Friday, October 30, 2009

Billy Mata receives AWA Western Swing-Album/CD of the year


Billy Mata's newest cd "This Is Tommy Duncan" received the prestigious National Academy of Western Artists Western Swing CD of the Year. Mata is also a previous recipient of the AWA's Western Swing Male Vocalist. You will want to make sure to download your copy of this wonderful cd at www.buckatune.net

Billy Mata & The Texas Tradition provides entertainment for true country music traditionalists as well as a new generation of Western Swing enthusiasts. Billy has been performing 30 years for audiences. His followers and enthusiasts range from traditional Honky Tonk listeners to Western Swing dancers. No matter who the audience is, all enjoy the energy and spirit of the musical talent of the performance.

The band is made up of some of Texas' strongest professional musicians with a combination of more than 165 years of musical experience. This includes strong lead vocals by Billy Mata and features true country fiddles, honky tonk steel guitar and true Western Swing style electric guitar that would make Eldon Shamblin proud. The guitar, bass and drums rhythm section are the 'real deal' - making it almost impossible to sit down when you could be dancing. The style of music played is from Bob Wills, Johnny Bush, Mel Tillis, Ray Price, as well as the popular sounds of Asleep at the Wheel, Jerry Jeff Walker, Robert Earl Keen, and many more!

Billy has also made several guest appearances with the Texas Playboys at Western Swing Festivals in Nocona & Snyder, Texas and Hobbs & Ruidoso, New Mexico. Some other same stage performances include: Asleep At the Wheel, Darryl McCall, Earl Thomas Conley, Eddie Raven, Emilio, John Conley, Johnny Rodriquez, Randy Travis, Ray Price, Rick Trevino and many special guest appearances with Leon Rausch, Tommy Allsup & The Texas Playboys.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Christmas In Ol' San Antone


Bobby Flores and Dicky Overby have created an outstanding Christmas cd, featuring some favorite christmas songs.Dicky and Bobby waited a long time to record this special Christmas album together. It was recorded entirely in one day at BGM Studio in San Antonio. It's several of the Christmas favorites done in traditional Country style, lots of fiddles & steel, and it's very unique. Excellent work also by Jake Hooker on upright bass, Jim Loessberg on drums and Randy Reinhard on piano.

Tracks include: Away In A Manger, O Come All Ye Faithful, O Holy Night, Silent Night, Joy To The World, Silver Bells, O Little Town Of Bethlehem, What Child Is This, In Excelsis Deo, and First Noel.

You will definately want to add this your Christmas cd collection. You can listen to tracks and download the cd at www.buckatune.net

Friday, October 16, 2009

New Spur Band mp3 tracks available at www.buckatune.net


Bill Hudgens & The New Spur Band is a Group of very seasoned musicians that have many years of experience between them. All of the musicians have played with a lot of top groups in the state of Missouri. They have all done openers for some top national acts and played onstage for some major stars as well. They bring to the stage professionalism and some fine Americana Honky Tonk music sure to please dancers and listeners as well. One of their many original songs is featured here on this site. See why they are a major draw at the venues they play. Bill Hudgens is the lead singer as well as M.C. and rhythm guitarist. Earl Knapp Jr. is the Lead guitarist and does second vocals and harmony. Dewayne (Dewey) Nichols on Bass guitar and Spot & does harmonies. JR Davis is the groups heartbeat on the drums. (Reprint from http://www.myspace.com/thenewspurband)

Download mp3 music tracks at www.buckatune.net

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Red Kilby "Keepin' It Real"


Red Kilby's cd "Keepin' It Real" is now available at www.buckatune.net

Now he's done it, really done it! Red Kilby had this irrational idea he could go to Texas and get some of his musical heroes from the past together; steel players, guitar players, and others. Then to make matters worse he even imagined he could cut a real, genuine country album just like we used to record in the 1960's. Talk about Paranoia!

Evidently, the world is madder than I suspected. He did it. Red got Ralph Mooney, Jerry Brightman, Dicky Overbey and me, Lloyd Green, to play steel on various songs-some of which Mooney and I are infamous for- added the great Redd Volkaert and Junior Knight on Electric guitars and Dale Morris on fiddle. To sweeten the pie he put Jeff Williams on piano, Dick Dunn on drums and Reggie Brown on bass, then had Joe Bielinski produce all these guys, with Robert Snyder engineering and mixing the music. Red Kilby, the man with the dream who thought he could make this happen is, of course, the singer, with occasional harmony from Jake Hooker. Mooney sounds just like the "Moon" I used to love listening to in the late 1950's and 1960's, while Brightman takes one of the classic Weldon Myrick solos on "I'll Come Runnin" and recreates a masterpiece in his own brilliant style. Overbey is splendid, adding great color, emotion and playing to a number of these tunes. I played the solo on "Crystal Chandeliers" that I never got to play on the Charley Pride "Live At Panther Hall" album. This is the solo I meant to play. Really I did, Red.

This first song on the CD "That Bakersfield Sound" will please and surprise everyone, while later Brightman and I combine our efforts on the Billy "Crash" Craddock song, "I'm Gonna Knock On Your Door".

It'll take you a long time to absorb all of the good steel and other music on the CD, so get prepared for some of the finest shuffles and country recordings to come down the road recently.

"By the way, I guess I shouldn't have doubted that Red Kilby could pull this off. When he wanted one of the world class muscle cars, he became the proud owner of "Ginger", an award winning, mint condition 1969 Dodge Charger R/T. And yes he plays the 1969 8-track tape of "Live At Panther Hall" in this show piece." Lloyd Green-Steel guitar

(Reprint with permission from http://www.redkilby.com/real.htm

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Recent Buckatune Additions

Monday, October 12, 2009

Jake Hooker releases new cd "Lost Along The Way"


Texas native Jake Hooker just released a great new cd called "Lost Along the Way". Jake is excellent and the musicians are superb. You won't want to miss this one!Download the cd or individual tracks at www.buckatune.net

Tracks include:
Lost Along The Way / Talkin' 'Bout You / Drowning My Troubles Till They Learn How To Swim / Night Coach Out Of Dallas / Don't Give Up On Me / It's Warm With Love In Here / Another Town / It Keeps Slipping My Mind / Nothing Left To Lose / You're From Texas / Mine Is A Lonely Life / Rodeo Man

Musicians include:
Acoustic Guitar: Jimmy Capps
Bass: Bob Moore
Bass Guitar: Jim Loessberg
Fiddle: Bobby Flores
Drums: Jim Loessberg
Guitar: Pete Wade
Piano: Pig Robbins
Steel: Paul Franklin
Harmony Vocals: Amber Digby & Tommy Hooker
Guest Vocalists: Leon Rausch & Jody Nix

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Light Crust Doughboys on Buckatune



Buckatune is pleased to announce the addition of the Light Crust Doughboys to www.buckatune.net The first cd has been added with more to come!

The Light Crust Doughboys are considered the longest-running country and western band in the world and one of the top historical bands of all time!

The history of the Grammy Award-winning Light Crust Doughboys covers more than seventy years of American music. In 1929, Texas fiddler Bob Wills formed the "Wills Fiddle Band". By 1931, Wills, along with Milton Brown on vocals and Herman Arnspiger on guitar, landed a morning radio show sponsored by the makers of Light Crust Flour. The general manager of the flour company and soon-to-be announcer of the band was W. Lee "Pappy" O' Daniel. Although Pappy went on to become Governor of Texas, United States Senator from Texas, and the only person to ever defeat Lyndon B. Johnson in any political race, when asked what he was most famous for, he replied, "The Light Crust Doughboys!"

The original Light Crust Doughboys are credited with the creation of the western swing style of music, which blends a wide range of musical repertoire including country, blues, jazz, pop, gospel and more. By the 1940s, The Light Crust Doughboys' Show was broadcast on more than 170 radio stations throughout the south and southwest. The famous opening words, "The Light Crust Doughboys are on the air!", are still used to this day to open all concerts by the The Light Crust Doughboys. The band today enjoys a faithful worldwide following that spans four generations of music lovers.

Since 1993 alone, The Light Crust Doughboys have been featured artists on dozens of different projects now available in CDs, videos, songbooks with CDs, and vinyl albums. Since 1997, The Light Crust Doughboys have received multiple Grammy Nominations for best albums in their fields, winning The Grammy in 2003 for the album on Art Greenhaw Records, WE CALLED HIM MR. GOSPEL MUSIC: THE JAMES BLACKWOOD TRIBUTE ALBUM.

Led by Grammy Award-Winning musician and producer Art Greenhaw on bass guitar and vocals, The Light Crust Doughboys in various combinations include such virtuoso instrumentalists and singers as Maurice "Reece" Anderson on steel guitar, Kevin Bailey on guitar, Jim Baker on violin, Dale Cook on drums, and oftentimes Doughboy legends Jerry Elliott on guitar and John Walden on violin. A Light Crust Doughboy brass and reed ensemble is even added for select events, concerts and balls. The Light Crust Doughboys have played prestigious festivals throughout the United States, have toured Austria, and make frequent television appearances. Current Light Crust Doughboys have over 150 years of combined experience playing in The Light Crust Doughboys band. The Light Crust Doughboys were named The State of Texas' Official Music Ambassadors by the 74th Texas Legislature, are Texas Commission on the Arts' official touring artists, and are inductees in the Texas Cowboy, Texas Western Swing, Rockabilly, Texas Music, and Cowtown Society of Western Music Halls of Fame. In every personal appearance by The Light Crust Doughboys, the band pays tribute to its legacy by honoring the musical contributions of Bob Wills, Milton Brown, and especially, Marvin "Smokey" Montgomery, a Light Crust Doughboy from 1935 until his passing in 2001.

The Light Crust Doughboys are considered the longest-running country and western band in the world and one of the top historical bands of all time. To quote THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS, "The Light Crust Doughboys are to western swing what Bill Monroe is to bluegrass. When the ultimate western swing and Texas music book is written, The Light Crust Doughboys will be in Chapter 1, Page 1."

(Reprint with permission from http://www.artgreenhaw.com)

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Leon Chambers - gone to Heaven


My heart aches today as I am saddened with the news of the passing of legendary western swing guitarist, Leon Chambers.

Leon was one of the greats! Here, he is pictured with western swing steel guitar legend Tom Morrell, whom we lost in 2007.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Red Stegall Cowboy Gathering



MARK YOUR CALENDARS FOR THE 2009 RED STEGALL COWBOY GATHERING, OCTOBER 23-25 Fort Worth, Tx Stockyards




Scheduled Entertainment for 2009

The Quebe Sisters Band, Don Edwards, Dan Roberts, Jean Prescott, and The Burson Family

Western Swing Festival with Red Steagall and the Boys in the Bunkhouse, Leon Rausch, and Bobby Flores.

ORDER YOUR ADVANCE TICKETS ONLINE NOW at www.cowtowncoliseum.com or call 888-COWTOWN



ADVANCE TICKET PRICES
Fri. 10-23 One-Day All Access Event Ticket $25.00
Sat. 10-24 Ticket without Sat. Night Rodeo $25.00
Sat. 10-24 Ticket with Sat. Night Rodeo $35.00
Child (3-12) Saturday Night Rodeo Ticket $10.00
Sun. 10-25 One-Day All Access Event Ticket $25.00
3-Day Pass without Saturday Night Rodeo $55.00
3-Day Pass with Saturday Night Rodeo $65.00
All Advance Tickets go off sale Thursday 10/22/09
(Reprint from www.redsteagallcowboygathering.com)

Kathleen Holeman - Don't You Wonder?


"Wow!" That's what fans of Kathleen Holeman have been saying over the past several years in response to the exciting talents of the Kansas City diva. Now, with this dazzling debut album, the buzz about Holeman is destined to ripple far beyond the Heartland. As Don't You Wonder? amply demonstrates, Holeman is clearly ready for prime time. Tracks from this fantastic cd are available at www.buckatune.net

Kathleen is a musician who just happens to sing. Significantly, she plays both piano (check her out in "Exactly Like You") and trombone ("I Don't Want to Set the World On Fire"). It's her singing, though, that carries the day. Gifted with a marvelous "instrument" of great precision (her intonation is pinpoint perfect) and power (you'd better put away the crystal before she hits high C), Kathleen is a telling interpreter of what Alec Wilder aptly called the American Popular Song, the rich repertoire of Tin Pan Alley, Broadway and Hollywood classics that continue to resonate as integral parts of the soundtrack to American life.

Kathleen's powers as a storyteller are compelling. One poignant example is her sensitive reading of the seldom heard verse for Irving Berlin's "Blue Skies." An equally moving moment occurs in Kathleen's intimate limning of "Everytime We Say Goodbye," an exquisite duo with guitarist Rod Fleeman. In each (and, really, in all of the album's fourteen tracks), she invites us to share her innermost thoughts and emotions. Her clear diction is another asset. Did I mention that she swings? Well, in carrying on in the tradition of consummate artists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Kathleen phrases with dash and class.

Since for many, Don't You Wonder? will be their introduction to the personable young singer, a bit of biography is in order. "My parents made sure that my four siblings and I had piano lessons and played instruments in the school band," recalls Kathleen. "My father loves to sing all kinds of songs from different eras. When I was a kid, he had me sit at the piano and play them so that I could accompany him. Little did I know that so many of those songs could be jazz tunes."

Along with piano lessons, Kathleen had vocal instruction for high school music contests. There were also trombone lessons. She received her B.S. in instrumental music education from Missouri Western State College, and then earned an M.A. in jazz from the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Throughout her school years, Kathleen performed with a variety of jazz, country, gospel and salsa bands. She's worked with a "who's who" of Kansas City jazz elite including Pete Eye, Bram Wijnands, Rich Hill, Brian Hicks, Monte Musa, Kerry Strayer, and, of course, the excellent musicians featured here, pianist Paul Smith, guitarist Rod Fleeman, bassist Bob Branstetter and drummer Al Wiley. In her hometown of St. Joseph, Missouri, she's helped lift stages with the Ray Alburn Big Band since 1990.

Kathleen, who correctly calls herself "a jazz singer," has been inspired by jazz stalwarts Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Irene Kral, Annie Ross, Tony Bennett, Mel Torme, Mark Murphy, Joe Williams and Eddie Jefferson. Other singers who have touched her include Jo Stafford, Patsy Cline, Judy Garland, Bonnie Raitt, James Taylor and the Ink Spots. "They are all masters of the singing craft," she points out.

"The message of the lyrics comes through no matter what. They truly make the listener believe that they are singing to you, individually, the listener." That also applies to Kathleen. This is a good time for the vocalist. "I am a lucky person. I get to work at something I love. I love the freedom of jazz, and try to use that freedom constructively. Above all, I aim for the song's message. Even when I'm looking for ways to create new rhythms and melodies, the lyrics are central. I want the listener to understand every word and believe that the message comes straight from the heart."

Connecting to the audience is critical for Kathleen. "I want to be creative and entertaining. I am driven by my own expectations and the smiles of an audience." Kathleen is also a first class improviser.

"I only scat when I feel it's appropriate. The style of the song influences my scatting note choices and the overall rhythmic feel." In all, it's a winning combination that makes Don't You Wonder? a musical and dramatic treat.

Kathleen credits husband Steve, her buddy Leslye, and colleagues Ray Alburn, Bob Branstetter and Paul Smith with pushing her to take the recording plunge. As for her supporting cast, she says simply that "they're the best, in terms of playing and attitude. They play from the heart and get along beautifully. Fortunately for me, Bob, Rod, Paul and Al are also great friends. I said 'I was lucky'."

The recording session proceeded smoothly. "The guys are all pros and quite used to recording. I had done studio work, but mostly jingles and voice-over work. So, on the first day, I was quite nervous. Thanks to the guys, I got over it quickly. Ron Ubel of Sound Trek also helped put me at ease. He's a gruff and lovable teddy bear. So we had lots of laughs and fun. Still, we were all perfectionists when it came to the sound we wanted, individually and collectively."

Don't You Wonder? is a sharply focused snapshot of where Kathleen is at this important stage of her young career. "I want the album to show that I can handle different styles of songs, from different time periods and genres, and make them my own. I have grown musically and want this to document where I am right now. Hopefully, the listener will be open-minded and appreciate the variety."

While the music more than speaks for itself, a few words are in order.

"That's All," the album's refreshingly breezy opener, is propelled by an insouciant samba pulse that launches Kathleen's lithe, Ella-esque trajectories. "The scat duet was an accident," she confides. "I had put down several tracks and was trying to pick one. Ron then said, "listen to this.' It was a combination of the two tracks. We all laughed and loved it. So it stayed. The song also means a lot to my husband Steve and me."

"Don't You Wonder?," Kathleen's impressively penned title track, is a haunting original whose perfectly matched melody and lyrics express the brooding "what if" of a romance torn asunder. "The song is the product of a long stormy relationship which ended several years ago," Kathleen recalls. With its aura of brooding romantic angst, "Don't You Wonder?" creates an atmosphere of norish intrigue. It's also a harbinger of the singer's promising songwriting talent.

"Blue Skies," after the lovely bitter-sweet opening verse, becomes a sophisticated swinger with Kathleen's sunny disposition lighting the way for dapper strolls by Bob and Paul.

"Every Time We Say Goodbye" is Kathleen's tribute to the late Irene Kral, one of jazzdom's most original vocalists. In this exquisite "chamber" setting, Rod's thoughtful guitar cradles Kathleen's lovely voice with tender loving care.

For a sample of Kathleen's ability to belt with Broadway bravado, "Get Happy" is not to be missed. Like Judy Garland's indelible version, Kathleen's declamation of Berlin's verse is a veritable "call to the sermon." In turn, the chorus is transformed into an insinuating waltz featuring Paul's dazzling pianistics.

Obviously taken with Michel Legrand's "beautiful message and chord progression," Kathleen's poignant take on "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?" transcends to the heavens.

Using Grady Tate's version of Van Morrison's "Moondance" as her point of departure, Kathleen and the band set a groove in motion that makes one want to get up and dance. Yeah! Dreamy romantic hues abound in the warm treatment of Ellington's "Mood Indigo," which additionally showcases Bob's plummy bass.

"Masquerade" moves with a celebratory south-of-the-border gait, while "I Don't Want to Set the World On Fire" is, in Kathleen's word, "retro." Indeed, with Kathleen's doubled trombone chorus and Rod's four-to-the-bar comping, it sounds like something from one of Woody's Allen period films set in the 1920s. More important, "This is a tribute to Daddy, who loves to sing this, and to the Ink Spots."

The retro approach also informs "Take Me Out to the Ballgame," which is augmented with Kathleen's "protest" lyrics. Protest? Yes, indeed. Troubled by the greed threatening to ruin America's pastime, Kathleen pleas for the return of "old fashioned values."

"Exactly Like You," a rhythmic tour de force featuring Kathleen's piano and Rod's guitar, also spotlights Kathleen's nimble scat work. Jobim's "Gentle Rain" returns us to Kathleen's intimate theatre of the heart and a wonderful outing by Rod. The finale is the rousing "How Sweet It Is to Be Loved By You," which although popularized by James Taylor and Marvin Gaye, swings here with a party-time, honky-tonk gait.

Looking back on the date, Kathleen says, "I just want to help people enjoy themselves by giving them something different to listen to."

"Don't You Wonder? will also be a highly effective calling card for a singular new talent deserving wider recognition. No need to wonder now -- Kathleen Holeman has arrived!" Chuck Berg (Chuck Berg is professor and chair of Theatre and Film at the University of Kansas. His jazz commentaries have appeared in Jazz Times, Down Beat, Jazz Educators Journal, Coda, books such as the Oxford Companion to Jazz, and in liner notes for U.S., European and Japanese jazz labels. When not teaching or writing, Chuck plays tenor saxophone and flute with his group in the Lawrence/Kansas City area.)


(reprint with permission from www.kathleenholeman.com)