Ray Wylie Hubbard, "Growl".
He's from Austin, I believe.
He's got Gurf morlix working on this album who was the brains behind Lucinda Williams' "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road".
To categorize, I'd say "alt-country". No Garth Brooks gay-ass bullshit on this.
He's got a great tune on it called "Rock-N-Roll Is A Vicious Game" which is a pretty scornful satire of the music industry and then a song that might replace "Deep in the heart..." as the unofficial anthem of Texas, called "Screw You, We're From Texas".
It's crunchy and rough-around-the-edges and everything that good southern rock should be.
If you're a fan of Yoakum, early Steve Earle, Junior Brown, Lucinda Williams, check this out. It's the album that the last two Lu Will albums should have been.
Here's a link from someone who knows a little more what he's talking about. He also seems to like "screw you".
He's from Austin, I believe.
He's got Gurf morlix working on this album who was the brains behind Lucinda Williams' "Car Wheels on a Gravel Road".
To categorize, I'd say "alt-country". No Garth Brooks gay-ass bullshit on this.
He's got a great tune on it called "Rock-N-Roll Is A Vicious Game" which is a pretty scornful satire of the music industry and then a song that might replace "Deep in the heart..." as the unofficial anthem of Texas, called "Screw You, We're From Texas".
It's crunchy and rough-around-the-edges and everything that good southern rock should be.
If you're a fan of Yoakum, early Steve Earle, Junior Brown, Lucinda Williams, check this out. It's the album that the last two Lu Will albums should have been.
Here's a link from someone who knows a little more what he's talking about. He also seems to like "screw you".