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1017 lines
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= Number Two =+= =+= T W A N G I N' ! =+= =+= July, 1994 =
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On-Line
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"It don't mean a thang ~ ~ If it ain't got that twang!"
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==============================================================================
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= Editor: Cheryl Cline =+= cline@well.sf.ca.us =
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= Sidekick: Lynn Kuehl
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TWANGIN'! On-Line is a monthly e-zine about country western music, covering
|
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what you might call the back forty rather than the top forty. Other people
|
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look at the word "country" and see line dancing and achey breaky hearts, but
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we see bluegrass, rockabilly, old-time music, cajun, folk, western swing,
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zydeco and Tex-Mex. Then we throw in blues and roots rock just to round things
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out.
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And that's just to start.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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TWANGIN' is also a quarterly print fanzine, available from Cheryl Cline, 2230
|
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Huron Drive, Concord, CA 94519. Subscriptions are $8.00/four issues -- a
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bargain at 32-36 pages an issue! Ask for a copy; the first one is free. The
|
||
print version and the electronic version are not identical, though material
|
||
will be swapped between the two. Twangin' has gotten good reviews from
|
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FACTSHEET FIVE, TOWER PULSE!, ROCK & RAP CONFIDENTIAL, SING OUT!, ALARM
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CLOCK, THE FEEDLOT, and MUSIC CITY TEXAS.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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TWANING' is always looking for contributions in the way of reviews,essays,
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interviews, and discographies. We are especially interested in reports on
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local country, bluegrass, old-time and rockabilly scenes.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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==> CAVEAT: Monthly? Did I say monthly? Well, okay, things have gotten off to
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kind of a rough start; but like a dope I put Twangin'! #1 out in the middle of
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May instead of at the beginning of the month, so rather than catch up by
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putting #2 out a mere two weeks later, I decided (and circumstances decided
|
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for me) that I'd just wait and send it forth near the beginning of July. The
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next issue will appear 'round about August 1.
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==============================================================================
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=+= C O N T E N T S =+=
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---------------
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= Interview: Billy Joe Shaver. By Jim Catalano
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= Reviews: CD's and cassettes by Ricky Barnes & the Hootowls, Joe Ely, Rosie
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||
Flores, Michael Fracasso, Tish Hinojosa, Robert Earl Keen, Jr., Don
|
||
McCalister, Jr., OKra All-Stars, Pleasure Barons, Sweethearts of the
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Rodeo, and Alan Whitney
|
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= Books: Larry Brown
|
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= If I Were Queen of the Silver Dollar. By Jill Van Vliet
|
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= Internet Resources
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---------------
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All unsigned material is by Cheryl Cline
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==============================================================================
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=============================
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B I L L Y J O E S H A V E R
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= Interview by Jim Catalano =
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=============================
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IF THERE WAS A COUNTRY MUSIC AWARD for "Comeback of the Year," then 1993's
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winner surely would have been Billy Joe Shaver. Last year, the Texas-born
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songwriter released TRAMP ON YOUR STREET (Zoo/Praxis), which is only his
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second album in ten years, and seventh overall. Many music critics have hailed
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it as the best country album of the year.
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On TRAMP ON YOUR STREET, Billy Joe shares equal billing with his son,
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Eddy, a monster guitarist who's toured with Dwight Yoakam. Contributing
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players include keyboardist Al Kooper, bassist Keith Christopher, drummer Greg
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Morrow, and guest backup vocalists Waylon Jennings and Brother Phelps. While
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Eddy is certainly a hot picker, he doesn't get in the way of the songs. And
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what songs they are! From the rousing "Heart of Texas" to the Dixieland-
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flavored "Good Ol' U.S.A.," Billy Joe paints a vivid picture of his Texas past
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and present. The title cut recounts his youthful hike to see a Hank Williams
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performance. There's some optimistic songs, especially the Tex-Mex flavored
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"Take a Chance On Romance." He also recut two of his best-known songs: "Old
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Chunk of Coal," which was a hit for Jon Anderson, and "Georgia On A Fast
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Train," a proud testimonial about growing up poor in the South which rockets
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along on Eddy's molten solos -- think Billy Gibbons meets Albert Lee! Eddy
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also shows some tasty acoustic chops, particularly the melodic fingerpicking
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on the uplifting "Live Forever." Not only would I say TRAMP ON YOUR STREET is
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the best country album of the year, it's one of the best albums of any kind
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that I've ever heard.
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The 54-year old Shaver is probably best-known for writing almost all the
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songs on Waylon Jennings' 1973 album HONKY TONK HEROES. Perhaps TRAMP ON YOUR
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STREET will finally earn him the widespread acclaim he's so long deserved.
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Whatever the outcome, Billy Joe certainly sounded optimistic when he called
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from the Praxis Records office in Nashville.
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CATALANO: You must be very happy with the critical praise for Tramp On Your
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Street.
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SHAVER: Oh man, yeah! Of course, we knew as far as we were concerned it was
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great, but we didn't really know if people would like it; you never know.
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Thank God that it did turn out that way, and when [positive reviews] started
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coming in, it really was great because we had worked so hard. It just keeps on
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going; we were really lucky. The timing's right, it seems like everything's
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just right for this album.
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CATALANO: I really like the title cut to TRAMP ON YOUR STREET. It must have
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been quite an experience to have Hank Williams sing to you when you were only
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a little kid.
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SHAVER: It was pretty amazing. It stuck with me all that time and I finally
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wrote that song. It took me almost a whole career to figure out how to write
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that song. A lot of my stuff is done by recall, anyway, and it just rolled
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around in me long enough and finally came out that way. It's great to be in
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this (songwriting business) and just be part of it. You don't really think
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about what you're going to get out of it because you'd do it for nothing and
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most people have. Some of them will do it for nothing their whole lives and
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I've been real lucky; it looks like we might be able to go on and do another
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one. That's what I've always felt was being successful: being able to get to
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the next gig and being able to do another album.
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CATALANO: Are you happy with R.S. "Bobby" Field's production of "Tramp On Your
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Street"? He always seems to get great guitar sounds on his albums [Field did
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Webb Wilder and Sonny Landreth's Praxis albums].
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SHAVER: If it weren't for Bobby, this record wouldn't have gotten made. He's
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the one who went out and got it done. He's the reason we contacted these
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people here at Praxis. He's good at all of it. He arranges things real well.
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We were lucky all this came together at one time. And the people here in
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Nashville at Praxis and BMG have been great, everybody's just been coming up
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and helping. I've never had this reaction before and it's all been wonderful
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to me.
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CATALANO: That's quite a change from your past bad luck with record companies.
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Shaver: They had bad luck with me, too! I guess the timing wasn't right or
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something, but this time it was. I'm happy to take what's give to me. It's
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really wonderful at this point in my life and career that it finally came
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around. It just goes to show you if you just keep on fussin' you might win!
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CATALANO: Do you find it harder to write the more personally revealing songs,
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like "If I Give My Soul"?
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SHAVER: Not really; I enjoy it. At the time I'm writing them they're so close
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to me they don't seem like that much to me. They don't knock me out as much as
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they do other people, but later on it finally hits me. It's just like
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something that's common to you -- you don't think it would be that interesting
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to something else, but it works out that it's the most interesting the deeper
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you can dig. It's just a self-healing process, really; you kind of heal
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yourself by getting into those things real heavy.
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CATALANO: In "If I Give My Soul" and a few other songs, there's some religious
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references. Has that been a constant theme in your writing?
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SHAVER: Yeah, it has. You can go back to my first album that I put out on
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Monument [produced by Kris Kristofferson] and I've got two Jesus songs on it.
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Just about all of my songs have a spiritual feeling to them. It's not anything
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I try to do; it just occurs naturally with me. It's not so much preaching or
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pointing your finger or anything; it's just there.
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CATALANO: By the way, have you heard Marty Stuart's cover of "If I Give My
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Soul" yet? It's on his new album LOVE AND LUCK.
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SHAVER: I haven't heard it yet. He's good, a good musician, too. I was real
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pleased that he did that. He's been a fan a long time. We know each other
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pretty well.
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CATALANO: One of my favorite songs on the new album is "Live Forever." Is that
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a new song?
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SHAVER: Fairly new. Eddy did all the guitar on that particular song. He gave
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me that melody a few years back, and I thought it was so great that I put it
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on a tape recorder. I drive around a lot -- I'll just get an old car or truck
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and I'll just drive around and I'm liable to go five or six states away and
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just drive. I do a lot of my writing when I drive. This particular melody
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knocked me out so much; I thought my son gave it to me so I've got to do real
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good on this one. I kept it with me for six or eight weeks and that's all I'd
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mess with. I'd go back to it, sometimes I'd write another song, but it wound
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up being really close to home. He helped me with a few of the words and it
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came together really good.
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CATALANO: The harmonies by Brother Phelps really add to that song.
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SHAVER: Aren't they great? Those guys are so great! I'm just so lucky to have
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those guys on there and Waylon too, but Brother Phelps just blows me away.
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They're great guys, too; they're really nice people.
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CATALANO: I heard "Hottest Thing In Town" was inspired by Madonna.
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SHAVER: I was sitting around watching TV one day, and this documentary came on
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about her early days; how she got her start dancing and stuff. They mentioned
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on there that she was born on August 16, which is my birthday, too. I said
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'I'll be darned' and I found myself just writing that song about her. I ain't
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never met her, and don't intend to. That's the first time I think anything on
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TV inspired me to write.
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CATALANO: I've heard "Hottest Thing In Town" and "Live Forever" on the radio
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occasionally, but I guess you haven't broken into heavy rotation yet.
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SHAVER: No, that part's been slow in coming, but you can equate it with the
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critics and writers -- it was kind of slow at first but it picked up steam,
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and I think radio will probably happen the same way. It really hasn't gotten
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to the ears of the public yet. It's a hard thing to break into, but we've got
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the goods. We just have to be heard.
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CATALANO: So what's it like to be in a band with your son?
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SHAVER: It's great! For one thing, I've tried using other people before, but
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it just don't work. We've been playing together for so song that he knows
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where I'm going and I know where he's going and its just one of those blood
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things. We get along pretty well, we're pretty much friends more than father
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and son. We have [spats] every so often but neither of us likes that.
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Everything seems to be going pretty good. He's stuck with me and now it's
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starting to be rewarding. Eddy's real good, too. He's got a good future ahead
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of him, he's really a good writer and a good singer and a great guitar player.
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He's just waiting to happen! He's rock and roll, pedal to the metal stuff!
|
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CATALANO: I just got a copy of C.J. Berkman's tape "A Texican Tradition"
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[Available from Saddle Tramp Publications, 7615 Stone Crop Lane, San Antonio
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TX 78249. Phone 210-558-8745]. He bills himself "the South Texas Redneck
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Poet"; I see you read his poem "Mad Dogs & English Women."
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SHAVER: He's a poet from down there in San Antonio, he's an old friend. I did
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it as a favor to him; he's a good old boy. He comes to some of my shows
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sometimes and I let him get up and do a few poems. I like that kind of stuff,
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you don't seem to see or hear it very often.
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CATALANO: Prior to TRAMP ON YOUR STREET, you had only released one album in
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the past decade (1987's SALT OF THE EARTH on Columbia). Where have you been
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writing and performing all this time?
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SHAVER: Yeah, we just kept on playing in the honkytonks and I just kept on
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writing. I just figured writing's the cheapest psychiatrist there is, and God
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knows I need it, so I've just been writing up a storm and still do. It's still
|
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a hobby with me; I really love to do it. If I get on a particular song I
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really enjoy, I'll stick with it a long time just to keep from finishing it
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because I enjoy working with things like that.
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CATALANO: What inspires your songwriting?
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SHAVER: I don't read at all, I don't listen to radio and TV's not a big deal
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either. I kind of like things coming out of me as much as I can. I like to
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live my life to its fullest and the way to do that is just have things that
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come out of me. I'd hate to get anything other than my true conception. Not
|
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that anything else is any better; it's just that I enjoy living my own life
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and enjoy doing my own writing.
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CATALANO: Would you say that there's a Texas attitude in your writing? Do you
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think you'd be different if you came from Florida or California?
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SHAVER: Probably not a whole lot different, but different. There is a Texas
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thing there; I guess it's just a lot of pride. Of course, pride ain't worth
|
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nothing! But there is a Texas thing in there. It comes from all that old
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history down there. You push a little harder.
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CATALANO: How long have you been in Nashville?
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SHAVER: I came to Nashville in 1966 and I've been here off and on ever since.
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CATALANO: Have you ever tried becoming a "house writer" with one of the
|
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publishing companies?
|
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SHAVER: No, I haven't. I like to write by myself. Every once in a while
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something will happen -- I wrote one song on HONKY TONK HEROES with Waylon
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called "You Asked Me To"; we wrote that in about five minutes -- but I haven't
|
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written that many with other people; there's just something about it. I have
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a hard enough time dancing with a girl without stepping on her toes, much less
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writing with some old guy. I'd imagine we'd butt heads a lot. That co-writing
|
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thing...something about it always bothered me.
|
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CATALANO: Was the album Honky Tonk Heroes conceived as a whole for Waylon
|
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Jennings, or were the songs written separately?
|
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SHAVER: Waylon heard me playing one of them songs in a trailer down at the
|
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first Dripping Springs reunion in Texas, and he heard me playing "Willie the
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Wandering Gypsy and Me" and he came running out saying "I want that song." So
|
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I told him "you can have it" and he asked if I had any more of those cowboy
|
||
songs. At the time [1972], I had a whole sackful of them, so he said "come on
|
||
up to Nashville and I'll do a whole album of your tunes." So he game me his
|
||
number and I came up there -- of course I had been up there before -- and I
|
||
tried to catch up to him for about six months, but it seemed like he was
|
||
ducking me. I caught him in the hall at RCA one night; he was recording there
|
||
and he came out of the studio and there was a long hallway and there was a
|
||
bunch of people there. He came my way -- I had just come out of the restroom
|
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at the other end -- and something just came over me and I just hollered at
|
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him. I said "Hey Waylon!" and he turned around and I said "I've got those
|
||
songs that you told me you was going to listen to, and if you don't listen to
|
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them now, I'm going to kick your ass right here in front of everybody." And I
|
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was ready to, too! He blew up at first but then he took me back there and
|
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said, "I'm going to listen to one damned song and that's it!" We went there in
|
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the back and I cranked out I think it was "Old Five and Dimers," and of
|
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course, then he said, "Give me another," and "another," and he just went in
|
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and cut the whole album.
|
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CATALANO: What are your feelings about that album today?
|
||
|
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SHAVER: It's good! It turned things around down here. The people at RCA, they
|
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swore it wasn't going to make it. They said, "This ain't gonna work: you're
|
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not supposed to say 'hell' in a song," and this and that. It was real
|
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different than what was going on, but it worked, real good!
|
||
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CATALANO: You must like it when other people do your songs.
|
||
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SHAVER: I love it! Just everybody that's done my songs has knocked me out.
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Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen did "Georgia on a Fast Train":
|
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that's one of the first songs that I ever wrote that I liked, a long, long
|
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time ago! Just about everybody...Willie and Johnny Cash, John Anderson did
|
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"Old Chunk of Coal," Johnny Rodriguez did "I Couldn't Be Me Without You,"
|
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Bobby Bare did "Ride Me Down Easy," even Elvis Presley did one, Bob Dylan,
|
||
Kris Kristofferson did one, Tom T. Hall did three. There's been a lot and I'm
|
||
really proud of them.
|
||
|
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CATALANO: Have you started planning the next album yet?
|
||
|
||
SHAVER: It's going to have to be better than this one, and I don't know how in
|
||
the world we'll do that [laughs]. It will be something to shoot for, anyway.
|
||
Getting better...that's what it's all about.
|
||
|
||
CATALANO: When you look back over your career, do you have any regrets with
|
||
the way things have gone?
|
||
|
||
SHAVER: Not now since this happened, because if anything had been moved in the
|
||
past it probably would have caused a different result. This right here, I'm
|
||
just real happy with this. I'm sure everything happened for the best. Yeah, at
|
||
the time I was going though some of it, and I was wondering if things would
|
||
work out, but now I don't. The reward has been great. This album has been more
|
||
than enough to please me for all the years of trials and tribulations that
|
||
we've been through.
|
||
|
||
CATALANO: Well, I hope the momentum keeps building for TRAMP ON YOUR STREET.
|
||
|
||
SHAVER: I think it will. The way it's running now, I think you'd have more
|
||
trouble trying to keep it from happening than you would from it happening.
|
||
_____________________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
===================
|
||
=+= REVIEWS =+=
|
||
===================
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Ricky Barnes & the Hootowls =+= BONE COUNTRY =+= OKra Records (cassette)
|
||
YA' FINALLY SAID SOMETHIN' GOOD! =+= OKra Records (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
QUOTE: "From the sound of Barnes' classic booze-fightin' lyrics, the smoothly
|
||
sad croop of his voice and the bitchenly pure pedal-steel oink of the
|
||
Hootowls, it's evident that these men pander to no yuppie boss. The works this
|
||
time around may be less overtly state-smashing than on the band's debut, Lost
|
||
Track of Time, but they are shot through with prole-grounded truth arrows that
|
||
would destroy the stereo system in any Mercedes." It's not that punk critic
|
||
Byron Coley writing up a band like Ricky Barnes & the Hootowls surprises me so
|
||
much as that the band printed Coley's little gem of a rant as the liner notes.
|
||
Of course, punk has influenced modern country music more than most critics --
|
||
particularly those who point to the Byrds as an example of rock & roll
|
||
influence -- seem to realize. If nothing else, it pointed the way back to
|
||
basics and spurred the movement toward its "roots." Still, Byron Coley...
|
||
Sheesh! For those who don't know him, start with Nick Tosches and then take a
|
||
hard left. "Prole-grounded truth arrows" indeed.
|
||
Most of the classic booze-fightin' lyrics on both BONE COUNTRY and YA
|
||
FINALLY SAID SOMETHIN' GOOD! are exactly that: classic. From "Waitin' In Your
|
||
Welfare Line" (Buck Owens) to "Once A Day," (Bill Anderson), the Hootowls
|
||
cover all the greats. Playing songs by the Louvin Brothers, George Jones,
|
||
Merle Haggard, and John Laudermilk, they perform a sort of musical time
|
||
travel. The songs are true to the originals -- not exact remakes, but more
|
||
like covers a group from the same era might have done, whether that era is
|
||
early George Jones or late Merle Haggard, and stylistically ranging from
|
||
Bluegrass to Honky Tonk. It's all tied together by Ricky Barnes' sweet, high,
|
||
hillbilly voice. The Hootowl's know what they're about. Their choices and
|
||
their treatments are dead-on.--Cheryl Cline
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Joe Ely =+= LIVE SHOTS =+= MCA (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
First released in 1980, this smoking live set recorded in London during Ely's
|
||
tour with the Clash has finally been reissued on CD. At that point in his
|
||
career, Lubbock native Ely was still straddling the fence between country and
|
||
rock, throwing in a dash of Tex-Mex and rockabilly for good measure.
|
||
Kicking off with the Jerry Lee Lewis-inspired "Fingernails," Ely and his
|
||
powerhouse band storm through the set with the fervor that won over the
|
||
Clash's audience. Other highlights include "Honky Tonk Masquerade," one of
|
||
Ely's best songs, and Butch Hancock's ominous "Boxcars." The band is top-notch
|
||
throughout, especially accordionist Ponty Bone, guitarist Jesse Taylor and
|
||
steel guitarist Lloyd Maines. Bone and Maines engage in a fiery duel of molten
|
||
solos on "Johnny's Blues," driving the song to cathartic climax.
|
||
This is probably my favorite Ely album, because it captures the fire of
|
||
his onstage performances that was often missing from his early studio
|
||
recordings. As a bonus, four tracks produced by Al Kooper have been added to
|
||
this reissue, which is a must-have set for any fan of Texas music. --Jim
|
||
Catalano
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Rosie Flores =+= ONCE MORE WITH FEELING =+= Hightone Records (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Rosie Flores has played a prominent role in both the Los Angeles and Austin
|
||
country scenes. Born in San Antonio, moving to San Diego with her family when
|
||
she was twelve, her childhood in Texas and youth in southern California gave
|
||
her a wide range of musical influences, including everything from early rock &
|
||
roll to Tex-Mex, country,and blues. She played in the rockabilly band Rosie
|
||
and the Screamers, and the all-girl cowpunk quintet, the Screaming Sirens
|
||
before fronting her own band.
|
||
ONCE MORE WITH FEELING is Rosie Flores' third solo release, produced by
|
||
Greg Leisz (k.d. lang, Matthew Sweet) and Dusty Wakeman (engineer for Dwight
|
||
Yoakam). They both play on the album; Leisz on electric and acoustic guitars,
|
||
pedal steel, lap steel and mandolin, and Wakeman on bass. The album is a
|
||
showcase for her diverse background and influences. "Someday" is a
|
||
contemporary ballad with Flores' plaintive vocals demonstrating the influence
|
||
of Brenda Lee. "My Blue Angel" is another ballad, about a blue angel who kept
|
||
the shadowy fears of her childhood at bay; today Flores calls on the angel to
|
||
watch over her and keep her safe from the dangers of modern society.
|
||
"Love and Danger" is a male/female country duet. Joe Ely provides the male
|
||
vocals; Leisz's pedal steel and Tammy Rogers' fiddle make it a classic of the
|
||
type. "Try Me" is a rocker in the Creedence Clearwater vein, while Leisz's
|
||
twangin' guitar puts the country in the rocking "Ruin This Romance." With
|
||
"Bandera Highway," Flores proves she can do the singer-songwriter thing too,
|
||
backing herself on solo acoustic guitar.
|
||
"It's Over" shows her conjunto influence. Skip Edwards provides accordion
|
||
and Flores reprises the vocals in Spanish. "Honky Tonk Moon" is an old-
|
||
fashioned Texas two-step, with Leisz, Rogers and Edwards providing the swing
|
||
with honky tonk piano, lap steel and fiddle. The lyrics to another male/female
|
||
duet, "Girl Haggard" is made up of the titles of Merle Haggard songs, with
|
||
James Intveld singing Haggard's part while Flores does Bonnie Owens. "Real
|
||
Man" has Katy Moffat dueting with Flores to funk guitar backing; like Meri
|
||
Wilson's "Telephone Man," a shoe man, a phone man, a roofer, a plumber, and a
|
||
lumberjack are objects of Flores' and Moffat's lusts.
|
||
Flores can do blues, too, as she demonstrates on "Rosebud Blues." Flores
|
||
steps out in front of her band for a blistering guitar solo. She closes with
|
||
another ballad, "Tumblin' Down," an elegant lullaby about a man who breaks
|
||
through the walls past love affairs built around her heart. This one begs for
|
||
pressing the repeat button.
|
||
ONCE MORE WITH FEELING is Flores' best one yet. Hopefully it'll bring her
|
||
out of obscurity and into the wider recognition and commercial success she
|
||
deserves. --William Athey
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Robert Earl Keen =+= A BIGGER PIECE OF SKY =+= Sugar Hill (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
If you want to make a statement about the dark hollow void at the heart of
|
||
modern life, you can wear black, dye your hair to match, pierce yourself in
|
||
five places, get tattooed from the neck down, grab a microphone, hunch over
|
||
and shriek into it like the guy behind you has just stuck a knife in your
|
||
backbone, and you will get attention. Or, you could stand there with an
|
||
acoustic guitar slung over your shoulder, looking like the clean-scrubbed
|
||
innocent boy-next-door, flash a cherubic grin, and then hit folks with a song
|
||
like "Blow You Away."
|
||
That'll get you some attention, too.
|
||
Robert Earl Keen looks like Ricky Nelson and sounds like the dark side of
|
||
Lyle Lovett. Oh sure, he throws in a couple of lighthearted songs, like the
|
||
understated western swing-styled "Daddy Had a Buick" or something
|
||
traditionally pretty like "Night Right For Love," (a duet with Maura
|
||
O'Connell). But these are just camouflage, as if to say, "No really, I'm
|
||
normal." Yeah, right, like I'm going to be getting that gothic western song
|
||
"Here In Arkansas" out of my head any time soon. (Lines like "they buried me
|
||
here this afternoon/and left me here to die" kinda stick in your mind.) And
|
||
the little tune about gunning people down "whenever kindness fails" (by Joe
|
||
Ely; the song appears on his LOVE & DANGER) -- that's supposed to get my toes
|
||
tappin'?
|
||
I love this album. Fell in love with it on first listen, first song, first
|
||
few bars -- that'd be the opening song, "So I Can Take My Rest," a haunting
|
||
song about longing and loneliness. This gives way to the aforementioned
|
||
"Whenever Kindness Fails," then on to the honky-tonkin' "Amarillo Highway,"
|
||
and then -- hell, I can't list every song -- did I mention "Corpus Christi
|
||
Bay," the blue collar slice of life that Steve Earle could have done? No? How
|
||
about Crazy Cowboy Dream?" "Paint the Town Beige?" Have I mentioned every song
|
||
on the album yet?
|
||
No! I've left you with one thing to find out when you find out for yourself
|
||
how good this album is.
|
||
...You still here? --Cheryl Cline
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Michael Fracasso =+= LOVE & TRUST =+= DEJADISC (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
A new shining light in the singer/songwriter firmament is Austin's Michael
|
||
Fracasso. His songs on LOVE & TRUST are intelligent, witty, and immediately
|
||
familiar as good songs usually are. The musicianship and instrumentation is
|
||
spare but appropriate to the intimate nature of the songs and Fracasso's
|
||
voice.
|
||
About his voice: it's high and nasal, but considering the rising
|
||
popularity of Jimmie Dale Gilmore, probably not a handicap to great
|
||
popularity. The publicity sheet compared his voice to Roy Orbison and Gene
|
||
Pitney... maybe so, at least superficially. But Michael Fracasso has a
|
||
distinctive voice and a fine one. On some songs, he strives for a traditional
|
||
country sound ("Door #1," "Brazos River Blues"), on others he sounds a bit
|
||
like classic Byrds-era Roger McGuinn ("The Streets of October," "Outside The
|
||
Rain"), and at other times he sounds strongly influenced by Bob Dylan ("Play
|
||
The Drum, Slowly"). Sometimes his singing reminds me of humorous beat-era
|
||
folk music ("Wake Up! George"). Let's just leave it that Michael Fracasso is
|
||
damn good at what he does and that simple comparisons are for saps.
|
||
A recent Austin music poll voted Michael Fracasso Best New Artist. I can't
|
||
add much more to that except that I've played love & trust every day since it
|
||
came in the mail and will continue to play it for a long time to come. If you
|
||
like folk-inspired country music, achingly pretty songs, and finely crafted
|
||
lyrics, then Michael Fracasso might be your cup of tea. --Lynn Kuehl
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Tish Hinojosa =+= TAOS TO TENNESSEE =+= Watermelon (CD) [Reissue]
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Originally released on cassette in 1987, this album was recorded almost as it
|
||
was being written. According to Hinojosa's own brief liner notes to this CD
|
||
reissue, James McMurty's "Crazy Wind and Flashing Yellows" was recorded while
|
||
"the ink...was still wet," and the title song was written on the last night of
|
||
the last recording session. Hinojosa writes: "An 8-track studio located in a
|
||
row of storage units fronted by a gravel lot was the workshop for me and other
|
||
Taos musicians with guitars and pens. To apologize for the quality would kill
|
||
the spirit of the time."
|
||
There's nothing to apologize for; while the production isn't as fancy as
|
||
on her later albums, the spirit of the time shines through, and Hinojosa
|
||
shines brightest. Her voice, one of the most beautiful in country music, is no
|
||
less so for being captured on 8-track in a storage shed.
|
||
The two songs written for -- and during -- the session are the standouts,
|
||
but I'm also fond of her sweet but stately rendition of Bill Staines' "River."
|
||
(This one *does* sound like it was recorded in a shed, but this only gives it
|
||
a pleasant "live" quality.) Peter Rowan's "Midnight Moonlight" is also pretty,
|
||
and Hinojosa's adding Spanish lyrics to Irving Berlin's "Always" is a nice
|
||
touch. All in all a fine reissue. --Cheryl Cline
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Don McCalister, Jr. & His Cowboy Jazz Review =+= BRAND NEW WAYS =+= DEJADISC
|
||
(CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
This one's a curious mixture of classic country style and contemporary country
|
||
lounge music. It starts off nicely with three McCalister country swing
|
||
originals ("Brand New Ways," "Silver Moon," and "If I Never Love Another"),
|
||
then veers off into moody country pop ("Fool's Gold" and "Walk On By"), then a
|
||
cover of a Louvin Brothers classic ("Cash On The Barrelhead"), then a Henry
|
||
Gross cover ("Laura"), and so on. The overall effect for me is slightly less
|
||
than satisfying, a little like mixing Commander Cody with Skip Ewing or Asleep
|
||
At The Wheel with Glen Campbell. I love McCalister's interpretation of
|
||
country swing but I could do with less of the moody modern country sentiment.
|
||
However, some of our more fanatical readership may wish to acquire this for
|
||
McCalister's pleasant rendition of Jimmie Dale Gilmore's "Tonight I Think I'm
|
||
Gonna Go Downtown." Like the rest of the album, it's a slickly professional
|
||
production. Hey, this is not a bad album, just not a really great one (and I
|
||
realize that as faint-praise-damnation, this line's a doozy). Sorry, no
|
||
whole-hearted recommendation here. But then, Don McCalister can still run
|
||
rings around a lot of that "big hat" music you hear on country music radio
|
||
these days. If you're into Lyle Lovett, you might want to give Don McCalister
|
||
a try.--Lynn Kuehl
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
OKra ALL-STARS =+= OKra Records [CD]
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
OKra is a small label in Columbus, Ohio that puts out some real cool country
|
||
music. A bunch of people from different bands on the label joined up together
|
||
to form the All-Stars and headed for Europe. They were well-received there,
|
||
and listening to this CD, released on their return, it's easy to see why,
|
||
though it's harder to explain or describe. There's a definite OKra Sound
|
||
here. It's bedrock country, full of strum and twang with a modern sensibility
|
||
and an old-time feel. Laconic is a word that comes to mind, but it's not
|
||
laid-back, exactly; it's too sharp. A lot of the songs here sound like Buck
|
||
Owens slowed down a notch or two--in fact, the cover of "I Wouldn't Live In
|
||
New York City" is exactly that. And what with a mournful steel guitar making
|
||
an appearance here, blue harmonica there, a dissolute air of lonesomeness
|
||
hovers over most of the songs. I can't get it off my CD player.
|
||
The All-Stars are Hank McCoy (Dead Ringers), Ricky Barnes (Hootowls), Jeb
|
||
Loy Nichols (Fellow Travelers) and Dave Schramms (The Schramms, Dead Ringers).
|
||
Other musicians include Jeff Passiifume (bass, Dead Ringers), James Casto
|
||
(drums, Hootowls), plus Pete Remenyi on dobro, Jeff Vogelgesang on mandolin,
|
||
and Randy Jones on fiddle.
|
||
Of the bands represented here, I'm only familiar with the Dead Ringers
|
||
and the Hootowls, and both make good showings in their spotlight selections.
|
||
The Hootowls' "Big Mistake" (written by Jeb) which starts off the CD, drags
|
||
you right in there, and sets the tone for what follows. If you can't take that
|
||
nasal twang of his, get outta the kitchen. Hank McCoy singing lead on the
|
||
uptempo "Don't Laugh," sets me to laughing every time I hear it--hey, I play
|
||
it on purpose just for the pleasure of laughing (and it's a sadistic pleasure,
|
||
too, the song's a plea from a hapless lover to an indifferent lady not to
|
||
laugh at his declarations of love. The fair sex can be cruel). Jeb Loy
|
||
Nichols wrote some of the best original songs here, including "Let's Build a
|
||
Bridge," and "Blue Sides (To Every Story)," given a gorgeous wistful rendition
|
||
by Hank. Hank's own "New Orleans" is a nice bluesy jukebox tune with
|
||
Passifiume contribuiting electric tremolo guitar, and Dave Schramm's "She's
|
||
Taken All My Toys Away" is also a favorite of mine, a moody song that rolls
|
||
along under Schramm's bass voice. The All-Stars also do really fine versions
|
||
of "One of These Days," and "Wild and Blue," taking turns singing lead
|
||
(lending a nice collaborative feel--a hint of what the live show must be
|
||
like). And Ricky singing lead to an twangy version of Prince's "Purple Rain"
|
||
is not to be missed. --Cheryl Cline
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The Pleasure Barons =+= LIVE IN LAS VEGAS =+= Hightone (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
LIVE IN LAS VEGAS is a veritable roots-rock summit, as former Blaster Dave
|
||
Alvin plays straight man to two of the genre's zaniest personalities: Mojo
|
||
Nixon and the Beat Farmers' Country Dick Montana.
|
||
Nixon rants with the fervor of a Televangelist on "Elvis Is Everywhere"
|
||
and "Amos Moses," while Montana's basso profundo rumbles through Bo Diddley's
|
||
"Who Do You Love" and "The Definitive Tom Jones Medley." Alvin takes lead
|
||
vocals on Joe South's "Games People Play" and Johnny Guitar Watson's ominous
|
||
"Gangster of Love."
|
||
The Pleasure Barons, who total 13 members, generate a raucous frat-party
|
||
atmosphere that will rattle your loudspeakers and shake the china in your
|
||
cupboard. This is one show that should be captured on videotape.--Jim Catalano
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Sweethearts Of The Rodeo =+= RODEO WALTZ =+= Sugar Hill (CD)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Kristine Arnold and Janis Gill, The Sweethearts Of The Rodeo, have had enough.
|
||
Enough of major labeldom's withering efforts to turn them into a piquant pair
|
||
of Judds. Enough of the overproduction on their last few records competing
|
||
with their genetically compatible harmonies. Enough of the insular Nashville
|
||
back-patting that excludes them, but lauds Gill's husband's pop/country
|
||
schlock.
|
||
Enough!
|
||
Nashville is all over RODEO WALTZ, but it is not the neon, made-in-Taiwan,
|
||
wax museum, ticky-tacky Nashville of Music Row. This record is the lovingly
|
||
preserved and renovated brick homes of 16th Avenue. It is the legacy of the
|
||
Ryman. It is biscuits and gravy at the Loveless Cafe. About the only thing
|
||
that's not Nashville is its label, Sugar Hill, the North Carolina indie.
|
||
Produced by Janis Gill, it is full of understated virtuosity from
|
||
Nashville's most illustrious session players, including Sam Bush and Roy
|
||
Huskey, Jr. of Emmylou Harris' Nash Ramblers. It was recorded, mixed and
|
||
mastered in Music City, and has an organic feel that permeates a telling
|
||
selection of twelve songs.
|
||
The Sweethearts have chosen to cover an eclectic swath of country and
|
||
bluegrass tunes, the thread of continuity being the blending of their lush
|
||
voices supported by a confident, restrained acoustic band. There's the
|
||
rockabilly of "Get Rhythm" (an early Johnny Cash hit) and the jukebox classic
|
||
"Please Help Me I'm Falling"; there's the traditional, bluesily rockin' "Deep
|
||
River Blues" (which showcases Terry McMillan's freight train whistle
|
||
harmonica). Contemporary Nashville hit-maker Don Schlitz's homey songwriting
|
||
is done justice by the joyous simplicity with which the sisters sing his
|
||
"Things Will Grow." Folkies Jesse Winchester and Gordon Lightfoot are
|
||
represented, as is Gill herself, whose "There One Morning" has the patina of a
|
||
musical family heirloom. The record ends with Robbie Robertson's "Broken
|
||
Arrow," sounding as it might had the newly-revived Band covered it with their
|
||
characteristic dirt-under-the-fingernails approach.
|
||
Gill shows an intuitive sense in utilizing the talents of her family
|
||
members. She allows her sister to continue the lead, vocally, and the
|
||
generally toned-down atmosphere of the record has inspired Arnold to dig in
|
||
and find a soulfulness that was sometimes disguised as ragged overreaching on
|
||
their previous work. Gill's husband, Vince Gill, plays a low-key role as
|
||
guitarist and as co-writer with Guy Clark on "Jenny Dreamed of Trains," a song
|
||
written for the Gill's daughter.
|
||
The bravest, most poignant declaration comes from Gill, writing with Don
|
||
Schlitz. She addresses her post-superstardom husband, pining for her
|
||
"Bluegrass Boy," the one with brown hair and blue eyes, the one that "looked a
|
||
lot like you." She urges, "Serenade me bluegrass boy/Play a round of
|
||
'Soldier's Joy'/Can't you see I miss him so/My bluegrass boy with his fiddle
|
||
and bow." It's an assertive moment and the thematic center of a record that
|
||
rejoices in its return to Nashville's simpler pleasures.
|
||
"Smile when you speak. It's possible to hear a smile," I was instructed
|
||
once at a receptionists's seminar I was forced to attend. On RODEO WALTZ, the
|
||
Sweethearts have an obvious smile in their voices, happy to be dealing with
|
||
Nashville on their own terms, to exhilarating results. --Jill Van Vliet
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Alan Whitney =+= 4-Song Demo Tape =+= from Western Beat
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Riding hard and fast out of the southlands (L.A. that is) comes one Alan
|
||
Whitney, a hard-rockin' country boy who's the best sure-fire argument against
|
||
Alan Jackson's anti-rock belly-ache since Dwight Yoakam. What Mr. Jackson and
|
||
other belligerent country folks don't seem to grasp is that the roots of
|
||
modern day country are just as firmly planted in musical soil fertilized by
|
||
sixties and seventies (and most especially fifties) rock & roll as they are by
|
||
old time country music. Modern country isn't any less authentic when it
|
||
includes elements of rock, not to mention jazz, blues, or other influences,
|
||
'cause, well shit... where would country be if people like Bob Wills hadn't
|
||
combined country & western with big band jazz? Or if Hank Williams hadn't
|
||
decided to sing the blues once in awhile? 'Nuff said!
|
||
Alan Whitney writes hook-filled rocking country pop songs with clever
|
||
lyrics and a beat that'll make you want to jump out of your seat. In "Cadillac
|
||
Kiss," Whitney makes an impassioned plea for love using the metaphor of big-
|
||
block V8 luxury transportation.
|
||
In "Love's A Rodeo," Whitney complains that he has rope burns on his
|
||
fingers from holding on too long and scars from falling flat on his face in
|
||
the rodeo ring of love. "Another Saturday Nite" and "The Hurricane" are only
|
||
slightly less powerful rockers than the first two songs and would be standouts
|
||
in almost any other set. Altogether it's one of the most exciting demo tapes
|
||
I've heard.
|
||
Although Whitney's based in L.A., he originally hails from upstate New
|
||
York. For the last couple of years he's been burnin' down the house in L.A. at
|
||
various open mic competitions and in the last year he's made two trips to
|
||
Nashville to be showcased at the legendary Bluebird Cafe. With Whitney's
|
||
talent and looks -- did I forget to mention how much he resembles a young
|
||
Steve Winwood? -- and just a little more exposure, it shouldn't be long before
|
||
some big label steps up and makes him an offer he can't refuse. If success
|
||
don't spoil him, this might be the fella to blow the lid off the entrenched
|
||
country music scene. (Ok, ok, I got my hyperbole gland workin' overtime.
|
||
Sorry, won't happen again.)
|
||
Anyway, all I've got to say is, keep your eyes (and ears) peeled for this
|
||
boy. Alan Whitney's one hell of a singer. --Lynn Kuehl
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Label Addresses:
|
||
OKra Records, 1992-B North High Street, Columbus, OH 43201 (in Germany,
|
||
contact NORMAL Records, Bonner Talweg 276, 5300 Bonn 1, Germany)
|
||
Hightone Records, 220 4th Street, #101, Oakland, CA 94607
|
||
Dejadisc, 537 Lindsey Street, San Marcos, TX 78666
|
||
Watermelon Records, P.O. Box 402088, Austin, TX 78704
|
||
Sugar Hill Records, P.O. Box 55300, Durham, NC 27717-5300
|
||
Western Beat Entertainment, 1738 Bay View Drive, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254
|
||
______________________________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
==============================
|
||
=+= BOOKS: LARRY BROWN =+=
|
||
==============================
|
||
FACING THE MUSIC (Algonquin Press, 1988)
|
||
DIRTY WORK (Algonquin Press, 1989)
|
||
BIG BAD LOVE (Algonquin Press, 1990)
|
||
JOE (Algonquin Press, 1991)
|
||
ON FIRE (Algonquin Press, 1994)
|
||
|
||
If you took a Steve Earle song -- "Good Old Boy (Gettin' Tough)," say, or
|
||
"The Week of Living Dangerously," and freed the characters from the confines
|
||
of a 3<> minute song and let them roam in a novel or a short story, they'd be
|
||
right at home in one by Larry Brown. Brown writes about the same tough down-
|
||
and-outers, facing the same hard choices and bad luck. And he does it with the
|
||
same compassion and dry humor.
|
||
The characters are drawn from life, his own, mostly. Brown, who lives in
|
||
Oxford, Mississippi, was a fireman who "got to wondering how people sat down
|
||
and created a whole book out of nothing" (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE 11/25/90)
|
||
and decided to find out by trying his hand at it. After writing two novels and
|
||
two collections of short stories, he's come full circle; his latest book,
|
||
excerpted in the December, 1993 issue of the NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, is an
|
||
autobiographical account of working as a fireman. He's fictionalized his
|
||
coming to writing in at least two stories, "The Apprentice," a humorous story,
|
||
told in the first person, about a man whose wife gets the writing bug; and the
|
||
more serious and much longer "92 Days," which follows a beginning writer's
|
||
odyssey through hell (drinking, divorce, and death) to find his soul and his
|
||
voice. Both of these stories are published in BIG BAD LOVE, the first Larry
|
||
Brown book I read and still my favorite one.
|
||
His stories are hard to describe because, at least in terms of
|
||
conventional plot, nothing much happens. A couple out driving get two flat
|
||
tires and have an argument; while they're busy making up in the front seat,
|
||
the police drive up. A man tries to cheat on his wife and is interrupted in
|
||
unexpected and ludicrous ways every time he tries to have sex with his new
|
||
girlfriend. An old couple lie in bed at night and one hears something
|
||
downstairs; the other goes to investigate what he knows is not there, has a
|
||
cigarette, and comes back to bed.
|
||
But of course more is going on. The old man reflects on mortality and
|
||
wonders how he and his wife "got to be so old." The cheating husband gradually
|
||
realizes, with a sense of fatality, that his hunger for his crazy love is
|
||
never going to be filled, even if the sex act is consummated. The man with the
|
||
flat tires knows that love is hard to find. "Love wasn't going to just walk up
|
||
and slap you in the face. It wasn't going to tackle you around the knees out
|
||
on the sidewalk. Love wasn't going to leap out of a second story window on top
|
||
of you." And when it does fall on you, it just keeps going wrong.
|
||
Brown is a master at making profound observations on big questions by
|
||
means of the most inconsequential, throwaway scenarios, many of them involving
|
||
a out-of-work no 'count who gets drunk and picks up a woman in a bar or has an
|
||
argument with his wife (generally about his getting drunk and picking up women
|
||
in bars). His characters are often crude, sometimes violent, a lot of times
|
||
confused. In his best stories they somehow claw their way or stagger gropingly
|
||
towards a sort of transcendence, but even so, their grasp on it is precarious.
|
||
Brown has a bottomless compassion for his no 'counts, even as he draws them in
|
||
such a way as to drive the reader to exasperation with them. While they
|
||
inspire a (sometimes grudging) sympathy, Brown doesn't glorify them in typical
|
||
wrong-side-of-the-tracks, bad-boy way. He just says, look closely at this here
|
||
lunkhead. He's human.
|
||
The everyday and the underdog is by now stock -- the pages of contemporary
|
||
writing have more flannel shirts and waitress aprons than any time since the
|
||
proletarian novels of the thirties -- but Brown goes some. When he's at his
|
||
best, his characters are so real and their pain so acute you flinch -- not
|
||
that Brown does. They're not yee-haw caricatures, they're not working class
|
||
people gussied up to play bit parts in literary sociology, they're not
|
||
qrotesques. If anything, they are too close for comfort.
|
||
His stories are powerful; I had forgotten how powerful until I started
|
||
leafing through his books to write this essay and got trapped. I spent the
|
||
rest of the evening reading, later remembering how each time I had sat down
|
||
with one of his novels I had finished it in one sitting. JOE is a compelling
|
||
but almost unremittingly grim story about a boy brought up in the most abject
|
||
and mind-numbing poverty imaginable, both physical and spiritual, and his
|
||
tenuous friendship with a man who poisons trees for a living. DIRTY WORK is
|
||
almost as grim. Its subject, Vietnam war veterans, and its theme, basically
|
||
the same as JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN, hardly makes for lightweight reading, but it's
|
||
written as a first person narrative, and so captures some of the same hapless-
|
||
dude humor of his short stories. The perspective alternates between a white
|
||
man, horribly disfigured in the war, who arrives at a VA hospital in the wake
|
||
of some unremembered catastrophe, and a quadriplegic black man who's been in
|
||
the hospital for twenty years. Neither of these novels are what you'd call
|
||
buddy stories, though both are about dilemmas and duties men face together.
|
||
I like Brown's short stories better than his novels. It may be that he
|
||
allows for a little more humor there (maybe he thinks novels should be more
|
||
serious?). But I think it's because his stories are more open-ended than his
|
||
novels. The novels end. The stories more often leave you with the feeling the
|
||
characters, having come to an important realization about love or life, are
|
||
embarking on a new chapter, off the printed page. It may not always be towards
|
||
something better, but still, moving, like the character in "Gold Nuggets,"
|
||
who, through a typical Larry Brown chain of events, finds himself broke, hung
|
||
over, and somewhat lost, wandering the docks looking for a perhaps apocryphal
|
||
boat selling shrimp at $1.35 a pound. "I kept walking. I knew all this was
|
||
just a temporary setback. It didn't mean that I couldn't ever be saved from my
|
||
life, or that I'd never find the boat I was looking for. Somewhere, somewhere
|
||
there, was a connection I could make, and I knew that all I had to do was stay
|
||
out there until I found it." --Cheryl Cline
|
||
|
||
=============================================================================
|
||
=+= If I Were Queen of the Silver Dollar =+= Jill Van Vliet =+=
|
||
=============================================================================
|
||
SOMETIME IN 1990, standing in front of my bathroom mirror, I picked up my
|
||
hairbrush and sang into it, "I'm goin' to Graceland, Graceland, Memphis,
|
||
Tennessee, I'm goin' to Graceland..."
|
||
My then-significant other had put the Paul Simon disc in the player that
|
||
spring afternoon as we lazed away a weekend. I sang along with an exaggerated
|
||
twang, and it suddently occurred to me! I yelled out to the living room,
|
||
"Hey, this would make a great country song!"
|
||
My then-significant other agreed. Obviously, so did Willie Nelson and Paul
|
||
Simon himself. As I lazed away yet another weekend, this time in the spring of
|
||
1993, I put Willie's ACROSS THE BORDERLINE CD in the player and listened to
|
||
him singing "Graceland" the way I always knew it should be sung.
|
||
I'm a sucker for albums of covers. I love to hear unexpected
|
||
interpretations of songs that I have grown so used to that when they are
|
||
covered, I'm initially indignant about the results. Those covers often become
|
||
my favorites. Once the shock wears off, I'm delighted by the ballsy way some
|
||
songs become new. Of course, they remain familiar. They become new songs you
|
||
already know the words to. That's the beauty of covers, and I'll admit it, I
|
||
can't get enough.
|
||
If I were Queen, I would produce an album of covers, using songs that have
|
||
always been country songs, but have been masquerading all these years as
|
||
simple, and sometimes yucky, pop songs. The simple structures and direct
|
||
emotions of what is mostly known, unfortunately, as seventies
|
||
singer/songwriter folksy drivel, lend themselves particularly well to this
|
||
idea. In my imagination, as they become pumped up with wailing steels, banjos,
|
||
mandolins and dobros, they become dusty, down-home weepers.
|
||
Consider two tunes by Fleetwood Mac. In "Monday Morning," a Lindsey
|
||
Buckingham song, and "I Don't Want To Know," a Stevie Nicks composition from
|
||
RUMOURS, the singers ask a classic country question within jaunty, tight
|
||
rhythms: why does love keep "walking on down the line?" I recruit Kevin Welch
|
||
and Kelly Willis to cover them, respectively, and wha la! My dream album is
|
||
out of the shoot.
|
||
Speaking of Stevie Nicks, I hire Patty Loveless to sing strength into
|
||
Stevie's warbling version of "The Highwayman" from her BELLA DONNA album.
|
||
Imagine Patty's rural gutbucket of a voice wrapped around these lines: "Alas,
|
||
he was the highwayman/The one that comes and goes/And only a highwaywoman puts
|
||
up with the likes of those."
|
||
Joni Mitchell's BLUE provides "All I Want," as sung in my dreams by Marie
|
||
McKee, who is capable of rising to the high soprano litany of the singer's
|
||
needs, or sinking gleefully into the guttural passion of a line like "Alive,
|
||
alive, I want to get up and jive/I want to wreck my stockings in some juke box
|
||
dive."
|
||
Merle Haggard would transform Joni's "A Case Of You" (also from BLUE),
|
||
from her melancholy reading into an unapologetic, sturdy C&W crying-in-your-
|
||
beer song. Imagine Hag simply stating: "Oh, you're in my blood like holy
|
||
wine/You taste so bitter and so sweet/Oh I could drink a case of you,
|
||
darling/And I would still be on my feet/I would still be on my feet."
|
||
Brenda Lee sings Jackson Browne? I would ask her to sing his staple of
|
||
late-seventies AOR radio, "Here Comes Those Tears Again," adding, as she
|
||
would, a texture and touch of Vegas to a song that suffers from smoothness.
|
||
Carole King's "Way Over Yonder" from TAPESTRY would retain it's faint
|
||
gospel/R&B tinge while being given a country swing shuffle when performed by
|
||
Lyle Lovett and his band, with backing vocals by powerhouse Francine Reed.
|
||
REO Speedwagon and Bon Jovi don't often come to mind as performers of
|
||
country songs, but certainly come to mine when the adjective "bombastic" is
|
||
mentioned. I would love to hear John Prine take Jon Bon Jovi's song from the
|
||
movie, "Blaze of Glory" and turn it into an acoustic, drowsy lament, full of
|
||
his characteristic irony. "...I'm goin' down, in a blaze of glory..." REO
|
||
Speedwagon could also benefit from some downshifting, as Jimmie Dale Gilmore
|
||
might perform their lovely, starkly declarative "Time For Me To Fly."
|
||
The restrained longing of 10,000 Maniacs' poetic "The Painted Desert" from
|
||
IN MY TRIBE, would be handled with sorrowful determination by Lucinda
|
||
Williams, whose own work is reminiscent of the beauty and vulgarity in the
|
||
line, "Is a cactus blooming there in every roadside stand/Where the big deal
|
||
is cowboy gear sewn in Japan?"
|
||
To insure this album's cult status, I'd have k.d. lang and Shelby Lynne
|
||
smokily dueting on "Sinful Life," a wacky ode to unwedded bliss that appeared
|
||
on Timbuk 3's album EDEN ALLEY.
|
||
Since Willie Nelson stole my bathroom mirror brainstorm, what would I have
|
||
him do? The Beatles "In My Life." Just in case he's already stolen that idea,
|
||
too, does anybody know how I can get a hold of Freddy Fender?
|
||
|
||
------------------------- + + + + + + + + + + + + + -------------------------
|
||
|
||
======================
|
||
= Internet Resources =
|
||
======================
|
||
|
||
=+= BGRASS-L =+=
|
||
Unmoderated mailing list run by Frank Godbey at the University of Kentucky.
|
||
Send e-mail to LISTSERV@UKCC.UKY (Bitnet) or LISTSERV@UKCC.UKY.EDU (Internet)
|
||
with a blank subject line and SUBSCRIBE BGRASS-L Your Full Name on the first
|
||
line of the message.
|
||
The list's charter states as it's purpose: The discussion of issues
|
||
related to the International Bluegrass Music Association (IBMA); and of
|
||
Bluegrass and Old-Time music in general, including but not limited to
|
||
recordings, bands, individual performers, live performances, publications,
|
||
business aspects, venues, history,performances, publications, business
|
||
aspects, venues, history,legal & ethical issues, radio, TV, you-name-it.
|
||
Early commercial country music is also an acceptable topic."
|
||
BGRASS-L is a *very* active list; fifty or more messages a day isn't
|
||
unusual. (I recommend setting the list to DIGESTS to avoid being overwhelmed.)
|
||
The topics range from musicians' shop talk (care of instruments, recommended
|
||
equipment, tablature, lyrics) to hillbilly stereotypes to festival reports and
|
||
the usual band itineraries and new release announcements. The sense of
|
||
community is very strong on this list, and the flaming is minimal (tempers
|
||
occasionally flare, but there's no out-and-out meanness here). Most of the
|
||
mainstays of the list are active in bluegrass and old time music, either in
|
||
working bands (including members of Southern Rail, Union Springs, Dry Branch
|
||
Fire Squad, the Poodles, Cornerstone, and the Bluegrass Patriots), or as
|
||
musicians, disc jockeys, label execs, promoters, journalists and music
|
||
scholars -- sometimes two or three of these at once! -- so the List provides a
|
||
glimpse of one corner of the bluegrass/old time community at work (the corner
|
||
that has Internet access...) The level of knowledge is also very high; just
|
||
about any question you might want to ask, whether it's how to safely transport
|
||
a stand-up bass to the Stanley Brother's last recorded show to who's playing
|
||
next weekend in Cincinnati, is likely to be answered. And don't be afraid to
|
||
ask dumb questions; newcomers to bluegrass are made to feel welcome and their
|
||
most basic questions are answered with grace. If you haven't figured it out
|
||
yet, this is one of my favorite Lists.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
=+= FOLK_MUSIC =+=
|
||
|
||
Moderated by Alan Roworth. To subscribe, e-mail to LISTSERV@NYSERNET.ORG with
|
||
the Subject line blank and SUBSCRIBE FOLK_Music Your Full Name on the first
|
||
line of the message.
|
||
While the focus of this list is folk, it often strays into country,
|
||
especially the singer-songwriter areas (there's not much bluegrass or old time
|
||
here, by the way). Performers like Nanci Griffith, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Butch
|
||
Hancock, Terry Allen, David Halley, and Kevin Welch are discussed fairly
|
||
regularly. It's not nearly as freewheeling as BGRASS-L, but the information is
|
||
solid (lots of tour itineraries) and discussion intelligent.
|
||
They also maintain files for FTP at nysernet.org, including the DIRTY
|
||
LINEN magazine monthly tour calendars. To access these files via anonymous FTP
|
||
logon as GUEST giving your user-id@your.local.host as a password. Files and
|
||
subdirectories are contained within the directory /FOLK_MUSIC. These are also
|
||
accessible via gopher on port 70.
|
||
The Nysernet gopher is also available via telnet by connecting to
|
||
nysernet.org and typing "nysernet" as a login name, no password is
|
||
necessary.
|
||
Contact Alan Roworth at ALANR@NYSERNET.ORG for more information.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
=+= rec.music.country.western =+=
|
||
|
||
An unmoderated USENET group, rec.music.country.western is a lot more sprawling
|
||
than either BGRASS-L or FOLK_MUSIC, and subject to the usual USENET problems
|
||
of flaming (including casual flaming from outside) and "spammed" messages
|
||
("MAKE MONEY FAST!!" "THE END OF THE WORLD IS NEAR"). It tends to be more top-
|
||
40 oriented, with lots of messages about Reba, Garth, and Clint, but fans of
|
||
Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Shaver, and Nanci Griffith are also represented, and for
|
||
every greenhorn who asks, "So, who IS Maybelle Carter, anyway?" there are
|
||
three or four knowledgeable folks who patiently post answers. (I also notice
|
||
these are often the *same* people who answer dumb questions with grace on
|
||
BGRASS-L and FOLK_MUSIC...if we're naming names, I'd like to nominate John
|
||
Lupton as an Internet List Saint).
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
=+= FOLK/ACOUSTIC/BLUEGRASS RADIO STATIONS AND PROGRAMS =+=
|
||
|
||
Jeremy Butler, host of "All Things Considered" on WUAL/WQPR has compiled a
|
||
list of folk/acoustic radio stations and programs, many of which play country
|
||
music. To get the list, send an e-mail message to LISTSERV@UA1VM.UA.EDU. In
|
||
the first line of your message, put the following command:
|
||
|
||
GET FLKRD3A TXT
|
||
|
||
Repeat the procedure with:
|
||
|
||
GET FLKRD3B TXT
|
||
GET FLKRD3C TXT
|
||
GET FLKRD3C TXT
|
||
|
||
(Note: there are no periods in the filenames)
|
||
|
||
He updates the list periodically, so if you host a radio show along these
|
||
lines, or know of a good one that does, send it to Jeremy. He requests the
|
||
information in the following format:
|
||
|
||
REGION:
|
||
PROGRAM TITLE:
|
||
PROGRAM HOST:
|
||
RADIO STATION NAME (call letters):
|
||
RADIO STATION FREQUENCY AND LOCATION:
|
||
TIME/DAY BROADCAST:
|
||
TYPE OF MUSIC FEATURED:
|
||
ADDRESS (e-mail or standard post):
|
||
COMMENTS (how cool is it?):
|
||
|
||
For more information, contact: Jeremy Butler
|
||
Host, "All Things Acoustic" (WUAL/WQPR)
|
||
jbutler@ccmail.bamanet.ua.edu
|
||
P.O. Box 870152
|
||
Telecommunication and Film Dept.
|
||
University of Alabama
|
||
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0152
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
=+= FOLK E-MAIL DIRECTORY =+=
|
||
Send request to Hiram Jackson: JACKSON@GEOLOGY.UCDAVIS.EDU
|
||
|
||
Hiram Jackson has compiled a directory of e-mail addresses for folk
|
||
performers, journalists, promoters, agents, editors, and others. Again, while
|
||
the umbrella term is "folk", the list includes addresses for people connected
|
||
with bluegrass, country, tex-mex, cajun, etc., etc. It's a very useful list,
|
||
especially in tandem with Jeremy Butler's radio list. If you would like to be
|
||
listed, send information to Hiram at the above e-mail address.
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
===> COMING SOON! =+= BOXCARS =+=
|
||
|
||
As if I didn't have enough to do, I'm working on a new e-zine project, a
|
||
collective zine, or "press association" or Reader's digest/Utne Reader style
|
||
electronic zine, tentatively titled BOXCARS. The plan is this: people who
|
||
publish newsletters, magazines, or fanzines about country, bluegrass, old-
|
||
time, blues, cajun, roots rock, or anything else that falls into the loose
|
||
category "American folk," send excerpts from their publications (preferably
|
||
via e-mail or on IBM-compatible disks), I edit it all together and send it out
|
||
on the Net. The excerpts will be set off from each other, much like columns,
|
||
with the name of the zine as the title, and will include subscription info &
|
||
etc. I'll do some minimal formatting to make it look good, but I won't edit
|
||
it. The length of the excerpts will depend on how many people participate. I
|
||
hope to do it monthly, but you don't have to contribute every time.
|
||
Along with the 'zine excerpts/columns, I plan to include a few resource
|
||
and news columns, covering things like Internet resources, new releases by
|
||
bands, radio show listings, and whatever else comes my way. If you're
|
||
interested, send an e-mail to me and I'll give you more details.
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
=+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+= =+=
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
TWANGIN'! On-Line is copyright (c) 1994 by Cheryl Cline. Individual writers
|
||
hold the copyright on their material. Forwarding or otherwise reproducing this
|
||
zine electronically is okay, but if you want to reprint any of the contents
|
||
in, say, your own zine, ask first.
|
||
|
||
That number again is cline@well.sf.ca.us
|
||
|
||
Contributors ----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Cheryl Cline: Editor, publisher, chief cook & bottle-washer
|
||
Lynn Kuehl: Sidekick
|
||
Jim Catalano: Based in Ithaca, NY, Jim writes a weekly freelance music
|
||
column for the ITHACA JOURNAL. He also writes a country
|
||
column for the Music Press, upstate New York's biggest all-
|
||
monthly; he makes a point to cover non-mainstream country as
|
||
much as possible. He invites submissions and correspondence
|
||
to 709 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca, NY 14850 or call 607-277-3695.
|
||
William Athey: Salt Lake City-based writer and regular contributor to the
|
||
Rockabilly magazine PUT YER CAT CLOTHES ON
|
||
Jill Van Vliet: Free-lance writer and member of The Cypress Group, a Chicago
|
||
Theater Group.
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |