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  • Omar and the Howlers- Border Girl- 6-6-87 Dallas

    Omar and the Howlers- Border Girl- 6-6-87 Dallas

    “Born in Mississippi in the dust of a cotton patch
    Raised up by a rattlesnake and that’s a natural fact…
    They all talk about me, they don’t understand
    They don’t know the power of a Mississippi hoodoo man…”-Kent Dykes, “Mississippi Hoodoo Man”

    While every biography I’ve read of the band Omar and the Howlers rightly locates the veteran rhythm’n’blues outfit as based in Austin, TX since the mid-Eighties, there is a decidedly non-Texas element in the songwriting of bandleader Kent “Omar” Dykes that always tapped that same musical gumbo made famous almost two decades earlier by John Fogerty’s Creedence Clearwater Revival. But while Fogerty admitted to me that, miraculously, he developed his “Swamp Rock” sound second-hand  through the novels of Mark Twain, William Faulkner, and Harper Lee plus the plays of Tennessee Williams and John Ford movies without Fogerty ever having set foot in the American South, Kent Dykes spent his adolescent early music career in McComb MS “gun and knife clubs”. Why that term?

    “Because there was a sign at the entrance which read, ‘Check your weapons’ at the door!” grinned Kent during our first interview to introduce his first major label release Hard Times in the Land of Plenty.  ”You know that scene in The Blues Brothers movie where they are in a s__tkicker bar on a little stage playing behind chickenwire? Before I learned to drive that’s how I spent every Friday and Saturday night.” These were notorious roadhouses in the southernmost parts of Mississippi just outside the McComb city limits, where a local boy like an honest-to-God Johnny B. Goode could cut his teeth playing his guitar five sets a night, or loose several teeth if he didn’t learn to duck incoming flying beer bottles.
    “It was pitch black in those nightclubs. The only light on stage came from the little red pilot lights on our amplifiers and one neon beer sign behind the bar,” Kent recalled.

    The roots rock revival of the early Eighties which included the Stray Cats, The Blasters, Nick Lowe and Dave Edmunds’ Rockpile, and Austin-based Fabulous Thunderbirds plus Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble, all convinced Kent Dykes to pack up his white Stratocaster and head west to the Texas capital’s burgeoning Sixth Street music scene.

    “When I pulled into Austin I stopped for gas at a full-service filling station,” Dykes remembers. “The guy pumping gas spotted my guitar case in the back seat and the Mississippi plates on my car, and inquired why I was in Austin. I replied that I was moving there to start a band. When the pump attendant asked to see my guitar, I pulled it out of the back seat, opened the case, & handed it to him. This guy put his foot up on my bumper, sat my guitar on his knee, and proceeded to burn up that fretboard like nobody’s business. If I hadn’t run out of money I would have got back in my car with my tail between my legs and gone home to McComb right then and there!”

    Welcome to Austin, y’all.

    It wouldn’t be long before Kent Dykes made good on his intention, starting Omar and the Howlers and writing and recording an independent single “Border Girl”, with Dykes wisely letting his distinctive husky growl and pop songwriting sensibilities become his calling card, not just his guitar chops. The combination of all three, plus a smartly rehearsed band of journeyman players in the Howlers, took Kent’s first-hand South Mississippi tales of dancing in the clearings among ten-foot forests of sugarcane fields to a worldwide audience over the next three decades.

    Don’t let that gruff voice fool you. Kent “Omar” Dykes is a big bear of a man, but he is a sweet man with a big Southern grin. This performance at Dallas’ Redux club in June 1987 was to celebrate his first national release Hard Times in the Land of Plenty  with the swamp rocker “Border Girl”. Mixed live to air, no overdubs, by Doug Hall in the Crossroads mobile, produced and remastered by Redbeard.

  • del Amitri- I Won’t Take the Blame- Dallas 5/90

    del Amitri- I Won’t Take the Blame- Dallas 5/90

    Two intrepid Scots, lead singer/guitarist Justin Currie and vocalist/ accordion player Iain Harvie of the Glasgow band del Amitri, showed up one blazing hot Friday afternoon to play out on the patio in upper 90s temp during my Friday afternoon remote broadcast in suburban Dallas in May 1990. Nary a word of complaint to us Texans, even though I found out a few years later that in Glasgow, a “hot day” is anything above 75 degrees Fahrenheit. The day they performed ” I Won’t Take the Blame” acoustically, You’ll hear that they sounded great, but watching these pale-skinned Geordies in the Texas sun, on a black stage no less, was like watching the Wicked Witch of the North in the The Wizard of Oz. ” I’m melting, I’m melting!!!!”. Thanks to Traci McPherson for the inspiration. – Redbeard

     

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  • Memphis Thing- Rob Jungklas

    Memphis Thing- Rob Jungklas

    For Elvis Week : Rob Jungklas, one of America’s finest unheralded singer / songwriters, with a cast of thousands from the album Closer to the Flame . “…bowing down in the Church of Stax…” Remastered by Redbeard. 

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  • J.J.Cale No Longer Livin’ on Tulsa Time

    J.J.Cale No Longer Livin’ on Tulsa Time

    “He was our guy,” Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist Gary Rossington told me about songwriter J.J.Cale in my December 2000 interview,” kinda our ‘go to’ guy for songs back then.” For over four decades Cale, the Tulsa-based songwriter who passed away overnight at the age of 74, was the ‘go to’ guy for some of rock’n’roll’s biggest hits including “Cocaine” and “After Midnight” for Eric Clapton, and Lynyrd Skynyrd covers of  “Call Me the Breeze” and ” Same Ol’ Blues” .

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    As in the new music documentary film about backup singers entitled Twenty Feet from Stardom, the closest Cale himself ever got to fame was his mailbox to pick up songwriter royalty checks. Clapton attempted to use his own considerable popularity to increase awareness of Cale’s contributions to both Eric’s career as well as music in general, and their 2006 collaboration The Road to Escondido  won a Grammy Award.

     

     

    But right from his first major release Naturally in 1972, while the likes of Clapton and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s fires blazed brightly, the performances by Cale of his own material  on Naturally glowed like the embers of a campfire late into the night. – Redbeard

     

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    Onstage with Eric Clapton (c) and J.J.Cale , right

  • Mick Jagger Doing 80 in a 50 Zone

    Mick Jagger Doing 80 in a 50 Zone

    “You live long enough and you all will get there. If you’re lucky,” chuckled his band mate Keith Richards in my most recent Rolling Stones interview. As impossible as it may seem to those of us who still recall the actual moment in 1965 when we first heard “I Can’t Get No Satisfaction” on a little portable transistor radio, we’ve lived to see the 80th birthday of Michael Jagger. But even more spectacular than that personal milestone is the fact that Mick Jagger still leads the same rock band, with most of the same personnel for over 50 years, something no band has ever done before. Here is your chance to eavesdrop on Mick and me on a telephone call before a 1997 Dallas/Ft Worth Rolling Stones show at Texas Motor Speedway. – Redbeard

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    At The Alamo, San Antonio Texas (L-R)

    Bill Wyman, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, Ron Wood, Charlie Watts far right

  • The Posies- Dream All Day- 1993 Dallas

    The Posies- Dream All Day- 1993 Dallas

    The main songwriters/singers/guitarists of Bellingham WA band The Posies, Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow, spent so much time in Memphis as neo- Big Star members that I think of them as honorary members of that incredibly rich music community. I was pleased when Auer and Stringfellow performed this live acoustic version of the Posies song “Dream All Day” from their 1993  album Frosting on the Beater   during my Q102 Dallas/Ft. Worth radio show in an SMU campus-area bar. –Redbeard

  • Rock’s Picasso, Storm Thorgerson, Goes to the Great Gig in the Sky

    Rock’s Picasso, Storm Thorgerson, Goes to the Great Gig in the Sky

    Storm Thorgerson, the most prolific, most influential rock graphic artist ever, has passed away at age 69. Most widely known for his work with  Aubrey Powell and the Hipgnosis team in England for the long series of Pink Floyd covers, it’s a safe bet that you have enjoyed more of Thorgerson’s genius wrapped around the music of your life than any single musician or band. And we have Storm Thorgerson, along with recording engineer James Guthrie, largely to thank  for the recent Pink Floyd catalog box sets, as Pink Floyd ceased to exist as a musical entity decades ago. Storm Thorgerson …wish you were here. –Redbeard

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  • Andy Johns, British Producer & Engineer,Passes Away at 61

    Andy Johns, British Producer & Engineer,Passes Away at 61

    It has been a week of great loss in the music world, with first the inestimable death of Phil Ramone last week & now the uber-engineer/producer Andy Johns. Our heartfelt condolences to his family, big brother producer Glyn Johns, and Andy’s many musical friends and associates. He captured the sound and the fury so the rest of us could experience it for a lifetime. –Redbeard

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  • Roger McGuinn-Turn Turn Turn-Dallas 1-17-91

    Roger McGuinn-Turn Turn Turn-Dallas 1-17-91

    MONTREAL, QUE: JUNE 12, 2013–Former leader of the Byrds Roger McGuinn, in concert at the Corona theatre on Wednesday June 12, 2013. (Pierre Obendrauf / THE GAZETTE)

    I was both honored and yet humbled to have Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Roger McGuinn of The Byrds appearing live on my Dallas/Ft.Worth radio show. Mere words fail  to explain what his unique gentle voice and 12-string electric guitar have meant to the last almost half-century of contemporary music ( as confirmed elsewhere within this archive by no less than the late Beatle George Harrison and Tom Petty). But Roger McGuinn’s choice to sing the Pete Seeger classic “Turn,Turn,Turn”, with its timeless lyrics from the Book of Ecclesiastes, on the day after the Gulf War Desert Storm broke out, helped me grapple then with long-dormant conflicted feelings about war on that memorable day. -Redbeard

  • Davey Knowles’Back Door Slam- Outside Woman Blues-Dallas 9-07

    Davey Knowles’Back Door Slam- Outside Woman Blues-Dallas 9-07

    Irrefutable proof that Cream continues to influence multiple generations of world class musicians  years after Disraeli Gears, here are Back Door Slam trio from the Isle of Man, led by guitar phenom Davey Knowles,  doing the vintage blues number “Outside Woman Blues” which Cream covered and popularized forty years earlier. – Redbeard