die Antwoord

    Ninja and Yo-landi's style may not be for everyone, but with thumping bass and spitfire lyrics, it's hard not to get on board with the South African duo's brand of hip-hop. After gaining attention with 2009's hit single "Enter the Ninja" from their $O$ album, Die Antwoord has gained a prolific following in the United States. Check out tracks "I Fink U Freeky" and "Fatty Boom Boom" from 2012's Ten$ion if you're ready to be converted to their "rap-rave" style.

    The full Free Press Summer Fest lineup:

    Jack White

    Vampire Weekend

    Lauryn Hill

    Zedd

    Pinkish Black

    Dead Roses

    Grand Old Grizzly

    Ill Liad

    Above & Beyond

    Wu-Tang Clan

    Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros

    Dwight Yoakam

    Childish Gambino

    Deftones

    Cage The Elephant

    The Kills

    Die Antwoord

    Big Gigantic

    Chvrches

    DMX

    The 1975

    tUnE-yArDs

    Laidback Luke

    Rebelution

    Washed Out

    The Naked and Famous

    Adventure Club

    Flosstradamus

    Drive-By Truckers

    Lord Huron

    Ying Yang Twins

    Sky Ferreira

    J. Roddy Walston & The Business

    First Aid Kit

    Mariachi El Bronx

    Paper Diamond

    King Khan & The Shrines

    Flatbush Zombies

    The Oh Hellos

    Shakey Graves

    Wildcat! Wildcat!

    Poolside

    Robert Delong

    The Orwells

    Anamanaguchi

    Venomous Maximus

    Wild Party

    Carnival Talk

    Driver Friendly

    Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors
    The Chain Gang of 1974
    William Fitzsimmons
    Destruction Unit
    White Sea
    Uh Huh Her
    Jana Hunter
    The Tontons
    Syd Arthur
    Lizzo
    Benjamin Booker
    Bagheera
    Wild Moccasins
    Ishi

    Feathers
    A Fistful of Soul
    Yung Slutty
    Eagle Claw
    BLSHS
    The Caldwell
    Pleasure 2
    Children of Pop
    Los Skarnales
    New York City Queens
    De'Wayne Jackson
    Make
    Another Run
    Gracie Chavez

    Vampire Weekend

    Free Press Summer Fest 2014 Vampire Weekend
      
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    Vampire Weekend
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    news/entertainment

    reel revival

    Houston film lovers get a nostalgic treat with 35mm screenings at MFAH

    Craig D. Lindsey
    Jan 24, 2025 | 5:35 pm
    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Lynn Wyatt Theater
    Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
    Film fans are flocking to the MFAH's 35mm screenings.

    Not too long ago, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston screened Emilia Perez, the Spanish-language, Netflix-distributed crime comedy/musical that recently won big at the Golden Globes, landing statues for Best Foreign Language Film and Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, and was just nominated for 13 Oscars, including Best Picture.

    The streamer not only released Perez in theaters, but 35mm prints were struck for those venues that wanted to play it on analog film, like the MFAH. “I saw that Emilia Perez was playing in 35mm at the Paris Theater in New York,” longtime MFAH film curator Marian Luntz tells CultureMap, “and I thought, I wonder what they're doing with the distribution of the film on 35. And, so, we were fortunate. We reached out to our contact at Netflix, and he said, ‘Yes, we have very few prints, but when do you want to show it?’ And I gave these dates, and they said yes and we're really proud.”

    Perez isn’t the only film getting shown the old-fashioned way. Fellow Oscar nominees Anora, Nickel Boys, Nosferatu and The Brutalist (which can also be seen in 70mm) all have had 35mm engagements at other theaters. Ever since acclaimed auteurs like Paul Thomas Anderson, Christopher Nolan, and Quentin Tarantino proudly declared that they will always make movies on analog film, fellow filmmakers have been following suit.

    Even though MFAH has analog and digital film projectors in both their Brown and Lynn Wyatt theaters (upcoming 35mm screenings includes Julie Dash’s directorial debut Daughters of the Dust and the Marilyn Monroe-Jane Russell classic Gentlemen Prefer Blondes), there are no first-run movie houses in Houston equipped to play day-and-date flicks on 35mm. Currently, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema’s South Lamar location in Austin is the only multiplex in the state that has an auditorium reserved for new releases on analog film.

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston film projectorsThe MFAH is the only venue in Houston screen films on 35mm.Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    But are Houston moviegoers even craving that these days? “I would love to see more 35mm and 70mm,” writer (and MFAH’s “Jazz on Film” programmer) Peter Lucas says. “But honestly, I don't think Houston cares about that at all.”

    Rice film professor/Rice Cinema programmer Charles Dove believes that watching a film on film will always be the better experience. “What happens is that the screen goes completely black every few frames of the film, and it generates a kind of hypnotic way of watching a film, unlike the continuous projection of a digital projection,” says Dove. “There's actually like a frame, a thing that's flickering, making the film flicker, right? So, if it's at 18 frames per second, it flickers more, right? If it's at 24, it’s closer to the idea of the persistence of vision, when people imagine that the images are moving when they really aren't.”

    Whenever Luntz does a 35mm screening at the MFAH, the response is usually positive. “I do think it's something that adds a little bump for the public,” she says. “I think it definitely inspires some people to turn out who may have seen a film before, in any other format. I do think it's an incentive and we make a big deal about it. We have that trailer that was made when we were reopening after the pandemic that has interviews with two former projectionists, Tish [Stringer] and Trey Ferguson… We make a point of acknowledging the projectionists and asking for applause before we start [the feature presentation].”

    Stringer, who has held analog film screenings/lectures at The Menil Collection, believes that more movies would get released on film if more audiences ask for them. “We have to educate the audience so that they can demand from the theaters and from the industry what they want,” says Stringer, who has worked at MFAH and Rice Cinema. “Theaters today have to find ways to inspire people to get off the couch and back into the screening room. We have to show how we're different from home theater experiences.”

    Come fall, Rice Cinema will rejoin the MFAH in playing 35mm films for local cineastes. Back when the program screened films at Rice Media Center (before it was demolished in 2021), Rice Cinema had analog and digital projectors available. Currently, it has been playing films on digital in a temporary space in Sewall Hall, where a new, state-of-the-art auditorium – with analog and digital projectors – will debut in the fall.

    “I literally just got off a Zoom call with the guys who are designing our new projection space in the new building,” Dove says. “They just turned their monitor around and showed us the projectors that they're working on for us… One of the first things we're going to do in the new theater is show Last Night at the Alamo in 35mm, which is the last film we showed at the old space in honor of [cinematographer] Brian Huberman, who will be in his 50th year as a faculty member at Rice.”

    Luntz says 35mm prints of newer films could get booked for future MFAH screenings, but don’t expect them immediately. “The reality for us is that we at the moment are booked up until May,” she says.

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