Little boy blues

Andrew Baxter Sr. is a distribution manager for a computer warehouse, and his wife, Angela, is a travel agent; theirs is a happy, healthy home in the middle of middle-class suburbia, deep in the heart of Carrollton. They are parents of two clean-cut kids any parent would proudly claim: 14-year-old…

Harvest time

Death is a big part of Cheri Knight’s life. A former member of the Blood Oranges, an acclaimed but obscure roots band that dropped off the branch a few years back, she is finally getting noticed thanks to The Northeast Kingdom, an album on Steve Earle’s E-Squared label certain to…

Take me home, country roads

One of the busiest recording studios in the area is in the middle of nowhere. Well, Argyle actually, which isn’t technically in the middle of nowhere, but you can probably see it from there. Argyle is little more than a city-limits sign between Lewisville and Denton, a glorified bend in…

Jim of all trades

Singer-songwriter Jim White’s life has a made-up quality about it. Among the reasons is his colorful way with descriptions; his anecdotes are sprinkled with metaphors and literary allusions softened by self-deprecating humor that suggests William Faulkner after his first joint. And then there are the tales themselves: admirably curious sketches…

Out There

Perfectly imperfect Car Wheels on a Gravel Road Lucinda Williams Mercury Records Only critics and accountants care about the eternity it took Lucinda Williams to record her fourth record in nearly 20 years. That it ate up six years–not to mention four producers (including Steve Earle), a handful of engineers,…

Out There

Pop-top Robert Pollard Waved Out Matador Guided by Voices’ early-’90s breakthrough records (Propeller, Vampire on Titus, and Bee Thousand) were uniformly great, full of songs on which the patina of quirk–fragmentary structures, amateur recording quality–scarcely masked a peaking melodic sensibility; last year’s Mag Earwhig, on the other hand, was a…

How low can you go?

If you haven’t heard of Beautamous Loaf International, a Dallas record label that specializes in dishwater-dirty trip-hop and ambient sound collages, you’re not alone. Beautamous Loaf seems less like an indie record label and more like an exercise in proving just how underground something can be without ceasing to exist…

Ani DiFranco, musician

Ani DiFranco emerged from Buffalo, New York, at the decade’s dawn and differentiated herself from other young artists with guitars and something to say with her financial acumen. She founded her own label, Righteous Babe Records, and unlike the owners of most other start-ups, she ran hers with a savvy…

Out Here

Blowing smoke Cleansed by Fire Pervis Idol Records They used to be the biggest contrivance in town, two half-half-dressed women undulating to the beat only they seemed to hear; the soundtrack was Sonic Youth with in-tune guitars, the gimmick was just a variation on a familiar cock-rock theme–the mostly male…

Sucking on the ’70s

Nostalgia is a hobby for those too afraid to move into tomorrow; it’s the pastime of cowards and fools. But as we inch closer to the millennium–which, don’t kid yourself, will look, feel, smell, taste, and sound just like today–there’s an increasingly annoying trend that involves looking over one’s shoulder…

Got a Woody

Billy Bragg knew from the beginning what Mermaid Avenue sounded like in theory: a freakin’ disaster. He could hear the snickers even before he began the task of writing music to lyrics left behind by Woody Guthrie, words for which the Dust Bowl prophet never wrote any music. “On paper,…

Big country

Down in Austin, there are people who insist that Don Walser is the greatest country singer in the world. Of course, if you happen to have spent time in that town three hours south of Dallas at any point since the 1960s, you probably know there are folks there who…

The King’s man

Andrew “Jr. Boy” Jones has long been a hero of mine, but until last week, I had never heard his name. He can be heard playing on a handful of the greatest songs ever recorded in and released from this city; he was, for two years, a member of one…

Out of Orbit

On Thursday, Hector Fontecha will celebrate the fifth anniversary of the opening of the Orbit Room. Bands will play, regulars will come, and all will be as it has been, for the most part, since June 18, 1993, when the Buck Pets and Bedhead inaugurated the club that has since…

Sucking on the ’70s

Nostalgia is a hobby for those too afraid to move into tomorrow; it’s the pastime of cowards and fools. But as we inch closer to the millennium–which, don’t kid yourself, will look, feel, smell, taste, and sound just like today–there’s an increasingly annoying trend that involves looking over one’s shoulder…

Wild man blues

Charleston, West Virginia’s Yeager Airport sits atop a mountain, which is typical in a state that enforces few, if any, building codes. Request a window seat if you ever drop in; the views are spectacular. Green hills roll forever, with soft “fairways” notched into the landscape as though it were…

Out There

Made for you and me Mermaid Avenue Billy Bragg & Wilco Elektra Records As music-biz gimmicks go, this one’s high-brow: Leftie punk-folk Billy Bragg and alt.country.pop.rockers Wilco writing and performing music built around lyrics unrecorded by songwriter-of-the-people Woody Guthrie. It’s a disc that screams important; might as well hold the…

Out Here

One degree of separation everybody’s a pinata El Gato self-released There are a million ways to say a record is boring without really coming out and saying it; Spin has been doing just that for more than a decade. You can say it’s a good record to listen to while…

Out Here

Celtic pride Broken with a Word The Killdares Self-released The bumbling weight of hard rock and heavy metal has dropped like a barbell on nearly every other genre of pop music, with mixed results. When it happily collided with punk in the ’80s and early ’90s, it conceived grunge; when…

The sound and Fury III

Every city has a few musicians like Stephen Nutt–talented performers who, for whatever reason, never found an audience. They probably never will, yet they’ve stuck around forever anyway, working as temps and busboys so they can keep their rock-and-roll dreams alive. They never made a fall-back plan, because they didn’t…

Pieces of crap

Few pop-culture developments have been so inevitable as a book of poetry by Jewel, rock music’s reigning queen of dime-store spirituality. A ripe tomato of a woman and a rotten apple of a songwriter, Jewel emerged from a Southern California coffeehouse a few years back armed with a canon of…

Out There

Setting sun Imagination Brian Wilson Giant Records “When I grow up to be a man,” he once wrote, but they didn’t let Brian Wilson grow up–they being his family and fans who wanted more fun, fun, fun in the sun, sun, sun; so they called him a lunatic and drove…