Skip to main content
texasbbq

Three Days on the Texas Barbecue Trail

By Adventures, Eat & Drink, Travel

Texas is in the middle of a new golden age of barbecue, so there has never been a better time to go on a serious barbecue road trip and explore the Texas Barbecue Trail. And, conveniently, since all the very best barbecue restaurants in the state are clustered in or near Austin, your road trip can consist of a few day trips, using Austin as a central hub and base of operations. You’ll want to arrive by late Thursday night, rent a room in Austin for the weekend, and acquire some sort of large car, ideally a Cadillac. Not an eco-friendly choice for a road trip I’ll allow, but, well, if you wanted eco-friendly maybe a barbecue road trip was the wrong choice to begin with. Don’t worry—on Monday it’ll be back to kale, Priuses, and normality. This is all just temporary.

Day One: White Hat vs. Black Hat

Texas Barbecue Trail

Louie Mueller BBQ

On Friday morning (for this trip, you can’t be averse to meat in the morning), head north to take a side in a genuine family feud. Of all the grand ol’ temples of Texas barbecue, only one still holds its own at the highest level of competition, and that is Louie Mueller Barbecue, in Taylor, Texas. Hallowed BBQ ground for generations, Louie Mueller has been topping lists of Texas BBQ joints for as long as such lists have existed. Louie founded it in 1949, his son Bobby took over in 1974, and Bobby’s son Wayne took over in 2007.

But there’s a name missing from that list. John Mueller, not Wayne, inherited both his father’s virtuosic mastery of smoked meats and the restaurant. But like a tragic character straight from a Western ballad, he blew it all up and left town. Since then the “Dark Prince of Texas BBQ” has been a drifter, periodically opening another BBQ joint, earning some money, and then blowing it up again. His current establishment, Black Box BBQ, about a half hour from Taylor, serves phenomenal barbecue.

Texas Barbecue TrailSo, what will it be—white hat and brother Wayne, or black hat and brother John? The answer is both. But sacred places deserve respect, so head to Louie Mueller first. Avoid the interstate—better to head east to Farm-to-Market Road 973, which you can take north all the way to Taylor. Try to arrive before they open at 11 a.m. As you step through the rusty screen door, the world goes sepia-tone; everything is stained from years of smoke. The menu is extensive, but stay focused—you are here just for brisket. Beef brisket, slowly smoked over indirect heat from post oak and seasoned only with salt and black pepper, is the undisputed king of Texas barbecue, and Louie Mueller serves some of the best anywhere. The meat is toothsome and moist, without a hint of the elasticity that signals un-rendered collagen (the ruin of brisket) but also without the intense overindulgent richness that plagues so many of the recent stars on the barbecue scene. The fat is rendered beautifully, savory and delicious, and the whole thing is encased in the signature Mueller black pepper crust. The moist brisket is excellent, but the lean is Platonic; I always get both, to hedge my bets, but I always get more of the lean. The styrofoam cup of red-colored onion soup they give you is what passes for a sauce here; it is best appreciated as a curiosity rather than as a foodstuff. Ignore the forgettable sides—if you need something to cut the grease, I recommend pickles and onions, and maybe just a bite of white bread. Actually, this side policy will apply at all of these establishments.

Like many great anti-heroes, John Mueller has a superpower—he can do things with a beef rib that no other man on earth can rival.

No time to lose—there’s more barbecue to eat. So put on your black hat and some James McMurtry, crank the volume, and head north up Main to Highway 29, which will take you to Georgetown—fancier than Taylor, with old stone churches and picturesque houses, making Black Box BBQ stick out all the more. Located on a vacant lot on Church street, Black Box is just three trailers, 8 picnic tables, and a big pile of split post oak. Sometimes they run a gasoline generator to power the electric scale. They don’t have a liquor license so, the beer is free—help yourself from the cooler in the back, and nod thanks to John, the grumpy man with the beard. Black Box lacks the historical impact of grandfather’s establishment, but actually, sitting on a plastic chair outside, watching the fire and listening to Waylon Jennings and George Jones, you realize this place has ambience to spare. Now is the time to branch out and try some of those other meats. The pork spare ribs here are delicious, perfectly cooked and crusted with salt and black pepper rather than some unfortunate glaze or powdery rub. Even better is the handmade plain beef sausage (NOT the other varieties!), which with its coarse grind and snappy casing is some of the best in Texas. Of course, there is the brisket, both the slightly-too-rich moist with its crackly crust and the excellent lean. But none of these are the real reason you’re here. Like many great anti-heros, John Mueller has a superpower—he can do things with a beef rib that no other man on earth can rival. So you must get one of those, and probably just one—they are large and filling, with a rich, robust beefiness like a more flavorful, less tender brisket. They sell out fast, but it’s Friday, so I like your odds; by this time on a Saturday, they’d be long gone.

It’s time for dessert and coffee, so you should head five blocks over to Monument Cafe, which has the best banana puddings outside of Georgia. Served in individual ramekins, they are made daily with real custard and then baked under airy meringues. Pudding sounds dense, but these manage to be light and elegant, a perfect post-barbecue dessert. If you don’t like bananas, or if they’re sold out of puddings (which can happen fast), the cream pies here are also very good, though they can hardly be called light.

Now you’ve got a little time to kill. If you like the outdoors, you should stay on Highway 29 straight to Llano, then head south down to Enchanted Rock, the pink granite inselberg known to Texans as perhaps the prettiest spot in the Hill Country. Or, if that’s not your idea of a good time, you could wend your way on rural routes through the Balcones down to Marble Falls, and stop at the Bluebonnet Cafe for a slice of peanut butter pie before continuing west. In either case, you should plan to be in Llano by about 6 p.m. for dinner at the original Cooper’s Old Time Pit Bar-B-Que.

Cooper’s is the outlier of the places on this list, and not just geographically. The barbecue here is less polished, less sophisticated, and so is the ambiance; the steel livestock fencing that guides you toward rows of giant smokers means you’ll feel like a cowhand at mess time. Instead of slow smoking with post-oak, Cooper’s uses direct heat from mesquite coals, a throwback to the earliest days of Texas barbecue. That means less smoke, but the smoke is from mesquite, so it’s more aggressive, more tang than caramel. Of course you must try the brisket (but maybe only a little bit), which here is a wild, chewy, intensely flavorful variant; do not feel obligated to eat all the fat they leave on. Their pork ribs are some of my favorite in the state, the rich fattiness of the pork balanced perfectly by the salt and the tangy mesquite. The same balance is at work in the enormous pork chop, for which Cooper’s is justly famous. But the reason we are here tonight is that Friday Night is Ribeye Night. The ribeyes at Cooper’s are well-seasoned medium-cooked steaks imbued with that beautiful tang of mesquite smoke. You might have to ask for these if they’re not in the pit, and you might have to wait. It’s worth it. As you select your meats, the pit-master, spearing them on a long fork, will ask you if you want them dunked into a bucket of dirty vinegar (they call it barbecue sauce). Why anyone would ever say yes to this is beyond me, but it seems inexplicably popular. Please don’t give in to peer pressure: Just say “no.” When you are done, wrap up the remaining 3/4 of your pork chop and take Highway 71 straight back to South Austin. Take the Lamar exit and head over to the Broken Spoke for a few beers and a two step, or two. Then, although it’s hard to forgo Austin’s famous nightlife, go to bed. Remember, you’re on a meat mission.

Day Two: Meet Tootsie

Texas Barbecue Trail

Slicing pork ribs.

Saturday morning is reserved for Snow’s, because Snow’s might be the best barbecue on the planet, and they’re only open on Saturday mornings. Also, the line can get very long, so you want to be there early; 8 a.m. would be ideal, 8:45 a.m is already getting a little too late. On top of that, it’s an hour away, in Lexington, Texas. So wake up early, grab some coffee, and try to hit the road by 7 a.m. No time for roundabout routes, so just head straight there—290 to Farm-to-Market 696. Fortunately, Farm-to-Market 696 in the dawn light is a beautiful road, so enjoy the drive.

Snow’s is a small red building with charming outdoor seating next to the outdoor smokers. It was only founded in 2003, but one of the founders, Pitmaster “Tootsie” Tomanetz, had multiple decades of prior experience smoking meat. Mrs. Tomanetz is an icon in the BBQ world, and rightly so—at 83 years old, she is still running the pit herself, and is producing some of the best barbecue available anywhere. Don’t skimp on the velvety brisket, which ranges in quality between exquisitely delicious and mathematically perfect. The pork steak is also astonishingly good, moist and deeply flavorful without being too rich. And, one morning, the jalapeno sausage forever altered the way I think about sausage. But really, everything here is great. And the dewy backyard, with Hank Williams on the speakers mixing with the sound of cattle lowing from the stockyard down the street, is as perfect a place to eat barbecue as one can imagine.

And the dewy backyard, with Hank Williams on the speakers mixing with the sound of cattle lowing from the stockyard down the street, is as perfect a place to eat barbecue as one can imagine.

Stop afterwards for gas, a bathroom break, and a bottle of Big Red at the Bastrop Buc-ee’s. Then you have a little time to kill before the next stop. Nature lovers could trek out of their way down to Palmetto State Park, to see a weirdly isolated little Lost Valley of the DinoPlants. Pie enthusiasts could head over to Round Top in search of a slice of pecan. Or you could do what I did after my first trip to Snow’s and sit half comatose on a rock in Bastrop State Park, staring at the sky while fighting back the Fear. What are you doing out here in the middle of Texas? What convinced you that eating this much barbecue was a good plan? Will you ever recover from this? But no, that’s just the meat sickness talking—some more Big Red will take care of that for now.

Press on to Lockhart. There’s lots of great barbecue available in Lockhart, but you just ate at Snow’s, so you’re here with laser focus, for just one crucial thing: the best sausage in Texas. Admire the beautiful old courthouse, then walk over to Smitty’s Market. As the screen door smacks closed behind you, it will take your eyes a moment to adjust to the dark flame-licked cavern you’ve just entered. The pits at the other end of the hallway are always roaring away; take a moment to marvel at the stalactites of ash that form above the fires, and try to get a good look at the pit filled with round sausage links. Those sausages are what you’re after—coarse ground, perfectly spiced, they are bursting with juice, and the casing has an ideal snap. You should really have at least one or two right now. Also, you should buy a bunch more, cold, to stuff into your suitcase. Pro tip: there’s a price break at 25. Twenty-five sausages, not dollars. Buckle up. 

On the way back into Austin, prep for tomorrow. Stop at the Whip In and buy plenty of interesting beer, then swing by a grocery store and pick up a cooler, plastic cups and some ice. Ice the beer down in the cooler, and leave that in your car overnight. Then take the edge off the meat sweats for good with liquor, maybe at drink.well, a cozy bar for the well-heeled hipster, or maybe stuffed into Techo, a quaint little rooftop mezcal bar on top of another bar. Again, though, not too late—you have another early morning tomorrow.

Day Three: It’s Not Just a Line It’s The Line

Texas Barbecue TrailSunday morning, it’s up at dawn again, this time to get in The Line at Franklin. Aaron Franklin opened Franklin in 2009 and changed everything. Prior to Franklin, the assumption was that any truly great barbecue restaurant had to be located in a small Texas town and had to have been there for years. Great BBQ joints somehow happened biodynamically, or by act of God, like wild truffles.

Texas Barbecue Trail

Lunch Tray pork ribs, smoked turkey, sausage, brisket and pulled pork. Photo by Wyatt McSpadden

If a barbecue restaurant did well in a city, it would become a chain and burn out—it just wasn’t stable. Aaron changed all that by hard work, careful planning, and deliberate action, and his model of success more than anything else has led to the current golden age of Texas BBQ. He has expanded slowly and carefully, making sure never to compromise quality for quantity, and, indeed, he has never had enough quantity—Franklin has sold out of BBQ every day since it opened in 2009. Hence: The Line.

Getting lunch at Franklin is an all-day affair, and The Line has its own code. I’m told by a reliable source that 8 a.m. is a safe time to arrive on a Sunday morning, but I’d rather be there closer to 7:30 a.m. Assuming you’re not doing this on your own, head straight there to establish your spot in line, then send runners out for coffee and maybe bagels (but no protein for God’s sake!). Once you’ve had a little coffee, it’s time to bust out those beers. Share with your neighbors—that’s why you got those cups, after all. The trick to a good trip to Franklin is to stop worrying and love The Line, and I find that that’s best done by building camaraderie via free beer.

If you’re going to wait four hours for your lunch, obviously you’re going to try some of everything at the end. And, as at Snow’s, it will be worth the ordeal; everything here is fantastic. The pork ribs are great, and the last time I was here I was very impressed with the deep beefiness of the sausage. One thing that is very different is that the sauces here are delicious, even worth putting on one or two bites of meat. But, of course, the critical thing is the brisket, and really you could just get that and be at peace. Franklin’s brisket is ethereal stuff, tender and moist without a hint of elasticity, silky and rich but not quite overindulgent, its perfectly rendered fat encased in a black pepper crust. If this brisket seems familiar, well, it should; Aaron Franklin learned the Mueller school of brisket when he was employed by John Mueller at one of those early independent joints. But Aaron was the ant to John’s grasshopper, and when John blew that joint up, Aaron bought the smoker and used it to start Franklin.

And now you have earned the right to judge, with some authority—how does Franklin stand up? Is it really the absolute best? How does his brisket compare with its immediate ancestors, still alive and well around Taylor? How do his ribs compare with the tangy pork chop from Llano, or the luxurious pork steak from Snow’s? Is his sausage as good as John Mueller’s? (It’s definitely not as good as Smitty’s.) And the truth is, Franklin’s is good enough that it just might win out, across the board. Even if it doesn’t, you’ll have a wonderful time playing judge.

You made it! Celebrate by not leaving Austin today! You could go swimming at Barton Springs Municipal Pool, or play a quick 18 at Peter Pan Mini Golf. Or, if it’s too hot out, Pinballz Arcade or the original Alamo Drafthouse would be delightful places to endure the aftermath of your morning. However you spend your afternoon, end the day by toasting your triumph with a round of Margaritas on the patio at Matt’s El Rancho at sunset. Now, start your vegan diet. Congratulations you’ve survived the Texas Barbecue Trail.

See all of our food and drink coverage here.

negroni

It’s Negroni Week!

By Eat & Drink

A century ago, the beautiful Caffe Giacosa on Florence’s famed Via Tornabuoni was a regular stop for Count Camillo Negroni who enjoyed his regular afternoon aperitif—an Americano cocktail—there. One day (maybe he had an especially bad day? Or an especially good one?) he asked the bartender Fosco Scarselli to amp up the usual by adding gin instead of soda water to the Campari. Scarselli added an orange garnish and the Negroni became a thing.

Tracy Gomez, bartender at AC Hotel and winner of Salt Lake magazine’s 2017 Cocktail Contest, will make her classic version using Tanqueray gin, Campari and Lustau Vermut rojo. “We’re calling our variation the Cascadian Negroni and making it with Big Gin bourbon barrel aged gin (Washington), Ransom sweet vermouth (Oregon) and Tempus Fugit Gran Classico bitter (California).” 

Well, we aren’t positive that’s a true story or that the gin-craving Negroni was really a count (his grandfather was) and the caffe has gone the way of most things old and beautiful, but the drink survives. Really, it thrives in today’s cocktail scene, a beautiful garnet-colored flash of elegant bitterness among all the sweet sips usually preferred by Americans. Like all recipes, the one for a classic Negroni (1 oz. Campari, 1 oz. gin, 1 oz. sweet vermouth, stirred and served over rocks) has been tinkered with. The Negroni spagliato (meaning “wrong”) calls for prosecco; the Negroski uses vodka instead of gin.

In 2013, the magazine Imbibe and Campari, presented the first Negroni Week and raise funds for charities. Since, 10,000 bars participate and $2 million has been raised. Every June, bars and restaurants mix Negronis and Negroni variations for the cause.

This year Negroni Week runs through June 30. Bartenders across town will be slinging their takes on the classic summer drink.

See all of our food and drink coverage here.

Monsieur crepes

By Eat & Drink

Ididn’t take my 14-year-old son to Europe this summer. But I did take him to Monsieur Crêpes, and that was pretty darn close. The first thing Charlie and I noticed was that Salt Lake’s latest food truck-turned-brick and mortar establishment, is very, very French. The authentic accent of owner, Maxime Ambeza, is trés French. The interior is charming, with painted shutters on the wall and the words “Bon Appetit” written above a pass-through window The tiny patio area out back—designed to seat about 20—is very European. And, of course, it would be hard to get more French than the cuisine—crêpes.

Monsieur crepes

Above: The Louvre: Bavarian cream, rasberry jam, powdered sugar, rasberry syrup and whipped cream

There’s the sweet Champs-Élysées—Nutella, strawberry, bananas, powdered sugar, chocolate syrup, whipped cream, or the savory Versailles—Brie, prosciutto, spinach, herbs de Provence and tomato. Add a Monsieur, a Merci and the crêpe that took the United States by storm four decades ago—La Suzette—and you’ve got a full-blown French experience, without the expensive flight. “Ooh la la,” said Charles jokingly, upon sight of the menu.

In the ‘70s, at Magic Pan locations all over the nation,  a gimmicky rotating invention allowed crêpes to be mass produced at restaurants in malls across America. That’s not what’s happening at Monsieur Crêpes. Instead, Ambeza uses a family recipe and cooks his crêpes on a flat round stone. At Monsieur Crêpes the the house-made jams and whipped cream are the real treat. Perfectly sweet cream and perfectly tart apricot and strawberry jams made the sweet crepes far more appealing than the savory brie and ham- filled ones we tried. In fact, Charlie, generally a fan of cheese and pig-based meats, all but passed up the savory options on our table.

In addition to the handful of salads on the menu (who goes to a crêpes place for salad?) savory crepes are served with mixed greens—Charlie didn’t touch those either, of course. We didn’t try the vegan and gluten-free crêpe options, but they are available.

The crêpes are good—crisp, fresh and made to order—but let’s be honest: Crêpes are just a delivery system. It needs only to hold onto whatever it’s filled with. And with the the quality and variety of fillings available here, that’s très simple.

IF YOU GO

  • Address: 1617 South 900 East, SLC
  • Web: monsieurcrepesut.com
  • Phone: 801-259-5843
  • Entrees: $-$$ (Low to Moderate)
  • Monsieur Crêpe is closed Monday and Tuesday to accommodate their food truck schedule. 

Subscribers can see more. Sign up and you’ll be included in our membership program and get access to exclusive deals, premium content and more. Get the magazine, get the deals, get the best of life in Utah! 

web_FULL_UAF_2018_Trevor_Hooper_Photo

Give a Crap About the Utah Arts Festival, Literally

By Arts & Culture

In addition to the gosh-dang DINOSAURS, the Utah Arts Festival is about the local arts community, each year local poets, filmmakers, visual artists and musicians get to put their work in front of the loyal attendees and find new ways to create. So it’s, like, a good thing. To keep funding for events, workshops, programming and to help support the community they need our help, so come on and Give A Crap.

Give a CrapAn innovative and potty-mouthed fundraiser new last year at the festival, the Give A Crap campaign is hoping we all never grew past poop jokes. For $75 your message, hopefully something involving farts, can adorn one of the many potties at this year’s UAF.

Yes that’s right. Your words. On a toilet. Plus you’ll get two UAF tickets and a commemorative foam porta-potty (like the one in the photo below), as additional thanks for your donation.

 

Give a crapDonate here RIGHT NOW and and tag @slmag on your instashots of your bathroom graffiti  so we can see your signs!

You can see the full music line up here.
A preview of other arts happenings here.
And this thing about dinosaurs here.

Subscribers can see more. Sign up and you’ll be included in our membership program and get access to exclusive deals, premium content and more. Get the magazine, get the deals, get the best of life in Utah! 

webClose-Act-Saurus-©-Bert-Holtmann2-1

Thar Be Dragons at Utah Arts Fest 2019

By Arts & Culture

Internationally praised, Close-Act Theatre will be presenting their larger than life “Saurus” street-theater dinosaurs at the Utah Arts Festival this Thursday June 20th through Sunday, June 23rd. The performers will be showcasing their Saurus production, featuring their giant 16-feet tall and 24-feet long dinosaurs, daily at 4 pm, 6 pm and 8 pm.

Close-act Theatre

Festival-attendees will be able to interact with the Close-Act Theatre dinosaurs and enjoy their entertainment as they roam Library Square during the festival. Kids and Adults of all ages will be in awe of their performance as they see Dinosaurs come to life right here in downtown Salt Lake City! For more information about the 2019 Festival, click here.

You can see the full music line up here.

A preview of other arts happenings here.

And this thing about toilets here.

webKids-Art-Yard-073-SM-UAF-2017-Trevor-Hooper

Utah Arts Festival 2019 Also Has Art

By Arts & Culture

Summer is here and that means that the beloved Utah Arts Festival is back again. The festival has been running every fourth weekend in June for the past 43 years. Featuring multi-disciplinary arts from local and national artists, food and interactive street theatre, hello dinosaurs, each year continues to get better and better.

The Utah Arts Festival is not only a way for Utahns to find inspiration through art, it brings together the community for a greater cause and to give back to the arts community in efforts of keeping art alive and thriving in Utah for many years to come.

KIDS FEST

www.trevorhooperphoto.com

One of the best parts of the Arts Festival is the kidsfest! Every year kids get to explore their creativity by going to the Art Yard. This years theme is insects where kids will be able to build ants in the ant maze, decorate giant bugs, learn print-making techniques and more fun bug stuff. KidsFest runs every day from 12-9pm
For more kid-friendly activities at the Festival click here.

ART BOOTHS

There are more than 150 artist booths at this years festival, including many local artists, all coming with their own unique work.
University of Utah Alumni and Helper, Utah local Aaron Memmott will be showing off his amazing paintings over at booth 169. There will be 5 different metal works artists who will have their own booth, including Utah born Robert Simmons of Invictus Steelworks who creates beautiful bespoke tables. For the ceramics lovers there is plenty in store with multiple ceramics booths and Salt Lake creatives Adam Addley & Camie Oka of Adley Craft.
Grab some food and get lost in the beauty of the art booths this year.

URBAN ARTS

Urban Arts at the Utah Arts Festival is well known for the graffiti art and of course, the hats. The DJ’s will be playing music as the audience watches the urban art come to life from the street and graffiti artists.

FILMS

This year the Utah Arts Fest features “Fear No Film.” The Library auditorium will be running programs all weekend during the festival, and all free to the public! This year the programs include new documentaries, animated and narrative shorts and much more. Click here to see the Fear No Film line up!

MUSIC

Can’t forget about the tunes. We have created a music guide for this years Arts Festival, click here to get the scoop.

Whisper-Ridge-e1560955417347

OK So Now There is Heli-Biking in Utah

By Adventures, Outdoors

Whisper Ridge is already renowned for its powder-fueled cat and helicopter skiing, and now they’re expanding their operation to offer Utah heli-biking adventures in the warmer months. You may not have had much exposure to heli-biking, which had previously been exclusively limited to professional mountain bike films and pricey operations across the coast range and Canadian Rockies, which is why Whisper Ridge is making waves with the first heli-drop program for mountain bikers in the lower 48.

For less than $200 per day, you can hop in a whirlybird for an exhilarating ride to the top of the Limber Pine trail. From there it’s a five and a half-mile ride down through loamy, high-elevation pine forests in the northern Wasatch for over 2,300 vertical feet. With only around 60 riders accessing the terrain each day, it’s a little slice of singletrack heaven for every Utah biker who’s had to deal with blown-out, moondust-filled corners and close calls on highly-trafficked two-way trails.

A single heli-drop at Whisper Ridge costs $200, with each additional bump costing $100 if just one wasn’t enough to get your fix. A full-day pass includes four drops and nearly 10,000 feet of descending for $475 per person. A six-pack pass runs $995 and can be used by one rider for six rides at any time during the season or for an individual six-person group heli-drop for your crew. The $166 per-person cost with the latter option is an absolutely unheard-of value for a heli-drop, especially since you can spend the rest of the day pedaling back to the top for more runs at no additional charge.

Whisper Ridge is in the process of expanding their trail network and should have even more terrain available by later this summer. Additionally, riders can access Whisper Ridge’s Yurt Village for a luxury camping experience that’s just over an hour’s drive from Sale Lake City but feels worlds away.

8990 UT-165, Paradise, 801-876-4664, whisperridgeutah.com

See all of our outdoors coverage here.

Music-339_FULL_UAF_2018_Trevor_Hooper_Photo

Music Guide to the Utah Arts Festival 2019

By Arts & Culture, Music

We have selected a few performers we think you should check out, but there are so many great ones, see the full schedule here.

THURSDAY

Thursday, June 20th is the first night of the festival and the line up is pretty stacked from Flutes to Folk, you’re not going to want to miss this. See the full schedule for Thursday here!

Utah Arts Festival 2019

THURSDAY NIGHT HEADLINER · THE SLACKERS

Ending the first night of performances will be the ska, reggae and soul group, The Slackers. They have been performing together for 28 years and will be joining us here in Utah Thursday night at the Amphitheater Stage at 9:45pm.

AFTERNOON · FLUTES AFIRE

You don’t want to miss these 4 best friends fluting away on stage, they have been performing together for 17 years! They will be performing at the Garden Stage this year at 1:15pm.

EVENING · JAIL CITY ROCKERS

Another 4-piece group you need to see on Thursday is the Jail City Rockers. Jail City Rockers will be performing at The Amphitheater Stage at 8:15. They mix everything from ska and 70’s punk rock to 60’s R&B and a little bit of 50’s rock-n-roll, with a performance that will definitely get you up and dancing the night away.

FRIDAY

Friday features some pretty powerful females in the Utah music industry and there are a few that we think you need to stop by and see. See the full line up here and keep reading to see our top female artists for Friday.

Utah Arts Festival 2019

FRIDAY NIGHT HEADLINER · CAROLINE ROSE 

Friday Night’s Headliner is Caroline Rose. After touring for her new album, Loner, she is making a stop at the Utah Art’s Fest and closing off Friday Night with a bang. She will be performing at 9:45pm at the Amphitheater Stage.

AFTERNOON · MIA GRACE

Mia Grace is an Utah Native and a women who rocks. Just to give you a little background her music is inspired by the likes of Joni Mitchell and Emmylou Harris, her and her band will be performing at 1:15pm at the Park Stage.

EVENING · MICHELLE MOONSHINE
Small Lake City is right. One of our favorite local artists Michelle Moonshine will be performing Friday evening at 5:15pm at the Park Stage. This is her first time performing at the Utah Arts Festival, be sure to go and see her folk/bluegrass inspired performance. If you miss it, we got you covered here at one of our SLMag Concert Series performances.

SATURDAY

Saturday is one of the busiest days of the festival so there is plenty more music to enjoy if you missed out the first two days. See the full line up here and keep reading to see our Saturday picks!

Utah Arts Festival 2019

SATURDAY NIGHT HEADLINER · HOT BUTTERED RUM 

Not the usual suspects coming into town from the Bay Area. This 5 piece bluegrass ensemble closes out Saturday night starting at 9:45 pm at the Amphitheater Stage.

AFTERNOON · PUDDLE MOUNTAIN RAMBLERS

Veterans of the Utah Arts Fest, the Puddle Mountain Ramblers will be back again at noon on the Garden Stage serving up some danceable bluegrass for everyone at the festival!

EVENING · MOTHERS OF MAYHEM

Mother musicians, without the mom jeans. Mothers of Mayhem pop/rock foursome will be performing all of your rock favorites at 4 pm on the Park Stage.

SUNDAY

Sunday is the final day of the Utah Arts Festival and is full of many more performances. From stilts to Jazz, you’re in for a treat. See Sunday’s full line up here.

Utah Arts Festival 2019

SUNDAY NIGHT HEADLINER · MARCH FOURTH

They have saved the best for last this year. Oregon Natives, March Fourth, combine music and visual performance on the stage. The artists are sure to entertain Sunday night and you can see them at our very own Utah Arts Festival. Catch them at 9:45pm at the Amphitheater Stage with drums, stilts, and hopefully some acrobat tricks, you won’t regret this one.

AFTERNOON · LARUSSO

To start off your Sunday check out Salt Lake’s favorite band next door, Larusso. They have been writing and playing together since 2004 and this year they will be performing on the Park Stage at 12:15pm.

EVENING · WENDY & THE LOST BOYS

For a little Sunday swinging and jazz romance check out Wendy and the Lost Boys. Wendy and the gang will be starting at 1:15pm on the Garden Stage.

Salt Lake has been blessed with talented geniuses. Don’t miss any of them at the Utah Arts Festival this weekend, check out the schedule here and if music isn’t your thing we have more about the festival here.

See all of our A&E coverage here.

 

RENT10-scaled

No Day But Today to Enter the RENT Ticket Lottery

By Arts & Culture

In 1996, two phenomena were born on Broadway: RENT, of course, but also the New-York-on-a-budget favorite that is the $28 ticket lottery. After a sold-out run at a small downtown theatre, RENT’s original producers began the lottery tradition when the show moved to Broadway, and now Zions Bank Broadway at the Eccles has announced that they’ll be giving that tradition new life during the show’s Salt Lake City run.

That’s right – seats in the first rows of the Eccles Theater’s orchestra section will be available for just $28 for every performance of Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning RENT! Chosen by drawing, if you’re in front of the Regent Street Black Box at the Eccles two hours before curtain, you’ll have the chance to purchase two orchestra seats for one hell of a bargain (Eccles orchestra tickets are currently selling for around $100 apiece).

But whether you’re a bargain hunter or an avid RENThead, you absolutely won’t want to miss this 20th anniversary celebration of a show that inspired an entire generation of musical theater, from creatively guiding shows like Next to Normal, to kickstarting Lin-Manuel Miranda’s show-stopping writing. Although the show’s tragedy in the AIDS crisis is real-time dwindling into a heartbreaking memory, this timeless show still showcases the themes, tunes and turmoils surrounding accepting your own individuality that every struggling artist can take to heart.


Put on by original creative team members, this run is primed to show that RENT retains its relevance, even after two decades, in teaching us to connect with our own humanity (and, of course, the humanity in every person and identity), and to measure our lives in what is most important: love.

If You Go:

RENT at the Eccles
June 25-30
7:30 Weeknights
8:00 Friday-Saturday
6:30 Sunday
Afternoon Matinees (see ArtTix.com for more information.)

Read more theater coverage here!