FEED YOUR EARS
Lunch sounds good: Sonya Coté and Graham Reynolds at Fusebox 2012
It's the furthest thing from a secret that Austin residents rank among the lucky when it comes to good food. The culinary scene in this town has shown a breadth of scope and depth of quality that even uber-critics like Anthony Bourdain can't help but praise.
At lunchtime on Tuesday, under the pavilion on the plaza level of the Whole Foods flagship at Sixth and Lamar, grand cuisinière Sonya Coté teamed up with composer-bandleader Graham Reynolds for an afternoon combo of the culinary and musical arts and a promise of exciting collaborations to come.
Digestible Feats curator Hank Cathey arrested our attention before the event began, outlining the remaining food-and-drink majesty on order throughout the rest of Fusebox Fest. Shortly thereafter the feast began, smorgasbord style, and we helped ourselves.
Imagine this: A thick sweet potato soup with little cherry-bomb peppers afloat in it; fruit as fresh as you'll find anywhere, dipped or drizzled in a coconut-chocolate sauce and cacao-nib powder dressing; a diverse array of quick pickles and exquisite house-ground mustard; mushrooms, onions and cherry peppers in a monstrously savory marinade; a subtle and serious achievement of a salad, a garden mesclun of beet greens, spinach, arugula, scallions, etc.; horchata in tiny cups and seltzer water in cans to wash the palette between tastes.
If you managed to miss Tuesday's light-lunch performance, never fear. Coté and Reynolds will team up again at Fusebox 2013 for a full-fledged Digestible Feat.
All of this and more.
Once everyone had taken a helping, Reynolds took his place in the center of the pavilion and brought the second part of the experience to beginning.
"I've never used any of this stuff," Reynolds tells us, indicating a buffet of gizmos situated atop a careworn piano. For the gearheads: an Alesis ControlPad and a Korg Wavedrum, processed through a faderfox micromodul DJ2 and MOTU 8pre Firewire preamp.
The percussion controllers were rigged with a sample kit of kitchen sounds — a bowl full of water, slammed oven and refrigerator doors, a chopping block hit, water boiling, a food processor grinding and a knife-sharpening scrape. Reynolds pulled out a pair of beaters and exercised wicked stick control to bring to life a kitchen-flavored take on the opening riff of "Immigrant Song."
The piano took center stage for the next selection, featuring an intro of classical trills into a sort of Alabama gypsy honky-tonk jive, all decorated with a thin layer of electronic distortion. The distortion disappeared partway through and echo effects dramatized a few bars of cinematic interlude before the jive returned with a lift in force, as jives do.
Reynolds closed his set with a key-tickling, percussion-slapping medley that included a one-man-one-piano version of "Teenage Wasteland." The final bars reprised the opening Zeppelin riff as we picked at the remaining salad and strawberries.
Fun fact: strawberries have the lowest sugar content of any fruit. Lemons and carrots contain more sugar than strawberries. Another fun fact is that coconut-chocolate sauce and pineapple were practically created to exist together, so try that sometime if you get a chance.
The throng of diners included several local personages of the non-culinary arts, notably Salvage Vanguard Artistic Director Jenny Larson, poet and musician Hilary Thomas and photographer Erica Nix, who was kind enough to contribute her shots from the event.
If you managed to miss Tuesday's light-lunch performance, never fear. Coté and Reynolds will team up again at Fusebox 2013 for a full-fledged Digestible Feat. And, of course, in the meantime, visit East Side Show Room and Hillside Farmacy to get a mouthful of the casual elegance that Coté’s coterie brings to our fair city on a daily basis.
---
Graham Reynolds performs at the Festival Hub on May 6 with violinist Todd Reynolds. Check out the list of culinary wonders that remain for this year's festival at the Digestible Feats schedule on the Fusebox website.