Category: Listening Lounge
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Waylon records classic live album at the Texas Opry House
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Waylon Live was recorded at the dawn of Waylon’s golden era, and released during the height of it.…
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It’s 2018, and Kacey Musgraves is having a golden hour
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Kacey Musgraves is an authentic songwriter whose albums are imbued with personal experiences. Her first two albums depict…
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Stevie Ray Vaughan’s invitation to the big dance
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Let’s Dance transformed David Bowie from a rock star into a megastar. He was chasing commercial success with…
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Welcome to Groover’s Paradise
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There isn’t one album that encompasses the Doug Sahm sound. That would be like defining the flavor of…
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Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble’s Final Album
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Stevie Ray Vaughan is the figurehead opposite Willie Nelson in the dichotomy of Austin music, with both men…
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You have to live it before it can come out of your horn, the Kinkster becomes a novelist
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Under the Double Ego was Kinky Friedman’s melancholic goodbye note to the music industry. It would be thirty-two…
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An Eagle, a Beatle, and a (Black) Crowe
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Co-Starring is an album released by Ray Wylie Hubbard in 2020 and features a collection of artists including…
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Lou Ann Barton has voice that can peel chrome from a trailer hitch
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Read My Lips might be the purest example of Austin blues music available, and a statement album from…
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Beyonce is coming for the country crown
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Cowboy Carter is destined to be a landmark album in Beyoncé’s collection, and has the potential to be…
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Austin’s role in producing one of the definitive albums of the the 90’s
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Austin is not the first city you associate with Sublime, but it played a pivotal role in the…

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Featured albums from the Listening Lounge

Read My Lips might be the purest example of Austin blues music available, and a statement album from one of the city’s biggest stars. Lou Ann Barton dominated the Austin Music Awards in the eighties. She won female vocalist of the year three times in five years before they gave up and put her in the hall of fame. Her voracious style was something legendary music journalist Margaret Moser liked to describe as “a voice that can peel chrome from a trailer hitch.”

Under the Double Ego was Kinky Friedman’s melancholic goodbye note to the music industry. It would be thirty-two eventful years before he recorded another studio album. When he recorded this one he was disillusioned and chose to work with the Austin based Sunrise label, despite their limited distribution network, rather than deal with corporate record executives. The album was produced locally by Sammy Allred (member of the Geezinslaws and long time radio personality who would eventually be included in the Texas Radio Hall of Fame.) The Texas Jewboys disbanded before the album was recorded leaving Kinky to assemble studio musicians from the crowded local talent pool, which included recruiting Chris O’Connell from Asleep at the Wheel fame.

On a cold February night in 1978 The Skunks played what is widely regarded as the first punk rock show in Austin, and for the next six years they continued to be a definitive presence. The three piece lineup evolved over the years, with bassist Jesse Sublett serving as the anchor. They pioneered a new sound leading acclaimed journalist Margaret Moser to declare, “In Austin’s punk rock history book, the Skunks are the first page.”
