Category Archives: – Venues

Tony Ramey songswap with Roger Springer

Roger Springer, Tony Ramey

Roger Springer, Tony Ramey

There’s a little shop, quaintly renovated to perfection, near downtown Tishomingo where only the best in live music is heard on a fairly-regular basis. This past Saturday night, (Aug. 13, 2016) it was Tony Ramey song-swapping with his old friend and writing buddy, Roger Springer, who hosts the concerts at The Pickin’ Parlor. The two of them had spent several days songwriting together, along with Greg Stonecipher, who also plays steel guitar with a subtle vengeance that makes it a shock that he’s not traveling with the top bands in the nation.

Roger and Tony put this show together in a short 3 days time. Their stories of their days writing in Nashville, told before so many of their self-penned songs, gave a clear picture of just how hard it is for songwriters to make it in the big time. And how they must keep their senses of humor to survive. But, just to be clear about it, both of these talents have made it in the big time, again as their songs completed the stories.

The next show at The Pickin’ Parlor will be Sept. 16, with country music’s Wade Hayes in concert.  You can connect with The Pickin’ Parlor through its Facebook page. (Click here)

And for a few more photos on Flickr, Click here

The same photos on Facebook, Click here

Lynyrd Skynyrd at Choctaw’s Grand Theater

All photos by Mary Jane Farmer22 10x8 name

The band Lynyrd Skynyrd wowed the crowd at a packed Grand Theater Aug. 5, with the 8-piece plus 2-girl singer band that is keeping the original Lynyrd Skynyrd alive.

They were kind and caring at the Meet n Greet that happened before they went onto the stage, with some photographs being taken by Tom, their road manager, of their special fans and others being taken by moi, Choctaw’s Meet n Greet photographer. Those are on the venue’s Website, ChoctawCasinos.com and each person involved is given a special online link to redeem/download their own photos. And they were exciting, dynamic, fun to watch and listen to on stage.

While on that Website, be sure and check for all upcoming entertainment, whether it be Grand Theater or Gilley’s in Durant, or at any of the other Choctaw locations.

Mostly, people like to view the photos — so — ‘nuf said.

Click here for photos — on Flickr for computers

Click here for photos — For FB and cell phone viewers 

(Please let me know if that Cell Phone viewers mode works —

MJFarmer.Music@gmail.com)

CD Review — South Austin Moonlighters

By Houston Hall

The South Austin Moonlighters

The South Austin Moonlighters

I first saw the South Austin Moonlighters a few weeks ago at a Texas Red Dirt Roads Radio Show with Justin Frazell that was held at Billy Bobs Texas in Fort Worth. Right away, when they started off their first tune in the song swap, I knew there was something to look forward to for the future of this band and the future of the Texas Music/Americana scene. But that’s the beauty of what they bring to the table. Not only can they rise to the occasion, but they also bring R&B, Soul, Gospel, Southern Rock and Blues just to name a few genres, to their music repertoire.

For a band that started playing together as a Sunday jam band, South Austin Moonlighters are breaking barriers and revitalizing a tone in the Texas music scene not heard since the mid 1960s through to the mid to late 1970s.

The band is composed of all true lead instrumentalists and vocalists. All of which have a few chances to sing lead vocals in the new album Ghost of a Small Town, which was released July 12 of this year.

Ghost of a Small Town is made up of 13 different tracks that pull together all of the bands strengths into one tightly-orchestrated package of excellence. With help from Beall Street Productions’ Ryan Lipman in the mixing of the tracks and the master, done by Nick Landis of Tera Nova, you get the best audio quality possible.

Mike Ryan (left) and Phil Hurley (right)

Mike Ryan (left) and Phil Hurley (right)

I had a chance to speak to one of the band members and the producer of the album, Mr. Chris Beall. He said that the main reason for the title of the newly released project stemmed from an anecdote to his initial start in Austin.

“Ever since I’ve lived in Austin there’s been this idea of what people think that Austin used to be. And everybody harkens back to the glory days. You know, when Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson and all kinds of these different artists were coming across the stage and there was just this great roots music revival going on in Texas… As soon as I showed up to Austin, there was this underlying buzz of all that… But as I stayed here a while, I began to watch my town change too. And I began to realize that maybe I’m not the same as those people, but I can sure see where they’re coming from.”

I than asked him what he meant by that and Chris so firmly responded with “I can sure see the tradeoff that has made it become what it is. So I’ve watched the condos go up. I’ve watched small businesses fold up and not be able to pay the overhead that it takes to survive in a large city like Austin. And all of this stuff is happening in the space of this moniker, the live music capital of the world… So you get this ironic kind of sense that this live music capital of the world thing man, you know. I’m not real sure of how long we can keep doing that to prop it up. If it can’t stand on its own legs you know… and the musicians are having a hard enough time making enough to live in the city that claims that, then how is that going to work?”

And that’s where Ghosts of a Small Town came from. “The idea that

Phil Bass

Phil Bass

we’re not resentful about change… But we are wise enough to know what the cost really is. So really, that’s what we’re doing. We are hanging on to the way that we believe and the way we love. And, we are trying to convey that to everyone around us. So Ghost of a Small Town is kind of like us living in this thing that used to be something else. Or Ghost of a Small Town is a remnant of the way that it used to be.”

The band consists of Lonnie Trevino Jr. (bass), Phil Bass (drums), Phil Hurley (guitar) and Chris Beale (guitar), all of whom have a turn in singing lead vocals on the album. Most notably would be the 12th track on the album, “Jesus (Make Up My Dying Bed).” That song utilized Lonnie Trevino’s diverse vocal range to encapsulate the tone and degree of precision required to make that song percolate to the masses of music lovers everywhere.

It truly shows the diversity of the genres that this band can cover. In a soulful, R&B tone along with bluesy licks that you can’t go wrong with, the South Austin Moonlighters give you a glimpse of what they are made of.

Other notable journalists and music publications have dubbed them as a band that “covers a ton of stylistic ground… with gritty blues, nasty funk, R&B, pop, rock, and more cropping up along the way.” – Matt Blackett, Guitar Player Magazine Editor’s Fav’s from 2014.

Jeremy Burchard from Texas Music Magazine put it pretty clearly when he said, “Success for this Americana ensemble has about embracing a supper group ethos while shunning supper group egos.”

Lonnie Trevino Jr.

Lonnie Trevino Jr.

And Andrew Conroy of KUTX 98.9 FM said, “When four established musicians decide to join forces and play together just because it’s fun, you’re going to get something special. Such is the case for South Austin Moonlighters.”

During the interview I had with Chris about the new album, I asked him if he felt like they were chasing after a time machine that might have already passed. Or, would it be more along the lines of ‘you feeling blessed to still be doing this?’ His response was great when he said, with echoing laughter and a sense of humility, “I think both are true.”

But that’s the kicker to this whole story, really. Yeah, they might have gained more grey hairs than most chasing down their dreams over the years, but I believe that people don’t even see age anymore. What they hear is a beautiful ensemble and orchestration of guys who have known each other for a while. That the South Austin Moonlighters are creating a passion in the music scene that is a part of what I’d like to call another revolution in music, where there are no barriers or boundaries that can confine the music to one label. And that’s what music really should be. Undefinable, free to roam the eardrums and music collections

Chris Beale

Chris Beale

of the fans who want to be enchanted or taken away from reality for a short while.

You can find Ghost of a Small Town on iTunes and Amazon for

download sites or you can get a hard copy at Waterloo Records or Antone’s Record Shop in Austin. You can also visit CD Baby (link below) and get a digital download or order the hard copy of the album as well.

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/thesouthaustinmoonlighte3

Link to the band’s Website:  TheSouthAustinMoonlighters.com

Maddie & Tae, Joan Jett at Choctaw

Joan Jett & The Blackhearts

Joan Jett & The Blackhearts

In just a two-day period, June 29 and July 1, Choctaw Casino’s Grand Theater hosted two spirited musical groups – Maddie & Tae on Wednesday nights and Joan Jett & The Blackhearts on Friday nights.

One would expect that these talented females and their equally-talented bands would perform well beyond expectations — if that’s possible, and sometimes it is — and neither disappointed.

Maddie & Tae are Madison Marlow of Sugar Land, Texas, and Taylor Dye of Ada/Silo, Okla. Both seemed completely blown away from their vantage view-point (on stage) of the entire audience and at least four times exclaimed that it was, by far, the largest crowd they had ever drawn. And the smiles on those two ladies’ faces could have put a lighting technician out of work!

Since the release of their first CD in August 2015, Maddie & Tae have already chalked up three hits.

Joan Jett, tho a few years older not only in years, but in experience, also brought the Grand Theater crowd to its feet more than once. This Pennsylvanian soprano and vegetarian has been dubbed not only the queen of rock and roll, but also listed as one of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time. (Rolling Stone).  And she’s chalked up numerous award-winning and best-selling records over the years. She and the Blackhearts traveled to Choctaw’s Event Center in Pocola for the next night’s concert.

So, what do they have in common? Both (or all three, maybe it should be said)

Maddie & Tae

Maddie & Tae

Maddie & Tae’s fans ranged from about 8 to 80 years of ago. And they talked with, especially, the younger fans with vigor. Some of those fans had waited for hours to get their photo made with Maddie & Tae.  They also autographed items for people for about two hours after the show.

Joan Jett took time to talk with her fans as well. She asked each his or her name and repeated it back, as if to memory.

Both also seemed to thoroughly appreciate each member of their respective bands, introducing and showcasing them through their concerts.

Maddie & Tae photos (click here)

Joan Jett & The Blackhearts photos (click here)

Next up at The Grand Theater in Durant’s Choctaw Casino is Peter Frampton and also Lynyrd Skynyrd on Aug. 7; Lady Antebellum on Aug. 19; and John Anderson and Pam Tillis on Aug. 20. Go Online to ChoctawCasinos.com for information on these and other shows, plus concerts at the Event Center at Choctaw’s Grant, Okla. facility. Next up there is Vanilla Ice on July 22.

Craig Wayne Boyd, David Adam Byrnes pack SoJo

CWB 10 bw 8x10 nameStory and photos by Mary Jane Farmer

There’s a young singer out on the road with past (and most successful) The Voice winner, Craig Wayne Boyd. There’s more than the simple truth that both performers sports three names, both, and much more importantly, are great talents — the kind who will be around for years and years to come.

David Adam Byrnes graced the Southern Junction (Royse City/Rockwall) stage in a solo concert prior to Craig Wayne Boyd’s taking it with full band (April 8, 2016). It was a sell-out crowd. It was an enthusiastic crowd. It was a crowd that sang along to many, most, and in some cases — all — of the songs.

Craig Wayne Boyd had been in Nashville (making his way there from his hometown of Mesquite, Texas) for quite a long time, since the mid-2000; with some minor success (but that’s till ‘success’) when he joined The Voice’s Season 7 and came out the Top Winner that season. Since then, he’s obtained good management, is touring nationwide, had a song hit high numbers on the Billboard Chart , and played the Grand Ol’ Opry — and now he’s played SoJo.David Adam Byrnes 1

Boyd, through it all, has retained his good ol’ Texas boy genuine friendliness — after all, Texas is known as The Friendship State, named from the Caddo Indian word “teyshas” or “tejas,” meaning friends. And the motto, “Drive Friendly, The Texas Way,” has greeted travelers since the 1960s. He signed guitars to be used for fundraising, he had his photo made in unofficial “meet-and-greet” style before his set and made his way to his merch table afterward, where he stayed until the last fan had said his say and has his photo made with the musician.

Byrnes, from Arkansas, was just as friendly, holding his own with his many fans there as Me and David and ladywell. Witness this photo bomb… That happened just moments before a table of fans called him over for hugs. He, too, left his hometown for Nashville a while back. It’s not clear just how he and Boyd teamed up for road trips, but team up they did, and the mix is working wonderfully.

Watch Southern Junction (SoJo)‘s Website for a list of their upcoming special guests, or just enjoy the venue’s regular house bands, which are all completely dynamite. And there’s dance lessons there, and great steaks, and sometimes other good times, such as this Sunday’s (April 24) Crawfish Boil, Car Show, and music and kids activities… well, it’s gonna be fun! Click here for SoJo’s Website

For photos of David Adam Byrnes, click here

For Craig Wayne Boyd photos, click here