Is Louis XIV San Diego’s most misunderstood band? Unravel the mystery at the Festival of Beers ...Middle East

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Is Louis XIV San Diego’s most misunderstood band? Unravel the mystery at the Festival of Beers
A reunited Louis XIV performed at the Casbah in 2025. The band returned to the stage after a long hiatus. (Photo courtesy of the band)

On Saturday, Louis XIV will take the stage at the North Park Festival of Beers, the annual sampling of 80-plus craft beers held in front of the historic Lafayette Hotel. It’s a fittinglyunpretentious setting for a band that has spent its entire career being widelymisunderstood.

Originally hailing from Poway, like their punk brethren Blink-182, the group carried areputation that never quite matched reality. There was even a time when a U.S. cityfound Louis XIV so offensive it banned them from performing.

    Critics called them too sharp, too rehearsed. Some heard an accent and concluded theymust be British — perhaps even David Bowie. Others believed they were manufactured,with a powerful label behind them carefully shaping every move.

    None of it was true.

    “We were one of the only bands that were literally recording our tracks completelywithout a producer, without an engineer. It was just us, mixing our own stuff,” said leadsinger and multi-instrumentalist Jason Hill.

    But we’re getting ahead of ourselves.

    From Convoy to Louis XIV

    Before Louis XIV existed, Hill and bandmates Brian Karscig (guitar, bass, vocals) andMark Maigaard (drums) were making inroads in the alt-country and rock outfit Convoy.Signed to an Atlantic subsidiary, the group was touring through Midland, Texas, with themost-requested song on local radio. And yet, fans couldn’t find their record anywhere.

    “I called the record company and they were like, ‘We can get more records there in afew weeks.’ It was disheartening,” Hill said. “This is what it’s like to be signed by arecord label. It doesn’t mean that there’s competence.”

    Instead of doubling down, they did something far less calculated: they started over. Theband morphed into an alt-rock foursome, adopted the name Louis XIV and committed todoing it all themselves.

    “We had written the song Louis XIV, I think Brian came up with the title, and the conceptgrew out from there,” Hill said, explaining how the group’s name came to be. “That firstsong really had the character of what defined the band, and we just tracked it live totape. The whole song was written in one night; it was just effortless.”

    The band’s 2004 debut album, appropriately titled Louis XIV, featured 11 songscompletely written and recorded in about 10 days. It was not meticulously crafted, butdiscovered in real time.

    That same ethos carried into their sophomore breakout The Best Little Secrets AreKept. Two standout cuts from that album, the colorful “Paper Doll” and “Illegal Tender,”were almost entirely improvised.

    Recalling the recording session for “Paper Doll,” Hill said, “It was three in the morning. Adrum beat happened, I moved the mic from the drums over to my guitar amp, and I justplayed that groove. I ad-libbed the whole thing, with the exception of one line. That wasthe thing with Louis. It wasn’t going to be overthought. It was a sandbox to play in.”

    The success of Secrets — bolstered by their Top 30 Billboard hit “Finding Out True LoveIs Blind” — put Louis XIV on the map and fueled more confusion and controversy.

    A ban in Birmingham

    Their early reputation for sexually provocative lyrics, suggestive album covers and racyvideos didn’t always land well. While touring in 2005, Birmingham, Alabama’s CityCouncil called an emergency meeting days before a scheduled gig and banned themfrom performing at any public facility. The last-minute replacement act? Snoop Dogg.

    The following year, as the band was concurrently breaking in England, David Bowiereferred to Louis XIV as his new favorite group and invited them to play at what wouldbecome his final live public performance, 2006’s BLACK BALL, an AIDS in Africa charityevent.

    “I always wondered — did [Bowie] think we were British, too?” Hill quipped in referenceto his nuanced vocal delivery, which he chalks up to deliberate enunciation.

    And then there was the time when a music reporter who was unsure what to make ofthe band caught them at the Bowery Ballroom in New York City. He enjoyed the showbut had one interesting takeaway.

    “He gave me a backhanded compliment, saying I’d obviously studied Jimmy Page sowell that all my solos were note-for-note perfect,” Hill shared. “Funny thing about me: Idon’t have the patience to ever play the same solo twice or to learn what I played on therecord. The only true enjoyment I get playing live is improvising solos all night long.”

    Louis XIV released just one more full-length album, 2008’s “Slick Dogs and Ponies,”before breaking up the following year. At the time, Karscig said the band “started to feelmore like a business.” Hill referred to the split as a “long liaison” and said things wentsouth when their songcraft became “more labored.”

    Together again

    The group made its reunion official in January 2025 with two nights at the Casbah,including bassist Jake Pinto in the lineup. On March 12, they released a new single,“Statues,” which they’ll play at the Festival of Beers. It wasn’t written in response to thecurrent war in Iran, though it might sound that way.

    “It certainly pertains to what’s going on, but to me it’s more of a song about resilience,pushing forward and seizing the moment,” Hill explained.

    “Statues” actually dates back to 2008, unearthed from a trove of unreleased material theband recently rediscovered.

    “There’s so many great tracks that we haven’t released,” Hill added. “Now it’s like, wehave to get this stuff out there.”

    Since 2014, Hill has become better known as a composer of film and TV scores, fromthe Netflix series “Mindhunter” to Apple’s “Dark Matter.” He’s currently busy working onan undisclosed David Fincher project but said he expects Louis XIV to release a fullalbum of recovered old tracks, B-sides and new material by the end of this year or earlynext.

    First up, however, is their North Park set. Hill said some friends may join them onstageand “it’s gonna be a really fun show,” but they’re not planning to overly prepare. They’rejust going to do what they’ve always done, mostly wing it, and be what they’ve alwaysbeen.

    “Our whole big motto back in the day, and I still live by this, is just try to be your ownfavorite band,” he said. “If you like it, then people can like it or leave it.”

    Donovan Roche is a longtime music writer and regular contributor to Times of SanDiego.

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