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Ty Walker and the Humanoids
Ty Walker and The Humanoids w/Charlie Whitten, Izaak Opatz
The 5 Spot
1006 Forrest Ave
Nashville, TN 37206
May 7, 2025
8:00 PM CDT
I Was There
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About this concert
Ty Walker and the Humanoids are a band that claims to be from another galaxy, formed after frontman Ty Walker was abducted by a group of aliens who call themselves "The Humanoids." Their genre-bending sound combines alt-country, art rock, soul, sample delia, and psychedelic rock. Known for their otherworldly live shows featuring interactive multimedia, they take audiences on an unforgettable cosmic journey.
"A band of unparalleled creativity, bringing intergalactic otherworldliness to country music" - Happy Magazine (Aus)
--- Izaak Opatz:
Like many of his favorite songwriters (John Hartford, Lucinda Williams, Jeff Tweedy),
Izaak Opatz is an ungulate in life’s winter pasture, chewing on and metabolizing
disappointment, heartbreak, and the other tough stuff into enjoyable musical
carbohydrates. A compulsive metaphorager (and inveterate wordplayboy), Opatz
breaks it all down with enzymes of wry humor, thoughtful simile and close observation -
a therapeutic process of narrativizing his own life that, almost as a byproduct, turns out
savory nuggets of literate, confessional pop.
Where 2018’s Mariachi Static drew from Opatz’s fragmented love life as a seasonal
Park Service employee and resonated especially with the sensitive dirtbag set, Extra
Medium, his latest release, splits time between romantic Hindenburgs across his native
Montana, up the East Coast, and in faraway Los Angeles. Montana and LA especially\
decorate the album, supplying wells of metaphor and scene-making, and as characters
in their own right - LA’s alternately charming (“In the Light of a Love Affair”) and
discomfiting (“East of Barstow”), and, in “Big Sandy”, Montana evolves from setting to
subject as the girl’s feelings he traverses it to see prove less than his own feelings for
the state.
In LA, Opatz learned from and worked alongside Jonny Fritz at Dad Country Leather,
and met bandmates and Extra Medium collaborators Malachi DeLorenzo (drums,
producer, engineer) and Dylan Rodrigue (multi-instrumentalist, producer). He now lives
in Missoula, Montana, where he runs his own custom leather shop, is writing the next
album, and pursuing a master's in journalism.
--Charlie Whitten:
Charlie Whitten grew up during the last gasp of the 20th century, a time when grungy rock bands and teen idols ruled the airwaves. You can’t blame the guy for looking back a bit, for rustling through his Dad’s collection of vintage records and finding some better music to soundtrack his life. Years later, the Nashville-based songwriter is rolling those influences into his own sound, a mellow brand of folk-rock that tips its hat to Pink Floyd’s psychedelic swirl one minute and Simon and Garfunkel’s acoustic wistfulness the next.
Some would call him an old soul. Others would just say he’s got good taste.
“For me, the ‘60s and ‘70s were the golden age for songwriting,” he says. “That’s when songs seemed to be the real focus, and people reached outside the box. The chords and melodies used were unheard of.”
Dreaming, Whitten’s 2012 debut, channeled some of the trippier sounds that came out of those two decades, from Dark Side of the Moon to Big Star’s Sister Lovers. The album was lush. It was dreamy. Keyboards, horns, and percussion collided, creating a soft foundation for Whitten’s vocals and guitar leads. When it came time to write songs for 2014’s Hey Love, though, Whitten took the electric guitar out of the forefront and focused on a quieter, stripped-down sound. In other words: less David Gilmour, more Don McLean.
A concept album about searching for love, Hey Love begins and ends with different sections of the same song. Fashioned like bookends, the first half tells the story of a couple parting ways, each partner in search of something else. In the second, they reconcile, knowing that things might not be perfect… but at least they’re real. Whitten took a similar approach to the album itself, which was recorded during a series of live sessions with a four-piece band. Overdubs were eventually added, too, but Whitten put his foot down when it came to the use of a click track. He didn’t want that. He wanted the songs to sway, to sound natural, to sound like songs.
“Any Charlie Whitten album has to sound like a band album,” he explains, “and I didn’t want a band of session players. I wanted a group of friends, of creative thinkers who could play the songs with feeling. I think a music album should be very similar to a photo album: a series of ‘pictures’ with the people you know, things you’ve seen, and places you’ve been within a period of time.”
Maybe that’s why Hey Love sounds so comfortable, so familiar. The songs tackle big subjects, but they do so with small, laidback touches: a whistling solo here, a burst of organ there, and a whole lot of melody throughout.
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Ty Walker and the Humanoids Biography
Ty Walker and the Humanoids have a backstory that's out of this world. Legend has it that frontman Ty Walker was abducted by aliens (self-named 'The Humanoids') from his tiny hometown of Roscoe, Montana, back in September of 1972. These rag-tag extraterrestrials, with a peculiar liking for old-fashioned country music, saw something in Ty and chose him as their front-man. Since then, they've been traversing the multiverse, honing their strange sonic craft.
Their live shows are something of a cosmic spectacle, featuring the large-headed, buggy-eyed aliens themselves adorned in matching black western wear, a pedal-steel playing android, and Ty, as the perhaps reluctant cowpoke frontman who leads the audience through an otherworldly set. The show is a multimedia experience with sci-fi elements and often includes a tin foil hat contest for attendees to join in.
While The Humanoids may think they're playing humanesque country music, their sound is a genre-bending fusion of alt-country, art rock, soul, sampledelia, swamp and psychedelic rock. To date, they've released their debut full-length album, "Where the Hell is Roscoe?" and are gearing up for their forthcoming second release, "Home on the Strange," set to drop in the fall of 2024.
Read MoreTheir live shows are something of a cosmic spectacle, featuring the large-headed, buggy-eyed aliens themselves adorned in matching black western wear, a pedal-steel playing android, and Ty, as the perhaps reluctant cowpoke frontman who leads the audience through an otherworldly set. The show is a multimedia experience with sci-fi elements and often includes a tin foil hat contest for attendees to join in.
While The Humanoids may think they're playing humanesque country music, their sound is a genre-bending fusion of alt-country, art rock, soul, sampledelia, swamp and psychedelic rock. To date, they've released their debut full-length album, "Where the Hell is Roscoe?" and are gearing up for their forthcoming second release, "Home on the Strange," set to drop in the fall of 2024.
Alt-country
Indie
Psychedelic Soul
Alternative
Sample Based Alien 808
Swamp Rock
Art Rock
Psychedelic Rock
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