Wednesday, October 5, 2022

The 2022 Americana Festival and Awards

My wife Leslie and I finally got to Nashville in September for the Americana Festival and Awards. We've been planning to do this since 2020 with our friends Donald Cohen and Madeline Janis. I'm kinda glad we waited because our new favorite singer, Allison Russell, won Best Album for her first solo album, Outside Child (see my blog post about her).



Overall the festival was a ton of fun, made even more special by Donald's knowledge of the music and relationships with many of the fine musicians present, including Alisa Amador and Ali McGuirk. We spent a few enjoyable days in Nashville prior to the fest, catching up with old friends and touring the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Johnny Cash museum.

Diversity was a strong theme of this year's fest, with Allison Russell and The War and Treaty winning awards, and Al Bell of Stax Records receiving a Lifetime Achievement award. A panel on Indigenous Americana, led by Shoshona Kish and Amanda Rheaume of Ishkode Records was eye opening and led us to attend their showcase later where Kish's band, Digging Roots, and Rheaume rocked!

Another fascinating panel, at the Country Music Hall of Fame, featured the Black Opry, a group of African-American country music lovers under the leadership of Holly G, with Aaron Vance, Nikki Morgan, Julie Williams and The Kentucky Gentlemen. All of the artists played a few of their songs, representing the range of roots music from blues to soul to indie rock to pure country.



Musically the highlight of the week for me was my discovery of Amanda Rheaume, a member of the Metis (Indigenous/French) Nation of Canada. She sings with a compelling intensity, with eyes that seem to make contact with you, even when you're at the back of the hall. Her songs combine the history of Indigenous people with her own personal experiences. One Hundred Years deals with awakening of Native people in response to, among other things, the recent revelations of the Canadian government's treatment of Native students, with thousands dying in residential schools:

Can you feel the heat
Underneath your feet
Rising on the land, stirring in the street
Waking from a hundred years of sleep
A hundred years of sleep
A hundred years of sleep

In Do About Her Rheaume sings forcefully about her experiences growing up with both Indigenous and settler lineage and not being accepted by either:

She's not quite an Indian girl
She's not quite a white girl either
Her heart beats in both worlds
What we gonna do about hеr?
Put a bullet or a blanket out for her


 

And I got a chance to chat up the fabulous Marissa Moss, author of the recent book Her Country on the struggles women have faced breaking through in country music and getting played on country radio (see my blog post about this great book). We talked about why many of these stars had to leave Texas for Nashville (the three singers she focused on - Kacey Musgraves, Maren Morris and Mickey Guyton - plus others like Miranda Lambert and Amanda Shires are all Texans!).

Friday, September 9, 2022

Why Allison Russell Should Win All the Major Americana Awards



After a two-year wait due to Covid, my wife Leslie and I are finally going to Nashville next week for the Americana Music Association's Americanafest. It's four days of nonstop keynotes, panels, and music performances all around Nashville, plus the 21st annual Americana Honors & Awards.

I've been a big fan of Allison Russell since her time in Our Native Daughters (the group she formed with Rhiannon Giddens, Leyla McCalla and Amythyst Kiah, four Black female banjo players) and her first solo album, Outside Child, released last year and  produced by Dan Knobler, has just blown me away. Her personal story of  survival from and triumph over a decade of abuse at the hands of her stepfather (see this NPR piece), coupling that with the survival of enslaved people (she wrote Quasheba about her enslaved ancestor for Our Native Daughters), is reflected throughout this powerful album.

Three songs from Outside Child stand out for me:

Persephone (written with her husband Jeremy Lindsay aka JT Nero) is Russell's homage to her first love, a girl with whom Russell would take refuge from her stepfather. It's a rockin', toe-tapping, great to sing along with, joyful song of overcoming adversity and first love:

Blood on my shirt, two ripped buttons
Might’ve killed me that time, oh if I’d let him
He’s slow when he’s drunk, and he lost his grip on me
Now I’m running down La Rue St. Paul
Trying to get out from the weight of it all
Can’t flag a cop ’cause I know he won’t stop
I’ll go see Persephone 
 
Tap tap tappin’ on your window screen
Gotta let me in, Persephone
Got nowhere to go, but I had to get away from him
My petals are bruised, but I’m still a flower
Come runnin’ to you in the violet hour
Put your skinny arms around me, let me taste your skin  
 
Mouth to mouth, mouth to flower
Salty sweet, you give me power
I feel you shake under my lips
Your fingers tender find my secrets
Don’t make a sound, don’t cry out, love
Your parents are sleeping just above
I kiss you once, I kiss you twice
Fall asleep looking in each other’s eyes

But the night must end and then it's

Back to the cold’s bite, back to the hard life
Back to the harsh bright street 

Nightflyer's chorus echoes two great rock songs:

Yeah, I'm a midnight rider
Stone bona fide night flyer
I'm an angel of the morning too
The promise that the dawn will bring you, you

The verses are filled with lush imagery celebrating her triumph over the abuse:

His soul is trapped in that room
But I crawled back in my mother's womb
Came back out with my gold and my greens
Now I see everything
Now I feel everything, Good Lord
What the hell could they bring to stop me, Lord?
Nothing from the earth, nothing from the sea
Not a God Almighty thing 
 
I'm the wounded bird, I'm the screaming hawk
I'm the one who can't be counted out
I'm the dove thrown into battle
I can roll and shake and rattle hm-mm, hm-mm
I'm the moon's dark side, I'm the solar flare
The child of the Earth, the child of the Air
I am The Mother of the Evening Star
I am the Love that Conquers All

Nothing is going to stop Allison Russell! 

4th Day Prayer is another empowering song about rising up against hate:

Father used me like a wife
Mother turned the blindest eye
Stole my body, spirit, pride
He did, he did each night 
 
From the coast of Africa
To the hills of Grenada
To the cold of Montreal
That whip, that whip still falls

The chorus exhorts us to stand against the hate: 

One for the hate that loops and loops
Two for the poison at the roots
Three for the children breaking through
Four for the day we're standing in the sun

So I'm definitely rooting for Allison Russell to win Album of the Year for Outside Child, Song of the Year for Persephone (it could have been Nightflyer, which was nominated for Grammys in Best American Roots Song and Performance) and Artist of the Year. Let's take a look at her competitors.

Album of the Year

Outside Child's competitors for Album of the Year are:

  • "In These Silent Days," Brandi Carlile; Produced by Dave Cobb and Shooter Jennings
  • "Raise The Roof," Robert Plant & Alison Krauss; Produced by T Bone Burnett
  • "A Southern Gothic," Adia Victoria; Produced by Mason Hickman and Adia Victoria, Executive Produced by T Bone Burnett
  • "Stand For Myself," Yola; Produced by Dan Auerbach
I think Brandi Carlile will be Russell's main competitor in all three categories. In These Silent Days is a great album, like we've come to expect from Carlile, with several excellent songs like Right on Time. I was glad to see Adia Victoria and Yola, two new Black women singers, recognized. I never got the Robert Plant/Alison Krauss pairing. She can do a lot better! Several great albums but I'm gonna go with Outside Child.

Song of the Year

The other nominees for SOTY are:

  • “Canola Fields,” James McMurtry; Written by James McMurtry
  • “Diamond Studded Shoes,” Yola; Written by Dan Auerbach, Natalie Hemby, Aaron Lee Tasjan and Yola
  • “Juanita,” Sturgill Simpson feat. Willie Nelson; Written by Sturgill Simpson
  • “Right On Time,” Brandi Carlile; Written by Brandi Carlile, Dave Cobb, Phil Hanseroth and Tim Hanseroth
Right on Time, a powerful ballad in the style of her songs The Story and The Joke shows off Carlile's vocal range and songwriting ability. Yola's Diamond Studded Shoes is a strong conciousness-raising song. I love Sturgill and Willie but they've each done better songs than this. And I actually like Canola Fields, from an artist I've never enjoyed, despite his being from Austin and the son of Texas royalty. Persephone beats these fine songs.

Artist of the Year

For Artist of the Year we have Russell and:

  • Brandi Carlile
  • Jason Isbell
  • Billy Strings
  • Yola

Either Carlile or John Prine has won this award for the last five years and she could quite well win it again. Jason Isbell is my favorite current singer but his main contribution in 2021 was the release of Georgia Blue, a record of covers of Georgia songs that Isbell promised if Georgia went for Biden, with proceeds going to voting registration organizations. Major props to him for the courage to cover Otis Redding's I've Been Loving You Too Long! Yola and the multi-instrumentalist Billy Strings are up-and-coming stars and will have their day. But this is Allison Russell's year!

Thursday, August 11, 2022

Her Country by Marissa R. Moss

 I just finished a fine new book about the women of country music, Her Country, How the Women of Country Music Became the Success They Were Never Supposed to Be, by Marissa R. Moss, a superb Nashville-based music writer. I used her Rolling Stone reporting on the Highwomen extensively in my 2020 blogpost on that fine supergroup (A Deeper Dive Into The Highwomen).

Focusing on Kacey Musgraves, Maren Morris and Mickey Guyton, Moss tells the story of the struggles that women have had to go through in the last twenty years to get played on country radio, once abundant with the likes of Dolly Parton, Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, etc., etc. Between consultants telling radio programmers that their audience only wants to hear one female artist per hour, sexual harassment from DJs and programmers, and resistance to weed- and gay-friendly lyrics (Musgraves) or Black voices (Guyton), these three and many other women have had to force their way into the national conversation.

As a reporter covering the Nashville scene for the past decade, with close access to all these artists, Moss presents a compelling story of the rise of these artists and many others including Miranda Lambert, Brandy Clark and Brittney Spencer. I found her description of the Nashville music scene especially fascinating, how the musicians agree to write together during the day, then play together in clubs and living rooms at night; how singer/songwriters face the choice of having their best work covered by established artists or hold on to the song for their own breakout vehicle.

Until reading this book I never realized how the banishment of The Chicks from country radio after lead singer Natalie Maines blasted George W. Bush for the Iraq invasion was so profoundly received in Nashville, forcing progressive country singers there to "shut up and sing" for years.

Of course the story of women in country music is a work in progress and I found two areas that I would like to see Moss (or someone else) explore further:

The first is the economics of country music and the reliance on country radio airplay. Several of the artists mentioned in the book broke through using non-traditional channels such as Spotify, Apple Music, SiriusXM Radio, or Country Music Television. Can a country singer thrive financially without airplay on mainstream country radio?  Many country-adjacent Americana artists like Brandi Carlile and Jason Isbell seem to be doing okay, although I don't have career earning figures at my disposal compared to, say, Tim McGraw.

The second question I have concerns the fact that Musgraves, Morris and Guyton are Texans, as are Miranda Lambert and Highwoman Amanda Shires. Why did these women have to leave Texas for Nashville to make it? As an Austin resident for almost four decades, I have become used to country radio ignoring our biggest stars like Kelly Willis, Joe Ely and Robert Earl Keen. I rarely hear the new breed of Texas country artists like Josh Abbott, Cody Johnson or Midland on traditional country radio. Since Willie Nelson fled Nashville in the early '70s for Austin the Texas music scene has flourished and has had a definite impact on Nashville country but hasn't lifted many local artists to national prominence. What's your take on that Marissa?

Sunday, February 6, 2022

Texas Waltz Playlist

Here are 26 Texas songs I love, arranged in a somewhat geographical manner. So put it on and get ready to waltz across Texas. Here's the Spotify link.


Let's kick it off with Gary P. Nunn telling us What I Like About Texas. My buddy Venancio Figueroa has created a great video that goes along with the song. Here's the link.

You ask me what I like about Texas
I tell you it's the wide open spaces!
It's everything between the Sabine and the Rio Grande.
It's the Llano Estacado,
It's the Brazos and the Colorado;
Spirit of the people down here who share this land!

We're going to start our tour in Austin where, Waylon Jennings will tell you, Bob Wills Is Still The King.

Then we'll bring back Gary P. for his classic London Homesick Blues (Home With the Armadillo).

Now we head down I35 to San Antonio. We're going to hear two versions of Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys' San Antonio Rose. The original was an instrumental with those twin Texas fiddles and pedal steel guitar. This was a hit, but the record company wanted a version with lyrics so Tommy Duncan wrote and sang the New San Antonio Rose, with more of the big band instrumentation the Playboys were known for.

San Antonio's Doug Sahm made his fame with Mendocino in California with his band the Sir Douglas Quintet but came back to Texas in 1972 and recorded (Is Anybody Going To) San Antone, which had been a 1970 hit for Charley Pride.

We leave town to Tish Hinojosa's autobiographical West Side Of Town and head down to the border.

My favorite version of The Streets of Laredo was song by a guy who's not from Texas but it's Johnny Cash so we'll let it slide.

Next we swing back up to the Texas Hill Country for Waylon and Willie's Luckenbach, Texas (Back to the Basics of Love).

Stevie Ray Vaughan's Texas Flood could happen anywhere in Texas but I'm placing it in the Hill Country to commemorate the adventure we had picking up our kids from their camps in Hunt, Texas when the Guadalupe overflowed!

Now we take a left turn and head out west, where Marty Robbins will spin a tale of old El Paso.

Lubbock's Butch Hancock wrote the classic West Texas Waltz but I like the way his Flatlanders bandmate Joe Ely sings it more.

From Lubbock we head up 87, the Amarillo Highway. Terry Allen wrote it but I prefer Robert Earl Keen's version better. More from REK later.

I don't wear no Stetson
But I'm willin' to bet son
That I'm as big a Texan as you are

Can't have a Texas playlist without George Strait's Amarillo By Morning.

We'll stay up in the Panhandle for a minute to catch Texas country music supergroup The Panhandlers' West Texas in My Eye, written by Charlie Stout. Check out the video with William Clark Green, John Baumann, Cleto Cordero and Josh Abbott taking turns on the verses.

Lately I've been thinking that I could leave this town
I'd cut back on my drinking, stop this running 'round
Playing songs 'til after midnight, staying up till dawn
There's something in the dust and wind that keeps me hanging on
And I never thought I'd live to see the day I'd say goodbye
I ain't crying, that's west Texas in my eye

From the Panhandle we head down to Dallas, Jimmie Dale Gilmore's song. Once again we are going with his Flatlanders bandmate Joe Ely's version.

You can't have a playlist about Texas without Tanya Tucker's Texas (When I Die).

Texas Sun by Houston's Khruangbin, with a vocal by Fort Worth's Leon Bridges, is a little tour of Texas by itself.

I had to include Wide Open Spaces by The Chicks, which is clearly about Texas even if it doesn't mention Texas. If I had to pick one voice that represents Texas it would be Natalie Maines's!

Sir Douglas Quintet's Texas Tornado starts out in Port Aransas and wipes out a bunch of Texas cities includes Galveston, Amarillo, Houston and Corpus Christi.

Speaking of Corpus, Robert Earl Keen tells us about life on the Corpus Christi Bay.

From the coast we'll head back toward Houston.

The Yellow Rose of Texas goes back to the 1840s. Many historians believe it is about Emily Morgan, a free mulatto working for Capt. James Morgan in 1836 whom Santa Anna met when his army came through what is now the Houston area in pursuit of the Texian army under the leadership of Sam Houston. To get at her, Santa Anna stopped in an indefensible position in San Jacinto, and was in his tent with her when the Texians attacked and routed the much larger Mexican army. Santa Anna was captured and was traded back to Mexico in exchange for Texas's freedom. Everybody in the world has recorded this song, from Gene Autry to Mitch Miller. My favorite, by Artie Morris, is not available on Spotify, so I'm going with Texan Michael Martin Murphey's version.

Houston's most successful musical export of course is Beyoncé and this is her song about her father, Daddy Lessons. I picked the version where she is backed up by The Chicks. What a combination!

Before we leave the town, we need to hear Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin Brothers' Houston (Means I'm One Day Closer To You).

Asleep at the Wheel are from Philadelphia but they have been the biggest proponent of Western Swing since they got here in the 70s so let's celebrate this road trip with Miles and Miles of Texas. And, yes, I'm gonna live here until I die.

I hoped you enjoyed this Waltz Across Texas. Take us home, Ernest Tubb!




Friday, December 3, 2021

My Thanksgiving 2021 Playlist

My family gets together for Thanksgiving every year with a huge crowd (26 adults and kids this year!) so I like to put together a playlist to keep the cleanup crew moving. I throw in a couple of oldies along with my favorite new songs, some slow ones and lots of rockers. Here's my playlist for this year.

Spotify link

We kicked it off with Layla, the classic from Derek and the Dominos, with Eric Clapton and Duane Allman on guitars. Can you believe that I’ve been doing this for over 10 years and haven’t included this one yet? 

Then I went to the husband and wife duo of Michael Trotter Jr. and Tanya Blount, called The War and Treaty for Are You Ready to Love Me? Last year I included their 5 More Minutes.

Next is Las Vegas’s The Killers’ Quiet Town, a very Bruce-like song about the effect of opioids on a small town:

When we first heard opioid stories

They were always in whispering tones

Now banners of sorrow mark the front steps of childhood homes

Parents wept through daddy's girl eulogies

And merit badge milestones with their daughters and sons

Laying there lifeless in their suits and gowns

Somebody's been keepin' secrets

In this quiet town

Allison Russell is my singer of the year and Persephone is my song of the year. Russell was part of Our Native Daughters, four Black women led by Rhiannon Giddens (I included their Moon Meets the Sun last year) as well as the duo Birds of Chicago with her husband J.T. Nero. Outside Child (nominated for a Best Americana Album Grammy) is her first solo album. Russell’s back story is compelling (see this NPR story). The album celebrates her survival from a decade of abuse at the hands of a stepfather as well as the survival of enslaved people (she wrote Quasheba about her enslaved foremother for the Our Native Daughters album). More of Allison Russell later.


Brandi Carlile capped a busy few years with another Grammy-nominated song, Right On Time. (Record and Song of the year, Best Pop Solo Performance). For you Brandi fans definitely listen to her new memoir, Broken Horses. It’s like she’s in the room telling you her stories and then, at the end of each chapter, she picks up a guitar or walks over to the piano and plays you the songs she mentioned.

We kicked off last year’s set with Letter To You from Bruce Springsteen’s album of the same name. Here’s another great one from that album, Power of Prayer:

Last call, the bouncer shuts the door

This magic moment drifts across the floor

As Ben E. King's voice fills the air

Baby, that's the power of prayer

Next is one of my favorite Maren Morris songs, My Church. I wanted to include this last year but we already had all of her stuff with Highwomen as well as her BLM-supporting song, Better Than We Found It (which just got nominated this year for Best Country Song).

When Hank brings the sermon

And Cash leads the choir

It gets my cold cold heart burning

Hotter than a ring of fire

When this wonderful world gets heavy

And I need to find my escape

I just keep the wheels rolling, radio scrolling

'Til my sins wash away

Then, just ‘cause there’s never enough Chicks, here’s Tonight’s The Heartaches On Me from back in their classic, pre-cancellation phase. Natalie Maines’ vocal rocks!

Jason Isbell promised he would record an album of Georgia music if Biden won the state. The result, Georgia Blue, came out a few weeks ago, with all proceeds going to Black Voters Matter, Fair Fight, and Georgia STAND-UP. I picked his rendition of Otis Redding’s I’ve Been Loving You Too Long. Nobody is going to top Otis’s version, with Booker T, Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn and the Memphis Horns but Isbell gives it a good shot.

So, we need a little Otis. I first heard That’s How Strong My Love Is on Out of Our Heads, the Rolling Stones’ 4th album, in 1965, my introduction to Otis.

Right before the Otis song on that album is The Last Time. My wife Leslie and I saw the Stones two weeks ago in Austin, at their last big show of what may be their last tour. No, they didn’t play The Last Time!

Switching back to some new songs, the Black Pumas are one of Austin’s hottest bands. We were privileged to hear lead singer Eric Burton do a solo on Tracy Chapman’s Fast Car, just him and his guitar, at Austin City Limits Festival this year.

To wrap up the new songs, here’s Allison Russell’s Grammy-nominated Nightflyer (Best American Roots Performance and Song):


Yeah, I'm a midnight rider

Stone bonafide night flyer

I'm an angel of the morning too

Promise that the dawn will bring you, you

Now, a bunch of fun oldies. Van Morrison’s Brown Eyed Girl is a classic.

Written and sung by band leader Willy Braun, Wicked Twisted Road is one of my favorite Reckless Kelly songs. Braun and brothers and cousins moved to Central Texas from Idaho in the 90s and have been local favorites ever since.

 

My first love was an angry painful song

I wanted one so bad I went and did everything wrong

A lesson in reality would come before too long

Yeah, my first love was an angry painful song

My first love was a wicked twisted road

I hit the million mile mark at seventeen years old

I never saw the rainbow, much less a pot of gold

Yeah, my first love was a wicked twisted road

 

Next, a really fun song from the Sir Douglas Quintet, going back all the way to 1969, Nuevo Laredo. Sir Douglas is Doug Sahm from San Antonio and that’s his buddy, the incomparable Augie Meyers, on the Vox organ.

 

In a little border town

Way down there in Nuevo Laredo Mexico

Spied a señorita there

Wind blows through her long black hair

As I cut a trail on the way to Boys Town

 

Smoke and drink the night away

In a dimly lit cafe

Long hairs were a novelty to the people that were on the scene

We picked the blues 'til early dawn

Everybody sang along

We had such a ball in Nuevo Laredo

 

I included Jerry Jeff Walker’s Mr. Bojangles on last year's set, to honor a great songwriter on his passing, but Jerry Jeff was also an incredible interpreter of others’ songs. Here’s his version of Michael Burton’s Night Rider’s Lament.

 

She asked me

Why does he ride for his money

Why does he rope for short pay

He ain't gettin' nowhere

And he's losin' his share

He must've gone crazy out there

 

Then they've never seen the Northern Lights

They've never seen a hawk on the wing

They've never seen the spring hit the Great Divide

Lord they've never heard ole' camp cookie sing

 

Sticking with Texas singer/songwriters, here’s Robert Earl Keen’s Jesse With The Long Hair, one of my favorite REK songs. A whole Western movie in a 4-minute song!

Next, to honor the 50th anniversary of Duane Allman’s passing, the Allman Brothers Band’s Blue Sky. This is one of the last recordings Duane played on. Rowland Archer and I saw the band play this great Dickey Betts song, which hadn’t come out on record yet, on August 15, 1971, at the Academy of Music in NYC. Duane died two months later. The interplay between Duane and Dickey's guitars gets me every time I hear the song, even 50 years later. Wikipedia's Blue Sky page breaks it down: Allman's solo beginning 1:07, Betts joining in a shared melody line at 2:28, followed by Betts's solo at 2:37.

This past Tuesday Leslie and I saw Duane Betts, Dickey’s son, play this as part of the Allman Betts Band, which he formed with Gregg Allman’s son Devon and original bassist Berry Oakley’s son Berry Duane Oakley.

George Frayne, leader of Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airman, passed this year. He was one of the first guys to do hippies playing country, with Seeds and Stems (Again) the classic from their first album, 1971’s Lost in the Ozone.

And we’re going to finish with the Storyteller, Tom T. Hall, who also passed away this year. Here’s one of my favorites, Old Dogs, Children and Watermelon Wine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, November 19, 2021

The Stones and Me

This Saturday my wife Leslie and I will see the Rolling Stones in Austin, on the next-to-last date of possibly their last tour. I’ve been an off-and-on fan of the World’s Greatest Rock ‘n’ Roll Band for most of my life and, at their peak in the late 60s and early 70s, they indeed were the best. I haven’t paid much attention to the band in the last few decades so, to get ready for the show, I’ve been listening to all their music chronologically. These are my recollections as I’ve gone through the records.

I discovered girls and rock ‘n’ roll at about the same time, when I was 10 or 11 in 1965, when I heard Keith’s guitar riff on Satisfaction. You know the one I’m talking about. I guess it’s kind of funny that I could relate to “I can’t get no girl reaction” when I was just starting out! [Okay, here’s the first Google-derived surprise: I always heard that line as “girly action”!]

Satisfaction was actually on the Stones fourth American album, Out of Our Heads, when they were really just beginning to write their own stuff. My grade school buddy Rob Connor had all the early ones. I used to borrow his until I finally went out and bought them all.  (Spotify has both US and UK versions of many of the Stones albums, as well as “Deluxe” re-releases but for the most part I stuck with the versions I grew up with in my journey through the past.)

The first one, England’s Newest Hitmakers, released in the US in May of 1964, was a trip through American R&B music, including songs by Willie Dixon (I Just Want to Make Love to You), Jimmy Reed (Honest I Do), Chuck Berry (Carol) and Rufus Thomas (Walking the Dog). The album includes the first Jagger/Richards song, Tell Me, as well as two bluesy songs credited to “Nanker Phelge”, the pseudonym for the whole band. So for me the early Stones were also a primer of American soul music.

One interesting thing is that, for the US version, they added Buddy Holly’s Not Fade Away, perhaps after noting how the Beatles had exploded earlier in the year with their heavily Buddy Holly-influenced sound. 

The second American album, 1964’s 12x5, continued the Stones love affair with soul music, including another Chuck Berry (Around and Around), Bobby Womack’s It’s All Over Now, Under the Boardwalk Susie Q, as well as three Jagger/Richards songs and two more group compositions including 2120 South Michigan Avenue, the address of Chess Records in Chicago, where the track was recorded. I worked in Chicago for a few weeks in 2014. One night my college friend Jeff Korman was driving me back to my hotel from dinner, along S. Michigan Avenue. The Stones song flashed into my mind from 50 years earlier and there it was, Chess Studios (now a museum)!

The version of Time is on My Side on the album starts with a lame organ intro but was re-recorded for the single with a nasty guitar intro!

In 1965 came their third album, The Rolling Stones Now, with their first Otis Redding song, Pain in My Heart (written by Allen Toussaint). The Stones led me to Otis; he’s still my favorite singer.

Satisfaction was released in June of 1965, when I was 10, and became the Stones’ first #1 hit in the US. The music and guitar riff are all Keith, a harbinger of what was to come, the words classic Mick. It came out on Out of Our Heads in July, along with another Stones classic, The Last Time. R&B covers included Sam Cooke’s Good Times, Marvin Gaye’s Hitch Hike, and another Otis song, That’s How Strong My Love Is.

December’s Children (And Everybody’s), a collection of singles and UK-only songs, was released in late December 1965. Get Off My Cloud, such a badass song, was the big song, but the album includes two other Jagger/Richards compositions, I’m Free and As Tears Go By. It also includes the Stones’ first country cover, Hank Snow’s I’m Moving On.

I’m Free has always been an anthem for me, but just picture an 11-year old proclaiming

I'm free to choose whom I please any old time
I'm free to please whom I choose any old time
So hold me, love me
Love me, hold me
But I'm free any old time to get what I want
Yes, I am

As Tears Go By was probably the first song I slow danced to, at summer camp in 1966, so probably also the first time I touched a girl!

Aftermath came out in July 1966 and was the first album consisting entirely of Jagger/Richards songs. To me this was a very English album, with Lady Jane, Stupid Girl (“like a lady in waiting to a virgin Queen”), I Am Waiting (which Jagger pronounces “Whiting”). Paint It Black was the big song from the album. This album probably represents the peak of Brian Jones’ influence on the band, bringing in new instruments including the sitar, dulcimer and marimbas. That is, when he showed up and wasn’t too drugged out.

Between the Buttons came out in early 1967, as the psychedelic period in music and culture was gearing up. Two of my favorite Stones song are the first and third cuts on the album and they couldn’t be more different. Let’s Spend the Night Together is a classic bad-boy rocker (Ed Sullivan made them sing it “Let’s spend some time together” although Jagger mumbled the line so you can’t really tell what he is saying - see the video), which you know exactly what it’s about while Ruby Tuesday is in the Stones’ soft, poetic, orchestral genre. I still don’t know whether Jagger’s saying “cash”, “cache” or “catch” your dreams before they slip away. (Google says “catch”). The album concludes with a vaudeville-sounding track about LSD (?), Something Happened to Me Yesterday, which includes the first Keith lead vocal.

Charlie did the back-cover artwork for Between the Buttons. The best image of it I can find is here.

Flowers (Summer 1967) was a collection of singles and other non-previously released on album songs. Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadow features Keith’s fuzz guitar like on Satisfaction. Two of my favorite lesser-known Stones songs are on Flowers: Back Street Girl (an illicit romance with a girl from the other side of the tracks, a theme Jagger would return to frequently) and Sittin’ On A Fence:

All of my friends at school grew up and settled down
And they mortgaged up their lives
One thing’s not said too much, but I think it's true
They just get married 'cause there's nothing else to do, so
I'm just sittin’ on a fence
You can say I got no sense
Trying to make up my mind
Really is too horrifying
So I'm sittin’ on a fence

Their Satanic Majesties Request came out at the end of 1967, full blown psychedelic music. There’s a lot of weird shit in here – Bill Wyman’s only (?) vocal ever, the heavily reverbed In Another Land. A vaudeville-type song, On With the Show, about a strip club. But there are several songs that rock, most notably She’s A Rainbow. For those who want to compare it to the Beatle’s, Sgt. Peppers, from earlier in the year, I would only ask, is there anything on Sgt. Peppers you can dance to?

So now it’s 1968, a very hard year. The escalation of the war in Vietnam, the assassinations of Martin and Bobby, police violence against protesters in Chicago and Paris, the election of Richard Nixon. I’m 14 and awakening politically, only to see my heroes killed and a stupid war continuing.

Musically the pyschedelic craze is passing and rock ‘n’ roll is returning to its roots and the Stones put out one of their best albums, Beggars Banquet, and kicked off what many including myself consider their classic period. They could have stopped the album after the first song, Sympathy For The Devil, and I would still say the same thing. Where to start? The insistent groove, Keith’s sizzling guitar breaks, the ominous feeling that the violence will never end. (The recording was done between June 4 and 10, 1968. The line was changed from “Who killed Kennedy” to “Who killed the Kennedys” as Bobby of course was killed on June 6.) Maybe Mick’s best vocal ever. The repeated “What’s my name” always reminded me of Muhammed Ali pounding Ernie Terrell, who insisted on calling him Cassius Clay, and taunting him with “what’s my name?” However, I can’t find any comments from Jagger that support that.

No Expectations, a simple Robert Johnson-like delta blues, highlighted the band’s return to its roots. The slide guitar is Brian Jones’ last major contribution to the band’s songs.

Street Fighting Man, another Stones classic starts side 2 on the album. So many mixed feelings about this song! Musically, Mick’s strident vocals ringing out over maybe the most forceful acoustic guitar track ever, with Charlie’s drums driving the whole thing. Lyrically, he’s ambivalent about the place of violence or even violent overthrow, to oppose the war and racism, as I was. The first two lines totally grab you but, is Mick advocating fighting in the streets despite being told there’s no place for it or is he literally saying don’t do it?

Ev'rywhere I hear the sound of marching, charging feet, boy
'Cause summer's here and the time is right for fighting in the street, boy
But what can a poor boy do
Except to sing for a rock 'n' roll band
'Cause in sleepy London town
There's just no place for a street fighting man, no

As much as I love Stray Cat Blues, with its screaming guitar, I probably knew even at 14 that sex with 15-year old runaways wasn’t right. It wasn’t the first time and wouldn’t be the last time where I would have to dissociate myself from the message while digging the song. My rationale was something like, “oh that’s just the Stones being bad!”

I can see that you're fifteen years old
No I don't want your I.D.
And I can see that you're so far from home
But it's no hanging matter
It's no capital crime
Oh yeah, you're a strange stray cat
Oh yeah, don'tcha scratch like that
Oh yeah, you're a strange stray cat
I bet, bet your mama don't know you scream like that
I bet your mother don't know you can spit like that.

By the way, while the Stones were doing all of the above the Beatles were singing about Rocky Racoon and Maxwell’s Silver Hammer.

This is a good time to mention a technology that had a huge influence on popular music, namely the growth of FM radio and the corresponding emergence of album-oriented rock. Sympathy was never released as a single for AM and Street Fighting Man never made the Top 40 (it was banned by several stations, including those in Chicago where it was feared to incite violence at the Democratic convention). Instead you would hear them on FM radio and Beggars Banquet was a top-selling album even without a hit single. Meanwhile, Jumping Jack Flash, recorded during the Beggars Banquet sessions, was released as a single only in June of 1968, and Honky Tonk Women would be released the next year.

Jumping Jack Flash was and remains one of the Stones signature songs, almost always included in their concerts. It is the Stones definitive statement of, forget that acid stuff, we are going back to rock ‘n’ roll (and taking it to the next level)!

I’m Jumping Jack Flash it’s a gas, gas, gas

Honky Tonk Women is definitely a Keith song, with Keith supplying the music and chorus (“It's the honky tonk women, Gimme, gimme, gimme the honky tonk blues”) and Mick filling in the verses. Today I’m reading that the version on Let It Bleed, “Country Honk” was the original version (recorded earlier in 1969), and then Keith turned it into the rocker released as a single, but the single dominated the radio in the summer and fall and the album didn’t come out until December, so I always felt it was the other way around.

Let It Bleed remains my favorite Stones album and its opening track, Gimme Shelter, my favorite song of all time. The song starts with Keith’s multilayered guitars, and builds with Nicky Hopkins’s piano and the producer, Jimmy Miller, on guiro, the Latin American percussion instrument which gives the opening its scratching sound. The guitars build and build. Keith’s bended note right before Mick’s vocal starts may be my favorite note in all of music!

Mick takes the first verse by himself,

Ooh, a storm is threatening
My very life today
If I don't get some shelter
Ooh yeah I'm gonna fade away

Then is joined by Merry Clayton (famously aroused from bed at midnight, pregnant, and rushed to the recording session) for 

War, children
It's just a shot away

Mick then takes the next verse, and both do the War children chorus again. Then another instrumental break and then, Merry Clayton’s scary, apocalyptic, awe-inspiring

Rape, murder, it's just a shot away
It's just a shot away

Finally, when the listener is totally drained the tone of the song changes to 

I tell you love, sister
It's just a kiss away

The album then immediately goes into the acoustic Robert Johnson blues number, Love In Vain, featuring Keith’s beautiful slide and lead guitar (Mick Taylor joined the band toward the end of the recording sessions, replacing Brian Jones, but made minimal contributions so almost all of the guitars on the album are Keith).

Country Honk features the fiddling of Byron Berline, one of the best fiddlers of all time. Berline was recommended to the Stones by Keith’s buddy, country rock pioneer Gram Parsons. More on him later.

Live With Me, one of the Stones’ funniest songs, in which they make fun of their own bad boy image, just rocks! The saxophone solo in the middle is the first time we heard legendary Texan Bobby Keys, who also backed up Leon Russell, Eric Clapton, Delaney and Bonnie, Joe Cocker and many others, and toured with the Stones right up until his death in 2014.

There are several other great songs on the album, notably Midnight Rambler, which became one of their best live numbers, and You Can’t Always Get What You Want. Some said the latter song represented the end of the 60s. I don’t know about that but the intro by the London Bach Choir was awesome!

On the Friday after Thanksgiving 1969 I saw the Stones at Madison Square Garden in New York. It was awesome! This was an extra early show added after the other shows that week sold out quickly. In the tour documentary, Gimme Shelter, you can see Mick saying, “Welcome to the Breakfast Show!” B.B. King and Ike and Tina Turner opened. The Stones did all their hits, with a dramatic rendition of Midnight Rambler, a song we hadn’t heard (Let It Bleed came out the following week).  I took Shauna Kloomok, a girl from my high school class. This may have been my first real date! One other cool thing happened: we ran into Marie Ertelli, who had been my English teacher in 9th grade and who I had a major crush on. She wasn’t dressed like she dressed at school. It was eye-opening to see her, not as my teacher, but as a mid-20s young woman out for a good time at a Stones concert!

That turned out to be a busy week for the Stones. After leaving New York they played two shows in Boston and then headed down to Muscle Shoals, Alabama to start recording Sticky Fingers at the Muscle Shoals Sound Studios, home of the famous Swampers. In Gimme Shelter you can see them working on Brown Sugar and Wild Horses. From there they flew to California for the infamous free concert at the Altamont Speedway on December 6, where the Hells Angels were hired for $500 worth of beer to guard the stage. The Angels were involved with numerous fights, some involving musicians, and the scene in front of the stage was chaotic. While the Stones played Under My Thumb, a man, high on meth, who had been pushed around by the Angels, rushed the stage with a gun and was brought down and stabbed to death by the Angels.

Sticky Fingers came out in April 1971 and continued the streak of classic, guitar and horn-driven Rolling Stone records. Ignoring the words, Brown Sugar is one of the best rockers ever. But what was it about? Slavers raping their enslaved women as a literal reading of the lyrics would suggest? Heroin (which “brown sugar” is a nickname for)? Mick Jagger’s relationships (two different Black women have claimed to be the inspiration)? Reading Mick’s comments years later I’m not sure that he knows. It wouldn’t be the last time the Stones were accused of racism. Anyway, the Stones have dropped it from the current tour setlist, and probably that’s a good thing.

Sway is the first song to predominantly feature Mick Taylor on guitar. Also, Mick Jagger plays some rhythm electric guitar, his first recorded guitar work. Keith just sang backup on the track!

Wild Horses was inspired by Keith’s friendship with Gram Parsons, founder of the Flying Burrito Brothers. As with many songs from this period, Keith came up with the riff and chorus line (“Wild horses couldn’t drag me away”) and Mick filled in the verses. The song was recorded in Muscle Shoals and, soon thereafter, Keith gave Gram a demo version. Gram then rushed to put it out on the second FBB album, Burrito Deluxe, which beat the Stones version by a year.

Bitch is more raucous rock ‘n’ roll, featuring a great sax break by Bobby Keys. He played the Continental Club here in Austin once, backed up by some of the top local musicians. I was 10 feet away from his golden saxophone as he played Bitch, Brown Sugar and numerous other songs he’s been featured on!

For I Got The Blues the Stones added Keys’ trumpet partner Jim Price and Billy Preston on organ to do a Stax-style slow ballad with horn charts totally inspired by the Otis Redding songbook.

Exile On Main Street, which came out in May 1972, represents to me the end of the Stones’ classic period. Although many critics consider this album, the first Stones’ studio double album, a masterpiece, I think there’s enough good stuff on it for just a single LP. Tumbling Dice is the big song here for me. The opening guitar riff flows right into the vocal

Mmm yeah! (Woo, woo)
Women think I'm tasty, but they're always tryin' to waste me
Make me burn the candle right down
But, baby, baby, don't need no jewels in my crown
'Cause all you women is low down gamblers
Cheatin' like I don't know how
Baby, got no flavor, fever in the funk house now
This low down bitchin' got my poor feet a itchin'
Don't you know you know the deuce is still wild

The song builds and builds and then fades out as the chorus, including Vanetta Fields and Clydie King, sings, “Got to roll me”.

Torn and Frayed, with Al Perkins on pedal steel, is sweet:

And his coat is torn and frayed
It's seen much better days
Just as long as the guitar plays
Let it steal your heart away

Happy is Keith’s signature song:

Well I never kept a dollar past sunset
It always burned a hole in my pants
Never made a school mama happy
Never blew a second chance, oh no
I need a love to keep me happy
I need a love to keep me happy
Baby, baby keep me happy
Baby, baby keep me happy

When Keith sings it sounds like such an effort (and looks that way in concert too!)

Just Want to See His Face (“You don’t want to walk or talk about Jesus, you just want to see his face”) is a loose gospel jam that I always saw as an “answer song” to Delaney & Bonnie and Friend’s Talkin’ about Jesus, from Motel Shot, which came out the year before. Now I’m reading that Friend (and Domino) Bobby Whitlock, who sang on the D&B song, claims he played Jagger basically the complete Just Want to See His Face but was not credited. 

The culmination of my love affair with the Stones came in July of that year when Jim Sande and I saw them at the Garden. Tickets were extremely hard to get so we went down there without tickets and $100 in our pockets between us. We really didn’t want to spend it all but we found a girl who would sell us two (not very good) tickets for $50 each and we grabbed them (that’s like $230 per ticket today). Stevie Wonder opened, at the peak of his career, around the time he released Superstition and the album Talking Book. The Stones played all their best songs, including most of the songs I’ve highlighted here, and brought Stevie Wonder out for the encore to do a medley of his Uptight (with Keys and Price doing the horn break) and Satisfaction. In the video you can see Jagger leading Wonder from his piano to the microphone at the front of the stage for Satisfaction and then the two of them dancing together.

After that summer I went off to college, got heavily into country and reggae, and my passion for the band waned. I found their albums spotty. So I will just cherry pick some of my favorite songs after that (and yes, I will wrap this thing up soon!)

One of Jagger’s most passionate vocals is Heartbreaker, from Goats Head Soup (1973): 

The police in New York City
They chased a boy right through the park
In a case of mistaken identity
The put a bullet through his heart

Heart breakers with your forty four
I want to tear your world apart
You heart breaker with your forty four
I want to tear your world a part

A ten year old girl on a street corner
Sticking needles in her arm
She died in the dirt of an alleyway
Her mother said she had no chance, no chance!

Heart breaker, heart breaker
She stuck the pins right in her heart
Heart breaker, pain maker
Stole the love right out of you heart

Beast of Burden from Some Girls (1978), driven by Charlie’s drumming, is Jagger again at the top of his form:

Am I hard enough?
Am I rough enough?
Am I rich enough?
I'm not too blind to see
I'll never be your beast of burden
So let's go home and draw the curtains
Music on the radio
Come on baby make sweet love to me

Start Me Up from 1981’s Tattoo You, with the driving guitars and irresistible chorus (“You make a grown man cry … You make a dead man come”) was the best song of theirs I had heard in years so, after skipping the tours in 1975 and 1978, on a beautiful October day in 1981, I took a day off from grad school in San Diego and went down to Jack Murphy Stadium to catch the band, with J. Geils and George Thorogood & the Destroyers opening. The Stones played a blend of old and new songs. It was fun seeing them again!

After that I continued buying their CDs but, to be honest, I must not have played them much because, on going back through them over the past few weeks, I don’t remember most of the songs.

In November, 1989, I took Leslie to the Cotton Bowl in Dallas for the Steel Wheels tour. The Stones were fine but our overall experience was bad. This was the worst organized venue I’ve ever been to. It took us a full hour on the shuttle from the hotel to the Cotton Bowl entrance (a 15-minute drive), then over an hour to get to our seats. At one point we had to push through a crowd going both ways at the only point in the stadium apparently connecting the two halves. Leslie just grabbed onto my belt buckle and held on as I inched my way forward. We sat down just as the Stones were coming on. We missed all of Living Colour.

In November of 1994 we drove a bunch of friends down to San Antonio for the Voodoo Lounge Tour at the Alamodome with Bryan Adams opening. We put a big sign, “Voodoo Bound”, on Leslie’s mommy van and honked at similarly decorated vehicles.

In February of 1998 James Jordan and I were at a conference in Houston that ended on a Friday while the Stones were playing at the Summit (now the Toyota Center) on the Bridges to Babylon tour with Jonny Lang opening, so we went over and caught that show.

In November 2002 my college buddy John “Little Johnny” Koerber took me to see the Stones at the SBC Center (now AT&T) in San Antonio. Johnny got us 9th row seats, a little bit left of center, right between Keith and Ronnie, so I got to see up close the guitar interplay between the two. Johnny had seen them earlier in the tour so he knew when to move to a small stage in the middle of the audience where just the five main members played a more intimate set. This was maybe my favorite Stones concert!

The Stones played Austin before – at Zilker Park, where Austin City Limits Festival is held - in 2006. They sang Bob Wills Is Still The King (“It don’t matter who’s in Austin, Bob Wills is still the king”) for the crowd. I missed that show so I am really looking forward to seeing them here this weekend, to see if they have a special song for us!

It’s been a treat going back through all these old albums and tours the past few weeks. In perusing Wikipedia (which has entries for nearly every album, song, and tour referenced here) I’ve read a lot about women that caused tension in the band (Anita Pallenberg was with Brian, then Keith, and maybe Mick too), drug issues (Keith was heavily addicted to heroin during the Exile sessions, which made his participation erratic), management/business issues (how Allen Klein ripped them off). I was only vaguely aware of any of that at the time and it didn’t affect my appreciation of the band, which was always through the music, so I left that out in my writeup.

If you’ve read this all the way through, I owe you a drink of your choosing. Thank you for indulging me on this trip through the past!

I especially wish to thank Little Johnny, who’s been a Stones fan as long as I have, for great Stones discussions, information, artwork, and of course the San Antonio show.


Postscript - the show

The show was fine aside from the screwed up logistics getting into and out of the venue - the Circuit of the Americas track where the U.S. Grand Prix is held.

The Stones were in good form and Mick especially seemed nostalgic about doing the last big show on the tour. Several times he professed his love for “the ATX” but they didn’t do any special songs for us.

Keith was in good form and, as always, I found the guitar interplay between him and Ronnie fascinating. He chose to do Connection and You Got the Silver for his lead songs. I would have liked to hear Happy!

Sasha Allen is the new (?) backup female singer and she knocked Gimme Shelter out of the park! The other musicians were mainstays Darryl Jones (bass), Chuck Leavell (keyboards), Bernard Fowler (vocals). New to me were Matt Clifford (keyboards and French horn on You Can’t Always Get What You Want), Karl Denson (sax) and Tim Ries (sax and keyboards). And of course Steve Jordan on drums. Mick dedicated the show to Charlie.

Here’s the setlist. Aside from “Ghost Town” we could have seen this show in 1981!

Street Fighting Man
It's Only Rock 'n' Roll (but I Like It)
19th Nervous Breakdown
Tumbling Dice
Let It Bleed (chosen by the public)
You Can't Always Get What You Want
Living in a Ghost Town
Start Me Up
Honky Tonk Women
Connection (Keith lead)
You Got the Silver (Keith lead)
Miss You
Midnight Rambler
Paint It Black
Sympathy for the Devil
Jumpin' Jack Flash
Encore:
Gimme Shelter
(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction


Monday, November 30, 2020

My Thanksgiving 2020 Playlist

I put together a playlist for my friends incorporating a lot of the new music I've been listening to recently (and blogging about here), plus a few tributes to songwriting legends we lost this year. It includes mainly passionate music from new Austin bands as well as from progressive Americana and Country musicians (many of whom are from Texas).

Here’s the Spotify link.

Here's the Amazon Music link.

You’ll hear several songs from The Highwomen on here, both as a band  (Brandi Carlile, Natalie Hemby, and Texans Maren Morris and Amanda Shires), as well as individuals. I wrote about them earlier in a blogpost. Crowded Table was just nominated for Best Country Song by the Grammys.

This year Mickey Guyton became the first Black woman to sing solo at the Country Music Awards. She’s from Texas. Black Like Me was nominated for Best Country Song Solo Performance.

On the blog you will also find a writeup on several of these songs under the title Southern Artists Speak Up. Do yourself a favor and take 6 minutes to watch Tyler Childers’ video message about his song Long Violent History, in which he imagines his fellow white rural Appalachians (he’s from a holler in eastern Kentucky) being treated by the police as Blacks are treated.

Rhiannon Giddons leads a new group of Black women singing new and old songs in traditional styles, Our Native Daughters, with Amythyst Kiah, Leyla McCalla and Allison Russell.

Black Pumas (nominated for Album of the Year as well as Record of the Year and Best American Roots Performance for Colors ), Jackie Venson, The War and Treaty and Los Coast are all new Austin bands. The Los Coast remake of Sam Cooke’s A Change is Gonna Come features Austin great Gary Clark Jr. on vocals.

Leon Bridges from Fort Worth teamed up with Houston trio Khruangbin on a beautiful song about driving around Texas with one you love.

While we’re driving around Texas, there’s my favorite song of the year, West Texas in My Eye from the Panhandlers, a supergroup of Texas musicians (William Clark Green, John Baumann, Cleto Cordero and Josh Abott) brought together under the auspices of Bruce Robison’s The Next Waltz, a new effort here in Central Texas dedicated to the preservation of Texas country music that my wife Leslie and I support. The video is beautiful.

Jason Isbell, Chris Stapleton and Sturgill Simpson all released great albums this year. I also included Tyler Childers Grammy-nominated song from last year, All Your’n.

I couldn’t leave out the Highwomen’s classic lesbian country song, If She Ever Leaves Me, sung by Brandi Carlile but written by Isbell and Shires.

Of course I had to include tributes to three songwriters we lost this year:  Billy Joe Shaver, Jerry Jeff Walker and John Prine, a Texan, a New Yorker who became a Texan, and a former Illinois mailman. Prine’s I Remember Everything was nominated for Best American Roots Performance and Song.

And Kacey Musgrave’s Rainbow has helped us get through this challenging year.