Tag Archives: sxsw

Way out in South Austin

NEWS FLASH: now have a print edition of GRAVE DIGGER BLUES. For info on where to buy it, check the Grave Digger Blues page.

Book singing & signing!!! April Fools Day, 7:30-9 PM, THE BUZZ MILL, Murder Ballad Monday, starring my terrible self + the supercool Bruce Salmon.

Then, on Friday, an awesome event, Noir at the Bar, I’ll be singing & signing books with three other incredibly fine authors. Details here and more below.

Grave Digger Blues, Jesse Sublett, Surrealistic Detective story

The author proofs his work.

SXSW is pretty much over. Our E-Book MeetUp on Tuesday went very well. Thanks to everyone for coming. My MeetUp co-host, Nettie Reynolds, took this pic of me performing the opening benediction, “Railroad Bill.”

Jesse Sublett, SXSW, Grave Digger Blues, Noir, Surrealistic Detective Novel

Plugging Grave Digger Blues at SXSW

BOOK SIGNING: this is pretty cool. I’ll be singing and signing books at BookPeople Friday, April 5, 7 PM – 9 PM, alongside these really fine authors. And when I say “really fine,” I mean these guys write some truly wild, weird, hardboiled stories. They are: Frank Bill (Crime in Southern Indiana and Donnybrook), Matthew McBride (Frank Sinatra in a Blender), and Todd Robinson (Hard Bounce). Pretty cool, huh?

Here, some sights from my SXSW Saturday. We went to see Split Squad, a rockin’ band featuring Michael Gilby, Josh Kantor, Keith Streng (Fleshtones), and my old pals Eddie Munoz (the Skunks, the Plimsouls) and Clem Burke (Blondie). They were rockin’ it good on SoCo.

Split Squad, Clem Burke, Eddie Munoz, Michael Gilby, SXSW

Split Squad at Yard Dog

Split Squad, Clem Burke, Eddie Munoz, Michael Gilby, SXSW

Split Squad, Keith Streng & Eddie Munoz working the crowd

Split Squad, Jesse Sublett, Eddie Munoz, Clem Burke, SXSW

The Split Squad at Yard Dog’s SXSW Saturday party.

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Filed under BLUES, MURDER BALLADS & OTHER COOL RACKET, Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, JESSE'S GIGS, NOIR & TRUE CRIME, self publishing, SXSW interactive

BLEU MONDAY

Jesse Sublett, blues singer, crime novelist, noir, hardboiled

Jesse, Secret Six

A quick blog this morning as we clear away the fog. Had a fine time Sunday morning at the Standard brunch at Swift’s Attic. First up as we came in the door, Kelly Truesdale of Standard and Samantha Howe of Blurb. It was nice to attach faces to the names of the cool people we’ve been coordinating with for SXSW and the whole E-Publishing thing. Standard is a very, very cool online magazine of style and art, and Blurb is a publishing/print-on-demand platform and new model publishing concept for writers, photographers, artists and other creative types seeking new ways of getting their work before the public. On hand were print editions of the latest Standard, showcasing the excellent print quality Blurb has to offer, and it wasn’t until we got home that I really, really looked at the magazine and found photo essay profiles of the Standard people we dined with.

[Note: For more info on this, read my post THE 7 STAGES OF E-BOOK GRIEF].

 

Walking into the room, I heard that unmistakeable shimmering tone of a Collings guitar, which was being played by a singer / songwriter type, name unknown to me, as he serendaded the guests. I wanted to grab the guitar and treat the folks to my rendition of Death Letter, but alas, he wasn’t playing in Open G and I’d left my set of slides at home. Collings are made right here in Austin and the man behind Collings, Steve McCreary, was also one of the guests, giving life to the photo essay on his fine company.

Collings guitar, at birth, in Standard magazine, online & print edition

Collings guitar, at birth, in Standard magazine, online & print edition

Kelly Truesdale, Publisher, Standard Magazine, inside a screen shot of the online version of the SXSW edition

Kelly Truesdale, Publisher, Standard Magazine, inside a screen shot of the online version of the SXSW edition

This is what the Standard magazine interface looks like.

This is what the Standard magazine interface looks like.

Expect to see these people at the E-Book MeetUp hosted by my terrible self and Nettie Reynolds Tuesday, 12:30-1:30 at Proof Annex. There will be copies of this magazine available, and also, if you are interested, you can see my the very FIRST print edition of my latest novel, GRAVE DIGGER BLUES. I’ve ordered a very small print run of special editions that I’ll be signing at events around Austin in the near future.

Also, be aware that the digital versions of the Martin Fender mystery novels, set in Austin in the 1980s, are free to Amazon Prime members today and tomorrow only. That’s ROCK CRITIC MURDERS, TOUGH BABY and BOILED IN CONCRETE.

The next MURDER BALLAD MONDAY at The Buzz Mill, featuring my terrible self and special guest Bruce Salmon, an early show, 7:30-9 PM, will be April Fool’s Day. That’s April 1, 2013 for all you newbies.

pulp fiction, Grave Digger Blues, e-book, blurb, crime fiction, noir, austin author

The author checks a proof copy of his latest mistresspiece.

One final quick note:

Please check out this temporary page of photos by Bill Leissner. Be warned, however, that you might get tired of seeing my face, as all the photos in my collection are of bands I was in during the 1980s. That includes The Skunks reunion show 1985, plus Secret Six, Flex and Hang Em High. Those last 3 bands covered a total of about 4 years and 18 truck loads of Aqua Net hair spray.

The Skunks, Jesse Sublett, Jon Dee Graham

The Skunks Reunion 1985, Jon Dee Graham foreground, Jesse Sublett on bass

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Filed under BLUES, MURDER BALLADS & OTHER COOL RACKET, Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, eBooks, Grave Digger Blues, ibooks, JESSE'S GIGS, MY FAMOUS BAND, THE SKUNKS, NOIR & TRUE CRIME, SXSW, SXSW interactive

“THEY’RE HERE!! RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!” SXSW 2013 BEGINS

SXSW 2013, interactive, live music capital of the world, E-book meet up

It’s here. Go with it, or leave town and do a VRBO with your house!

Please be aware of our E-Book MeetUp, Tuesday Mar. 12, 12:30-1:30 at the Proof Annex, featuring my terrible self, NETTIE REYNOLDS, our sponsors, Blurb, and many of our esteemed writing and publishing and publicizing friends, including Standard Magazine. Read the full description here, and my blog post here, in which I talk about my little journey publishing my surrealistic detective novel GRAVE DIGGER BLUES as an enhanced iPad, then to Kindle, Smashwords and finally, what a strange surprise….. a print edition, being released on April 1, or a few days sooner…

The book looks like THIS.

Grave Digger Blues, apocalyptic pulp fiction, detective fiction, hardboiled, noir, Jesse Sublett

and this:

murder ballads, Jesse Sublett, crime fiction, noir

and… and …

Grave Digger Blues, surrealism, surrealistic detective novel, Jesse Sublett

Grave Digger Blues, surrealism, surrealistic detective novel, Jesse Sublett

Grave Digger Blues, surrealism, surrealistic detective novel, Jesse Sublett

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Filed under Austin, BLUES, MURDER BALLADS & OTHER COOL RACKET, Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, eBooks, Featured, Grave Digger Blues, ibooks, NOIR & TRUE CRIME, self publishing, SXSW, SXSW interactive

Playing Footsy While Rome Burns

right wing, Tea party, John McCain, Lindsey Graham, GOP idiocy

If John McCain had a colostomy, Lindsey Graham would carry the bag.

(Credit: AP Photo/CBS News, Chris Usher)(defaced by Jesse Sublett)

So, today, a little political update. I like Salon a lot, but sometimes I think their graphics are a little weak, thus, this morning’s slightly altered graphic. You can read the salon.com post here.
FROM SALON: SENATE COMMITTEE SET TO VOTE ON OBAMA’S CIA CHOICE
The Senate Intelligence Committee will vote Tuesday on John Brennan’s nomination
BY BY RICHARD LARDNER

You can read the salon.com post here.

TUESDAY, MAR 5, 2013 07:27 AM CST
WASHINGTON (AP) — John Brennan’s nomination to be director of the CIA is set for a key test before the Senate Intelligence Committee.

The committee is scheduled to vote Tuesday on Brennan, who is currently serving as President Barack Obama’s top counterterrorism adviser in the White House.

Brennan’s nomination to lead the spy agency has been held up by demands from Democrats and Republicans for more details about the classified Justice Department legal opinions that justify the use of unmanned spy planes to terrorist suspects overseas, including American citizens, and about the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Libya.

Obama nominated Brennan to be CIA director in early January. If the intelligence committee, which is controlled by the Democrats, approves the nomination, it would then move to the full Senate for consideration.

By the way, back to the usual pop and pulp culture topics, I want to thank everyone for coming out Monday night to my Murder Ballad Show at The Buzz Mill. We had a great gig!

And about that print edition, softcover, illustrated, 200 pages of hardboiled detective story in a surrealistic stew, GRAVE DIGGER BLUES, I just want to say that our micro publishing experiment is progressing nicely, and I should have a small stock of printed copies soon, and will convey info on orders, preorders, book signing gigs, etc., very soon. All this has been possible through the urging of some fine people at Blurb.com, who encouraged me to give their alternative publishing model a try. I’ll talk more about that, and introduce my new friends at our SXSW Meetup Tuesday Mar. 12 (the fabulous Nettie Reynolds will be there too). Details here. Proof is in the pulp fiction pudding, below.

pulp fiction, surrealistic, noir détective, Jesse Sublett

Right, proof copy of Grave Digger Blues; Left, the author


Grave Digger Blues, apocalyptic pulp fiction, detective fiction, hardboiled, noir, Jesse Sublett

Cheers,
Jesse

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Friday Favorites

OK so it’s Friday, so here are some of my favorite things.

JON DEE GRAHAM’S BIRTHDAY PARTY, which was last night, at Maria’s Tacos. Jon Dee played for us, working on his birthday, as he tends to do, and so we were all reminded what a gift he is. Mike Hardwick accompanied him, although the size of Mike’s contributions kind of make the word “accompanied” seem inadequate. Suffice to say, if you’re a fan of Jon Dee Graham, and you go way back to the origins of his groove as a solo performer / bandleader, then you’re aware that a good deal of Jon Dee’s material from his first two albums was developed this way, just the two of them, together, melding their harmonic and melodic grooves. It was grand to hear the early material like this again.

jon dee graham, mike hardwick, the skunks, jesse sublett, maria's tacos

Jon Dee Graham’s birthday party at Maria’s had many cool guests in attendance

Not surprisingly, Maria did a superb job decorating. It was post card perfect. Lots of cool friends were there and a grand time was had by all, I’m sure.

I’ve probably said this before, in this space, but Jon Dee and I met when he was 19 years old, a Plan 2 student at UT with a brilliant career ahead of him, but that was all ruined when he auditioned for The Skunks, to replace the departing Eddie Munoz (who went off to be Elvis Costello‘s guitar tech, then guitarist with the Plimsouls), and Jon Dee got the job, as you may know. Then he went on to other things. UT’s loss was the art world’s gain.

MONDAY IS MURDER BALLAD MONDAY AT THE BUZZ MILL.

jesse sublett, the buzz mill, murder ballads, crime fiction, noir, blues, austin music

I am playing solo 7:30-9 PM Monday March 4. I love this new joint. It’s just off I35 down Riverside on 1505 Town Creek. Sure, you know where Walgreen’s is, right? It’s just West of that, on the North side of Riverside. Before Emo’s or Antone’s or whatever it’s called now. See my blog about the gig here, or just come out. It’s free, for all you cheapskates, and it’s early, for all you elderly 9 to 5 types, and there are drink specials, for all of you lounge lizards. The Facebook event link is here.

SPEAKING OF THE SKUNKS, we will be playing at the super fab MARGARET MOSER BIRTHDAY EVENT, which is being organized by Jon Dee’s son, William Harries Graham. Confirmed performers include The Skunks, Kathy Valentine, Mystic Knights of the Sea, with many other super special guests yet to be announced, so an eye on Facebook or whatever social media pipeline suits you, for more details. Margaret Moser‘s precise birth date happens to be May 14, and mine is May 15, the same year, and Eddie Munoz and Lesley Woods are May 16; and there are many other notable Taureans are around, as you may know.

AND THEN THERE’S SXSW. Nettie Reynolds and I are hosting an EBOOK MEETUP Tuesday March 12, 12:30 PM, details here . It’s sponsored by BLURB. It will be a cool opportunity for all of you who are working with, trying to figure out, or simply curious about going digital with your writing life. It’s been a very, very interesting year for me in the world of EPublishing, and I’m not saying it’s been all wonderful and that I am now an eTycoon or an eNicholas Sparks, or whatever, but I’ve learned a lot and been incredibly inspired. As you can see.

Grave Digger Blues, crime ebook, Jesse Sublett, Dick Cheney in drag

Secret backstage scenes after the Republican coup, as chronicled in Grave Digger Blues.

If you have not yet downloaded my latest noir novella, GRAVE DIGGER BLUES, I hope you will give it a shot very soon. You can buy the Kindle version here, or the Blues Deluxe iPad Edition here. And if you’re really cheap, the Smashwords Bare Bones Edition, text only, is here, for $.99.

enhanced ibook, ipad, novel for iPad, Jesse Sublett, noir, pulp fiction, Kindle, crime fiction for Kindle

GRAVE DIGGER BLUES may in fact be too weird for you. Maybe you’d rather listen to Celine Dion and wear elephant plaid to your high school reunion.

 

 

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Filed under BLUES, MURDER BALLADS & OTHER COOL RACKET, Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, eBooks, Grave Digger Blues, JESSE'S GIGS, MY FAMOUS BAND, THE SKUNKS, NOIR & TRUE CRIME, SXSW interactive

ADD GUN NUTS, REMOVE LOGIC, SERVE

UPDATE 1.9.13: SXSW 2013 is just a few weeks away. Scroll to bottom of this post for news tip about my eBook events at SXSW 2013 Interactive. Also it’s time for you to get shot. Shot by one of Austin’s best, Ricardo Acevedo, who has a great package of SXSW 2013 rates  for you. Blood loss is negotiable, of course. As you may know, Ricardo is one of the great photographers whose work is showcased in Grave Digger Blues, plus he did the cover art. Check the photo, bro, below:

 

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

Photo: Ricardo Acevedo

UPDATE 1.8.13: GRAVE DIGGER BLUES, Bare Bones Edition now available at Smashwords for $0.99. ”Bare Bones” means text only, but with the same insane narrative on hyperdrive packed with hardboiled action, surrealism, homicide blondes, jazz, blues and lyrical brutality, but bargain priced for those of you who don’t care to see 100+ photos of sexy women, doomed private eyes, urban wastelands and pix of Dick Cheney in drag, Reagan-faced monkeys and giant walking catfish.

For all the info you can handle about my favorite creation, check the GRAVE DIGGER BLUES home page.

And a little note to my friends and fans: I wish you’d check out this book and maybe even buy it. I think you’d like it. If you have something new for me to check out, let me know, and I will return the favor.

enhanced ibook, ipad, novel for iPad, Jesse Sublett, noir, pulp fiction, Kindle, crime fiction for Kindle

GRAVE DIGGER BLUES may in fact be too weird for you. Maybe you’d rather listen to Celine Dion and wear elephant plaid to your high school reunion.

UPDATE 1.7.13: MORE POSTS ON OPEDNEWS.COM FROM MY SECESSION CHRONICLE: These new pieces ran in the last week or so and concentrate mainly on the discussion (if you want to call it that) about bringing some sanity to the topic of guns in the USA. I’ll continue to write OpEds for this fabulous progressive news site and post notices of those articles here and on the SECESSION CHRONICLE page. See “THE TOWER MASSACRE, GUN CONTROL & AN VISIT FROM PLANET n-RA” here, and “IT’S OK, HONEY, HIS GUN HAS A NOISE SUPPRESSOR” here.

On August 1, 1966, Charlie Whitman introduced the world to a new concept: the public gun massacre. The NRA has an answer: more guns for EVERYBODY, EVERYWHERE, ALL THE TIME. OH, JOY!

On August 1, 1966, Charlie Whitman introduced the world to a new concept: the public gun massacre. The NRA has an answer: more guns for EVERYBODY, EVERYWHERE, ALL THE TIME. OH, JOY!

UPDATE 1.4.13: SXSW 2013 is inevitable, isn’t it? I will be hosting an E-BOOK MEET UP during SXSW Interactive with my digital guru, NETTIE REYNOLDSThat’s all I have right now, as I’m in the process of wading through the SXSW production thingie to get things set, but basically it will be a one hour session for anybody and everybody involved in digital publishing –authors, publishers, cover artists, publicists, etc.–to meet, exchange business cards or whatever, talk, moan, gush, groove.

UPDATE 1.6.13: I GOT A NEW GUITAR. I’M SO HAPPY NOW.

jesse sublett, Hot Rod Steel, Lenny Gerthoffer, Vintage Nationals, blues guitar, Grave Digger Blues

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Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, eBooks, Grave Digger Blues, gun control, guns, ibooks, mass murder, NOIR & TRUE CRIME, politics, secession, serial killers, SXSW, SXSW interactive, Texas secession

AUSTIN WALKS INTO A BAR

A man walks into a bar. Bartender says, “Hey, you look familiar.” Man says, “Well, maybe it’s because my great-great-great grandfather used to come in here.” It’s no secret that a joint that’s been around a few decades almost always exudes a certain welcoming vibe to its patrons. Like the old joke about the restaurant on the moon: It had great food and everything but no atmosphere.

jesse sublett, jessesublett.com, grave digger blues, noir, austin, austin music scene

Bar. By Jesse Sublett

Last week the Austin edition of Eater.com published a neat story on this topic: http://austin.eater.com/archives/2012/11/30/austins-oldest-bars-lounges-and-beer-joints-mapped.php
, a cool story which I’m sure many of you will agree bears further study.
The oldest bar in town and the first one on the list is Scholz Garten, at 1607 San Jacinto Bl. Scholz Garten was founded in 1867, followed not long after by The Scoot Inn (1871), at 1308 E. 4th (presently closed for renovations). Next on the Eater.com lists are the bar at the Driskill Hotel, downtown (1886), and Threadgill’s on North Lamar (1933), Tavern at 12th and Lamar (1933), Mickey’s Thirsty I Lounge (1934), Longbranch Inn (1935), Deep Eddy Cabaret (1951), Continental Club (1957), Broken Spoke (1964), Horseshoe Lounge (1965), Draught House (1968), Donn’s Depot (1972), Cloak Room (1970s), Cedar Door (1975), and Ginny’s Little Longhorn (1970s).

Even newcomers to Austin might already know that Scholz Garten is the oldest joint in town, but I like to say that you could argue that Scholz also helped set the stage for Austin becoming the Live Music Capital of the World. We have the German community and beer to thank for that, also. You see, a German singing group was organized in Austin in 1852, and after Scholz opened its doors, it was only natural for these folks to gather there and sing and imbibe. The group officially organized as a German singing society called Saengerrunde in 1879, and that year the organization also hosted a gathering (read: conference and music festival) of other German singing clubs. Visualize, if you will, the hordes of German musicians converging on Austin for a weekend of song, fellowship, and schmoozing, way back in 1879, long before iTunes, Napster, Kickstarter, Red Bull, or any of that. All the registrants for this first Saengerrunde by Southwest were issued state-of-the-art convention ID badges made of pressed tin hung on rawhide lanyards, and even in these very formative early years, the town was already atwitter with rumors of a secret showcase by Bob Dylan.

saengerrunde 1879, austin, live music capital of the world, jessesublett.com, jesse sublett, grave digger blues

The first SXSW was sort of held in 1879, the way I figure it, anyway.

No story like this could ever be complete in a bulletproof way, and of course it leaves out all the great dives and joints that came and went without making a big impression for posterity, but we must call attention to a few here, including the Victory Grill (opened V-day 1945), Carousel Lounge (1960s), and Rabbit’s Lounge(1969).

Austinites who know Austin history (or who simply lived it) will also want to mention important defunct establishments like Armadillo World Headquarters and its predecessor, Vulcan Gas Company, and folkie joints like the Fred, 11th Door, and others. Powerful emotions and lots of great stories will be prompted as well by recollections of the late, lamented One Knite Saloon, a real Austin landmark when it comes to the blues scene, as well as the truly historic joints like the I.L., Ernie’s Chicken Shack, Charlie’s Playhouse and Sam’s Showcase. Another club that opened around the same time as the One Knite is the Hole in the Wall, still a spewing spigot of musical expression in Austin today.

raul's club, the skunks, jesse sublett, jessesublett.com, grave digger blues
Pictured above, those benevolent giants who ran Raul’s, Joseph Gonzalez and Bobby Morales. Not pictured, Raul “Roy” Gomez, the owner.

jesse sublett, jessesublett.com, grave digger blues, the skunks, raul's, austin music scene

Me & my Fender Precision bass at Raul’s club with the Skunks, 1978

And, if you were waiting for me to mention Raul’s Club, which opened for business under that name in 1977, I don’t want you to be disappointed. It was here that the moribund and cowpokey Austin music scene was gifted a battery acid enema by the punk/new wave scene starting in January 1978. Austin’s first two punk bands, The Violators and The Skunks, played there just two weeks or so after the Sex Pistolsshow in San Antonio and, as you probably know, I was in both bands.

The Skunks, Austin, Texas, Raul’s Club 1979, performing “Television Lover&quot (youtube);

 

Instead of rounding out this blog with a bunch of lists, I wanted to point readers toward some good histories that have been previously published on this subject, with a half-assed promise to delve deeper into it myself at a later date and share some collected knowledge of the history of Austin night life. “Oldest Bars” story sparked this idea, but in truth, it’s always just below the surface of my subconscious. So, as a step in that direction, something I think about every time I head into East Austin and visit some of my favorite haunts, taking note of the armies of hipsters and slackers and tourists who have rediscovered the cool vibe of East Sixth Street and the neighboring area, including the 11th Street corridor long ago known by such derisive, antiquated terms as “The Congo,” I am directing you to a fine piece of writing titled Bright Lights, Inner City, by Margaret Moser in the Austin Chronicle July 4, 2003.

The Cotton Club was down on 11th Street, just off I-35, coming east right before you get to Ebenezer Baptist Church, at San Marcos Street,” remembers Ernie Mae Miller. “They had nice bands there — Duke Ellington, Count Basie. It must have been the Forties when it got torn down, when I was a kid. Right next door was the Paradise Inn. They had a jukebox, but every now and then, they’d bring in a band.

“My mama would tell me, ‘Now, y’all go to BYPU,’ the Baptist young people’s group, 6 o’clock Sundays. So we’d go into Ebenezer, then out the back door and down to the Paradise. My mama came by there with a switch one time, switched me all the way back home. I just wanted to hear the music!”

And it was the music that shaped Ernie Mae Miller’s life. The 76-year-old native was a band student at L.C. Anderson High School, Austin’s black high school of the day, which was named for Miller’s uncle. Back then, she was known by her maiden name, Crafton, and she played baritone sax. At Prairie View College, she joined an all-girl big-band revue known as the Prairie View Co-Eds, who traveled the country playing army bases, camps, and USOs, even hitting hot spots in New York City.

Afterward, Miller returned to Austin, traded the baritone sax for piano, and by the Fifties, had established herself as a solo musician and singer — in part because her husband didn’t care for her touring with male musicians. Miller crossed racial lines early, playing clubs patronized by whites such as Dinty Moore’s, and in more recent years, she played nearly every hotel bar in town.

Miller’s most famous gig ended its 16-year run in 1967 at the New Orleans Club on Red River Street, then considered the western end of the Eastside’s 11th Street entertainment district. Popular music in the Sixties underwent the birth of rock & roll, which boosted the audience for its parent genre, rhythm and blues, but the results were not always beneficial to the black community. Nevertheless, traditional musicians such as Miller sometimes found themselves in the most interesting of places with the most interesting of company.

“At the New Orleans Club, I played downstairs, and the 13th Floor Elevators often played upstairs,” recalls Miller. “One night it rained, and the place got flooded. That night I’d bought a brand-new pair of red suede shoes. You had to walk down about six steps to get to the club, and that night I had to walk — slush, slush — across Coke cases through the water, while upstairs was the Elevators with people dancing.

“I sure did like those shoes.”

Rockin’ in Rhythm

 In a dark, poorly documented corner of Austin’s memory, it’s pure speculation to suggest that the town’s fabled music scene started in the jazz age of the Twenties. It’s quite possible, however, that young Duke Ellington loaded into Austin’s Cotton Club at the same time that Louis Armstrong was polishing his trumpet in preparation for his well-documented gig at the Driskill Hotel. Jazz was so pervasive at the time that it was being incorporated into country & western music and called Western swing. With the Depression just around the corner, music was as vital to the culture here in Austin as in Harlem or New Orleans.

 The presence of active military bases at Bergstrom and Fort Hood (then Camp Hood) meant soldiers on the town every weekend. Documents on and of the time imply that the rowdy atmosphere led to scrutiny by the city and subsequent regulation. By Ernie Mae Miller’s recollection, the Cotton Club and Paradise Inn were closed by the end of the Forties.

Meanwhile, Huston-Tillotson College’s jazz programs were in full swing, the Apostolic Church at Comal Street and Blackberry offered teen dances, and a place called the Black Cat on 12th was popular, but not until Johnny Holmes opened his Victory Cafe on V-E Day in 1948 did the scene revive. By the time the cafe moved a half-block toward town as the Victory Grill in the Fifties, other clubs like Tony Von’s Show Bar — previously the Black Cat — were booking live music, too. As Henry “Blues Boy” Hubbard looks back on it, “The Victory Grill was it,” but changes were afoot.

“I was playing piano with a trio at the Victory Grill about 1956,” says Hubbard, 69, “when Tony Von had a jazz group at the Show Bar that wasn’t drawing so well, and he invited me to get on guitar. We got a group together — no name, just a group — and within a week, the house was packed, and no one was at the Victory. I went up to the Grill on a Friday not long after, and it was only the people that worked there sitting around looking at each other.”

By the late Fifties, East 11th Street and its jog up 12th was Austin’s musical destination, much as Sixth Street is now. “Lit up like Broadway,” is how some describe the snaking blocks of clubs that attracted jazz, blues, and R&B players of every caliber. Clubs with names such as the Clock Lounge, Good Daddy’s, the Palladium, the Shamrock, Slim’s, and Steamboat attracted a lively following. Like Harlem, the scene jumped with lines to get into clubs, flashy cars, and well-dressed patrons of every color out for the weekend stroll. For a young musician like Hubbard, it was heaven.

The military brought Hubbard to Austin, stationed him at Bergstrom AFB, and here he stayed. In addition to the Victory and Show Bar, Hubbard and company played after hours at places such as Cheryl Ann’s on Webberville Road, near the outskirts of town. It was a good time to be young and in the swing of things; the unlikely benefit of segregation was the tightly knit black community that thrived in East Austin.

“During the time we played at the Show Bar, Charlie Gildon bought the place,” explains Hubbard. He bought the whole block there — barber shop, cleaners, liquor store, shine parlor, and the club. And when he bought the place in 1958, he called me and said, ‘I got part of your band, and they want to make you the bandleader.’ Charlie and his wife wanted it to be a business and wanted a name for the band. So I said, Why not the Jets? I’m a jet mechanic at Bergstrom.’ And that’s how it came about.”

Dance to the Music

Pay attention when Allen “Sugar Bear” Black emcees at Antone’s. He’s been a fixture at the club since the Seventies; he walked into its original location at Sixth and Brazos Street with former Show Bar owner Tony Von to promote Johnnie Taylor and stayed for the next three decades. The tall, handsome man may stand at the door of Antone’s as a greeter of sorts, but he’s a direct link between today’s downtown blues scene and the glory days of the Eastside.

“I was a youngster in 1965, going to Charlie’s Playhouse,” recounts Sugar Bear. “I saw bands like Al ‘TNT’ Braggs, Tyrone Davis, and Albert Collins, but mostly it was Blues Boy Hubbard and his Jets on the weekends. It was basically a Blue Monday club for blacks, but on Friday and Saturday nights, it was 95% white — kids from colleges and the University of Texas. 

“It was real unusual to have that. They didn’t fear coming to the Eastside; people didn’t get their cars vandalized, stuff like that. More like it is now, with blacks and whites in clubs together. There’d be a constable out there with a pistol, to keep people from loitering if they weren’t coming in.”

The presence of a young white audience on the Eastside had been building since the late Fifties. Hubbard theorizes that the proximity of the neighborhood to UT was the crucial link.

The fraternities wanted somewhere to go every week,” he states. “Here’s a club on the Eastside that’s all black, and it turned all white. I wasn’t surprised to see it — if you’d seen how the kids were going on over that music. … When we’d kick that first number, they’d be on the dance floor and wouldn’t leave. They’d dance when we weren’t even playing. They just couldn’t get enough of it.

“The blacks on the Eastside would come to Charlie’s and get turned away. Not exactly turned away, but no room to sit. The fraternities reserved tables for 20, 40, 50, and the Playhouse was full before we’d even kick off. The white college kids were spending more money than the black kids because they had more money. It got to the point that blacks on the Eastside coming from the projects were getting mad at Charlie because of that. But Charlie was looking out for Charlie.”

The impact of a moneyed white audience bolstered East Austin’s economy. Hubbard saw the changes from a businessman’s point of view as well as an artist’s.

Charlie’s brought the white kids from the west side and the runoff enabled the other clubs to have a heck of a business,” he explains. “Like Sam’s on 12th Street and the IL Club across the corner from Charlie’s Playhouse. And when Charlie’s was full, the kids just said, ‘We’ll go to the IL Club,’ because he had a band, too. They just tore that club down a year or two ago.

Sam’s Showcase was the only other club to give competition to Charlie’s, really. W.C. Clark was playing with me then and would say, ‘Well, Charlie’s paying $10 a night, but Sam is paying $12.’ So he’d end up going to Sam’s and play with Major Burkes for a while.

“So Sam and Charlie got together on what they wanted to pay the bands. Sometimes, the musicians would get tired of the same crowd and jump the fence to play another club. The grass always seemed greener. But next thing you know, they were back with me. Until 1970, Charlie had one heck of a business.”

Charles Ernest Gildon, “or maybe it was Ernest Charles Gildon, I’m not sure,” was Sugar Bear’s uncle, a man with a glad eye for a dollar who was in the right place at the right time. In 1960 he bought the after-hours joint called Cheryl Ann’s and renamed it Ernie’s Chicken Shack and would often continue the night’s music from the Playhouse into the morning’s wee hours. Hubbard’s Jets became the after-hours band at Ernie’s, a gig that made them local legends.

Mississippi-born Lavelle White was already a veteran musician based in Houston when bookings brought her to Austin in the Sixties.

“I came to Austin to play,” she says, “and I played a gob of clubs: Charlie’s Playhouse, the Derby, Good Daddy’s, Sam’s Showcase, the Victory Grill. Joe Valentine had a club, too. There were a lot of clubs there and really in the swing, you know? They were really doing it.

Ernie’s Chicken Shack — that was a rockin’ place, and I was a rockin’ girl. That place was so jumpin’, and the best food — mmm, mmmh — you ever ate in your life! That fried chicken and fish was just mouth-watering. It was really hoppin’, I’m telling you. 

“Everybody went there, every weekend night. You could hardly find a place to sit. Dancing and music. Gambling going on in the back room, yes there was. They had bootleg liquor and Blues Boy Hubbard & the Jets. It was wonderful.”

As quickly as it came, the scene went. By the early Seventies, the Victory Grill had closed, as had Charlie’s, Sam’s Showcase, and the IL Club. Ernie’s Chicken Shack served its bootleg liquor and hosted the Jets after hours until 1979, when Gildon died. Nearly every one of the musicians interviewed cites the same ironic factor in the decline: integration.

Integration isn’t the only reason given; drugs, crime, and the changing times played their part as well. Today, the limestone structure known as Symphony Square stands where the New Orleans Club was located, and to look up the block from there toward I-35 is to see how successfully a bit of architecture can affect a culture. The interstate that quite literally divided the city was, as Harold McMillan says, “symptomatic and not causal.”

McMillan moved to Austin in the late Seventies as a student and musician, and his experiences as both led to the founding of his local preservation organizations, DiverseArts and the Blues Family Tree Project.

“Once the desegregation legislation happened,” says McMillan, “like the Voting Rights Act, black folks had a false sense of victory. We assumed that when the laws changed, we could go all over Austin and do whatever it is we do — see music, eat wherever we want. No need to do business just in central East Austin, because investment will come here, too, and it’ll be just fine. Instead, especially in businesses and clubs, it started to die off.”

Some of this was due to what McMillan calls a lack of “critical mass of African-American political and economic power in Austin because the community is so small.” He concedes that the decline happened all over the U.S., yet correctly points out that cities like New Orleans did not turn its back on its musical heritage simply because the times changed.

Like McMillan, Rudy Malveaux came to Austin as a student and would like to see the times changed back. Malveaux also worked as a musician and rapper, playing clubs such as the Mercury, Electric Lounge, and Mercado Caribe. As owner of a small grocery in East Austin in the late Nineties, Malveaux became friendly with a customer named R.V. Adams, who owned the Victory Grill.

In 1997, Malveaux was trying various musical efforts, but the one that took off featured Bobby “Blue” Bland, the Houston R&B singer who’d been a star at the club in the Fifties and Sixties. Opening the show was a local teenage guitarist, Gary Clark Jr., who played with the Blues Specialists and is among the last of the keepers of the Eastside flame.

“When you bring back Bobby Bland, debut Gary Clark, and have an institution like the Blues Specialists, where do you go?” asks a frustrated Malveaux.

[Here's me, your blogger, interjecting a comment: Speaking of Gary Clark, Jr., he's come a long way since this story was published. His new CD, titled Blak & Blu, is selling like bootleg hootch on a Saturday night at Ernie's Chicken Shack, and here's a youtube clip of his song from that CD titled, ironically, "Bright Lights."]

Gary Clark Jr. on youtube performing “Bright Lights”

Malveaux’s question is one he’s pondered for six years. In that time, he’s worked with Showtime, the Austin Music Network, and a variety of musical acts and events at the Victory Grill, including the Juneteenth MusicFest two weeks ago. Not all his efforts are profitable, but his spirit is unflagging, because he believes now, as then, that “the Victory Grill is the cultural hub of East Austin.”

For veteran musicians like Lavelle White, the memory of the Victory Grill in its heyday clashes with today’s reality. She bluntly states there’s no place in Austin for her to play any longer and talks of moving away after her new album is released this summer.

“If you’re a skinny white boy with a guitar, you got a gig,” she asserts. “But no one wants to see a black woman with talent.”

Without rancor, Blues Boy Hubbard agrees.

 “Lavelle is right,” he says. “I was lucky back then; I got with Charlie, and Charlie’s living was me. He hired me in ’58, and I played for him ’til he died in ’79. Every week. But the other black musicians didn’t have a place to hang their hat for 10 years. The club owners kept coming and going. Get a band to a club for a year, someone else buys the club, maybe he don’t want a band.

“Then I went to the Austex and the Continental Club, the Opera House, Steamboat. I met Steve Dean, Clifford Antone, Chuck Geist from Hut’s, C-Boy, and Hank Vick, and these guys all kept me working, opening for Bobby Bland, John Lee Hooker, the Fabulous Thunderbirds. I played the Guadalupe club for a month one time, playing to a lot of college kids, just like the old days at Charlie’s Playhouse.”

There’s an arch over the entrance to 11th Street from I-35 today, and it’s a bellwether of new hopes and old dreams. Drive up 11th Street and the revitalization is evident in refurbished buildings, construction, and a cleaner look to the area. Everyone agrees it’s a positive step for the neglected community: Build it, and maybe the people will come.

Yet the frustration in Lavelle White’s voice is understandable. In her mind, the Eastside’s musicians are still relevant and should have a place in the music scene on both sides of the interstate: “It’s time to make people wake up and smell the music. That’s my new saying: Wake up and smell the music.”

 

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Filed under BLUES, MURDER BALLADS & OTHER COOL RACKET, Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

REMEMBERING BRENT GRULKE

Dear Friends & Family, if you are looking for the memorial I wrote for HELEN RICHWINE, CLICK HERE.

UPDATE: I was talking to Jon Dee Graham Thursday night about all these heavy-duty life events, and he reminded me that Brent was the road manager for the True Believers for their epic adventures on the roadways of America. We had a laugh when I told him that Helen (Lois’s mother) was down there in the back room at Weed-Corley-Fish on SoCo waiting for cremation, same place they took Brent. Jon Dee said, “Brent is for sure talking up a storm with Helen right now.” I said, “Yeah, he’s probably got her smoking cigarettes again.”

Brent Grulke told me that The Skunks (my band, which was founded by me, Eddie Munoz, and Bill Blackmon, then Jon Dee Graham replaced Eddie after he left) was the first band he saw at Raul’s, and this was right after he moved to Austin, and we were the loudest band he’d ever seen, and that it changed his life. I’ve heard that from quite a few people, and I liked hearing it from Brent. Actually, I never knew him that well until he moved to LA for a while. Lois and I moved there in 1987 and we were living in Studio City, where I was writing novels and screenplays and playing in a band with Kathy Valentine, and Lois worked in publicity, then for the LA Weekly. Brent moved in with our good friend Cayce Cage, and they lived in a guest house next to the swimming pool, so most of our hanging out was at poolside barbecues. That was where Brent finally told me how long he’d been a Skunks fan, and I also learned, to my delight, that he loved single malt scotch whiskey. His favorite was Lagavulin, one of the heaviest of the Islay whiskies. I’m a big fan of Islay whisky. Lagavulin isn’t my favorite, but there’s sure nothing wrong with it, and if Brent was pouring, I was happy to drink it.

Cayce was crazy about Brent. Casey is very happily married now to a great guy named Chad and they have a beautiful daughter named Stella.

But the time we’re talking about now is the late 80s/early 90s. Cayce was one of a number of us Austin ex-pats who were more or less slackers in Austin but once they moved to LA, they hit their stride. Cayce thrived in California. Being so gregarious, it should be no surprise that she made a lot of show-biz friends and they all seemed quite fond of her. There were always several cast members from Twin Peaks at her pool parties. Brent was kind of a fish out of water, I thought, though he got along fine with everyone. He just looked like he belonged in Austin.

I liked Brent, but thing I’ll always remember is how much Cayce liked him, even after their romantic relationship ended.

In Austin in the early 1980s, Cayce was a kind of free spirit. She worked for a while at the Austin Chronicle with Lois and for a while she drove this little tiny pickup truck. And for quite a while her only transportation was a little moped that had no brakes. She’d stop by dragging her feet and /or gently bumping off the car in front of her. I’m not making this up.

Our friend Teresa Garrett was part of this group, too. Teresa also moved to LA shortly after we did (as did my best pal Jon Dee Graham, and a number of others). We introduced Teresa to our good friend Randall Johnson, who wrote the screenplay for The Doors, which Oliver Stone adapted for the movie. In weird coincidence, our friend Tom Huckabee also wrote a Doors screenplay. Randy was great pals with screenwriters like Shane Black and Gregory Widen (Back Draft) and the director Pen Densham. Don Knotts lived right around the corner from Randy in Rancho Park. Randy and Teresa fell madly in love got engaged. The engagement party was in Beachwood Canyon and when Lois and I arrived we had to park a good ways down the road, but you could hear Teresa and Cayce’s voice twanging all through the canyon. Loud Texas women, you gotta love ‘em. Randall later got cold feet about the engagement and told Teresa he wanted to go home to his parents and think about it a while. So she started throwing things at him. This frightened Randy quite a bit. I said, “Look, man, next time you tell a girl from Texas something like that, get ready to duck.”

Everything worked out. Randy got married to a great gal and has a son now, too. Teresa is happily married with two kids.

Cayce is a very sweet person (despite having grown up in a small town, Blanco, dangerously close to where I grew up, Johnson City) and she likes to laugh and have a good time. Cayce has this big face and when she likes something it just lights up like a full moon or a big billboard. And Brent always turned that light switch on for her, even on the last trip she and Chad and Stella made here. Something about Brent just warmed her heart. And so when we heard about Brent’s absurd demise, our first thought was how terrible it was for Kristen and their son, Graham. But then immediately my thoughts turned to Cayce.

Actually, what happened, on Monday, we had the memorial service for Lois’ mother, Helen Richwine, who passed away peacefully on Thursday of last week. It was a big day for us, following a rather intense couple of weeks, because Helen had planned it out. She was tired of going to dialysis three times a week. She was 87 and had lived a full life. Actually, I’ve written all about this and you can see it here on my blog post. The point is, we had just said good-by to the last friends who came over after the memorial service and washed the dishes, then sat down for a night cap. We both literally sighed and said, “OK, that’s over…” and Lois looked on her MacBook and said, “Oh my God, Brent Grulke died.”

You know, I write crime novels with a lot of darkness in them and I write and sing a lot of murder ballads, probably at least two or three dozen songs all total, maybe more, but I don’t think death is funny at all. In fact this week, August 16, is the day that my girlfriend, Dianne Roberts, was murdered by a serial killer here in South Austin in 1976. This has been a summer of death in some ways, because this year we had a big fight on our hands after the State of Texas almost granted parole to this serial rapist and murderer. I and a handful of other survivors had to put on a big presentation before the parole board in Angleton on May 11. It was successful, but quite wearying. You can read about that here, in Update to A K A Serial Killer.

And also this weekend is Lois’ birthday, and one more thing, we are moving Dashiell down to San Marcos to start his second year of college there, after moving back from California where he put in his freshman year at Whittier College. So we’ve got a number of landmarks going on all at the same time.

The house is still full of flowers from Helen’s service, but they’ll be dead soon, ready for compost. Helen is being cremated. We’ll take her ashes up to the Monongahela River Valley, where she was born and raised, and scatter them along with those of Harry Richwine, Lois’ dad, who passed away five years ago, on Easter, ironically.

Lois’ Uncle Billy DiMascio, at 84, the baby of the family (nine siblings total) was here all week, full of life and laughter. We took him to some of our favorite Italian restaurants (well, actually, the two best in town, Vespaio and Enoteca, the only ones we go to) and he was favorably impressed. Plus Lois made us an Italian dinner, too, which he was also quite pleased with.

So we’re thinking about past, present and future here. It’s easy to get temporal displacement, with all this birth, death and life going on at once. Sometimes when you’re happy, you forget about the hard, dramatic parts of life. It’s all part of the same stew. Just like blues music has that flatted third. It’s not all minor and it’s not all major. Sometimes it’s this neat mixture of both, and that’s the blues. That’s life.

One other note about Brent. I remember when the big Elektra compilation of Texas bands came out called Ten From Texas: Herd It Through the Grapevine. We were excited, because we thought Austin was about to be recognized, worldwide, as this music Mecca. And we thought that my act, then known as Jesse Sublett’s Secret Six, was ready for a major label deal. Our song on the compilation, “No More Weekends in Warsaw,” came out pretty well. A big ballad, dramatic and modern sounding. Brent reviewed the record and remarked, more or less: “I wish Jesse would sing more naturally because when he uses this affected voice, he sounds strained or something.” Not word for word, but that was the gist of it. I wasn’t offended, because, unlike some of my friend-critics, he inserted (I think he did, anyway) that little caveat, “I wish…” which made all the difference.

When we moved back to Austin, Brent was in between things and we cooked him a big dinner with lots of booze and when we sent him home, we filled the back seat of his car with vinyl records, which we just didn’t want anymore but being farsighted and fanatical about music, Brent still treasured vinyl. We thought we’d be seeing more of Brent after that, but I guess we just moved in different circles.

Thinking about Brent just reminds me of all the Austin people we’ve known forever who kind of built the music community here. A lot of them, or hell, probably most of them, were slackers and crazy artists and misfits, people who, when you take Austin out of the picture, it’s very difficult to imagine them even existing. It reminds you that for all its faults, Austin is a real special place and has been for a long time. But then again, it’s largely because of these people.

And so, not long after Brent moved back to Austin, I came here for about a week to do research for a novel. Brent put me up. He had a house on the east side, nice place, with the weekly poker games with his gang of poker pals. We watched the level go way down in his bottles of Lagavulin every night. And he picked me up at the airport and we went to get tacos at this place on 38th or Cherrywood, I forget the name. I ordered some tacos and a couple of hot pups (for outsiders, that means a jalapeno stuffed with cheese, battered and deep fried), because I am an aficionado of hot pups. We sat down to wait for our numbers to be called out and the guy behind the counter called out, “Hey man we’re outta hot pups wanna beer same price?”

I said, “What?”

“We’re out of hot pups,” he said, enunciating only slightly more this time. “Want a beer instead? It’s the same price?”

“Yeah, sure,” I said. I loved that. It was so Austin.

It feels criminal not to mention this last association with Brent Grulke. By 1986 I was fed up with driving a band van, plus we were moving to LA so I could be the rock n’ roll Raymond Chandler, playing blues on the side. So I put my van up for sale. A 1979 (or so) Dodge Maxi-Van, a stripped down cargo van. So generic and minimal, it barely had seats. No upholstery, no padding in the cargo area. High mileage, and I bought it from a sleazy car lot so I’m sure the odometer had been rolled back at least once. In fact I thought it might be on its last legs. To my chagrin, Mike Hall responded to the ad and sent over his mechanic. Mike’s band, the Wild Seeds, were one of those bands who wanted spread their rock n’ roll gospel to every little club and joint in the USA. To my surprise, Mike’s mechanic, Steve McGuire pronounced the van in good health. They bought it and I crossed my fingers. With Brent as their road manager, the band fitted the van out with padding and futons to save on motel bills and they crisscrossed the country and played every town far and wide and underneath. Brent told me they LOVED that van. He said it finally died, after more than 150,000 Wild Seeds miles, in some town up in the northeast. They knew it was dead because a big chunk of the engine block had fallen off.

So long, Brent. Even that van finally wore out, but the music survives. The body dies, but the smile remains. Have a beer, it’s the same price. I’ll keep a bottle of Lagavulin on the bar in case you stop by.

Please visit the SXSW site “Friends and Staff Remember Brent Grulke” and contribute to the education fund for Graham Grulke here.

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SXSW Fri -Sat Final Blow-out

Hi friends. My favorite gigs are about to happen. We’ve had our dose of Bruce Springsteen and other cool SXSW things, plus a little buzz about my Rock Critic Murders: The iPad Edition which people are downloading from iTunes.

Fri. 3/16/12 5:30-7:30 PM, Uncle Billy’s on Barton Springs, Jon Dee Graham & Jesse Sublett’s Murder Ballad Show. My great pal, Austin’s beloved bear of a guitar hero singer songwriter raconteur, Jon Dee Graham, of the Skunks, and me, My Terrible Self, for your amusement, on guitars and basses, making joyful racket. Must be seen to be described.

Sat. 3/17, Afternoon show, Benefit for Austin music legend George Kinney, at Uncle Billy’s on the lake, along with a slew of Austin psychedelic legends. Details here.

AND, NO JOKE, ON APRIL FOOL’S DAY (for you Right Wing Home Schoolers, that’s the First Day of April): The April Fool’s Rag Blog Benefit on Sunday, April 1, 6-9 p.m., at Jovita’s. The bill is Shiva’s Head Band, Greezy Wheels, and the one and only Jesse Sublett.

Cheers, Jesse

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The Skunks Are Number One (in Davis, CA)

Just rec’d this message. — The Skunks are #1 in Davis, CA. Hello, Austin?

The message was from Harry at Last Laugh records, who reissued “Earthquake Shake” / “Can’t Get Loose” a few weeks ago. The single is available at Waterloo Records, unless they’ve sold out, and by now should be available from major distributors.

See a recent clip of band doing “Earthquake Live” "Earthquake Shake".

The exact message from KDVS-FM, with the Top 30 list, is below. But if you’re in town for SXSW, you can see 2/3 of the Skunks — Jesse Sublett & Jon Dee Graham, at Uncle Billy’s on Barton Springs Friday 3/16, 5:30-7:30 PM. That’s right, we’ll be doing two sets, murder ballads, blues, etc., doing our part to keep austin Weird.

We are happy to announce that The Skunks’ “Can’t Get Loose” was among our Top Ten most played records this week at KDVS 90.3 FM in Davis, CA. (#1)

KDVS Top 30 and Top 5 New Adds for 03/05/2012

Tali Link, Jess Abell, Hatem Gallouzi: Music Directors
Brent Batty: Assistant Music Director

KDVS Top 30

1. The Skunks – “Can’t Get Loose” (Last Laugh)
2. Charles Albright/Matt K. Shrugg – “Split Personalities 7″ (Sacramento/Phono Select)
3. U.S. Girls – “The Island Song” (Calico Corp.)
4. The Mentally Ill – “Gacy’s Place 7″ (Last Laugh)
5. King Lollipop – “Woodland Whoopee Songs Of OL’ Callowee!” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
6. Terrible Truths – “s/t” (Small Town City Living)
7. Buzz – “See You Sioux” (Dark Entries)
8. The Pharmacy – “Dig Your Grave EP” (Kind Turkey Records)
9. Unnatural Helpers – “Unnatural Helpers” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
10. Thorbjorn Risager – “Dust & Scratches” (Cope Records)
11. King Dude – “My Beloved Ghost” (Bathetic)
12. Baloji – “Kinshasa Succursale” (Crammed Discs)
13. Actual Water – “She’s A Priest b/w Latoya” (Plastic Idol)
14. Sola Rosa – “Get It Together” (Melting Pot Music)
15. Uzi Rash – “I Saw You 7″” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
16. Bad Drugs – “Raw Powder” (Rotted Tooth)
17. Cheater Slicks – “Guttural: Live 2010″ (Columbus Discount)
18. Twin Steps – “Serial Parade” (Cola Bruin)
19. Sound Became Color – “Sometimes the Sun Shines Through the Rain” (Daly City Records)
20. The Lonesome Savages – “All Outta Love EP” (Kind Turkey Records)
21. Slim Twig – “There’s A Secret To Your Pleasure” (Calico Corp.)
22. Beverly McClellan – “Fear Nothing” (Junk Drawer)
23. The Andy Poxon Band – “Red Roots” (EllerSoul Records)
24. Various Artists – “Friends & Friends Of Friends Vol. 4″ (Tender Loving Empire)
25. Dead Boomers – “The Pig in the Python” (Sabbatical )
26. Lilac – “Lilac” (Omega)
27. Kidda Band – “(Watch Out) Thief” (Last Laugh)
28. Vanna Inget – “Allvar” (1-2-3-4 GO!)
29. “Blue” Gene Tyranny – “Detours” (Unseen Worlds)
30. Pete Swanson – “High Time b/w Trees” (Emerald Cocoon)

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