Smooth Operators

They might be young, but the musicians of Mind Shrine know how to find a slick old-school groove, and a growing audience.

Anthony Rathbun

Fifteen seconds. That’s how long it takes the breezy track “Goodbye” from the South Houston smooth-funk pop quartet Mind Shrine to elevate listeners. Recorded locally at SugarHill studios, the song kicks off with a drumbeat and 14 seconds of bubbly bass before frontwoman Krystina Wilson provides liftoff with Sade-like verve. “My intentions were not bad, but I pretended not to try,” Wilson croons, stretching syllables around the shimmering sound of guitars.

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Art+Culture

The Art of Recovery

Artists strive to overcome disaster, to support each other, and lift up a storm-worn city.

Todd Spoth

On Sunday night, Aug. 26, as Hurricane Harvey raged, Claire Richards stood at her window in the Elder Streets Lofts, where she lives with her teenage daughter, and watched the rain lashing the street.

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Roll Over Beethoven

With a fresh spin on date night — they’ve got food trucks! — UH prof Rob Smith and his cohorts are making chamber music cool.

Phoebe Rourke
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With an apologetic shrug, Houston composer and UH Moores School of Music professor Rob Smith, 49, shifts to make room on his lap for the family dog Truffles, a freshly groomed white toy poodle his pediatrician wife Shea Palamountain adopted from a local shelter. On this late-summer afternoon, Hurricane Harvey still hovers in the Gulf of Mexico, and the longtime musician has less pressing matters than storm prep on his mind. “I don’t know about these,” Smith says, gesturing to a pair of red bows tied into the dog’s hair. (Flooding would narrowly miss Smith’s home in Willow Meadows, south of Bellaire, and the UH performing arts facilities likewise would escape Harvey mostly unscathed.)

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Art+Culture