Tuesday, October 31, 2006

"We Should be a Band" ~ Benefit ~ Friday 11-3-06

Monday, October 30, 2006

Jason Boland & the Stragglers TOY DRIVE

Come out & support the Stragglers & their toy drive...

Friday, October 27, 2006

Cooder Graw w/Nick Worley 10-7-06




Cooder Graw pics taken @ Waller Co. Fair...no security there, either. Loved it...

Johnny Rodriquez pics 9-30-06




Johnny Rodriquez pics taken @ Henry's Hideout in Plantersville, TX
no security there
I loved it!!!

Fall Fandango Pics 10-1-06



These are family & friends pics @ the Fall Fandango. This is as good as it gets with the pics...thanks to the security there.

October @ a glance...

Sunday October 1st...I know I blogged about this earlier but here it is again. I went to the Fall Fandango @ Cynthia Mitchell Woods Pavilion and will never go again. The security there is to make sure that NO ONE IN THE SEATS can have a good time, not secure the crowd. Security was lame...very lame.

Saturday October 7th...Cooder Graw @ Waller Co. Fair w/Niece C.

Thursday October 12th...Continentals Casing's Octoberfest Party & the Mike Mancy Band @ the Armadillo Palace.

Saturday October 14th...Jason Boland @ Brazoria Co. Fair w/Friend K.

Saturday October 21st...Ziegfest w/Friends S & A @ the horse track.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Shows I've seen recently...

August 18th...yep. I went to see Jason Boland and the Stragglers.
August 25th...went to see Cooder Graw.
Sept. 2nd...did I go & see Two Hoots & a Holler?
Sept. 7th...did I go & see Cooder Graw?
Sept.9th...now I know for sure that I went to the Roller Derby.
Sept.12th & 13th...went to see Hank III in Houston then the next night, Friend C & Friend P went to New Orleans to see him again. Great fun was had...
Sept. 15th...Went to see Dale Watson.
Sept. 20th...made two shows tonight. Jesse Dayton first @ Puffabelly's then headed out to the Firehouse Saloon to see Jason Boland.
Sept. 22nd...did I go & see Cory Morrow?
Sept. 23rd...did I go & see No Justice?
Sept. 30th...went to Henry's Hideout to see Johnny Rodriguez with Sister K & Mom. I've got pics to share somewhere. Maybe one of these days...

Lots of things have been a big blur lately and I'm sure it's all my fault. At least I've got photos so that I can refresh my memory...if only I could FIND them now!

Friday, October 20, 2006

RIP Freddy Fender 1937-2006


Tuesday, October 03, 2006

NASHVILLE SKYLINE: Willie Nelson as Pot Scapegoat?

It's Way Past Time to Legalize Marijuana
By: Chet Flippo

(NASHVILLE SKYLINE is a column by CMT/CMT.com Editorial Director Chet Flippo.)
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Willie Nelson was one of the first celebrities to hold a fundraising benefit for the victims. He also mobilized Farm Aid's resources to aid Gulf Coast farmers in distress, and he was quick to take part in several other benefits, including one in New Orleans organized by Arlo Guthrie.Now, the state of Louisiana rewards Willie Nelson for his good deeds for disaster relief by busting him for a relatively small amount of marijuana (well, a pound and a-half of weed is brunch and dinner for Willie, I can testify, as a sometime Willie bus passenger) and for a few ounces of mushrooms (no doubt intended for Saturday night's spaghetti supper on the bus).You know, this is just plain silly. Seems to me that America's war on drugs has become as phony and ineffective and clueless and pointless and endless as its war in Iraq.This was an easy bust, a career-boosting, gold-star-rating, guaranteed AP story kind of bust for an ambitious, Dudley Do-Right state trooper. Willie's bus is very recognizable, and anybody who doesn't know that Willie takes a little toke every now and then must live in a backward state.Is this really the face of the war on drugs? There are a lot of people sitting in stir and doing serious time for small-time marijuana possession. Over the last two decades or so, I've known several decent guys who went off to prison in Texas for small amounts of marijuana.I think what most people would rather see is major busts of crack factories and meth labs, the sources for the serious drugs that are truly crippling America's inner city and heartland youth. But those busts are harder to get. We're not seeing those. Those are hard work. The Dudley Do-Rights might get their creased trooper uniforms dirty, trying to bust sleazy crackheads and meth freaks. And politicians would get no headlines or photo ops out of those difficult tasks.Even Johnny Knoxville has weighed in on this matter, declaring, "He [Willie] gets arrested in Louisiana for weed? I mean, if he's not singing a benefit for Louisiana or for the farmers, he's singing a song about the city of New Orleans -- and they bust him for weed? He should have rolling fields of marijuana to harvest at any time. Leave Willie alone, man. ... Let Willie smoke."Not that Johnny Knoxville is the voice of a thoughtful nation, by any means, but I know his family from when I lived in Knoxville, Tenn., and his father regularly worked on my Jeep at his car repair shop, R.T. Clapp Car Center, and I know that such families are the backbone of the heartland. Their voices should be heard, and I know that's where Johnny's values were formed. The city of Knoxville is conservative territory, but it's also territory where individual freedom and liberty are still championed. And I think Johnny's grassroots opinion on this matter is that of most down-to-earth people.I will tell you what, and you can bank on this: In the long run, marijuana is by far among the least of the threats facing this nation. Legalize it. And minimize it.That will neutralize it. You won't see any more fish hooks dangling at eye level in state and national parks where the renegade weed growers hide their crops and try to maim or trap and then kill trespassers. You won't see any more deadly, sharpened and poisonous punji sticks guarding those same illicit marijuana patches. You won't see any more worthless, vicious thugs running the underground smoke trade -- because there won't be any underground smoke trade. Instead, we'll have state or national government-administered smoke shops run by the usual inefficient, bumbling, corrupt civil servants. Unless they turn it over to Starbucks.My old friend Kinky Friedman, the next governor of Texas, has called for the legalization of marijuana, saying "We've pretty well lost the war on drugs doing it the way we're doing it." Kinky's not a user, but he's a realist. And I think that's the issue. Chasing smokers is a waste of time, money and law enforcement resources. There's little to show for it, except trophy busts such as Willie's. Legalize it and neutralize it and therefore make it middle class and unhip.Look at Amsterdam. The legal cannabis coffee shops there are really safe ... and kind of boring. That's why dope really is dope.Transform marijuana into your father's boring little indulgence or into your wise old grandfather Willie's harmless afternoon smoke and no teenager will be attracted to the illicit lure of a glamorous, banned substance. No danger and no risk equal no thrill.

Monday, October 02, 2006

My Last Concert @ the Pavilion

I'l never go to the pavilion again after last night's security episode. I'll be the first to admit that I'd had a beer or 3 but to be ejected from my seat is a little overboard for the security staff. I think it made the little short fat round guy feel good to tell me that I either had to leave or I could sit on the hill. To hell with the pavilion and their security staff. I'll never go to another show there again. It wasn't like I was in someone's seat or anything like that...they wouldn't let me take pictures of the band, dance or anything regarding a good time was prohibited and then the little round guy told me that I was being dramatic. Me dramatic? Ha! Give me a break! I was trying to have a good time and the security there is too uptight for that to happen.