Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Brock Zeman 5/6/15 $85 7pm

 
Over the course of 11 albums, Ottawa area singer songwriter Brock Zeman has built a reputation as a writer of great depth and passion, through his thoughtful, often personal songs. But he’s got a rough, rockin’ side as well. Joined on relentless tours across Western Canada and down to Texas and back by his ever present collaborator, Blair Hogan, and often drummer Dylan Roberts, Zeman and crew can put on a powerful show that has attendees rocking as much as feeling the stories that he tells in song. He could easily be the bastard son of Lucinda Williams and Steve Earle, with a gravelly Tom Waits voice.
brock zemanOn his last couple of albums, Zeman had been experimenting with dense sound scapes that told as much of the story as his words. On the newest, “Pulling Your Sword out of the Devil’s Back,” the words and melody are at the forefront, and with a batch of songs as strong as these, they certainly should be. The melodies on the record are his strongest yet. Many are instantly memorable, and could find a home on commercial country or rock radio. If those tired formats played powerful songs like these, “Dead Man’s Shoes” could be a strong country hit, and “Little Details” or “Some Things Always Stay” would be blaring out of car windows all summer long.
Although the songs and the album sound fun, there is some deep emotion spilled out. Zeman tells some sad stories of heartbreak and love gone wrong on this one. One of the most sad and powerful songs is “10 Year Fight,” where he recounts seeing the father of a former lover, who has been struggling after “Daddy’s little girl, she’s gone wrong.” After the meeting Zeman says, “I finally lost the battle of a 10 year fight. I broke a promise to myself that you would never get a song. Don’t it look like I was wrong.”
In the powerful title track Zeman speaks more than sings, “I live in a house full of ghosts that just won’t let me be. I let ‘em in myself, but now I can’t get ‘em to leave. I’m haunted by love…” and now he’s exorcising those ghosts inside of these songs. For him, writing songs is “Juggling words and chiseling lines to tell a story, to tell the truth… It’s just heart to tongue, tongue to hand, blah, blah, blah, and struggle.” Later in the song, Zeman says, “And when you really knock it out, and all the planets align, it’s like pulling your sword out of the devil’s back and saying ‘No! Not this time!’” before building to a powerful crescendo finish.
With this record, the sword has obviously come loose, and there’s no doubt that Zeman will use it to battle other ghosts, demons and devils in song. The prolific writer has already written the bulk of another album, and has a wealth of other material still awaiting recording or release. This is a mature, powerful album from a writer who truly needs to be heard. Here’s hoping that many new ears will be tuned to this one.

Chuck Hawthorne & Ray Bonneville 5/3/2015 $110 7PM

 
 
 

Chuck Hawthorne was sitting in a Chicago airport next to his guitar case. He had been visiting friends for the weekend and was waiting on a flight back to Austin, where he had recently relocated following his retirement from the US Marine Corps. Another gentleman toting a guitar took the seat next to him and struck up a conversation. That man was Juno Award winning artist Ray Bonneville.

As the flight boarded, the two exchanged contact information, and Ray asked Chuck to send him some songs. Chuck had heard that line before and figured that airport conversation would be the last he heard from Ray Bonneville. But the next day, he emailed Ray a few songs anyway. Ray sent a reply that would change Chuck’s life and career. It read, “Let’s meet for coffee and discuss your record.”


Every now and then, you run across someone with a library’s worth of stories to tell. But unlike the raconteurs who regale friends with well-embellished versions of their exploits, these storytellers have lived so much, they reveal chapters of their hard-won wisdom slowly, carefully, like layers peeled from an onion.

Ray Bonneville didn’t even open his storybook until his early 40s, some 20 years after he started performing. But with a style that sometimes draws comparisons to JJ Cale and Daniel Lanois, this blues-influenced, New Orleans-inspired “song and groove man,” as he’s been so aptly described, luckily found his rightful calling.

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Jeremiah Johnson Band $140 5/2/15

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Every ticket includes the show and also a full 4 star dinner, parking and all gratuities in an incredible VIP venue.
You will be spoiled by the waitstaff and the intimacy of the event! 
The nationally touring Jeremiah Johnson Band, original rockin’ blues band with Jeremiah Johnson, lead guitar, vocals; Jeff Girardier, bass; and Benet Schaeffer, drums.  Jeremiah has been writing original music for decades and continues to polish his art through consistent rehearsals and tireless touring. Though born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri, he seasoned his songwriting by spending a decade on the Gulf Coast of Texas, working hard at making a name for himself as an original Blues Artist.  Johnson returned to St. Louis to continue his mission to share his music with the world. Now five albums into his career, he has a sound that is both fresh and original, blending St. Louis Blues, Southern Rock and Traditional Country in to a style that has something for every discriminating music fan. 

Monday, April 6, 2015

David Allan Coe 4/25/15 $150


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Official Site

Born September 6th 1939 in Akron, Ohio, USA. From the age of nine, Coe was in and out of reform schools, correction centers and prisons. According to his publicity handout, he spent time on Death Row after killing a fellow inmate who demanded oral sex. When Rolling Stone magazine questioned this, Coe responded with a song, ‘I’d Like To Kick The Shit Out Of You’. Whatever the truth of the matter, Coe was paroled in 1967 and took his songs about prison life to Shelby Singleton who released two albums on his SSS label. Coe wrote Tanya Tucker’s 1974 US country number 1, ‘Would You Lay With Me (In A Field Of Stone)?’. He took to calling himself Davey Coe – the Mysterious Rhinestone Cowboy, performing in a mask, and driving a hearse. He satirized the themes of country music with hilarious additions to Steve Goodman’s ‘You Never Even Called Me By My Name’, but has often used the clichés himself. His defiant stance and love of motorbikes, multiple tattoos and ultra-long hair made him a natural ‘Nashville outlaw’, which he wrote about in the self-glorifying ‘Longhaired Redneck’ and ‘Willie, Waylon And Me’.

In 1978 Johnny Paycheck had a US country number 1 with Coe’s ‘Take This Job And Shove It’, which inspired a film of the same title in 1981, and Coe’s own successes included the witty ‘Divers Do It Deeper’ (1978), ‘Jack Daniels If You Please’ (1979), ‘Now I Lay Me Down To Cheat’ (1982), ‘The Ride’ (1983), which conjures up a meeting between Coe and Hank Williams, and ‘Mona Lisa’s Lost Her Smile’ (1984), which reached number 2 on the US country charts, his highest position as a performer. Recordings with other performers include ‘Don’t Cry Darlin” and ‘This Bottle (In My Hand)’ with George Jones, ‘I’ve Already Cheated On You’ with Willie Nelson, and ‘Get A Little Dirt On Your Hands’ with Bill Anderson. 

Coe’s 1978 album Human Emotions was about his divorce – one side being ‘Happy Side’ and the other ‘Su-I-side’. The controversial cover of Texas Moon shows the bare backsides of his band and crew, and he has also released two mail-order albums of explicit songs, Nothing Sacred and Underground. 

Coe appears incapable of separating the good from the ridiculous and his albums are erratic. At his best, he is a sensitive, intelligent writer. Similarly, his stage performances with his Tennessee Hat Band differ wildly in length and quality: sometimes it is non-stop music, sometimes it features conjuring tricks. Coe’s main trick, however, is to remain successful, as country music fans grow exasperated with his over-the-top publicity. He may still be an outlaw but as Waylon Jennings remarks in ‘Living Legends’, that only means double-parking on Music Row.

Friday, April 3, 2015

Upcoming Shows

Upcoming shows @Texan Theater
4/8/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $175 -- Marty Stuart           
4/9/15     -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Alyse Black          
4/10/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $340 -- Rick Springfield 
4/17/15   -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Matt Harlan             
4/18/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $125 -- Wade Hayes           
4/19/15   -- 2:00 PM --   $75 -- Gary P Nunn
4/22/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $140 -- Jimmie Vaughan
4/25/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $150 -- David Allan Coe
4/26/15   -- 2:00 PM -- $120 -- Mills Brothers
 
5/2/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $140 -- Jeremiah Johnson 
5/3/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $110 -- Chuck & Ray 
5/6/15     -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Brock Zeman
5/8/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $110 -- Malford Milligan
5/23/15   -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Roy Bookbinder

6/4/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $140 -- Acoustic Alchemy
6/6/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $100 -- Band of Heathens
6/13/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $175 -- Fran Cosmo
6/18/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $110 -- Tommy Allsup
6/20/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $110 -- Ken Mellons & Sammy Sadler
6/21/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $130 -- Amar Khalil

7/10/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $110 -- Evening in the Round
7/11/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $220 -- Ricky Nelson Remembered
7/17/15   -- 7:00 PM --   $90 -- Suzanne Choffel
7/23/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $110 -- Eddy Raven & Frank Meyers

8/5/15     -- 7:00 PM -- $350 -- Ballroom with a Twist
8/7/15     -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Whiskey Shivers
8/12/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $100 -- Funny Thing on Way to Forum (Live Play)
8/13/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $100 -- Funny Thing on Way to Forum (Live Play)
8/14/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $100 -- Funny Thing on Way to Forum (Live Play)
8/15/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $100 -- Funny Thing on Way to Forum (Live Play) 
8/16/15   -- 2:00 PM --   $80 -- Funny Thing on Way to Forum (Live Play)
8/22/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $220 -- The Bellamy Brothers 


9/4/15     -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Two Tons of Steel
9/12/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $140 -- Mark & Clark Dueling Pianos
9/25/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $350 -- Little River Band

10/3/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $140 -- Divas of Soul
10/8/15   -- 7:00 PM --          -- Chad Elliott
10/10/15 -- 7:00 PM -- $100 -- Plank with Band
10/16/15 -- 7:00 PM --   $85 -- Will Sexton
10/31/15 -- 7:00 PM -- $290 -- Barbara Eden

11/13/15 -- 7:00 PM --   $90 -- Gurf Morlix
11/21/15 -- 7:00 PM -- $290 -- Village People

12/5/15   -- 7:00 PM -- $290 -- Helen Reddy
12/18/15 -- 7:00 PM -- $120 -- Dale Watson
12/19/15 -- 7:00 PM --          -- Michael Londra Celtic Christmas
12/31/15 -- 6:00 PM -- $180 -- Hit Men Live
12/31/15 --10:00 PM - $180 -- Hit Men Live