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0616 Page 4 color
Kent Finley Tribute Dreamer: A Tribute To Kent Finlay Eight 30 Records THIS COLLECTION OF 14 SONGS, all written by the late Kent Finlay, owner of Cheatham Street Warehouse in San Marcos and mentor to numerous songwriters, was produced by his daughter Jenni and by Brian T. Atkinson. Each singer on it has been one that Finlay supported by not only his words, but also his actions. He once told me that there wasn’t any good in helping someone if you weren’t going to give them your all. Kent Kent Finlay’s songs are a study of human behavior. Randy Rogers and Sunny Sweeney share vocals on “Just Between You and Me.” Walt Wilkins brings truism to “The Bright Lights of Brady,” and Jamie Lynn Wilson and everyone who wanted to jump in and become the “Hill Country Choir” do a fine job on the song that Randy Rogers Band took to the top of the Texas charts, “The Hill Country.” There’s others on this recording, names very easily recognizable including James McMurtry, Terri Hendrix, and William Clark Green. This CD, one of my favorites for 2016, would be a valuable addition to anyone’s collection. —MARY JANE FARMER Dave Insley Just The Way That I Am Independent Release SO MUCH OF COUNTRY’S gone pop now that it’s refreshing to come across a traditional C&W recording like the new release from Dave Insley, “Just The Way That I Am”. Insley’s rich, smooth baritone drips with honky-tonk cool. That big voice deserves great lyrics, and it gets them in a wonderful variety of imaginative material. Insley wrote ten of the tunes, and co-wrote the other two (the last track with Rosie Flores). His band, The Careless Smokers, show off their skills as the tight group countless live shows have made them. Many other fine musicians make cameos, (Kelly Willis, Dale Watson, & Redd Volkaert to name a few) but the real star here is Insley’s tantalizing voice. Whether narrating a tale of lonely hearts hooking up (“Win-Win Situation For Losers”), a comical imagery of death as a merciful release (“Dead and Gone”), a gunslinger ballad (“Arizona Territory, 1904”) or a beautiful tribute to his wife (“We’re All Here Together Because of You”) these songs thump with the heartbeat of a music mans life. Dave Insley is asking you to take him “Just The Way That I Am.” And this release is good enough to do just that. —BLUE LISA Robby White Sam Colt and Jesus Independent release I DIDN’T KNOW WHAT TO EXpect from Robby White’s newest release, Sam Colt and Jesus but when the first song on the album, I Ain’t Sorry, opened with a quote from the movie, Barbarosa, I knew it was going to be something special. From one song to the next, a story unfolds. Living in 3/ 4 Time, co-written with Tom McElvain, is a lament about the fast pace we all live these days. No one stops to smell the roses or dance to a waltz. As Robby sings about riding 4 BUDDY JUNE 2016 the trail with Billy and helping him bust out of the Lincoln County Jail on a “Hundred Years Too Late,” I feel his sadness and frustration of living in the 21st century. “How About You” is a poetic reflection of how often we complain when in truth there is nothing to complain about. Fort Worth, “I Love You” is an upbeat tribute to Cowtown. “Little More Love,” written by Mark Alan Atwood expresses a life philosophy and Robby does a fantastic deliverance of the message. But, the icing on the cake is the title track, “Sam Colt and Jesus.” Robby has this quote on the back of the CD, “God created men. Jim Suhler Sam Colt made them equal.” The movie clip from Barbarosa at the beginning of this song is Willie saying this, “I reckon Sam Colt makes about everyone the same size.” If you like pure honest music, you will love Robby White’s true concept album, Sam Colt and Jesus. You won’t hear any fancy guitar licks; no special effects or hype, just raw Texas emotion. It’s like black and white pictures — no frills, no fluff, but plenty of brilliantly written and delivered lyrics about sin and redemption in 1880. —JAN SIKES Glenna Bell Lone Star: Songs and Stories Straight from the Heart of Texas Independent Release FROM DOWN SOUTH WHERE Country and Americana intersect with blues comes a new self-release from Houston singer/songwriter/guitarist Glenna Bell Lone Star: Songs and Stories from the Heart of Texas. An intimate project, Bell’s throaty croon invites you to sit a spell on the porch while she weave’s tales of love, loss and Texas. A prolific songwriter, Glenna wrote eight of the ten tracks. The project feels like an adult lullaby of sorts — the beauty of the sparse production soothing you into a relaxed but contemplative mood. Finding love in “So In Love With You,” facing the impermanent nature of life in “Everybody’s Changing,” calling it like it is in “Pig in Lipstick Blues” — you’ve been there too. It’s called life. No surprise that she covers the poignant “Heart of the Matter” written by fellow Texan, Don Henley. But it’s an original take on the tune – she manages to make the song you know feel brand new again. Glenna Bell’s no damsel in distress – these songs tell you she has a firm grasp on where she’s been and where she’s going. But pause and listen to Lone Star: Songs and Stories Straight From Texas and enjoy where she is now. —BLUE LISA Jim Suhler & Monkey Beat Jim Suhler & Monkey Beat – Live at the Kessler Underworld Records Dallas’ Kessler Theater has earned a reputation as the best listening room in North Texas. When Jim Suhler & Monkey Beat, who have earned a reputation for intensely engaging (and often lengthy) live performances chuck flores RECORD REVIEWS take the stage at this historic Oak Cliff venue, the results are satisfying on so many levels. It’s not hyperbole when I say that this is one of the best live recordings I’ve heard from anyone in some time. The textures, tones and nuances of the instruments come through vividly, with transparent highs and a warm, deep bottom end. Additionally, the great mix reveals the quality of Suhler’s voice. Suhler has been a vital part of the Dallas and North Texas music scene for well over three decades. An exceptionally gifted six-stringer, especially on slide guitar, he distills a unique blend of blues and rock that pleases both the blues and the rock crowds. Over these years, through dedication, discipline and relentless touring, he’s honed his guitar and vocal chops, but perhaps more significantly, he’s emerged as a quality songwriter. Maybe that’s why Jim Suhler & Monkey Beat – Live at the Kessler (Underworld Records) works so well. All 16 songs on Live at the Kessler are Suhler originals. All but two are from earlier Jim Suhler & Monkey Beat releases - Bad JuJu (2001), Dirt Road (2002), Tijuana Bible (2009) and Panther Burn (2014). There’s the infectious, straight ahead shuffle of “I Declare,” along with crowd favorites like “Tijuana Bible,” “Panther Burn” and “Across the Brazos,” with their lowdown grooves and wicked slide guitar work. Along the way, Live at the Kessler offers up the swampy accordion-laced “Deja Blue” and “Texassippi,” the ethereal “Morning Prayer,” with its sweetly teasing, almost Pink Floydish slidework, the cocky braggadocio of “Scattergun,” as well as the relentless, no-nonsense roadhouse boogies of “Doin’ the Best I can” and “Restless Soul,” the honest warmth of “Po’ Lightnin” (Suhler’s tribute to blues legend “Lightnin’ Hopkins,” the hypnotic raga groove of “Sunday Drunk,” the atmospheric “Reverie” and the sincere and hopeful “Prayin’ For Rain,” with its tender guitar and vocals. Live at the Kessler features Shawn Phares (keyboards, accordion), Christopher Alexander (bass), Beau Chadwell (drums), along with guest performances from Tim Alexander (keyboards, accordion) and Tex Lovera (cigar box). The CD was produced by Jim Suhler, mobile live recording was by Eric Scortia, and the mix by Suhler and Paul Osborn. Live at the Kessler is a good-feeling CD that that impresses with formidable musicianship, quality songwriting, enough variety to ensure a great flow, and of course, the aforementioned incredible sound of the Kessler itself. —CHUCK FLORES “T “T HE THING ABOUT WRITing songs is, everything is songwriting. All you have to do is remember.”— Guy Clark Guy Charles Clark was born November 6, 1941 and died May 17, 2016. He was considered by most to be the first man to meet when one got to Nashville, Guy Clark and his wife, Susanna, kept their door ajar for 40 years to all who wanted to pick a few tunes or write a few songs. During these years, they became best friends with the also-great Townes Van Zandt, and considered Ray Wylie Hubbard, Rodney Crowell, Mickey Newbury, and dozens upon dozens more of their most intimate friends. Texan by birth and Tennessean by choice, Guy Clark left his image permanently in the hearts and minds of many Kerrville Folk Festival longtimers. During this 45-annual festival, memories are blowing like the winds through the oak trees of Quiet Valley Ranch. Buddy Mondlock, still a regular singer/ songwriter at the Kerrville Folk Festivals, told this story about meeting Mr. Clark there. “I went to the Kerrville Folk Festival (the first time) mostly because I saw on the schedule that he was going to host this thing called the Ballad Tree one day and that anyone could sign up to sing a song. I might get a chance to shake his hand. That was my whole ambition. Somehow, after the whole thing was over, he was walking toward me. ‘Hey, I like that song you did. Got any more?’ “And then he went right on and changed my life. ‘Let’s see if we can get you in the music business,’ he said a few weeks later on the phone. He took the demo I gave him and started passing copies around to his friends in Nashville. When Guy Clark gives you a tape, you listen to it. And so everything changed. He just went on and kicked the door open. That was the most generous thing anybody ever did for me.” Guy Clark (it’s almost impossible just to say ‘Guy’ — it almost demands both names be used.) taught in the songwriter school at Festivals. Davis, the festival Corn Dog King, said he remembers Guy Clark as a mentor to budding songwriters at one of those early festivals. “He was such a mentor to all of these guys. It may not have been an organized songwriting class, but it could have been. They all wrote a song together with Guy Clark and performed it together on stage. Sue Medley, another longtime volunteer and now on the Quiet Valley Ranch Board of Directors, laughed when she remembered Mr. Clark as a true “homegrown tomato. He was the salt of the Earth. He never had a big head about his fame, he was just a good ol’ boy. That’s what I loved about him.” Susan Roads, photographer, said one of her greatest satisfactions was learning that her work had helped Mrs. Guy (Susanna) Clark during her final years after Susanna’s health and despair made her a one-room hermit. Years previously, Roads had presented Townes Van Zandt with a photo she took of him at one of those late 1970s festivals. She said that, after Van Zandt’s death, she learned the photo then hung on the wall inside Susanna’s bedroom, where, she was told, it gave her much comfort. “It’s the ultimate fulfillment knowing something you created gives someone else peace and joy,” Roads said. “Guy could take the simplest thing and show you what was profound about it. He knew that it’s all profound. And he knew better than anyone how to recognize it when he got it right. He also knew not to let it go until he got it right. Any one of his songs will tell you that,” remembered Mondlock. The Monahans man, Guy Clark, split his childhood time there and on the southern Gulf Coast town of Rockport. During the past decade, while he could still tour, his Texas gigs included the Wildflower! Festival, Hank’s Texas Grill, and Poor David’s Pub. Even after his physical condition prevented him from going on the road any more, he kept going with his songwriting, and only a few short years ago released his last CD, My Favorite Picture of You. The title song, as explained in several articles, is about Susanna. But, this reviewer’s favorites are others in the collection, songs that show he was, even toward the end, the world’s premier songwriter. “El Coyote,” “Cornmeal Waltz,” and “The Waltzing Fool” are examples of just how Mr. Clark understand and captured people’s intrinsic pain and joys. A understanding of life on life’s terms that he took with him on May 17, along with the rogue’s charm that was Guy Clark.