Bob Wills blogging

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From the Sundries Shack:

Everyone here who has heard of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys raise your hands.

Good!

Now the rest of you go out and find one of Wills� CDs, listen to it, then come back here and tell the class just how cool Western Swing really is and how it�s physically impossible to feel bad when you�re listening to it.

From SFist, in response to Charles Barkley's complaint about country music in the NBA All-Star Game half-time program:

Now, we at SFist have always liked the Round Mound of Rebound, even when he balled all over the Warriors in the 1994 playoffs, but we were a little bummed out by his larger point: most popular country music sucks. It sucks because it's homogeneous. It's produced for an audience with geographic, racial and economic boundaries, and it (i.e. the music, but now that you mention it much of the audience, too) has little to no regard for what else goes on in music, culture, or really anything. And don't get us started on alt.country, which seems to abide by the following imperative more than anything else: As soon as you're famous or important, stop making records that are fun, or sound like they were fun to make.

If you agree with Sir Charles, too, if you long for boundary-crossing or brio or fun in country-western music, if you are as annoyed by the whole thing as SFist (we annoy pretty easily, so we're skeptical of that last), git along to San Francisco State University the next three Tuesdays (March first, eighth and fifteenth) to celebrate Bob Wills at 100. The inventor of "Western Swing," Bob Wills combined country music with Nawlins jazz, blues, ragtime and traditional Mexican music. He and his Texas Playboys came up with a style that swung just as hard playing "Basin Street Blues" and "Take the 'A' Train" as it did playing "The Yellow Rose of Texas" and "Hey, Good Lookin'." They came out of the small-groups jazz tradition that gave us Louis Armstrong's greatest work, with the Hot Fives and Sevens, and their bandstand improvisation foreshadowed groups like the JBs and the Meters.

Here's a link to that San Francisco State program on Bob Wills. Anything like that happening here in Tulsa?

The Hypothetical Wren wonders about the lyrics of "Roly Poly":

I was listening to this song on the iPod while I was walking home this morning, and thought, how many songs these days would include the phrase "Daddy's little fatty" in them? As a compliment? Of course, this kid was obviously walking and doing strenuous yard work, so the "bread and jelly 20 times a day" were probably a good idea: the kid was tired. He needed bread, not to mention "corn and taters."

And finally, here's a little something I wrote last November, which includes a little reminiscence from my grandfather. (Grandpa told me once that he didn't dance much at those performances -- he preferred cuddling in a dark corner.)

3 Comments

Victor said:

I'm glad to see Bob Wills is getting his due--my father listened to him frequently when I was young. But I'm curious about one thing: When did Texas Swing transmogrify into Western Swing?

BTW, check out the Hot Club of Cowtown sometime for some new Texas Swing. Not bad for a bunch of kids :)

Victor said:

I'm glad to see Bob Wills is getting his due--my father listened to him frequently when I was young. But I'm curious about one thing: When did Texas Swing transmogrify into Western Swing?

BTW, check out the Hot Club of Cowtown sometime for some new Texas Swing. Not bad for a bunch of kids :)

Ron said:

Bah. If Barkley had even bothered to listen to Big & Rich, I don't think he would have complained. I don't think you can call a band which contains influences from hip-hop, Southern rock and the Louvin Brothers homogenous. Plus it's fun to listen to -- like Bob Wills was.

It's not like Big & Rich are some sort of cult band, either. They've sold 2 million copies of their album and counting.

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This page contains a single entry by Michael Bates published on March 6, 2005 6:48 PM.

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