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Hacienda Brothers | Americana Roots

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Hacienda Brothers – Arizona Motel

Category : Reviews

From the faded love song opening the CD”A Lot Of Days Are Gone,” a somewhat eerie feeling begins as Gaffney sings of time slipping away. This feeling, however, subsides as the listener is drawn to the powerful passion in each song. “Ordinary Fool” along with “I Still Believe” highlight why the Hacienda Brothers are well known for their soulful traditional country ballads. 

Gaffney delivers perhaps the most moving performance with “Use To The Pain,” which was co-written by Gonzalez and producer Dan Penn. The lonely despair in this song permeates throughout, driving this poignant song home.

“Soul Mountain,” which was written by Gaffney, is an uplifting gospel revival number that paints a more joyous outlook on life. The contributing background vocals add to the fervor quite well.

The Hacienda Brothers include an outstanding instrumental entitled “Light It Again Charlie,” which allows Gonzalez to display his keen bluesy guitar, along with Joe Terry on Piano and Gaffney on accordion.

There are three covers included here, which add much to the variety. Connie Smith’s “I’ll Come Running” takes on a more Bakersfield sound. “When You’re Tired of Breaking Other Hearts,” written by Hank Williams is a well done shuffle by Gaffney. The vocal arrangements add to the haunting despair on Bill Deaton’s “Divorce Or Destroy.”

The Hacienda Brothers fourth album is certainly their most poignant. Filled with a mixture of ballads, soulful country, and blues, this CD displays how the Hacienda Brothers had matured. With the unfortunate passing of Gaffney, one can only wonder where it goes from here.

Western Soul in Spades: The Hacienda Brothers

Category : Features

A timeless town in many ways, even the public clocks can�t seem to reach a consensus on the hour. Cultures blend and merge, becoming spicier, better, than when they arrived.
Perhaps only in such an enchanted borderland could the Hacienda Brothers come to be. The band is the brainchild of two journeymen musicians: Former Paladin front man/guitarist Dave Gonzalez, and accordionist/guitarist/singer Chris Gaffney, who led the band Cold Hard Facts and plays sometimes still with Dave Alvin�s Guilty Men.
What�s Wrong With Right, the Hacienda Brothers� strong sophomore release, scored a spot on any number of �best of� Americana lists in 2006.  Driven by accordion and guitars, punctuated by keyboards, the group deftly blends spaghetti Western tremolo riffs, soulful vocals, classic and fresh love songs, boot-scooting honky-tonk energy and border instrumentation into a brew as potent as mescal.
�{quotes}Tucson, just the way things are there, is a part of how we sound, no doubt about it{/quotes},� said Gonzalez, calling from his home in San Diego County, Calif. �It�s such a beautiful, inspiring place. We made our original demos there, trying to capture that.�
�Western Soul� is what producer Dan Penn dubbed their sound when he heard those Hacienda demos.
Penn is a legendary producer and songwriter of the old soul school, producing classics for such artists as Aretha Franklin and Solomon Burke.  A couple of his best, �It Tears Me Up� and �Cry Like a Baby,� are revisited by the Haciendas on �What�s Wrong With Right,� along with several new compositions by Penn, Gaffney, Gonzalez and other �Brothers.�
Gonzalez confesses to a fierce case of nerves when he first sent Hacienda demos to Penn. The two met years ago in Europe when Gonzalez was playing a festival with the Paladins, and Penn was playing with his songwriting partner, Spooner Oldham. Gonzalez and Penn hit it off nearly instantly with a shared love of old music and vintage vehicles.

�Dan told me he wasn�t into emails or calls or letters,� said Gonzalez. �He said what he was into was hanging out. So I didn�t quite know how he�d react to getting these demos. But Dan called me up and said, �Wow, this thing knocked me out. I would be glad to invite you to Nashville. But I�d rather come to Tucson, because there is a sound you guys got that is not West Coast, it is not Nashville. What it sounds like it Western Soul.� And that sounded right to us.  So he came to hang out with us in Tucson.�

Soulful and gritty
Gonzalez and Gaffney first met in Los Angeles in the ‘80s, through their friend, Dave Alvin.
�I dug Chris. He was a cool accordion player, and he was kind of gruff and had some real soul,� said Gonzalez. �Yeah, he sounded soulful and gritty, but he knew just how not to overdo it. And he’s funny as hell, too. Not like a comedian, but he just gets off these lines that keeps everyone laughing.�
Gaffney and Gonzalez performed together a few years ago at mutual friend Jeb Schoonover�s birthday party. Schoonover is a Tucson-based music promoter and radio programmer, and now the band�s manager and the executive producer of �What�s Wrong With Right.�
�Jeb and I had been friends since I started going there in the �80s with my other band,� said Gonzalez. �We were always kicking this idea of doing a country thing around. We�d both said, �You know who could nail this stuff?  Chris!� He has the perfect voice for what we had in mind.�
The three decided they would at least make a great album. Gonzalez said, �Whether we became a full-fledged band, sticking together years and years, that I did not know. I just wanted to do songs with Chris, and play and produce and do all the other stuff I couldn�t really do with my other band. I wanted to make at least one great album, whatever else we did.�
So far, they’ve made two great albums, and have, said Gonzalez, �… Become a pretty damned good road band, too.�

{mospagebreak}

Hacienda sound
Gonzalez�s California home, which Schoonover dubbed �The Honky-tonk Hacienda,� played a part in both naming the band, as well as shaping their sound.
�We really are like family. We called each other �bro,� you know, and one day, looking for a name, I said, �We�re the Hacienda Bros.� And Dan said, �If you change that to Hacienda Brothers, it might just stick. It did.�

Gonzalez says The Honky-tonk Hacienda has two turntables on the living room table, as well as a Seeburg Jukebox in the parlor, crammed with fine 45s.
�I�m probably going on 20 years with this old Seeburg juke,� Gonzalez said. �For a time, it was my only turntable. The way it sounds, the way it plays those old records, is the way they are supposed to sound—the way the bass sounds on there, and those vocals up front?  That is a big inspiration for the songs I write, that juke sound. Dan made records that way, too.�
Also helping to shape their eventual sound were the road trips Gaffney and Gonzalez took together across the desert between Southern California and Tucson.
�I had this old DeSoto then, with only an 8-track, and we�d go between California and there, cruising at 55, listening to Waylon or �Super-Fly� or �The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,� depending what we were in the mood for, depending where the sun was at in the sky at the time. Just me and Chris, on that road together in that old car, singing together, figuring the harmonies out, tossing these songs around.�

Border music
The band recorded its demos, as well as its first two albums, at the Cavern Recording Studios in central Tucson.
�It�s a good room,� said Gonzalez. �When I first saw it, I just walked in there with an old nylon-string guitar, walked around strumming, hearing how it sounded. I saw the big analog board and old tape deck and knew it would be good.�
�It worked in there, Chris laying down a lot of accordion, and me using a lot of baritone guitar. … {quotes}But you know, for a of blues people we�re too country, and for a lot of soul people were too country{/quotes},� said Gonzalez.  �I�m back in the same old bag as I was with my old band � too bluesy for the rockabilly crowd, too rockabilly for the blues crowd.  But that�s part of what we want to do � work between those cracks and find what�s good.�
Gonzalez planned to spend time with Gaffney in Tucson at he end of 2006, to write and pick songs for a third album.
�We did 20,000 miles this year,� said Gonzalez. �Not bad.  But eventually, we�d like to settle in Tucson, maybe have a residency gig there or something. At least for now, we want to get out there with a couple of guitars, cruise around, hang out, and get inspired.

�Dan�s talking about our doing the next album in Nashville, or someplace back East,� Gonzalez added. �But even if we do record back there, there�s no doubt that this music begins out there in the desert.�

Hacienda Brothers – Hacienda Brothers

Category : Music, Reviews

Reviewed by Daniel CarlsonDon’t be fooled by the cover image of the latest self-titled release from the Hacienda Brothers: these guys are old school. The grainy black-and-white image of frontmen Chris Gaffney and Dave Gonzalez, in shades and hipster-country shirts, makes them look like Big ’n’ Rich’s cool older bothers, but a glance at the photo inside shows them to be more like the Texas Troubadours in style, and it comes across in their sound. The Hacienda Brothers play classic country-rock, driven by steel guitars and cruel women, and they sell it so well because they seem to genuinely believe in the music they’re making. Country isn’t a fad or experiment for this band; it’s a way of life.The opening strum of the first track, “She’s Gone,” pulled me right in, a soothing reminder of the honest music at the base of so many pop-country acts today. Chris Gaffney’s strong baritone poured out of my speakers: “My heart is lonesome as can be / the sun no longer shines for me….” It’s a simple song and the perfect one to open the album: the whole thing begs to be listened to on a screened-in porch with a six-pack in July.  Because of that, the best songs on the album are the ones closest to the pure sound you’d expect from men wearing long skinny bowties and elaborately decorated jackets. Produced by legendary Southern soul guru Dan Penn, the album is full of songs about heartache, missed love, and having a good time: you know, country stuff.{mosimage}The Hacienda Brothers are at their best when they don’t sound like they’re trying to be somebody else. The album’s biggest misstep is “Looking for Loneliness,” a forced R&B trip with horns and a waw-waw pedal. Penn’s soul upbringing comes through loud and clear, but it’s a too-odd contrast to the rest of the disc’s tracks, lyrically and stylistically. The album soars when Penn’s influence is toned down and the Brothers let loose in classic Opry fashion.The songs are often lyrically true to old school country, too, and that means some pretty saccharine love songs. “I’m So Proud” is about how proud the singer is to be “her man,” and it comes off too trite to pack any real emotional power. But they dig a little deeper in “Seven Little Numbers,” in which the singer regrets ever getting the phone number of the woman who “turned [his] world around,” and “South of Lonesome” is a wistful but upbeat number that reminded me of “Streets of Bakersfield.”   On the whole, it’s miles better than anything mainstream Nashville is churning out these days.The Hacienda Brothers are heading in the right direction, and if they steer clear of the syrup and clunky experiments in sound, they could become one of the greatest honky-tonk groups we’ve seen in a long time.Click here to purchase this CD at lonestarmusic.com

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