Category Archives: Choctaw Casinos

Southern Rebels of Country Music—You know them well!

Two special evenings of country music will include performances by Chance Cody & Spur 503, The Dustin Perkins Band, and Chase Sanford & Swamp Rat Jackson

On Friday (June 29) and Saturday (June 30), Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant and Grant, respectively, will be hosting the “Southern Rebels of Country,” a special evening featuring the three popular country music bands of Chance Cody & Spur 503, The Dustin Perkins Band, and Chase Sanford & Swamp Rat Jackson. Tickets start at $10 and can be purchased by phone at 1-800-585-3737 or online at www.ChoctawCasinos.com.

Denison native country band Spur 503 is known for its frequent visits to the country charts, including chart-topping hit singles, “Raisin’ The Bar,” “Into You,” “That’s What’s Wrong With Me,” and “It Might Be the Whiskey.” Lead vocalist Chance Cody, also from 93.1 KMKT Katy Country and before that KHYI 95.3, recently took on lead guitar, enticing audiences with a passionate and high-energy stage presence. Spur 503 performs for fans throughout Texas and Oklahoma and considers themselves a unique country blend of Red Dirt and Texas Country music.

Starting off as a singer-songwriter, Texas native Dustin Perkins was a solo artist performing mainly acoustic shows. In May 2010, Perkins released his debut album “I Wrote You a Song,” which was a smash hit and opened the door to creating a complete band. After pulling together a group of multi-talented musicians, the Dustin Perkins Band was born, and have averaged more than 350 performances at venues all over Texas and Oklahoma. Their most honorable performances include the Super Bowl XLV, the Association of Country Music Awards in Las Vegas, and twice at Texas Stadium. They also were one of the top five finalists on Shiner Rising Star, a music competition presented by KHYI 95.3 FM, Shiner Records and Shiner Beer. Recently, the band released its second CD, “The Next Step,” signed with professional management, and is being slated to go on national tour later this year.

In 2008, Chase Sanford & Swamp Rat Jackson, a Texas-native four-piece country band led by Chase Sanford, pulled their talents together to form the country group after they enjoyed a few jam sessions together. To make a name for themselves, they started performing gigs in local club circuits as much as they could, which eventually led to their music receiving major radio play, visits on Billboard charts, shoulder rubbing with industry icons, and special performances at the Super Bowl. Following icons such as Randy Rogers Band, Zac Brown Band, Spur 503, and The Dustin Perkins Band, Chase Sanford & Swamp Rat Jackson do what they do best, which is put on an amazing honky-tonk road show for adoring country music fans.

About Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant, Oklahoma

The AAA Four Diamond Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant, Oklahoma, includes 330 hotel rooms, a natatorium, fitness center, business center, full-service spa and three retail outlets. In addition, there are five restaurants, a 175-seat amphitheater, and 110,000 square feet of gaming space, including over 4,100 slot machines, 30 poker tables and 48 table games. For more information, visit www.ChoctawCasinos.com or www.Facebook.com/ChoctawResort.

Mickey Gilley brings city lights to Choctaw

Mickey Gilley

Thanks to Choctaw Casino management for making it possible to sit down with country music superstar Mickey Gilley, Friday night, (June 2, 2012)
 
Click here for more photographs

Mickey Gilley sat on the edge of the living room chair, in his suite at the Choctaw Casino hotel, surrounded by several travelers to help him manage his busy day. Gilley was there to open the newest facility named for him, Gilley’s Durant. He was on a schedule of interviews, videoing, and band rehearsal that was, to use a Texism, tight as a tick. When asked how Mickey liked the new Gilley’s, he said he hadn’t seen it yet, that he was whisked to the suite straight from the car.

The first Gilley’s was in Pasadena and made famous as the world’s largest dance hall, thanks to Mickey being at the helm and its use in the 1980 movie “Urban Cowboy.”  That facility burned down, and hasn’t been rebuilt. Instead, Gilley said, he has opened one in Dallas and another in Las Vegas. He doesn’t put his name on these venues without a lot of direct input and pride.

About not having seen the Durant facility yet, Gilley said he just keeps continuing to work to make sure the name is out there, and that it represents good country. His slow easy smile came out for the first time in the interview when told that the John David Kent band, which played a soft opening the previous weekend, would have made him proud. He said he was glad to hear that the band lived up to the Gilley’s legacy.

One of those in the Gilley entourage was fellow Branson performer, Dalena Ditto, there with a video camera creating a documentary, and filming the interview. Her young son played in the room, and later in front of the stage, with a set of drumsticks, tapping out rhythms on just about anything he could reach. Another was a cousin, distant cousin and performer in her own right, Penny Gilley, who jumped on stage later to be by his side.

Mickey asked for a Diet Coke, and then asked for two glasses, and shared it during the interview. He held his glass gingerly in both hands, the hands that have played piano for about 60 years, and which are now still recovering from a fall he talked about.

“I fell two and a half years ago, and damaged my back.” It happened, he said, when he was helping a friend move a couch, and he fell down, backwards. “I was paralyzed from the neck down, injuring C4, C5, 6, and 7. I’m 76 now, and don’t recover like I used to.” He said he was bedridden and then in rehab for months. “I weighed 186 when I fell and got down to 148, but I’m gaining it back, too. I can do a lot of things for myself without any help. I can take a bath, I can shave, I can wash my hair, I can dress myself. I can’t button my shirts, but I can drive my car. I’m not back 100%, but I’m back.”

The major injury, though, was to his hands, and he said the doctors hold out little hope that  he will ever play the piano again. When asked how he released the passion those fingers drove onto keyboards, he answered, “The only way I have left — through my voice!”

The interview then went to the questions which his fans has submitted to this reporter ahead of time. Some serious, some not quite so much so. But first, this reporter had to pass on one attaboy, submitted by Vicky Cupit: Tell him I still have my napkin from the original dance hall in Pasidena Texas. Will pass it on to my red-neck granddaughter one day. Had fun dancing there!! That slow smile spread across the wrinkled face.
When Jaye Wilson’s comment was presented, “He’s my father-law’s cousin, Jack Gilley, Jeff’s dad. We went to see him in Branson twice, what a performer, love him!!,” Gilley commented only that he has a lot of relatives, cousins included. Two of those include Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggart, who he said were very close to him in age and with whom he shared childhoods.
Vicki Penhall asked: What is his favorite childhood memory (with cousins Swaggart and Lewis)? Gilley said he wished he’d kept better notes during those years that the three of them played together so much, especially after all of them became so different. But one memory was a “stupid game we made up, called ‘Conquer and Unconquer. If one of us did something, the others had to do it, too, or we were conquered. But when Jerry Lee walked the Mississippi bridge and the water was 100 feet down, I just said I was conquered.”
He also said the other strong memory was going to church together. “I sang with my Mom and Jerry Lee would sing and all of us did sometimes. We were a poor family and did the normal childhood things to have fun.”
Jack Browning (aka Jumping Jack) asked: Did he ever ride the mechanical bull in Pasadena? Mickey answered, “I  don’t mind getting up on something. I rode it for a commercial, did a picture session. I rode it slow. It’s not my cup of tea, not my saddle.”
L.B. Blanton asked: How much has the honky tonk world changed in 30 years? “ Gilley said he hasn’t played a honky tonk in the last 30 years, that he’s been busy touring and with his show and club, now, in Branson. He’s been inside a few over time , and hasn’t seen a lot of changes in clubs, lounges, bars, dance halls. “Different stages have different laws, and that makes a bit of a difference there, but a club is a club. They are all designed different and with different atmospheres, but still there for the fun of it.
Hangover Sunday (aka Marvin Hillis) asked a double question: I would really like to know, what his biggest influence is, and the best hangover cure.
Gilley answered the second part quickly, and solemnly, saying simply, “The best cure for a hangover is don’t drink.” Then, he got into part A of the question, saying, “Of course, my influence was my cousins. I started out wanted to be a rock star, then heard Conway Twitty. Conway was country and his style influenced me. I basically consider myself as country rock, but don’t really think of it. But it was Jerry Lee on the piano… he picked it up by ear, and I followed him. The guys of the 50s were all trying to make it into rock and roll, and I didn’t want to do that.”
Mickey said he was never a good songwriter, and he depended on his management to find him good songs. They must have done good jobs, because Gilley has had strings of charted hits, many which topped of at No. 1.
He talked about the changes in country music then, having lived through it all from the 1950s until today. He adapted his style through the changes and managed to keep himself viable in the industry. No one-hit wonder there!
“Any good song, whether you classify it as country, rock, whatever, if it says something in 3.5 or 3 minutes and it has a storyline, well, it’s a good song. As an example, I did “You Don’t Know Me,” and it did good for me. I tried to do it middle-of-the-road classic country. Ray Charles had the best version, and then I heard Cindy Walker and Eddie Arnold do it, they wrote it you know, and it was completely different. And if you let George Jones record it, it would be more country, and it would still be a good song.
Later in the day, Mickey Gilley sat on a chair on the new Gilley’s Durant stage, with the Chris Rivers band backing him up. Whether he sits or can eventually stand up again to perform is not a major concern, he said. He’s just happy to perform.
Mickey Gilley has garnered so many awards — Entertainer of the Year several times, Album and Single of the Year, Top Male Vocalist, and so many more. Here’s one more for him: Interview-ee of the Year.

Dustin Perkins Band, moving forward, fast forward

 

Dustin Perkins

Story and photos by Mary Jane Farmer, photos taken 100% using Dustin’s mother (Sandy)’s Canon lens.

Dustin Perkins Band is continuing to make their own history, their own mark in the music world, and their tenacious climb from “local” to “regional” status continues it’s journey upward.

Friday and Saturday night, they made a little history being the last band to play at the Diamondback Lounge at Choctaw Casino in Durant, the last because the club is being rebuilt as the third in the Gilley’s Bar and Saloon chain, not now a secret. The new club is due to open Memorial Day weekend and is being called Gilley’s Belt Buckle. But more about that later.

The band is made up of Dustin as songwriter on most songs, lead singer, and guitar, Colton Gilbreath on lead guitars and harmonies, Nathan Brown on drums, Michael Waitt on bass guitar, and Chris (Jett) Romain on keyboards and rhythms. They have been together now about a year and a half, and had quite an adventure along the way, having had a stint with professional management that didn’t quite pan out, played a special concert for the 2010 Super Bowl, and now released their CD “The Next Step.”

The band has two gigs coming up for the prestigious South by Southwest festival in Austin, and also will be playing Texas Music Revolution, March 10 in Wylie. And, Dustin will be be interviewed March 8 and featured on the Paris Radio Station K95.5′s radio show, 7-8 p.m. at The River Bar and Grill, Choctaw Casino, Grant, Oklahoma. March 31, they alongside Spur 503 and others, will be intitionating J.R.’s grounds in Savoy, in a one-day festival known only, right now and unofficially, as J.R.’s event and maybe Po’ Boys Picnic.

The Dustin Perkins Band has also created an exciting new set list, one that moves smoothly and energetically from one song to the next, featuring many of the songs on “The Next Step” CD, plus a couple from the original CD “I Wrote You A Song,” and new ones not yet recorded. Their cover of Adelle’s “Rolling In The Deep” is uniquely their own arrangement, and one of the rare covers the band performs.

To top that off, the band will soon be developing a professional video, based on the song they intend to release next off “The Next Step,” the song called “Too Late To Turn Back Now,” or as I think of it, “Somewhere south of Austin.”  They are using the Internet capability offered by KickStart to help finance that video. You can access it by clicking on this link here. (Just a note:

KickStart for the Dustin Perkins Band video:

Sean Franks

Saturday night, Sean Franks opened the show at The Diamondback, an acoustic set featuring his on-stage personality and his rich deep voice. At other times, it has been and could be the Chase Sanford & Swamp Rat Jackson band that opens for Dustin and the guys.

When The DP Band took stage Saturday, they rocked the house with that new set, then Dustin did a couple of solo songs including the one he wrote and played for his grandfather at his funeral. Powerful stuff, powerful tribute to a man who had been a powerful influence in Dustin’s life. They took a short break, then got back on stage to keep the pace moving.

Thursday, (Feb. 16) the band will be at One Eyed Jack Saloon in Whitewright, with an all-acoustic set.  And their full schedule can be found on the Web site: dustinperkinsband.com

Keep this band on your radar. Plug them into your GPS. Mark your calendars. They are already making Texoma, North Texas, and southern Oklahoma proud and that’s only the beginning. They are creating new, loyal fans with every new venue and every mile added to the van. They are going places.

For Diamondback Lounge  pix, click here:

For Hanks Texas Grill pix, click here:

For Love & War pix, click here: