Country Music People June 2018 | Page 3

contents cmp June 2018 Features The Outlaw in DALLAS MOORE 10 Dallas Moore by Duncan Warwick The Outlaw spirit is alive and well in the Harley-ridin’, hard workin’ Mr Honky Tonk. Chris Smith talks 90s hits and Merle Haggard with the songstress. 20 Cocaine & Rhinestones T he title of Dallas Moore’s latest album, Mr Honky Tonk, sums him up nicely. A seasoned performer, who last year played 327 shows, he has been building a fanbase for more than two decades. Hailing from Cincinatti, Ohio, Moore has been embraced for his uncomprimisingly old-school Outlaw sound which embraces some Southern rock and roadhouse blues by those in need of something more real, and well, more organic, just like his refreshingly old-school approach to gigging. “It’s totally grassroots. We’re getting out there and taking our music to the people and getting out and playing live every night we can in front of different audiences. It’s really building everything and growing organically. I guess there’s a lot of different ways for folks to do it but it’s what seems to work for us and it’s the thing I love the most about it. I enjoy it not only for playing the different shows everywhere but I love travelling 10 cmp - JUNE 2018 16 Suzy Bogguss and meeting new people everyday.” This devotion to a life on the road paid off last year when The Dallas Moore Band picked up an Ameripolitan Award for Outlaw Band Of The Year, and Moore has perhaps found the spiritual home for his music, in Texas, although the fans for whom he’s played for around 20 years locally might not give him up that easily despite the momentum of recent recordings. “For the longest time we mostly played regionally around Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Tennessee, and we would take an occasional trip once a year where we’d play a motorcycle rally or go to Florida for a week and play, but we weren’t actively touring like we are now. The last three or four years has really turned around and really started picking up steam and, like you just said, took it up to the next level. We want to just keep going with that because everything’s working out really well for us right now.” JUNE 2018 - cmp Duncan Warwick meets Tyler Mahan Coe, the man behind the essential podcast about The History of 20th Century Country Music and the lives of those who gave it to us. Suzy Bogguss 26 Leslie Tom Kelly Gregory meets the Texas honky tonker with a passion for Hank. formative years, folk songs and the future One of the stars of the 90s, Suzy Bogguss, talks to Chris Smith about her forthcoming 3-CD collection from that period. And a little bit about Merle Haggard. 52 Eddy, Don & Lefty T An anniversary tribute to Eddy Arnold, Don Gibson and Lefty Frizzell by Jack Watkins. hat anyone would decide to release a fifty song, 3 CD compilation of her work seems to be something of a surprise to Suzy Bogguss; a pleasant one of course, she describes it as “kinda cool” and told me she feels honoured that somebody would think her work was sufficiently important to want to do that. The album is Aces, released on Hump Head Records and sub-titled “The definitive Capitol collection”; it takes the listener from Suzy’s early developmental deal with that major American label and provides a veritable cornucopia of great songs. Talking about her involvement in the project Suzy seemed a little amused she had not been required to do very much at all, “I supplied the photo” she told me, “I keep a closet full of old memorabilia and there were some photos from the (1992) Voices in The Wind album taken in New Mexico that didn’t get used, and I love the light on them.” We moved on to talking about Merle Haggard and Suzy’s 2014 album Lucky. 58 Country’s Best Whiskey Songs Our guide to some of the best tunes dedicated to Kentucky’s finest. 62 Randy Scruggs Obit. 11 Page 10 Suzy’s introduction to The Hag’s music happened at a very early age and at that time his songs bordered on taboo to a young girl growing up in a small town where everybody knew everybody’s business. “You would get wind of somebody having an affair, or someone’s financial troubles and here was Merle writing songs about those things”. Suzy’s father worked at International Harvester and car pooled with co- workers for the drive into work every day; years later he gave the car to Suzy and it came with all the eight track cassettes of Buck Owens, Ray Price, Eddie Arnold and of course Merle. “I would drive that car around town with a canoe on the roof, listening to that music and it kind of became my identity. I was one of the few people in town that loved country music and I was playing guitar so I was learning these songs because they had simple melodies and great stories to tell.” Fans will know Somewhere Between, the title of Suzy’s debut album, to be a Merle Haggard song and shortly after that release and the radio airplay it generated 16 cmp - JUNE 2018 JUNE 2018 - cmp 17 Page 16 By Walt Trott 63 Rayburn Anthony Obit. By Walt Trott Duncan Warwick speaks to Tyler Mahan Coe. The man behind the po dcast about the history of 20th Century Country Music and the lives of those who gave it to us. Reviews 30 Album Reviews 50 Book Review Regulars 4 News 8 Tour Guide 15 The David Allan Page 29 I Want My Country Back 51 Americana Roundup T yler Mahan Coe has some stories to tell you, and he makes all of them totally compelling. He’ll tell you how Merle Haggard’s Okie From Muskogee had so much to say and how it has been misunderstood for many years, the real reason Loretta Lynn’s The Pill was banned, and he’ll help you understand why the all-round nice guy of country music, Ernest Tubb strapped 20 cmp - JUNE 2018 on a gun late one night with killing in mind. Then there’s the disturbing story of how Spade Cooley went from one of the biggest acts in America to substance abuse, torture, and murder. And those are just some of the highlights of the first season of a podcast called Cocaine & Rhinestones. Billed as “a podcast about the history of country music made in the 20th century,” the show’s host states that, “it had to happen, nobody else was going to do it and I knew I had to at least try,” referring to the task ahead of him. In the podcast Tyler Mahan Coe introduces each episode with “… I’ve heard these stories my whole life. As far as I can tell, here’s the truth about this one,” and when he refers to “his whole life” he means it, for, as his surname implies, Tyler’s dad is none other than David Allan Coe. “I do say that and it does have a lot to do with the fact that I was born David Allan Coe’s son which is the reason why I’ve lived a life in and around the genre of country music. But really anything that brought me to country music at such a young age would have put me in the same position to be able to say those words, because being a fan of country music is to be a fan of the stories around country music. The stories around country music are so often what gets put into the country music itself.” One thing’s for certain, as podcasts have grown in popularity in recent years country music has been severely under-represented. Country music also everything you think you remember. This isn’t a Lifetime movie. It’s rated R,” and Season 2 will be with us soon. The podcasts might feature some household names, but rather more important than that to Coe is the storytelling. “To me it’s about keeping people interested. It comes down to the basics of storytelling and I did hit a few big names in the first season but I didn’t do a whole episode on Merle Haggard or Loretta Lynn. I did a whole episode on a Merle Haggard song and a Loretta Lynn has some dark stories to tell, and the suggestion that it’s about time there was a decent podcast elicits a laugh from Tyler, “Oh yeah, that’s the reason I started one.” The first season of Cocaine & Rhinestones runs to 14 episodes plus a bonus Q&A episode, and includes topics such as The Louvin Brothers, two episodes on Don Rich and Buck Owens, and three on Harper Valley PTA. There’s even one about Wynonna, the description of which states, “Forget JUNE 2018 - cmp 21 Page 20 LESLIE TOM It’s all about Hank on her latest, the Texas singer tells Kelly Gregory. “I was born too late, or you were born too soon” ponders Leslie Tom on the opening song of her recent album Ain’t It Something, Hank Williams, and with a sound she describes as “Traditional country, circa 1950s, with a modern twist,” the Texas songstress is just the person to pay tribute to the legend known as The Hillbilly Shakespeare. But rather than just cover Hank songs like so many before, Tom’s tribute, while laced with classic Williams songs like Hey Good Lookin’, Honky Tonkin’, and I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry is mostly made up of original songs that have been inspired by the work of Hiram King Williams, and even the covers take on a new life in Tom’s hands. It doesn’t hurt none that steel great Lloyd Green is providing some tasty licks either. “Hank Williams was one of the very first artists I remember hearing as a child,” reflects Tom on the motivation behind the project. “His music truly was the foundation for my sound. This project was supposed to be a filler EP to get us through until my first full-length album was released in 2019. As we began working on the record, it took on a life of its own and as they say, ‘the rest is history.’ “When we were writing the original songs, our mission was to write songs that were influenced by the life and music of Hank Williams, but not necessarily making sure that what we were writing fit in or mimicked the Hank tunes we were covering. We wanted to make sure every song included a story or a part of Hank’s life. As the project was finished, we felt like our goal had been accomplished. I love our version of Hey Good Lookin’ and my favourite song on the record is Angel Of Death.” Leslie Tom started playing music at just seven years old and attended a music and arts charter school in Corpus Christi, TX. She began playing violin before moving on to piano and clarinet, and then the choir. However, whilst every performer will admit to some nerves before taking to the stage, Leslie Tom wasn’t keen on being in front of an audience. “The irony of my early life is I had acute stage fright and was unable to sing solo in front of anyone...and I mean ANYONE,” she shouts. “In 2003, a morning show in the US called ‘The Today Show’ on NBC held a singing competition similar to American Idol (though this was pre-Idol). I decided I was going to audition for that show and began taking vocal lessons. “Though I never tried out for that specific TV show, I loved the rush I had when singing 26 cmp - JUNE 2018 JUNE 2018 - cmp 27 Page 26 EDDY, DON & LEFTY: Charts (AN ANNIVERSARY TRIBUTE TO EDDY ARNOLD, DON GIBSON & LEFTY FRIZZELL) 64 Americana & UK Country Charts 65 Billboard Country Charts by Jack Watkins Courtesy of Billboard Inc. RNOLD EDDY A 52 cmp - JUNE 2018 T ony Bennett, the first mainstream popster to record a country song, a shimmering, semi-operatic rendition of Cold Cold Heart in 1951, re ckons the rise of the singer-songwriter in the 1960s undermined “non-composing” artists like himself. What he meant was that the critics started writing off people like that as one-dimensional. He’s probably right. Although Bennett subsequently gained hipster cred by working with Amy Winehouse and Lady Gaga, how many of that crowd would have time for crooning greats like the recently departed Vic Damone – who Sinatra reckoned had the best pipes in the business – Perry Como, Al Martino or Matt Monro? Unless you write your own material, you’re not in the race, dude. The same thing applies to country, the death knell of the singing stylist coming with the arrival of the country outlaws in the 1970s. Thank God for the outlaws, you might say and, fair enough, the Nashville Sound, which helped perpetuate the country crooning tradition, had got a bit stale. But at least we still had the likes of Ray Price and Faron Young to remind us that singing a song, regardless of whether you had written it, was an art form in itself. Today it is hard to think of any country performers who are really carrying on the tradition, who you listen to simply for the appeal of their vocal range. In fact, the tradition is so far gone I suspect the industry has barely noticed the anniversaries of three great country stylists this spring, Eddy Arnold (born May 1918), Don Gibson (born April 1928), and Lefty Frizzell (born March 1928). Okay, Gibson was a prolific songwriter, but he was a fine, stylish vocalist too, about as far removed from the “good songs, shame about the voice” singer-songwriter prototype as you could get. And before we go any further, I should also apologise for the omission here of another fine country singer, Dave Dudley. Born in May 1928, he could easily have made this a quartet, because he could do a nice bit of crooning when the fancy took him. But really he was a truckin’ giant, so doesn’t quite fit in here. E ddy Arnold’s name is almost entirely overlooked in contemporary country circles now. That’s because he is deemed guilty of selling his country soul for pop dollars, which is ironic when you think that almost the entire Billboard Hot Country chart today is filled with artists JUNE 2018 - cmp 53 Page 52