AUSTIN, TEXAS – As echoes of a rock band playing only 100 yards away spilled over into their performance, Agnes Obel and her classically tinged chamber-pop band proudly stuck to their role as the antithesis of the South by Southwest Music Conference.
Their music was hushed, ornate, full of nuance and gradual in its majesty — all qualities that typically go over as well as a salad bar at SXSW, but will be perfectly served when they hit one of Minnesota's best listening rooms, the Cedar Cultural Center, next Wednesday.
"It's almost impossible for me to play South by Southwest," Obel admitted while in Austin last week, listing off the lack of adequate soundcheck times (harder with string instruments) and the fact that her band was using recording loops, which pick up all the extraneous noise.
Despite all that, the Danish singer/songwriter and her all-woman ensemble earned a very favorable response when we caught them outside Austin's Clive Bar, which was hardly a typical SXSW party. Thanks in part to the fact that filmmaker David Lynch once did a remix of one of her songs, Obel got invited to play Showtime's promotional party for "Twin Peaks," with star Kyle MacLachlan in attendance and the hot indie-rock band Real Estate for headliners.
That the 36-year-old Copenhagen native would commit to SXSW at all illustrates the sense of adventurism she puts into her music.
"I really like to come into a circumstance where my music is very different from all the other music," she said two days after the Showtime party, relishing a down moment in her hotel's coffee bar, where her icy blue eyes matched her casual, grayish-blue jeans.
"I love to break down all the ideas of what type of artist I am. Especially in Denmark, they get mad if I play a big festival. They expect me to always play in a church somewhere or some sit-down venue."
Obel's latest record, "Citizen of Glass," disrupted if not outright defied expectations based on two prior albums going back to 2010's "Philharmonics," which earned her platinum-record status across much of Europe. Her intricate and dramatic writing style, elegant, falsetto-equipped voice and knack for looped, ambient sonic layers put her somewhere between JoAnna Newsom, Bon Iver and yMusic among contemporary music innovators.