Root 66: The Show Ponies’ Roadside Favorites

Name: The Show Ponies
Hometown: Los Angeles, CA
Latest Project: How It All Goes Down

Gear Shop: Dusty Strings Music in Seattle, WA

Burgers: Dick’s Drive-In in Seattle, WA

Highway Stretch: Avenue of the Giants in Humboldt County, CA

Coffee: Extracto Coffee Roasters in Portland, OR

Brewery: Crux in Bend, OR

Roadside Attraction: Trees of Mystery in Klamath, CA

Truck Stop: Buc-ee’s in Texas

Listening Room: Club Passim in Cambridge, MA

House Show: Sheri’s Living Room in Oklahoma City, OK

Backstage Hang: Freight & Salvage in Berkeley, CA

Music Festival: FloydFest in Floyd, VA

Car Game: Improvise three-part harmonies until the other two non-participants can’t handle the dissonance.


Photo credit: Daley Hake

Traveler: Your Guide to Marfa, Texas

A six-hour drive to one stop light in the middle of West Texas has never seemed more appealing until the quaint, artsy town of Marfa, Texas, began to blossom. Drink a Lonestar with a cowboy, see the Marfa lights, and get your artistry on with teeming inspiration in the middle of this changing desert town with a population of 2,121. With little to no nightlife, vegetation that looks like you stepped into a Dr. Seuss story, and a clear desert sky, Marfa is a quite the getaway.

Getting There

Photo credit: ballroommarfa.org

If you’re feeling a road trip through West Texas, take the six-hour drive from Austin, or fly into El Paso’s International Airport and head southeast for about three hours. Midland Airport is also a three-hour drive. Since Marfa is so rural, it’s quite the haul from larger cities in Texas.

Accommodations

Photo courtesy of El Cosmico

If you’re looking to meet other artists (like Queen Bey) and really #liveauthentic, El Cosmico is an 18-acre trailer, tent, and teepee hotel with a hammock grove made for artist meetups. The Hotel Paisano is a restored hotel with original architecture, plus an outdoor restaurant and pool. Thunderbird Hotel is also beloved, with its 1950s minimalist chic vibe. Plus, the top 20 highest-rated Airbnbs in town range from airstream trailers to boats on dry land to “Modern + Minimal” homes.

Eats & Drinks

A hippie meets a cowboy at a local dive for a Lonestar kinda atmosphere, Marfa’s food and drink scene runs the gamut from trippy grilled cheese spots to food trucks to breakfast tacos. Many places are cash only, so be sure to check before you go. Hours are spotty at all of Marfa’s restaurants, but you can take comfort in the fact that Stripes is open 24-7.

Thunderbird Café has gourmet sandwiches, fried chicken, and fluffy biscuits making for a solid lunch spot. Marfa Burrito’s breakfast burritos are a hallmark of the scene, and you can get your fancy coffee fix at Do Your Thing, alongside homemade sourdough toast, unique porridge specials, and Four Barrell Coffee. Grilled Cheese Parlour is filled with 1950s TVs serving late-night grilled cheeses, and Food Shark is an airstream serving tasty Marfalafel and other mediterranean food. Boys2Men is a renowned food truck specializing in breakfast tacos, and Chochineal has an upscale brunch, specializing in Tex-inspired fare like chilaquiles.

Sight Seeing

Photo credit: Lauren Swedenborg

Most shops, restaurants, and galleries are closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, so plan to take it easy or go exploring outside of town those days. There are two grocery stores and two ATMs in town, so consider bringing snacks and cash with you. Thirty minutes outside of town near Valentine, Texas, lies Marfa’s most recognizable marker: Prada Marfa. A permanent art exhibition co-produced by Ballroom Marfa, this Insta-worthy freestanding store is disorienting as you peek through the glass windows to see the fall 2005 Prada collection … in the middle of West Texas.

Speaking of Ballroom Marfa, their gallery is the town’s go-to for art — especially their immersive video installations. Pretty much every part of town has been converted into a makeshift art gallery, so there’s always eye (and brain!) candy like this installation in the front room of Big Bend Coffee Roaster, “The Listening.”

Photo credit: Maria Perry

If you’re into the unknown — and possibly extraterrestrial — try to catch the Marfa Lights along Route 67, which are unexplained beams of bright lights that flicker across the horizon 10 to 20 times per year. Or just stick with regular ol’ stargazing, sans light pollution, at one of McDonald Observatory’s Star Parties to see the stars in the rural country, 40 minutes from Marfa.

Shopping

Photo credit: Maria Perry

Marfa’s shops have the bare hipster essentials: gemstones, cowboy boots, vintage clothes, and books. At Moonlight Gemstones, you can buy Himalayan pink sea salt by the pound, plus handmade jewelry. The Marfa Book Company doubles as an art gallery and performance space and has been in business for 20 years, located in the Hotel Saint George. Cobra Rock Boot Company makes one handmade pair of ankle boots in many variations. Seeing a theme? Marfa fosters artists. And then there’s Ranch Dressing — a vintage pop-up shop with a bounty of carefully curated used apparel.

Restaurants, shops and bars change often with artists coming and going, so be sure to check marfalist.org, the minimalist site Marfa locals use to stay up-to-date with the most recent changes.


Lede image: One of Donald Judd’s concrete pieces at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. Photo credit: K Bennett.

LISTEN: Shinyribs, ‘Don’t Leave It a Lie’

Artist: Shinyribs
Hometown: Austin, TX
Song: “Don’t Leave It a Lie”
Album: I Got Your Medicine
Release Date: February 24, 2017

In Their Words: “The only rule one ever really needs is the Golden Rule. We all lie to ourselves and each other. That’s alright, as long as you don’t leave it that way. Be you, but be true. Always come back to love and honesty.” — Kevin Russell


Photo credit: Wyatt McSpadden

3×3: Matt Harlan on Good Hair, Highway Wind, and Essential Shoes

Artist: Matt Harlan
Hometown: Houston, TX
Latest Album: In the Dark
Personal Nicknames: Mackie


If Jesus, Buddha, Krishna, and Mohammed were in a band together, who would play what?

Jesus — guitar / vox (He’s “the way,” right? Gotta be front and center.) 
Buddha — bass (b/c “Buddha on bass” would sound awesome as the band is introduced.)
Krishna — flute
Mohammed — drums

If you were a candle, what scent would you be?

Highway Wind

What literary character or story do you most relate to?

These days, not to be dark, but the story of Job is really hitting home for me.


How many pairs of shoes do you own?

Three — boots, sneakers, slip-on shoes

What’s your best physical attribute?

Hair

Which is your favorite Revival — Creedence Clearwater, Dustbowl, Elephant, Jamestown, New Grass, Tent, or -ists?

Creedence Clearwater, for sure


Animal, mineral, or vegetable?

Animal

Rain or shine?

Rain

Mild, medium, or spicy?

Spicy

WATCH: Julie Mintz, ‘The Reason’

Artist: Julie Mintz
Hometown: Corpus Christi, TX
Song: "The Reason"
Album: The Thin Veil
Label: Manimal

In Their Words: "Love is so unreasonable that one person can be both our reason to have hope and, almost simultaneously, our reason to despair. So the song is an expression of the extremes to which love takes us. At least that’s how I’ve experienced love … maybe i’m doing it wrong!

Speaking of love (or lack thereof), I met the director/cinematographer of this music video under romantic pretenses. Although we never made it past our first date, a friendship and working relationship endured, and he shot this magical video for me on a horse ranch in Acton, California. The rider in the video is a seasoned rodeo cowboy who insisted on addressing me as 'ma’am' during the entire shoot (no matter how many times I asked him to call me Julie) which sort of made me feel old, but mostly made me long to move home to Texas and fall in love with a real-life cowboy." — Julie Mintz


Photo credit: Oden Roberts

3×3: El Campo on Sam Cooke, Shiny Food, and South Alabama

Artist: Jerid Morris (of El Campo)
Hometown: San Antonio, TX 
Latest Album: "Skinny Kids" / "Sloe-Eyed" 7" double-single
Personal Nicknames: We call Rudy "Ol' Hungry Eyes," because we all sat watching him one night at a tour stop in New Mexico as he went from lady to lady, eyes so hungry, heart so empty, trying to create a spark. The other four of us bonded heavily over that moment watching Ol' Hungry Eyes. 

 

A photo posted by El Campo (@somoselcampo) on

Which decade do you think of as the "golden age" of music?
The 1960s. It doesn't get any better than the Dillards covering the Beatles (the former's version of "I've Just Seen a Face" is, dare we say, better than the original), or the Statler Brothers' debut record, or the last few records Sam Cooke cut before he died. Lots of good country & western music from that decade, lots of great standards, and probably the best rock records ever recorded. 

If you could have a superpower, what would you choose?
The power to make Rudy go to sleep when he's had too much to drink and it's fucking late and we have to get up early and drive 13 hours to Chicago. It is an impossible, perhaps superhuman, task. 

If you were in a high school marching band, which instrument would you want to play?
Tuba

 

A photo posted by El Campo (@somoselcampo) on

What's your go-to road food?
John K. Samson calls it "shiny food you find with gasoline." That's about the size of it. The type of restaurants that populate the interstate highway system in America is not of the very best quality. I'm a vegetarian, so that complicates things even further. Usually, I end up eating mixed nuts and V8 when we're on the road. Once, we tried to eat Mexican food in Nashville — big mistake. We miss tacos awfully when we're away from Texas. 

Who was the best teacher you ever had — and why?
My freshman copywriting teacher was Mr. Pribble. He was a really sweet guy who didn't have any of the typical professorial hubris about who he was. He was genuinely a teacher. He showed up every day to teach you something. He was a pretty sweet, very sincere guy.

What's your favorite fruit?
Mango. You can make a pretty mean vegan barbacoa substitute out of jackfruit. 

 

A photo posted by El Campo (@somoselcampo) on

Boots or sneakers?
If we answer sneakers, they don't let us back in to Texas.

Noodles or rice?
Gotta go rice here. It's enough with the noodles. Get real.

Pacific or Atlantic?
Atlantic. I was born in Florida, though we like to call it "South Alabama."


Photo Credit: Kaitlyn Grimsland

3×3: The Oh Hellos on Colgate, Cold Brew, and What Rhymes with Maggie

Artist: The Oh Hellos (Tyler and Maggie Heath)
Hometown: San Marcos, TX
Latest Project: Dear Wormwood
Personal Nicknames:
Maggie: Unfortunately, not many nice words rhyme with Maggie, so not many nicknames have stuck around.
Tyler: I frequently have friends threaten me with nicknames like T-bone, Big T, Billy T Williams, Old Bill, etc., but they're all quitters and give up after about an hour.

Who is the most surprising artist in current rotation in your iTunes/Spotify?
T: Neil Cicierega's music is the definition of surprising, and it's been in my rotation more than just about anything lately.
M: '68 is currently probably the most surprising, but mostly because it sheds light on my the Chariot days (long live, never forget). Honestly, I listen to more podcasts than music right now though, what with all the driving! My current favorite is Lore.

Who would play you in the Lifetime movie of your life?
T: Paul F. Tompkins, no question.
M: I will forever be crossing my fingers that my lady-crush Emma Stone would play my role, should Wes Anderson ever be interested in directing a biopic.

If the After-Life exists, what song will be playing when you arrive?
M: I really, really hope it's this.
T: Or this.

What brand of toothpaste do you use?
M: Currently, Colgate sample-size packets, because I left my Arm & Hammer at a hotel last week.
T: I use regular-sized Colgate!

What's your beverage of choice?
T: Cold brew coffee!
M: There is a coffee shop in San Marcos, TX, that makes the very best cold brew in the continental United States. It is called Wake the Dead, and you should go to there to fully know our beverage of choice.
T: "Very best" isn't an exaggeration. We've been all over the country and haven't ever found another shop that can beat it. We welcome all challengers, because good coffee should be shared (and because, if there's better coffee somewhere out there, I want to drink it).

What's your favorite TV show?
T: I've watched Parks and Recreation all the way through at least four times.
M: All of my favorite shows are finished! I think my absolute favorite show was Over the Garden Wall. If you want to be whisked away by whimsy, please go watch it!

Star Wars or Star Trek?
M: I respect both for their own unique qualities!
T: I love them both. Sorry to cop out!

Taylor Swift or Ryan Adams?
M: Taylorallthewaylor
T: I'll say Ryan Adams just to be contrary!

Coffee or tea?
M: There is room in my belly for both.
T: Tea wronged me once as a child and I've never found it in myself to forgive it. Coffee's the only one for me.