Austin, TX
Podcast explores the changing music scene in Austin, Texas
SCOTT DETROW, HOST:
Austin, Texas, calls itself the live music capital of the world. And it’s not just a slogan. A recent study showed that live music tourism generated $1.8 billion for the city in one year. But the live music scene that the city has based its reputation on has been at risk recently. First, the pandemic closed venues, which, of course, kept fans from seeing that live music at all. And now the scene is having to deal with skyrocketing ticket prices, oppressive heat and new laws in Texas. The latest season of the Pause/Play podcast from KUT and KUTX Studios explores how these global and local changes are impacting Austin’s music ecosystem. Host Miles Bloxson and Elizabeth McQueen are here with me today. Hey there, Miles.
MILES BLOXSON, BYLINE: Hey.
DETROW: And, Elizabeth, thanks for joining us.
ELIZABETH MCQUEEN, BYLINE: Hey, Scott.
DETROW: So this is the fifth season of the Pause/Play podcast. Congrats, first of all. But, you know, this is about the live music ecosystem in Austin. How has the show evolved?
MCQUEEN: Well, we started the podcast in 2020, talking about how the pandemic was affecting Austin music. And then we spent a couple of seasons talking about how we could financially sustain our live music ecosystem. And this season, we’re looking at how changes outside of Austin are affecting our music scene.
BLOXSON: And really, it all came from our listeners. We asked our followers on Instagram what they wanted us to cover. And we also did a bunch of pre-interviews for the season. And we noticed the same things kept coming up.
DETROW: Yeah. And, like, on one hand, this is a podcast about a hyper-focused topic, live music in Austin, right? But, on the other hand, you are talking about universal themes like change. I mean, we are all continuing to think about that in the years since COVID.
MCQUEEN: Oh, yeah. And COVID is one of the changes that we talk about. I mean, it’s hard to believe, but, like, it’s still impacting people’s relationship to live music. And we heard about this from Lawrence Boone, who books The Far Out Lounge, which is this indoor-outdoor venue that has live music, like, every day and has been around since 1908.
LAWRENCE BOONE: I’ve talked to a few people about the social anxiety that came from the whole process of COVID. And people that did not normally have any social anxiety, now they have extreme social anxiety to the point where they don’t even want to go to the grocery store. They’d rather have it delivered. If you don’t want to go to the grocery store, you’re certainly not coming to some big show.
BLOXSON: And we understand that talking about all these changes, including COVID, can be an emotional trigger for all of us. So we brought in a neuropsychotherapist, Bella Rockman.
MCQUEEN: Yeah. Listeners are going to hear from her throughout the season of the podcast.
BLOXSON: Bella told us, whether we believe it or not, we are all still being affected by COVID, and we’ve all been affected by it.
BELLA ROCKMAN: Like Especially, like, it wasn’t like a short term kind of event. It was something that was ongoing. And there wasn’t a very specific end in sight. And over time, that takes a toll on us. And we kind of can get fatigued in, like, waiting for things to change. And so, I mean, we’re not completely out of the woods. I think post-pandemic life, people are kind of trying to figure out what life should be like now. And should we be trying to make it like it was before? Or how do we adapt?
MCQUEEN: And Bella said something to us about trauma that, like, really stuck with us and helped us frame this season because everyone is going through these changes, but sometimes change can lead to growth.
ROCKMAN: We can grow as a result of trauma. The goal is not always to get back to who we were. But how do we become the better versions of ourselves with what we have now? So how do we pick up the rubble, see what’s left and then integrate that into becoming the better version of what we can with what we have? So when we think about trauma, I don’t want it to all be foreboding (laughter). There are some wonderful things that can come out of it.
DETROW: Let’s think about another big topic here. How did climate change enter into the music scene podcast?
MCQUEEN: Well, you might have heard we had a brutal summer last year here in Austin.
DETROW: I spent some time in Austin during that summer, so yes, I can confirm it was incredibly hot.
MCQUEEN: Oh, my gosh. You were here during the summer? That’s crazy. It was so hot. We had 80 days where the temperature was over 100 degrees. And we had 45 days where the temperature was 105 or higher. I mean, like, we’re Austinites. We’re totally used to that heat. But that was too much.
DETROW: Yeah.
MCQUEEN: And it’s only going to get hotter. You may have noticed a lot of our music venues are outdoor venues. So last summer, they were left scrambling. This is Lawrence Boone again.
BOONE: Well, why don’t we try to do indoor shows? But it was still hot inside. You know, we tried to bring in fans. But our space is so big, there’s just no way to cool it down, there’s just not. If you have answers, I would love to hear them.
BLOXSON: Unfortunately, Scott, it’s not as straightforward as we hoped it would be. So a lot of people in the music scene are still trying to adapt any way that they possibly can. For example, a lot of venues are holding shows later in the day. They’re also investing in fans and misters and tons of water just to try to cool off their patrons.
MCQUEEN: I mean, some venues are even hiring people whose, like, hold job it is to keep refilling water stations.
DETROW: Wow.
MCQUEEN: Yeah.
BLOXSON: And some musicians are even debating on whether or not they still want to play in Austin during the summer or just travel to other places.
DETROW: So these are big existential issues. Let’s talk about another one of sorts, at least for music fans, and that is expensive ticket prices. It’s the case all over. It is really the case in Austin. What did you find on that front?
BLOXSON: Yeah, Scott. To be honest with you, I would rather go see 30 live shows to support a local artist than to go see a superstar artist that’s charging thousands of dollars just for one ticket. And let’s not forget about the processing and service fees on top of that.
DETROW: Can’t forget about those.
MCQUEEN: Yeah. Ticketing is on a lot of people’s minds. Like, the Justice Department recently announced that it’s planning to file an antitrust suit against Live Nation, which owns Ticketmaster.
BLOXSON: But we wanted to look at ticketing through an Austin lens, so we reached out to Mellie Price. She’s a serial entrepreneur here in Austin and a professor at the University of Texas at Austin. She actually created one of the early online ticketing platforms called Front Gate Tickets. They’re owned by Live Nation now, but for a long time, they were actually independent.
MCQUEEN: Yeah. And she walked us through the transition from paper tickets to online tickets. She explained processing fees and service charges to us. And she told us what it was like to be an independent ticket seller back in the early days of online ticket sales.
MELLIE PRICE: I remember one of the first box offices I worked was Insane Clown Posse. You know, I think it was a $35 ticket. And we had like a $3.50 service charge roughly, which was a lot less than the 10 or so dollars that were being charged by Ticketmaster and other ticket entities.
DETROW: Let’s talk about one other factor that you’re looking at and that’s politics. That’s what’s happening in state legislatures. This is something that seems to permeate all aspects of life. And this is something that has affected the music scene because there are some musicians who are thinking about Texas politics, specifically laws in Texas dealing with reproductive rights, when they decide whether or not they want to play a show there.
MCQUEEN: Yeah. And that’s something that people in our music scene are talking about as well. Like, we heard stories of women in the music industry leaving Austin or just deciding, like, not to move here in the first place because of the Texas abortion ban. And that also affects how women in our scene think about having kids.
BLOXSON: Yeah. Adrian Lake (ph), who’s a music publicist here in Austin, shared with us how she feels about living in Texas as a woman under these laws.
ADRIAN LAKE: It’s really hard to wrap your head around these people in charge of controlling other people’s lives and bodies, and they know nothing about it. And they don’t care. They don’t even care if it’s a situation where, you know, the child was wanted but there are medical issues. They don’t care if the mother’s life is at risk. It’s about control. These types of things affect the creative class and people who struggle financially more than anybody else.
MCQUEEN: Also, during our last legislative session, Texas tried to restrict drag shows and passed a law banning gender-affirming care for trans kids. And we wanted to know how those laws are impacting the LGBTQIA+ members of our scene. Jammy Violet, who fronts the band Pelvis Wrestley and who identifies as nonbinary, told us how these laws complicate their relationship to playing live.
JAMMY VIOLET: When you are a performer, you’re not only a performer, you’re a promoter. Being nonbinary, queer, trans artists, visibility is danger. So our job is to actively put ourselves in more and more danger. Without fail, whenever Pelvis Wrestley has a, like, a higher visibility moment, it turns into spending days combing comment threads, removing the death threats. It becomes this very strange thing where it’s like, I really want my project to do well, and I really want people to hear this art that I care so much about, but also, I don’t. And it’s really difficult to fully want to succeed when it comes at such a high cost and such a high risk.
DETROW: What do you want listeners to take away from this season?
BLOXSON: You know, so many of these changes are things that we’re all going through as a whole, not just people in the Austin music scene, right? And many of them can seem a bit overwhelming. But one thing that we’ve learned from making this podcast, Scott, is how resilient the Austin music community actually is. They don’t just throw their hands up when they see new challenges. Instead, they figure out how to grow from them.
MCQUEEN: Yeah. And that’s what we’re hoping people will take away from this season, like this understanding that we can all grow and be resilient even as the world is shifting beneath our feet.
DETROW: Last big important question. What shows are you excited to see in Austin this summer?
BLOXSON: Pelvis Wrestley.
MCQUEEN: Yeah, for sure. You definitely have to see Pelvis Wrestley.
DETROW: That was Elizabeth McQueen and Miles Bloxson, host of the KUT and KUTX Studios podcast Pause/Play. Thanks to both of you.
BLOXSON: Thanks for having us.
MCQUEEN: Thanks, Scott. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.
Austin, TX
Austin, Texas shooting leaves 4 injured, 3 in custody. What we know
Police release new footage of gunman who opened fire at Austin bar
Police released new CCTV and body cam footage of the gunman who opened fire at an Austin bar.
Three juvenile individuals are in custody following a weekend crime spree of 12 shootings that left four people injured and multiple car thefts in Austin, Texas.
The crimes occurred starting at 4 p.m. on Saturday, May 16, and ended on Sunday, May 17, resulting in the arrest of a 15-year-old, a 17-year-old and a third individual, Austin Police Department Chief Lisa Davis said Sunday, May 17.
“The 17-year-old has a warrant for his arrest for a theft of a gun from the same store the 15-year-old stole a gun from,” Davis said at a news conference.
The string of crimes started when Austin PD was first notified of a stolen vehicle from an apartment complex, followed by the theft of a firearm. Following that, Davis said an estimated 20 service calls were received in the South and Southeast Austin areas regarding the individuals.
“Two times they fired at a firehouse and struck a truck,” Davis said. “Into apartment buildings where officers had to go door to door, ensuring that everyone was safe.”
In total, two separate fire houses, several buildings and apartment complexes were fired upon by the individuals, in addition to four vehicles being stolen.
Of the four individuals injured, three have been confirmed to have sustained non-life-threatening injuries, with the fourth sustaining critical injuries.
Police were able to connect these events to the three individuals, but Davis said there is no known motive for the series of events.
The crime spree concluded when Manor PD conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle that the individuals were driving. The individuals fled, but two of them were apprehended on Sunday.
Following the news conference, the Manor Police Department announced a third individual — a juvenile — who had fled the vehicle earlier on Sunday had been detained with no ongoing threat to the public.
Gov. Greg Abbott released a statement on social media calling the individuals dangerous.
“If they are ever released from jail, they will surely harm again,” Abbott said. “The DA & Court must do their job and keep these criminals behind bars.”
Anyone with information should contact the Aggravated Assault Unit at 512-974-5177 or submit tips anonymously through austincrimestoppers.org or by calling 512-472-8477.
Austin, TX
2 arrested, 3rd suspect sought after series of shootings in Austin, Texas
Anadolu staff
18 May 2026•Update: 18 May 2026
Two suspects were taken into custody and police continued searching for a third suspect on Sunday following a series of shootings in Austin, Texas that injured four people, authorities said.
Austin Police Department Chief Lisa Davis said the suspects were linked to at least 10 attacks carried out between Saturday and Sunday, adding that one victim sustained serious injuries while three others suffered minor wounds.
Police said the shootings appeared to be random and that no clear motive had been identified. Most incidents occurred in South Austin, including at least two shootings targeting fire stations.
“At this time, the investigation is ongoing, and APD (Austin Police Department) asks that our community remain vigilant,” the department said in a press release.
Authorities lifted a shelter-in-place order that had been issued for parts of South Austin, while a separate order remained in effect Sunday in the nearby Manor area as officers searched for the remaining suspect.
The Austin Fire Department said two of its stations were struck by gunfire in separate incidents late Saturday and Sunday morning, though no firefighters were injured and only minor damage was reported.
Officials urged residents to remain vigilant and asked anyone with information to contact police or Crime Stoppers, a community-based, non-profit program that allows citizens to submit anonymous tips about criminal activity and unsolved cases.
Austin, TX
One dead after car strikes semi-truck, rolls over on US 183
AUSTIN, TX — One person is dead after a vehicle hit a semi-truck and rolled over on US 183 in Northwest Austin early Sunday morning, police said.
Officers responded to the 11200 block of northbound Research Boulevard, near Balcones Woods Drive, at 2:24 a.m.
ALSO | Shelter-in-place lifted after SWAT response in Kyle; suspect taken into custody
The Austin Police Department initially said that one person was taken to the hospital, but later confirmed the person had been pronounced deceased.
The driver of the semi-truck remained at the scene.
All northbound lanes of US 183 near Breaker Lane are shut down. Drivers are advised to expect delays and plan alternate routes.
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