Texas country music
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Texas country music | |
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Stylistic origins | |
Cultural origins | Late 1960s, Texas |
Typical instruments | |
Derivative forms |
Texas country music (more popularly known just as Texas country or Texas music) is a rapidly growing subgenre of American country music. Texas country is known for fusing traditionalist root sounds (similar to neotraditional country) with the outspoken, care-free views of outlaw country. Texas country blends these subgenres by featuring a "take it or leave it" approach, a "common working man" theme, and witty undertones. These often combine with stripped down music sound. Texas country music can also be called "Red Dirt" country music. Sounds from Texas and Oklahoma have influenced the scene of this particular genre.
Neither the location of birth nor the location of upbringing seems to calculate in the definition of a Texas country artist, as long as the origin is not in the corporate Nashville scene as the genre tends to be anti-Nashville. For example, Chris Knight is considered by some to be a Texas country musician, despite his Kentucky ties. Adam Hood, an Alabama native, also has had success in the genre. Even international musicians, such as Alberta, Canada native Corb Lund, have been successful in the Texas country scene.
Instrumentation
The acoustic guitar is essential in Texas country music. However, the use of electric guitars, steel guitars or pedal steel guitars in the genre is not uncommon. Bass and percussion are used in live performances. The sounds of piano, baritone guitar, banjo, accordion, fiddle or harmonica on studio recordings are the norm for the genre.
Vocals
The line of delineation for vocals is unclear. Traditionally, the Texas country scene has been a male dominated genre, however many women have had chart success in recent years. The Texas "anthem" is a common song type, referencing and sometimes embellishing on the different positive characteristics of the state. Many of these types of songs have been popular on the Texas Music Charts.[1]
Live performances
The live performance is at the very root of the Texas country scene. Enthusiasm is the best descriptor for both band and crowd at a live Texas country performance. "It is not an uncommon sight to see clubs all over Texas packed to the rafters; girls and boys in cowboy hats and Wranglers two-stepping next to the mosh pit, where college boys or "Man Fans" in khakis and college girls pressed up against the stage".[2] An important factor Texas Country's success is in the frequency of live performances. It is not uncommon for a Texas Country band to tour 200+ dates a year, all, or nearly all, in the State of Texas[citation needed]. This allows the fan to attend a band's show more often, thus interacting with the music on a more personal level. Popular venues include, Gruene Hall (Gruene), Billy Bob's (Ft. Worth), John T. Floore's Country Store, (Helotes) Luckenbach Dance Hall, and Blue Light Live [3] (Lubbock).
In addition to local and state wide venues hosting live performances, the Texas Regional Radio Report hosts the annual Texas Regional Radio Music Awards Show where the Texas Red Dirt artist and radio stations are recognized for the outstanding achievements throughout the year. The winners in 25 categories are nominated and voted on by fans, friends and industry professionals and are awarded the night of the show. The voting membership has grown to over 32,000 voting members in five years and continues to expand every year. The awards show is open to the public and fans alike who cheer on their favorite artist/entertainers and radio stations. Information about the show and voting procedures can be found at www.TRRMA.net
Themes
Lyrical content is the backbone of Texas country. Willie Nelson, a legendary Country Music Outlaw, inspired his friend Waylon Jennings, an outlaw country music legend himself, who is sometimes cited as an inspiration to present day Texas country musicians, to say, “Your melody goes where the words take you”.[4]
Songs about traditional dance halls, open roads, family farms and hometown bars, along with other illustrations of Texas landscape, are all found in present-day Texas country artists' catalogs. The ties of landscape and music seem to serve as remembrance and gratitude, as evident in most songs. Appreciation for surroundings is not the only limitation for this theme. The "average man" and his struggle with nature do appear as well. "The songs definitely incorporate a spirit of the times and constitute a spontaneous and fairly comprehensive record of life".[5]
History
Origination
Country music from Texas has been a popular since the spread of the cowboy culture in the late 1800s. Texas helped popularize country music through the world and the state’s rich and varied traditions continue to redefine country music.[6]
Texas country's roots lie in the Outlaw country movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Texan artists such as Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and David Allan Coe retreated from the Nashville Country Music scene to Austin, Luckenbach, College Station and Houston. Other artists who were inspired by this movement included performers like Guy Clark, Jerry Jeff Walker, Gary P. Nunn Steve Young, Kris Kristofferson, Joe Ely, Terry Allen, Steve Earle, and Townes Van Zandt. All these stars have rated higher than 43 on the Texas Music Scene charts[citation needed].
These artists were followed in turn by the work of singer-songwriters such as Pat Green, Robert Earl Keen, Max Stalling, Wade Bowen and Cory Morrow.
While the genre has roots in Texas, Oklahoma artists such as Jason Boland, Stoney LaRue, Mike McClure, and Cross Canadian Ragweed have had a major influence on Texas Country. For this reason, "Red Dirt Music" is becoming a more popular term for the genre to pay homage to its Oklahoma influence. The term was coined in reference to the miles of red dirt that is common throughout the two states.
1990s
Robert Earl Keen's No. 2 Live Dinner, released in 1996, had it all; comedy accompanied with "a sharp wit, a laid-back cowboy style, and an eye for detail... combined in [his] songs that are as easy on the ears as they are packed with insight".[7] Keen's home calling came after a short stint in Nashville, where he quickly became uncomfortable. His 1996 live album release truly showcased the “wide range” of the talented Texas musician and popularized the single "The Road Goes On Forever", a song many music fans regard as the paradigm for Texas 'Country anthems'. Joe Ely and other Texas musicians have recorded cover versions of “The Road Goes On Forever”.
2000s and the Texas influence in Nashville
Cory Morrow, a Houston native, had been on the Texas scene since the mid-90s. With the release of his fourth album Outside the Lines, Morrow found more mainstream success on the country music charts.[citation needed] Pat Green, also an artist from Texas, began his career as part of the Texas country scene later went on to widespread commercial success with gold album Wave on Wave after switching to a "Shania Twain/ Garth Brooks" Nashville style of country music. The album's title track hit No. 3 on the U.S. Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart and won a Grammy nomination for Best Country Song.
Kevin Fowler, a former hair-metal/glam rocker was Dangerous Toys guitarist from the late 1980s until 1993, followed by his own founding of Thunderfoot, a Southern rock band based out of Austin. Originally from Amarillo, he self-released his country debut album One For The Road in 1997. This followed with his smash independent follow-up album, Beer, Bait, and Ammo. He has since found national success, on a major label.
Texas country's influence continues to be felt in the mainstream music genre with artists such as Jack Ingram, who had already established a name for himself in Texas country, who won a CMT Music Award in 2007 and the 2008 Academy of Country Music award for New Male Vocalist of the Year. He has also scored top 25 singles on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart with songs such as "Love You" and his cover of Hinder's "Lips of an Angel". Another one of his singles, "Wherever You Are", went to number one on the Billboard Chart.
Radio
Texas country is unique in that radio stations throughout Texas have embraced the subgenre and regularly mix Texas country into a Country radio format. Two Texas music charts exist to track radio play throughout the state, the Texas Music Chart and the Texas Regional Radio Report, respectively. Several radio stations across Texas have adopted a "Texas Country Only" format. These stations include:
- KHYI 95.3 The Range – Dallas, Texas
- KBEC 1390 Classic Texas Music- Waxahachie, Texas
- KFWR 95.9 The Ranch – Mineral Wells/Fort Worth, Texas
- KFYN 104.3 The River – Paris, Texas
- KRVA 107.1 Friendlee 107 – Texans, Legends & Outlaws – Campbell (Hunt & Hopkins counties), TX
- KFLP 106.1 Flip-FM – Floydada/Plainview/Lubbock, Texas
- KRMX 92.9 Shooter FM – Waco, Texas
- KTTU 93.1 Texas FM – Lubbock, Texas
- KBSO 94.7 The Rig – Corpus Christi, Texas
- KTWL 105.3 Texas Mix – Houston, Texas
- KOKE-FM 99.3 or 98.5 Austin's Country Alternative – Austin, Texas
- KOLI 94.9 The Outlaw – Wichita Falls, Texas
- KORA 98.3 Texas Country – Bryan/College Station, Texas
- KNRG 92.3 Texas Renegade – La Grange, Texas/Columbus, Texas
- KYKK 93.5 The Real Deal – Junction, Texas
- KKCN 103.1 Kickin' Country- San Angelo, Texas
- GotRadio Texas Best – (Internet Radio) – www.gotradio.com
- KNBT 92.1 Radio – New Braunfels, Texas[1]
In addition, at least two regionally syndicated programs feature the format: the CDTex radio show hosted by Cowboy Bobby Lopez and the Official Texas Countdown hosted by KHYI morning host Chuck Taylor.
Notable artists
The following artists are often classified as members of the Texas country movement:
- Aaron Watson
- Adam Hood (Originally from Alabama.)
- Billy Joe Shaver
- Boys of Broken DuckFeet
- Brandon Rhyder
- Bruce Robison
- Casey Donahew
- Chris Knight (Originally from or still resides in Kentucky)
- Charlie Robison
- Cody Canada
- Cody Jinks
- Cody Johnson
- Cory Morrow
- Cross Canadian Ragweed (Originally from Yukon, Oklahoma; rose to fame in Stillwater, Oklahoma)
- Dale Watson
- Deryl Dodd
- Django Walker
- Earl Dibbles Jr
- Ed Burleson
- Eleven Hundred Springs
- Eli Young Band
- Flatland Cavalry
- Gary P. Nunn
- Granger Smith
- Guy Clark
- Hayes Carll
- J.W. CUDD
- Jack Ingram
- James McMurtry
- JB and the Moonshine Band
- Jerry Jeff Walker
- John David Kent and the Dumb Angels
- Jason Boland & the Stragglers (Originally from or still resides in Oklahoma)
- Jason Eady
- Jesse Brand
- Joe Ely
- Josh Abbott
- Junior Brown
- Kacey Musgraves
- Kelly Willis
- Kevin Fowler
- Kinky Friedman (Born in Chicago, moved to Texas as a youth.)
- Kyle Park
- Lost Immigrants
- Lucero (band) (From Memphis, TN)
- Lyle Lovett
- Mark David Manders (Singer-Songwriter)
- Michael Anthony Rodriguez (Singer, songwriter, front man for the boys of Broken DuckFeet)
- Micky & the Motorcars (Originally from Idaho, now based in Austin Texas. Brothers Micky and Gary Braun are the younger siblings of Willy and Cody Braun of Reckless Kelly.)
- Mike and the Moonpies
- Mike McClure Band (Originally from or still resides in Oklahoma)
- Mark Sanders
- Max Stalling
- Mike Ryan
- No Justice (Originally from or still resides in Oklahoma)
- Pat Green
- Radney Foster
- Randy Rogers Band
- Ray Wylie Hubbard
- Reckless Kelly (Originally from Idaho, now based in Austin Texas)
- Rio Grand
- Robert Earl Keen
- Roger Creager
- Rusty Wier
- Ryan Beaver
- Ryan Bingham
- Sam Riggs and the Night People (Vocalist Sam Riggs originally from Saint Cloud, Florida, now resides in Austin, Texas)
- Shotgun Rider (band) (Originally named Seven Miles South, but changed for contractual and legal reasons)
- Sons of Bill (Originally from and still resides in Charlottesville, Virginia)
- Sonny Burgess
- Steve Earle
- Steve Helms
- Stoney LaRue (Originally from Taft, TX but may still reside in Oklahoma)
- Sundance Head
- Sunny Sweeney
- The Gourds
- The Great Divide (Originally from Oklahoma)
- Tommy Alverson
- Turnpike Troubadours
- Two Tons of Steel
- Townes Van Zandt
- Wade Bowen
- Whiskey Myers (East Texas)
- William Clark Green
- Willie Nelson
- Zane Williams
- Zona Jones
Further reading
- Abernethy, Francis E. "Texas Folk and Modern Country Music." Texas Country: The Changing Rural Scene. Ed. Lich, Glene. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 1986.
- Barr, Gregory. "Randy Rogers Band: Just A Matter of Time." Best In Texas Music Magazine.
- Carr, Joe and Allan Munde. Prairie Nights to Neon Lights. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 1995, ISBN 9780896723658
- Dawidoff, Nicholas. In the Country of Country: People and Places in American Music. New York: Random House, 1997, ISBN 978-0375700828
- Fox, Aaron A. Real Country: Music and Language in Working-Class Culture. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0822333487
- Harrington, AnnMarie. Roger Creager - Long Way To Mexico., ASIN: B0000C3I5L
- Jennings, Waylon and Lenny Kaye. Waylon: An Autobiography. New York: Warner Books, 1976, ISBN 978-1613744697
- Malone, Bill C. "Growing Up With Texas Country Music." What’s Going On? (In Modern Texas Folklore). Ed. Abernethy, Francis E. Austin, TX: The Encino Press, 1976.
- Middleton, Richard. Studying Popular Music. Philadelphia: Open University Press, 2002., ISBN 978-0335152759
- Specht, Joe W. "Put a Nickel in the Jukebox." The Roots of Texas Music. Ed. Clayton Lawrence. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 2003.
References
- ^ TX National Anthem voting Archived 2008-07-03 at the Wayback Machine (sponsored by Lone-Star Beer company)
- ^ Lone Star Music. Kevin Fowler Biography. November 9, 2006 LoneStar Music.
- ^ "The Best Places for Live Country Music in Texas". Wideopencountry.com. 1 March 2017. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
- ^ Jennings, Waylon and Lenny Kaye. Waylon: An Autobiography. New York: Warner Books, 1976.
- ^ Clayton, Lawrence. "Elements of Realism in the Songs of the Cowboy." American Renaissance and American West. Ed. Durer, Christopher S. et al. WY: University of Wyoming, 1982.
- ^ Hartman, Gary. The History of Texas Music. N.p.: Texas A&M University Press, 2008. Print.
- ^ Wolff, Kurt. Country Music: The Rough Guide. London: Rough Guides Ltd, 2000.