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James McMurtry | Americana Roots

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Drew Kennedy - Alone, But Not Lonely (Live) (Free Download) There is something warm and soothing about live acoustic music. It allows the singer to paint a picture with his lyrics with amazing clarity and passion. When you combine well written lyrics along with...

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Tom Savage Trio- The County Line Kingston, Ontario's Tom Savage fourth studio album called The County Line recently founds its way to my ears.  Even though it is a 2008 release it deserves your attention if you haven't heard it. ...

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Marley's Ghost - Ghost Town Ever ask yourself what has happened to real music as you search your radio dial….looking for anything that sounds appealing? The music is still out there, you just need to look in the right places. Some...

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Jeremy Porter - Party of One After listening to “Party of One,” Jeremy Porter’s debut solo CD, it’s easy to see what makes Americana music a deeper listen than pure Pop. Both genres share the synthesis of multiple source genres,...

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Drunk On Crutches - People.Places.Things. Have you ever decided to listen to new CD, not knowing what to expect? Sure you have. And when the first song starts, you are not only surprised, but ready to hear what’s next? Well, that’s what happened...

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SXSW Sights

Category : Live Shows

Man, can this festival be frustrating.  Too many great shows to choose from and too many great places to try to eat at!

I spent SXSW with Gregg Geil, his wife Nicole, as well as Hickorywind.org founder Larry and his wife Heather romping about Austin in an ‘earal’  and oral orgy of sound and taste! Gregg has posted on some of the happenings in Austin already, so I’d like to add some photos to give a ‘taste’ of what this thing was like.

We spent thursday night at Antone’s at the Americana Music Association Showcase at a jam packed Antones.  The next day we had the Americanaroots.com and Galleywinter.com showcase at the Waterloo Ice House.  Saturday was spent at The Continental Club seeing Jon Dee Graham and James McMurtry in the afternoon.  In the evening I happened upon the Countryline Magazine showcase at The Ranch on 6th and saw Ruby Jane, Jeffrey Steele (Nashville songwriter extrordinairre) and Brandon Rhyder. There were probably only 30 other shows we would have liked to see.  The great music, coupled with great food (Salt Lick BBQ and Guero’s Taco Bar especially) made for one fantastic weekend!

Carrie Rodriguez at Antones

Carrie Rodriguez at Antones

Band of Heathens at Antones

Band of Heathens at Antones

Sarah Borges and me

Sarah Borges and me

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Two Tons of Steel- Waterloo Ice House

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Wrinkle Neck Mules at the Ice House

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Scott Miller at the Ice House

Josh Grider Trio

Josh Grider Trio at The Ice House- new EP is fantastic!

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Tim Easton at Jovitas

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Ruby Jane Smith at The Ranch

Man was that fun!

Fleeting Glimpses and Frozen Hearts: James McMurtry plays with “Just Us Kids”

Category : Features

“We Can’t Make it Here,” and Childish Things, the album that included the song, took best song and best album, respectively, at the Americana Music Awards in 2006.

McMurtry followed that album with the song “God Bless America,” another pointedly political song posted as a downloadable single in conjunction with the midterm elections of 2006.

Brassier than its predecessor, “God Bless America” stars a fat-cat narrator crowing that America’s ever-growing thirst for oil is the real engine of violence in the Middle East.

“My analogy about these two songs is that ‘We Can’t Make it Here’ is like a newspaper editorial, and ‘God Bless America’ is the editorial cartoon at the top of the page,” said McMurtry. “It’s a little bit more of a parody, an exaggeration made to make the point.”

“God Bless America” and 11 other McMurtry originals grace Just Us Kids, his ninth full-length record and first studio effort in almost three years. It’s due in stores from Lightning Rod Records on April 15.

“A little something to look forward to come Tax Day,” McMurtry quipped.

Imposing presence

A hunting and fishing enthusiast, McMurtry often arrives on stage looking like he’s just come from a day rustling around in the brush. His hats, worn over a Medusan mess of curls, are something of a trademark. They range in style from fine fedoras and safari chapeaux to big-box-store camo hunting caps.

While he looks the part of one of the boys in the crowd, and is sometimes known to wander into the front house post-show, McMurtry isn’t particularly approachable. His imposing gaze alone can deflate the zeal of even the most ardent fan-boy.

“You know, I’m a misanthrope. I don’t like people all that damn much,” McMurtry has admitted.

On stage, he definitely lets the music do the talking. Banter infrequently passes between crowd and band — or gets tossed about among the men on stage, for that matter.

But McMurtry’s band, the Heartless Bastards, don’t seem to need much talking to, playing seamlessly alongside him. The rhythm section is comprised of bassist Ronnie Johnson and drummer Daren Hess, who’ve been alongside McMurtry for better than a decade. Recently, second sets have also included another guitarist, most often Tim Holt, who’s put in years with McMurtry as his road manager.

Though lauded primarily for song-craftsmanship, McMurtry is an inventive guitarist in his own right, incorporating imaginative tunings and a fluid style that can range from tender ballads to roof-ripping rockers, as the material calls for it.

To get the right tool for the job, he is known to tote a good half-dozen axes along on the road.

“It’s about not getting bored, about not having that same tone all they way through a set,” McMurtry has said of his cache of guitars.

As for his bandmates, he notes, “We’ve worked together for long enough that we sound pretty good now, I think. …When I am working on a record, I go in (the studio) with Daren and Ronnie first, usually. We get the bones of it down. Then we bring in other players and parts later. It’s pretty much how we always get this done.”

American castes

McMurtry was born in Fort Worth, Texas in the year before the Kennedy assassination. His parents split up while he was still a toddler, and he grew up primarily with his father, writer and rare-book aficionado, Larry McMurtry.

McMurtry spent a good part of his formative years in Leesburg, Va., a city he’s described as neither truly Southern or Northern in nature. But whatever the temperament in that cusp country of Virginia, the abundance of old money and political power in the region is beyond dispute.

“We often try and promote the false notion that we have no class system in this country — but we do,” McMurtry said. “My father was amazed when he moved to the D.C. area, to run across people that didn’t even carry cash, because they were so rich and powerful. They could just give you a business card and you’d bill them, no questions asked.”

On Just Us Kids, McMurtry examines this American caste system at work in the song “The Governor.” Against a driving, blues-flavored guitar riff, the song tells of an expensive cigarette boat on a lake where it shouldn’t be, mowing down a modest watercraft. The angler in the little boat ends up as dead as yesterday’s catch.

“It’s a piece of fiction about class conflict,” McMurtry said of the song. “We like to say we don’t have royalty here, but we do have these dynasties — the Bushes are part of that, of course. And the problem with royalty is that they are always more beholden to their class than their countrymen.

“That’s why all those Bin ladens were allowed to fly to Paris on Sept. 13, 2001, and my drummer couldn’t get to Austin for a recording session. American citizens couldn’t fly on that date — but royalty sure could. They made a big show of George Herbert Walker Bush getting grounded somewhere on a commercial flight? You know damn well that if he’d wanted to get somewhere, there would have been a Lear jet in the air.”

McMurtry further examines the idea of the “more-equal-than-others” mentality in “Ruins of the Realm,” a time-tour of world empires that have come and inevitably gone, looking in the last verse or two at our own times.

“That one’s like a history lesson,” said McMurtry. “I started drawing parallels between the state of the country now, and the decline of various empires — starting with the Romans in the first verse, then I got a couple verses on the British, and now, our situation in the Middle East. And that verse on the South? That just kind of got in there, really because I liked the imagery.”

Two lines and a melody

While overt political outings may be relatively new to McMurtry’s oeuvre, his studies in social commentary are not. Since Too Long in the Wasteland, his 1989 debut, and throughout the eight albums that have followed, the population of his musical landscape can’t even catch a decent glimpse of the American Dream.

McMurtry tales speak mostly of damaged folk clinging without much purchase to the fringes of society — the disillusioned, the addicted, the rebellious, the trapped.  And while love songs are the mainstay of most rock, love in the McMurtrian universe is, at best, unrequited.

“I can’t make any promises about writing any (love songs),” he said in a radio interview with this writer, in the months before he recorded Just Us Kids. “guess I am not much of a lovable guy. The songs don’t much turn out that way.”

A number of songs on Just Us Kids go on to prove his point. Lovers abound, but not the variety with starlight in their eyes. In “Ruby and Carlos,” a poignant acoustic ballad featuring intricate internal rhyme-work, tells of a middle-aged couple going their separate ways — he, trying to keep going as an road drummer while fighting Gulf War Syndrome-related ailments; she, a horsewoman who takes a bad spill off her colt, breaking her hip.

“Freeway View,” a rocker driven by former Faces keyboardist Ian McLagan’s barrelhouse piano, concerns a man trying to escape a relationship, but uncertain he has the willpower to pull it off.

“Hurricane Party,” a crowd-pleaser the band has been playing out for about 18 months, features a classic McMurtry character — a man waiting out the storm, thinking dusty memories of lost love and chances both, alone despite his presence in a bar full of other stranded folks.

“He is kind of beaten down by life,” said McMurtry of his “Hurricane” character. “He is looking back and not entirely happy with what he sees, either. He doesn’t seem to care that much that his house will still be there after the storm. He doesn’t care about much by that point, though.”

Whether he is writing about events on the world stage or a life lived loveless in a thicket-swaddled shotgun shack, McMurtry allows that the actual nuts-and-bolts of his writing tend to be much the same.

“It’s still about figuring out who is speaking,” McMurtry said. “Political songs start pretty much the same way as the others — with a couple lines and a melody. And if that works, if it keeps me up at night, then I keep on writing it.

“But the way political stuff can be more difficult is that they turn into sermons real easily,” he added. “And if they do that, you have to say to yourself, ‘Is this a good enough sermon? Does it have merit in pursuing beyond this point?’ And there are a lot of them I haven’t finished because the answer to that question was, ‘No.’ But the ones on [Just Us Kids] seem to work pretty well.”

The kids involved

Along with McLagan’s keyboards, McMurtry brought a few other guests into the studio. He brought in pat mAcdonald, formerly of Timbuk 3, to add his harmonica to the mix. Jon Dee Graham, who usually shares the Wednesday night Continental Club gig with McMurtry when both are in Austin, adds soaring guitar lines to “Fireline Road”—a story of the twin horrors of incest and meth addiction.

McMurtry’s teenage son, Curtis McMurtry (who, his father notes, now has a couple of bands of his own) lays down the honkin’ baritone sax on crunchy rocker, “Bayou Tortous.”

Swamp-rock ace C.C. Adcock also adds some blistering six-string to opener “Bayou Tortous.” McMurtry, who’s been producing his own albums in recent years, points to Adcock as a talent he thinks of tapping to helm his next album as producer.

“I am kind of tired of [producing],” said McMurtry. “I think I’ve done a pretty good job of it, but I think I need to go back to school on that now. I have kind of used up all my tricks. It’s good to work with different people because everybody brings something new to the table. All the producers I work with gave me some tools I still use.”

Election highway

But in the meantime, there is an album to sell, and shows to play to help get that done. The first step to getting listeners on board is the release of the single “Cheney’s Toy” as a free download (see http://www.JamesMcMurtry.com for more). Lightening Rod Records is holding a contest for the best homemade video related to the song. The band also played a number of SXSW showcases in March as well, and then in April embarks on an Eastern U.S. tour. Parts West are likely on tap later this year, with talk of a possible overseas leg in the near-future.

But then, McMurtry is not the only colorful character hitting the highway to sell his vision of America in the coming months. Perhaps Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and John McCain will cross paths with a certain vanful of shaggy Bastards out on the lonely highway between gigs—political and otherwise.  Weirder shit has been known to happen out there in an election year.

As to whom McMurtry would like to see go all the way come time to cast the ballot, he said, “I intend to vote for a Democrat. McCain lost me with the ‘Bomb, bomb Iran’ gaffe.”

James McMurtry – Real Texan

Category : Features

. To make it in this scene, a singer not only has to sing well, but also write his or her own material. A whole bevy of performers has emerged, led by Ray Wylie Hubbard, Robert Earl Keen, Joe Ely, and Steve Earle–the old timers. And a group of youngsters, among them: Pat Green, Slaid Cleaves, Blue Edmonson, Rodney Hayden, Cory Morrow, and Cody Canada of Cross Canadian Ragweed. There are others–lots of them. Then there is one that falls somewhere between these two groups–he’s not exactly young–but his music is just now being discovered in many circles. And he’s not exactly country. Or rock.{mosimage}James McMurtry: he’ll deny this, but first and foremost, he’s a writer. But unlike his dad, Larry, James writes in a different medium, one more suitable for this new generation. He writes songs that paint the changing face of America–where sons and daughters of cattlemen and farmers sell off the cows and horses, leave the land fallow, and migrate to the city. We who stay on the farm rent land to hunters that come from the city and spend fifteen hundred dollars to shoot a deer we feed with corn. Unless we come from an area with no deer. Then we gamble, get high on pot and speed washed down with Crown Royal whiskey, shoot at the sky with rifles and kill feral hogs. Unless that land is suitable for a shopping mall or a sub-division. Then we sell it also. Or divide it into owner-financed lots, which we sell to slackers with no kind of credit so we can get it back to sell again.Larry McMurtry’s struggle to get off of the farm led him to write novels. I’m sure his dad thought him crazy. But he’s done well at it. James, too, took a look at his dad’s work and life and decided he wanted something different. So he picked up a guitar. I’m sure he has questioned this choice at times–making it as a musician is a tough endeavor. But I think he chose wisely.Who would have guessed that this new generation would quit reading books? Perhaps James did. He knew what he liked and what he didn’t. And it appears he wasn’t alone. In a world of television, computers, and video games, young people now prefer entertainment in other forms; music and movies sell much better than books. But the skill required to write a song is different than a novelist who has unlimited lines at his disposal–a musical poet must write in short concise phrases that inspire one’s mind to think and elaborate and then marry them to a catchy sound to make it all go down.James has mastered the craft. No one distills into music what it was like for a son of Texas to grow up better than he. But why waste time listening to me? Check out some of his lyrics.From Lobo Town:Grand Daddy’s good nameFits like a shackle and a chainAnd all them others, long deadStill a’ hangin’ round my headHard working cattle menThere’s not a one left of themThere’s only me, there’s only mineI guess we’re all the other kindThrowin’ dice and dippin’ snuffOut in a trailer back in the brushSippin’ Crown and smokin’ weedHuntin’ hogs and cookin’ speedThat’s how we do it nowadaysNo matter what the teachers used to sayPass judgment if you dareSee if any of us care…Or, check out his uncle Slayton from Choctaw Bingo:…Uncle Slayton’s got his Texas pride Back in the thickets with his Asian brideHe’s got a Airstream trailer and a Holstein cowHe still makes whiskey cause he still knows howHe plays that Choctaw Bingo every Friday nightYou know he had to leave Texas but he won’t say whyHe owns a quarter section up by lake EufalaCaught a great big ol’ blue cat on a driftin’ jug lineSells his hard wood timber to the chippin’ millCooks that crystal meth cause the shine don’t sellHe cooks that crystal meth because the shine don’t sellYou know he likes that money he don’t mind the smell…For my taste, McMurtry’s latest, a live recording, is his best to date. In this album he performs a few well-selected old tunes and some more recent offerings along with his band, The Heartless Bastards.James has developed a reputation among musicians as one of the better songwriters of our time. Robert Earl Keen recorded and has done well with two of his songs: Out Here in the Middle from which I stole the title to my column and Levelland, which is really about Floydada, Texas, a God-forsaken little town in the panhandle of Texas. James wrote Levelland for his buddy Max Crawford who grew up there. For those of you who do not believe in miracles, consider this: Max was a Communist. And he survived Floydada. The American Workers Party is not well represented in Floydada. According to McMurtry, Max once said, a good old boy can become an intellectual but an intellectual can’t become a good old boy. Man had to have balls the size of King Kong. And a little luck also.Ray Wylie Hubbard, another Texas treasure, is set to cover Choctaw Bingo on his next album. Among Texans that’s one hell of a vote of confidence. Most of the time it’s the other way around–someone wanting to cover one of Ray’s songs.Yep. It’s sad to say, but most of us that could get off of the farm did. Some who stayed weren’t so bright. And those of us that return come back not for money, but in search of another time when a man’s word meant something and honor was a way of life esteemed above making money.But we fall short.Can’t hack it. Not with the lure of the city and the easy life there waiting to be grasped: Fine cars, women, drugs, booze. Air conditioning. Eight hour work days. Weekends off.Why work your ass to a frazzle and starve when you can sit on that same ass and make lots of money?James plays the hell out of a guitar and reminds people what they’ve lost and who they are. His eyes see the things all around us that we somehow fail to notice. His lyrics truthfully describe what is rather than promulgate a fairy tale myth of the country in which we live. He sees through the shallow scams and traditions of politicians, preachers, and shysters and helps those who will listen do the same. Ever notice how Dubya is the only one of the bush children with a Texas accent? And the only one to say nucular, even after this has been pointed out time after time? James did. And has balls enough to tell a room full of drunk Texas rednecks all about it between his songs.James McMurtry works hard at his craft–damn hard.He may not be aware of it, but he is a whole lot more like that Granddad he describes than he’ll ever know.But the world has moved on. The world has moved on.* * * * *After I wrote this, I had the opportunity to meet James in person–he graciously agreed to share an evening meal with my wife, Leah and me. He brought along his significant other–a smart, well-spoken and pretty brunette woman. The food we ate was Thai–I ordered something I couldn’t pronounce and consumed a dish that tasted as though it might be laced with pine branches. (Us Texans eat both kinds of food: Barbecue and Mexican.) Oh well. The soup was good. But the company was great and we had a good time.Looking at James McMurtry in person, I got the impression I was in the presence of an extremely intelligent man–so much so that he almost seemed intimidating. Kind of like staring into the astute eyes of a judge considering your fate. Not that he was judgmental or aggressive, just that he saw. Kind of left me wondering what it was he saw.James allowed the rest of us to carry on a lot of the conversation and digested what we had to say. One of the lines he uses came up again: A good old boy can become an intellectual but an intellectual can’t become a good old boy. While James understands and writes about the good old boy world from which he came, he cannot abide that simple way of looking at the larger world in which we live. Or politicians and preachers that do. He voices dissent (or for that matter, his approval) with measured words, and only then after careful consideration.The man is no doper, or a hard partier. He’s a man of vision chronicling the world in which he lives.After the meal, we watched part of his show. I saw the transformation, from the almost shy and reserved person at the restaurant, to the skilled and practiced professional musician who must subject his work to the immediate scrutiny
of an audience. I don’t think I’d have the courage. He has quite a selection of guitars–he treats them almost with reverence. Each is a special instrument and delivers a precise effect obtained only by hours of practice. James is quite serious about his job; it’s no accident that the music sounds as good as the record each time he plays.Like the first time I saw him perform, the songs were well received. And I think those who watched the show realized they had just seen a glimpse of greatness.Do yourself a favor and buy one of his cds or check out his live show when it comes to a city near you. Better yet, come visit Austin and the Continental Club some Wednesday night. You’ll be glad you did.And you will have heard the voice of a real Texan.Pick up James’ latest release, Live in Aught Three, over at LoneStarMusic.ComVisit James McMurtry’s website here: www.JamesMcMurtry.com©Copyright 2004 Don Henry Ford Jr.——————–About the Author – Don Henry Ford, Jr.When Don’s not writing books he lends out his talent to Americana Roots to put together great articles like this. You can pick up Don’s latest book Contrabando: Confessions of a Drug Smuggling Cowby at your local bookstore or online at Cinco Puntos Press.

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