Saturday 31 August 2013 - Visionary Noise Presents: Silent Hunters, Elyse, In Zurgo, and First Turn

Silent Hunters
(Sorry, No information available on-line)

 

 

Elyse ( Houston, TX)
https://www.reverbnation.com/elyserox

Fans rock-out to ELYSE’s flare of indie rock and groove to their melodic chords and lyrics. Critics often reminisce of Kings of Leon with Elton Salazar’s raw lead vocals and Sergio Moya’s deeply musing lead guitar lines. Newly added member, Ricky Vasquez, offers walking bass phrases to ELYSE’s English music that reminds us of The Smiths. Beto Hernandez’s drums, rhythmic and solid, seamlessly compliments ELYSE’s jangle rock style.

Some of ELYSE’s influences—The Beatles, U2, The Smiths, and The Who—have all helped forge ELYSE’s power pop compositions such as “The Haven”, ”Shooting Flowers”, “Los Buitres”, and “Perfume” that captivate us as fans and gives us that predisposition to sing along and bob our heads in harmony.

ELYSE released its debut EP album in 2010. Since, ELYSE has not been short of sharing the stage with Latin international rock bands at annual music festivals and stunning the local critics…

2011 Radio EXA Music Festival, Brownsville, Texas
Shared stage with—Moenia, Moderato, and Panda
Critique:
“I loved the show! It was not what I expected!”
Claudia González | Radio EXA Live Brownsville

2012 Unik Music Festival, South Padre Island, Texas
Shared stage with—Plastilina Mosh, Enanitos Verdes, and El Tri
Critique:
“It is important that our Latino talent is recognized. Congratulations ELYSE!”
Teresa Alonso | Telemundo News

Having shared the stage with a myriad of star-power Latin international rock artists, is not the only feat ELYSE has achieved. In 2010, ELYSE merited the respect, and in succession, the privilege to record their first self-titled EP in Monterrey, Mexico with renowned producer, Sacha Triujeque, who has worked with likes of Gustavo Cerati (Soda Estereo), Kinky, Jumbo, Volovan, and Molotov. Guest appearances in their debut album included Jumbo artists Charlie, bass player and Beto, drums.

ELYSE sets its horizons on pushing forward to explore its English rock aspirations but not forgetting its Spanish Rock roots. Headquartered in Houston, Texas, ELYSE is poised to launch its first major English and Spanish Rock LP in late 2013. Sergio Moya sums up the band’s sentiment, “Truly, producing and recording ourselves would be ideal, it would not only gives us creative control of our work, but it would also give us the time or self-pace that we would need to create a great product every time; in the spirit of indie rock, we feel we owe it to ourselves and to anyone who loves our music to strive to be independent as best as possible; however, not accepting constructive help from the outside would be narrow-minded as well. There are lots of great musical minds in the world, and a collaboration deal with a talented producer would not be out of the question”.

ELYSE’s live performances are undoubtedly energetic and engaging, driven with passion, and contagious, winning over the loyalty of fans and earning the respect of local artists and promoters. Elton Salazar explains, “You know all your efforts are validated when you see fans in the crowd singing along to your songs, and local bands ask to cover your songs, or if we share a bill with them, they stick around or show up early to watch you perform; the feeling is awesome to know that you are admired, not only by your fans, but by your peers as well.”

 

InZurgo (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/Inzurgo

 

In-Zur-go [ Verb ] ..
To renounce, and resist by force, the authority of the ruler, government or society to which one owes obedience. To rise up, rebel, revolt… See “rebellion”

 

Joel Sinisterra, Jaime Suarez, Jonny Suarez, Peluchin

 

 

 

 

 

 

First Turn (Jacksboro, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/firstturnband

 

First Turn is a band from Jacksboro, Texas. A small town, but has nothing to do with the rather large sound created by the five Them and their instruments. What kind of band are they? Cant tell. With the different influences from Thrice to Blink 182 this group knows how to rip it up, this band is definately one people will just have to listen too. First Turn is a group that will surely grow on you.

Friday 30 August 2013 - Trial By Bourbon * Jimmy Pizzitola * Little Outfit

Trial By Bourbon (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Trial-By-Bourbon/124485971033010

 

Tim Rieker
Michael Sifuentes
Matt Foster
Ben Parks

 

 

Jimmy Pizzitola – (Houston, TX )
https://poetontherun.net/

Jimmy Pizzitola is a Houston based singer/songwriter, night-time landscaper, and lover of all things jellicle (except Cats). His early musical influences, driven into his three year old skull while being held captive in the back of a 1968 blue Malibu by his carpool-driving mother, were the singer-songwriters of the 1970’s. Between dropping off and picking up siblings and assorted neighborhood ruffians, Jimmy was force-fed Jim Croce, Neil Young, James Taylor, Gerry Rafferty, and of course, Der Weinershnitzel corn dogs. Come weekend, he would often head out to South Texas with his father and grandfather to shoot at things. Sitting on the console of a Ford Bronco, squeezed in between stacks of 8-tracks and bottles of V.O., he would sing along with Waylon, Willie, Hank Williams (Jr. and Sr.) Don Williams, and other country-fried offerings of the time.

Fast forward ten years.

Strictly in the name of research, his father would often venture out into various ice-houses and beer joints in order to update his blog (betterbeicefreakingcold.org), which focused on the relative temperatures of Miller Lite in different sections of the city. Jimmy would often accompany him on these outings and it was there that he observed first-hand the so-called “Texas Singer-Songwriter” in his original habitat. Needless to say, it had a lasting effect. He quickly blackmailed his father into buying him a pawn-shop guitar and started learning Townes Van Zandt songs.

After returning to Texas from Colorado in 1998, Jimmy began writing songs and fronting a Houston-based Alt-Country band, Jimmy James and The Enablers. Songs like the honky-tonking “Where the Hell’s The Johnny Cash in Your Jukebox?” and the quirky “Sweet Marie” were instant fan favorites. After a failed attempt to cut a record the old-fashioned way – with an investor, producer, hired guns, etc…, and the birth of a child, Jimmy took a performing hiatus and tried having a real job, with an income and everything. It didn’t take and it didn’t take too long before Jimmy had a fresh batch of songs and began hitting the clubs again. He also started devoting more time in his home studio and began working on the record that would eventually be Poet On The Run.

In 2007, Jimmy was included in Steve Harris’ book “Texas Troubadours” alongside the likes of Billie Joe Shaver, Kris Kristofferson, Guy Clark, Joe Ely, and others. He joked at the time that he was the only one in the book without a record. With the 2010 release of Poet On The Run, all joking aside, Jimmy is sure to carve out a place all his own in the long line and deep-seeded tradition of the mythical Texas Singer-Songwriter.

 

 

Little Outfit (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/Littleoutfit

Rooted in the modern folk movement, Little Outfit delivers crafted songwriting with open melodic arrangements and soulful harmonies. Alt-Country/Folk-Rock with Texas swagger.

Thursday 29 August 2013 - Rudz Beer Tasting Dinner with Joe Apa featuring Selections from Six Point Brewery

Join us on the last Thursday of each month as Joe Apa, formerly of T’afia and Plum Easy Kitchens, brings you food carefully paired with beer selections from some of the finest breweries around. Each month features a different brewery and a unique dining experience.

Visit the our event page for the lastest on this month’s pairing
https://www.rudyardspub.com/wordpress/rudyards-beer-tasting-dinners-with-joe-apa/

Seating is limited to 40 so signup ahead of time at the bar, on-line at the page link above, or call us at the bar at 713-521-0521.

Early sign-ups get a $5 per-person discount before the Monday of the dinner ($45 per person)…after that it goes up to $50 per person.

 

August 29 Beer Tasting Dinner
with selections from Six Point Brewery

Date: Thursday August 29 (7pm)
Discount Seating: $45 through Sunday August 25
Regular Seating: $50 beginning Monday August 26

Six Point Brewery (https://sixpoint.com/)

While some historical records indicate Sixpoint Brewery was founded in 2004, the real birth of Sixpoint begins at the dawn of civilization. That is when the earliest societies began cultivating cereal grains to make fermented beverages, and the desire for excellence in the craft of brewing was forged. Even during the earliest civilizations, rich iconography had adorned various brewing vessels, and pictographs depicting the craft of brewing were rife with symbolism. One symbol has transcended and survived throughout the ages - the Sixpoint Brewers’ star.

The idea of “Sixpoint” as a code of brewing has resiliently persevered over centuries of rapid human development. But it has not been a journey without struggle or conflict. The symbol was very prominent during the medieval period and up until the early 1900s, but its popularity and visibility started to wane within the last century. After 1950, Sixpoint was nearly snuffed out and one of the cornerstone crafts of our civilization was nearly extinguished. Was Sixpoint dead, or just dormant?

The shimmering light of the Brewer’s star started to shine once again in 2004 with its reincarnation as “Sixpoint Craft Ales.” This is when the Sixpoint Brew Crew not only resurrected the Sixpoint Brewers’ Star, but also breathed life into a patchwork of brewing equipment within an 800 square foot garage in a then-dilapidated neighborhood of Brooklyn, NYC called Red Hook. The original creations of Sixpoint Craft Ales were a mash-up of professional brewing experiences, global brewery influences, and unbridled homebrew proliferation. Out of this modest maritime enclave hundreds of delicious craft brews were concocted and disseminated, and the star had been reborn.

The reincarnated star proved to have an attractive radiance. The historical traditions of craftsmanship that had been coursing through the veins of others also drew them to Sixpoint. Within years, a team of Sixpoint Brewers and Staff had gathered underneath the Sixpoint star, not knowing how they arrived there, but knowing they must keep the Sixpoint tradition alive.

 

Monday August 26 2013 – A Couple Of Stand Up Guys Open Mic

OpenMicMondaysA Couple Of Stand Up Guys (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/rudzopenmic

Formed in January 2012, it is a rotating group of comedic talent from the Houston area set on revitalizing the local comedy scene with new talent featuring the best of Comedy and Music culled from the Houston Open Mic scene. Currently the group is performing Bi-Monthly shows within the Houston area.
Our Free Comedy Open Mic Show Opens At 9:00. Show star

Sunday 25 August 2013 - The Ridgelands * Los Gritos * Ookami Kids

The Ridgelands (Chicago, IL)
https://www.facebook.com/TheRidgelands

 

Ever wonder what it would be like if the ninja turtles drank and sort of played instruments instead of fighting crime? Yeah? Well then we’re your band. We are The Ridgelands, we aint got nothin’ to lose… cept your respect. But we probably lost that when you stumbled across our page.

DAGGERS RULE!!
ALL HAIL CARDIEL!!!

 

Los Gritos (Houston, TX)


https://www.facebook.com/LosGritosStreetPunk

 

Los Gritos!! are a band from SouthEast side of Houston from a barrio called Meadowbrook started back around 97-98 playing streetpunk uk 82 and oi!!

 

We played many shows to remember with many bands. We are still going strong!!

 

Ookami Kids (Houston, TX)

https://www.facebook.com/OOKAMIKIDS

PUNK ROCK AND ROLL

JERMZ - BASS/VOCALS,
LAUREN - GUITAR/VOCALS,
SHAUN - LEAD GUITAR,
LEXI - DRUMS.

Saturday 24 August 2013 - The Aristocrats

The Aristocrats (England, Unites States, Germany)
https://the-aristocrats-band.com/

The word “supergroup” is tossed around a lot in instrumental music circles, the result of a seemingly endless supply of efforts to package together individual virtuoso players and make a band out of them. But every once in a while, thegroup part of that shopworn term becomes authentic and real. Such is the case with The Aristocrats – guitarist Guthrie Govan, bassist Bryan Beller, and drummer Marco Minnemann – who defiantly and joyously blow the supergroup stereotype to bits, thrilling audiences and fans around the world in the process.

Let’s get the requisite individual credentials out of the way:

* Guthrie Govan is arguably the hottest guitarist on the international music scene today, and his 2006 solo album Erotic Cakes was widely recognized as an instant classic. His top-level touring experience (Asia/GPS, U.K. rap superstar Dizzee Rascal) complements his busy schedule as one the most in-demand guitar clinician/educators in the world, and he was featured on the cover of Guitar Player Magazine in July of 2011;

* Bryan Beller’s numerous credits include guitarists Steve Vai (Beller’s featured on Vai’s 2009 live DVD Where The Wild Things Are), Mike Keneally (Frank Zappa), and the hugely popular metal “band” Dethklok, borne of the Adult Swim (U.S.) animated TV show Metalocalypse. His solo artist catalog includes three CD’s, two DVD’s, and an instructional DVD for Alfred Publishing, and he was featured on the cover of Bass Player Magazine in October of 2012;

* Marco Minnemann has played with everyone from Steven Wilson (Porcupine Tree) and Adrian Belew (Zappa, King Crimson) to technical death metal specialists Necrophagist, and is looked upon by fans and peers as one of the most gifted, innovative, cutting-edge drummers in the world. He’s graced the covers of several drum magazines, including Modern Drummer. Perhaps less known: He’s a multi-instrumentalist and compulsively productive composer with nearlytwenty CD & DVD solo releases to date.

Despite their individual followings, The Aristocrats’ formation was a matter of considerable happenstance on a barely-paying gig. Beller and Minnemann had a trio slot scheduled at the Winter NAMM show in Anaheim, CA in January of 2011, and their guitarist was a late dropout. Govan was a last-minute replacement who they met for the first time in rehearsal, the night before the show. The electricity was immediately obvious, with their unbeknownst-to-them shared influences infusing a high-energy instrumental fusion with an aggressive, playful, even cheeky edge.

The single 45-minute set they performed the following night unexpectedly floored the audience – and themselves – with near-telepathic interplay and boundless musical energy, leaving heads shaking in disbelief that it was their very first gig. The response was overwhelming, and the band formed practically by demand on the spot. “The chemistry was so great,” recalls Govan, “that when we came offstage we all said to each other, ‘This is working. We should record this.’”

A mere three months later, the band convened in person in Chicago – eschewing the usual remote file sharing method in favor of actual live band chemistry – and tracked their debut album in just eight days. Consisting of nine tracks (three contributions from each member), the music turned out to be a melting pot of their respective influences, ranging from the seminal ’70s jazz-rock fusion of Return To Forever and Mahavishnu Orchestra, to the progressive rock of King Crimson and UK, to guitar heroes like Steve Vai and Joe Satriani, to the absurdly complex and satirical music of Frank Zappa and Mike Keneally, and even to ’90s groove metal like Rage Against The Machine. But this strange brew is peppered with memorable melodies, myriad shifts in dynamics, and sensitive treatment of musical timbres that explore the limits of what the electric guitar, electric bass and drums in a power trio can achieve.

Beller says of the tunes, “We ended up using our different influences to write foreach other. I wrote “Sweaty Knockers” specifically for Guthrie to have fun with, while Guthrie wrote “I Want A Parrot” with bass leads in mind. As for Marco’s material, we’re just lucky to be able to keep up with it.”

The ever-mischievous Minnemann’s song titles – such as “Boing!…I’m In The Back” (borne from a publicly indescribable incident in Russia) and “Blues Fuckers” (in which a typical blues form is violated in every way imaginable) – along with Beller’s “Sweaty Knockers,” prompted Govan to wonder if the band shouldn’t be named The Aristocrats, after the infamous dirty joke and movie of the same name. It stuck, and The Aristocrats were born. “We’re going to have a raucous rock vibe and a sense of humor about the music,” says Govan, “which you might not expect to find in other muso projects in which people are flung together to make an album in a hurry.”

The band released The Aristocrats on their own label, BOING Music, in September of 2011. It was universally praised as one of the most interesting and groundbreaking instrumental albums of the year in publications from America to Japan, France, Germany, and around the world. Seemingly every major guitar magazine took the opportunity to finally do their feature or cover story on Guthrie Govan, and the album appeared on many of that year’s top ten lists. Music schools in particular felt the impact, as a wave of students took to covering Aristocrats tunes much in the same way Steve Vai’s Passion And Warfareinspired players a generation ago.

As of 2012, the band has successfully toured both coasts and the Midwest/mid-south of America, eastern Canada, the U.K., Benelux, France, Spain, Sweden, Italy, Germany, Poland, Croatia, Turkey, Greece, Israel, Korea, and Japan. The band’s live energy and otherwordly chemistry are captured on the DVD/2CD release BOING, We’ll Do It Live! The Aristocrats At Alvas Showroom, which is set for a December 2012 release. Looking to the future, the band plans to start tracking its second studio album in January of 2013.

The key thing to remember is that The Aristocrats are a true band. Whether it’s about the music, the touring plans, the record artwork and sequence, the business decisions, or what have you, everyone has an equal say. Perhaps Guthrie said it best when he used the phrase “a rowdy democracy of musicianship.”

It’s not just fusion. It’s not just shredding. It’s not even meant to be taken seriously at times. It’s just the sound of a new band, consisting of three guys who did a NAMM show gig and discovered they had something musically deep going on together…and also had a propensity for employing R-rated song titles.

So what do you call an act like that?

The Aristocrats.

 

Friday 23 August 2013 - Beta (Sketch Comedy – doors 7pm) followed by The Hickoids * The Beaumonts * Poor Dumb Bastards (doors 9pm)

Beta (Sketch Comedy – doors 7pm)

 

Beta (Houston, TX)
https://www.betatheater.com/

Beta presents Houston’s only independent sketch troupe comprised of the city’s most talented and experienced comedians. Beta is a fierce comedy show dedicated to pushing the comedic boundaries with sketches for the stage and film. Audiences can look forward to seeing a Second-City-style comedy show with diverse characters and expert writing.

Beta is: Amy Birkhead, Jeromy Barber, Antoine Culbreath, Ty Mahany, Adrien Pellerin and Adrian Frimpong.

 

 

The Hickoids * The Beaumonts * Poor Dumb Bastards (doors 9pm)

 

The Hickoids (Austin, TX)
https://www.hickoids.com/

Hell, let’s just cut to the chase right at the outset. The Hickoids defy easy and neat description, or even messy description, though “messy” was often applied to the band’s members and their shamelessly uninhibited punk rock run for the wilted Texas yellow roses from 1985 through ‘92 — one of the mildest descriptions, in fact. The tags hung around their scrawny and unruly necks like name and number slates in arrest photos include but are hardly limited to cowpunk, white thrash, glambilly, hard-corn, psychobilly, hick rock, acidbilly and out on bail. All in a way apply, but none and even the sum of those terms do these magnificent musical reprobates full justice.

To truly “get” The Hickoids as they were in their original wild, wooly and damned loud and raucously ragged magnificence, combine tequila with beer chasers (not the other way around), psychedelic shrooms, demon musical seeds spewed by The Sex Pistols, The Ramones and Iggy & The Stooges, honky-tonk and “Hee Haw,” hay bales scattered in the air, power chords and toxic twang galore, battered cowboy hats and tattered thrift store dresses, and their Austin hometown in all its late ‘80s cheap rent/booze/pot/living slacker splendor. That’ll give ya a bracing taste of what was and now, nearly 20 years after they sputtered to a halt, returns anew. Or simply mix the notions “Texas” and “punk rock,” multiply that to the Nth exponential, and shake vigorously. Voila! Hickoids.

Now in 2011, The Hickoids throw another wrench into the cogs of preconception on Kicking It With The Twits. Yeah, they’re an American band in ways that Grand Funk Railroad could never have dreamed of in their worst nightmares. But proudly flying the Union Jack of the Disunited Kingdom across the pond on their latest release makes perfect sense for this resolutely renegade rock’n’roll band.

The eight-song mini-album shouts never mind the corn, here’s the Brit-rock bollocks that are as much a primal musical scream within the Hickoids consciousness as the magic mushrooms found growing in the cow patty of the band’s twisted American roots. Anyone who has wondered where the cross-dressing, splashes of glam and elegantly wasted decadence that The Hickoids have ingeniously perfected into the highest levels of low art will find the origins here on songs by superstars like The Rolling Stones, The Who and Elton John as well as such quintessentially English groups as Mott The Hoople, Eno, Slade, The Move and punk pioneers The Damned.

The disc abounds with transatlantic twists like a billowing blues harp on Pete Townshend’s ode to onanism, “Pictures of Lily,” and Sir Elton’s #1 hit “Bennie and the Jets” neon lit by rolling Texas tumbleweed steel guitar. The Jagger/Richards 1965 social commentary of “Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadow” and the first Brit-punk single “Neat, Neat, Neat” are reborn in the colonies and supercharged new millennium garage rock nuggets. The Saville Row savoir faire of Eno’s “Needles in the Camel’s Eye” gets transmogrified into a swirling psychedelic storm and The Move’s “Brontosaurus” becomes a heavy metal guitar squall. The stomp’n’roll of Slade’s “Gudbuy T’ Jane” gets amped up to 11, and Mott’s “Whizz Kid” becomes a roaring slide guitar fever dream. Just as The Hickoids have done with everything they’ve musically touched since their mid-1980s breech birth, this set sparks a roaring American heartland prairie fire from the fuel of the band’s seminal British inspirations.

“The Hickoids are to country music what a stick of dynamite is to firecrackers. Back in the days when no one had to worry much about keeping Austin weird, The Hickoids were doing their best to make it the weirdest place in Texas, if not on earth,” observes William Michael Smith of the Houston Press today. Although it’s nothing short of a miracle that the group even survived their sordid past, the truth be told they “sound as big and badass as ever,” raves their hometown rag the Austin Chronicle. Key members Jeff Smith (aka “The Thin White Duke of Hazzard”) at the microphone and Davy Jones on his gnarly guitar still lead the charge, ably abetted by Jonie Hell on drums, Rice Moorehead on bass, Jacob Schulze on guitar and keyboards and Scott Lutz on steel guitar.

“There are some things about The Hickoids that will never be known,” confesses Smith. “You could only know them by being there when they were happening.” And even those who were there debate the facts and/or try to remember them. But this much is known and not in dispute: Three original — and we do mean bracingly original — vinyl (somewhat) long-playing record releases titled We’re in It for the Corn, Hard Corn and Waltz a Crossdress Texas, plus a holiday spirits 45, “We Got the Eggnog If You Got the Whisky.” Thousands of miles in run-down stinking band vans and hundreds of gigs whose memories linger for those who witnessed them like God’s own worst hangover after a damned and devilishly fun night of demented hillbilly from hell rock’n’roll revelry. And a genuine legend left in their wake along with drained beer kegs, pregnancy scares, arrest warrants, damaged eardrums, shattered psyches, and truly fond recollections of how The Hickoids buzz-sawed through musical clichés and conventions while staging intoxicatingly (and intoxicated) extemporaneous entertainment extravaganzas whenever they took the stage.

Those who happily suffered the damage in the day and lived to rave about it include such influential rock star dudes as Peter Buck of R.E.M., Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth, Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic and Sublime drummer Bud Gaugh. Nine Inch Nails opened a show for The Hickoids on their first tour. The guy who recorded the band’s debut album describes it in his Wikipedia entry as a “destructive, reckless, absurd, stoned, drunk, sped-out tweaked mess that happened to capture that mentality and people related to it.” The Hickoids are also proudly listed on Eagle Glen Frey’s website as one of the artists who have covered — but to be more accurate in this case transmogrified — one of his songs, “Take It Easy.” (“Has he ever heard our version?” wonders Smith.)

It’s no surprise that the two main principals behind The Hickoids were both corrupted soon after puberty by rock’n’roll. For Smith it was reading the English music weeklies Melody Maker and New Musical Express that he bought at a local underground record store in San Antonio at age 13. “I was following the Sex Pistols saga very closely,” he recounts. Soon after he was singing Pistols and Ramones songs in his first band at school assemblies. At the end of his high school years Smith fronted a “porno punk” band called The Bang Gang who got as far as opening for Bad Brains at CBGB in New York City, and put out an EP, She Ran But We Ran Faster, that even cutting-edge punk zine Maximum Rock’n’Roll found so offensive they wouldn’t run an ad for it.

By 1985 Smith was living in Austin and not just dropping but bottoming out of his Radio, TV & Film studies at the University of Texas. He decided to start a band with his friend Jukebox, “who was one of the best guitarists on the fringe of whatever passed for the punk scene in Austin,” Smith recalls. And also “an itinerant black-marketeer [read magic mushroom dealer] who carried around a teepee and lodge poles atop his van but never set it up.”

Their concept was “Gary Stewart meets Black Flag with psychedelia and glam thrown in,” explains Smith. The group’s debut gig was opening for, fittingly, Black Flag and The Meat Puppets in San Antonio.

Guitarist Davy Jones coined the band’s name after watching a homeless guy in a crumpled cowboy hat dumpster diving and remarking, “There’s a real hickoid-looking son of a bitch,” sealing his fate to join the combo a few months later. He had started playing in bands at 13 on the East Coast and “got Southernized” in 11th grade when his family moved to Arkansas. Then the debut New York Dolls album and Raw Power by The Stooges “changed everything,” he recounts. After graduating from college, “I was at a loss to get work and fucked up and went in the Army. But the good thing was that I ended up at Fort Hood in Texas and started coming down to Austin and going to shows.” A stint in the seminal Lone Star hardcore outfit The Offenders led to his relocation to the capital city after a surprisingly honorable discharge.

The Hickoids line-up eventually solidified with Central Texas punk scene vets and brothers Richard Hays on bass (now dearly departed) and Arthur Hays on drums, later replaced by Wade Driver due to Arthur’s ongoing troubles with the law and stretches in jail and on probation or parole (dilemmas to which the rest of the band’s members were also no strangers). They initially released their debut album in 1985 on Smith’s Matako Mazuri label, later picked up by Toxic Shock Records. That year they aced out local C&W favorites like Willie Nelson, Asleep at the Wheel and Jerry Jeff Walker to win Best Country Band at the Austin Music Awards. “All it really did was piss-off people who actually played country music, and we of course dug that,” says Smith. “Mission accomplished. That award and two bucks would have got us a six-pack of Lone Star back then.”

They followed with an EP, Hard Corn, that included a reinterpretation of “Kung-Fu Fighting” as “Corn-Fu Fighting.” On a subsequent West Coast tour, Jukebox absconded with the tour proceeds. “He was probably always better off as a solo artist,” Smith notes philosophically. “And it did unite the rest of the band.” They considered titling their final eight-song 1989 release Teepee My Ass in honor of their larcenous former bandmate, but instead named it Waltz a Crossdress Texas for their inclination to shop for stage duds off the ladies rack and smear on make-up.

By 1991, the “nutball cudpunks,” as San Francisco Weekly dubbed The Hickoids, no longer had the breath to siphon gas into their corroded creative tanks. After all, their antic and substance fueled stage shows were no act, and in truth only the highpoint of a 24/7 lifestyle. “It was a chicken or egg sort of situation,” Smith explains. “Did being in the band allow us to engage in immoral and illegal behavior? Or did engaging in immoral and illegal behavior allow us to be in a band? At the time we didn’t grapple with such heavy questions. We just got by and enjoyed being able to engage in immoral and illegal behavior.”

More than once in their travels The Hickoids heard the line, “Place your hands on the vehicle.” And on an all too frequent basis they barely escaped gigs and other scrapes with their lives. Booked one night at the last minute into an oilfield trash juke’n’puke in Odessa, Texas, Smith walked into the club bathroom after their set to find Jones, garbed in stretch pants with a tiger tail, facing the business end of a knife brandished by a six-foot-six tall redneck who didn’t appreciate the band’s unique take on the country music ethos.

The Hickoids certainly weren’t the Grand Ole Opry. After a show in Athens, Georgia attended by only two people, Peter Buck and Jones’s father, the elder Jones told his son, “I hear the punk, but I don’t hear the cow.” Band members would alternate nights being the one who fell down drunk (and worse) on stage. And to bring it all back home to the barnyard, they’d often shower their audiences in hay. “We weren’t above grabbing a bale or two out of a ditch being used for flood control,” Smith recounts. “We had to be careful because sometimes they had ants in them,” much to the itchy dismay of audience members the following day.

Garbed in mix’n’mismatch yard sale chic, gender-bending regalia or t-shirts that read, “Fuck You, We’re From Texas,” The Hickoids were rarely if never less than a sight to behold. Smith would frequently unzip during shows to let his flagpole fly in all its randy glory, and full frontal and back nudity was neither above nor below them on occasion. Yet on the best nights and even the worst, the group pursued their musical mission with an invigorating potency and abandon as well as affectionate if also hilariously ironic corniness that was so life changing there oughta be a law against it.

Song titles like “U Kin Lead a Hoss to Water, But He Still Drinks on His Own,” “Animal Husbandry” and “Pennsylvania Mexican” hint at their knack for making bad taste timeless. And no sacred cows were spared from slaughter as they slashed and barbequed covers like the Elvis Presley hit “Burnin’ Love” yet also recorded a surprisingly musically true cover of a Webb Pierce’s honky-tonk classic, “There Stands The Glass.” But as Jones points out, “I like that fact that we didn’t take it seriously. That’s an important part of rock’n’roll.”

A handful of reunion shows through the 1990s started to coalesce into reformation school after the turn of the century. As Jones explains, “Even when we really didn’t do shows for 10 years or so, I just considered The Hickoids such a part of me — ‘That’s my band,’ the most important one, and certainly the most satisfying. It’s the greatest group I’ve been in. I’ve never stopped being a Hickoid, not that I now dress in conflicting plaid and stripes every day.”

Smith eventually relocated back to San Antonio and again started a record label, Saustex, which re-released the material from the last two Hickoids records on CD as Corn Demon in 2006. Last year’s The Hairy Chafin’ EP sounded the siren for the rebirth — or maybe better re-spawn — of The Hickoids to be heard on their highly-anticipated upcoming full album, The Hairy Chafin’ Ape Suit. Rated as a slab of tunes that “kicks some major booty” by Punk Planet, “these perverse purveyors of cow-punk poon-twang have whipped up five saucy tunes” raves Blurt. And the best — well, maybe better said the most bad ass yet from the band — is percolating up to full blast in the near future.

“We’re making a record that is true to who we are now,” Smith explains. “Funny, but a subtler brand of funny. And more musically solid.”

On the other hand, Jones points out, “It’s only going to be so grown up.” But their redneck punk rock filth and fury still retains its 100 proof potency. “Apart from maybe the Groovy Rednecks or Hank III, there aren’t any country-rock performers around these days who live it up recklessly and raucously with the same boozy, profane attitude and hell-raisin’ abandon as the Hickoids,” notes L.A. Weekly

“The delightfully lewd, crude and lascivious Hickoids have returned from the corn crib of oblivion,” declares Blurt. So lock up your wives and daughters as well as your liquor and medicine cabinets, batten down the hatches, and happily beware. The corn is again popping, roasting and brewing in the still as The Hickoids return to criminally mischievous action. After fomenting a musical revolution from the dung of punk rock and country, they’re back to rule the roost like the proverbial wolves in the henhouse of contemporary music.

 

Beaumonts (Lubbock, Tx)
https://www.thebeaumontstx.com/

There’s something about Lubbock. Something other than the oppressive blue sky, the unavoidable cloud of shit-smell that occasionally engulfs the city, the flat, featureless landscape, or the preponderance of teen pregnancy, boredom, alcoholism, and God. There’s music. Yes, indeed there is. The Hub City has spawned music like you wouldn’t believe. Music loved by folks the world over. Even the real “King of Rock and Roll” came from Lubbock, and if you believe that (which you’d be a damn fool not to), then it ain’t too much of a stretch to believe Lubbock is also home to the greatest country band that ever existed. That band is THE BEAUMONTS.

It wasn’t too long ago that four of Lubbock’s most loved veteran musicians decided the state of Texas country music was dismal at best, and horrifying at its worst. Somehow, over the last twenty years, it became acceptable for a group of frat-boys to show up in thrift-store AC/DC shirts, play half-ass Lynyrd Skynyrd tunes about drinking Lone Star and smoking weed, and call that “country.” Well, good friends, THE BEAUMONTS didn’t think that was “all that damn country” and decided to do something about it. What resulted was a juggernaut of essence, the trooest of troo cvntry, something akin to the creation of the universe, but with Telecasters. Behold, good friends, and delight in the majesty of THE BEAUMONTS!

 

Poor Dumb Bastards (Houston, TX)

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Poor-Dumb-Bastards/126350582202

PDB was formed in March 1991 by long time hetero life partners and musical collaborators, Mike Porterfield and Byron Dean. The initial interest was to find a means to get into Emo’s for free, later they discovered Emo’s was always free. Drawing on their collective influences and experiences from some of their earlier work, bands like Cretinoid, Plutonium Flatheads and the Byron Weird Group, Mike and Byron set out create a genre all their own, hence “Texas Drunk Rock” was born. Add the non bass playing talents of Steve Scholtes and the competent, metronomic drumming of Chi Chi Macoola, and PDB were able to carve their initials on the bathroom door of the Texas music scene. Through the many years and many lineup changes, but these Ill-minded sewer rockers have stayed true to their founding principals. POWER, PERFORMANCE, PERVERSION