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 Post subject: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 7:47 pm 
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AMG Wrote:
There may be no greater maverick than Terry Allen in all of country music from the mid-'70s onward. Along with Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Joe Ely, and Butch Hancock — all of whom he's known and collaborated with — Allen is a standard-bearer of the Lubbock, TX, country scene. Though not widely heralded, this is perhaps the most progressive movement in all of contemporary country, digging into modern-day concerns with a gutsy, liberal perspective, while maintaining a firm musical grounding in regional country and folk traditions. Allen is perhaps the most ambitious of them all, writing complex song cycles that have been performed with the help of fellow eclectics ranging from Lowell George to David Byrne.

Allen's audience, like those of the other Lubbock pioneers, is not the country mainstream. Indeed, his principal appeal may not lie with the country audience at all (though his music definitely is country), but with open-minded alternative folk and rock listeners. Unlike most current country artists, his words aim to question and confront hard day-to-day realities, rather than offer conservative clichés or maudlin comforts to shield listeners from those very day-to-day realities. He does so with a humor and irreverence that will also find little sympathy in Nashville or Middle America.

Country music is just one of Allen's artistic pursuits, perhaps accounting to some degree for his wide perspective. The renaissance man is also an internationally recognized artist with three NEA grants and a Guggenheim Fellowship to his credit. He's also a true multimedia performer, having done work in the mediums of painting, sculpture, film, video, installation, theater, and poetry. Just a few of his more interesting projects, for instance, were writing the music for Amerasia, a film about American servicemen living in Thailand after the Vietnam War; writing a new national anthem (with Ely, Hancock, and Gilmore) in conjunction with a book about Vietnam; and collaborating with his wife, Jo Harvey Allen, as well as Ely and Hancock, on the production of the acclaimed stage play Chippy.

But Allen is not a country music dilettante, having written songs for Bobby Bare and Robert Earl Keen. Outside of the strict country sphere, he wrote "New Delhi Freight Train" for Little Feat, and contributed a few songs to the soundtrack of David Byrne's True Stories film. The cinema has always been an inspiration or influence upon Allen's work. His first album, Juarez (from the mid-'70s), was a conceptual work that originated as a soundtrack to an imaginary film, evolving in performance to a set of songs inspired by Mexican imagery.

Released in 1979, Lubbock (On Everything) is considered his most significant album. Inspired by his experiences growing up in the Texas town, it won praise for observing the details of regional life and characters with a sensitivity and wit more akin to rock and folk singer/songwriters than country ones. Allen's music (if not his lyrical content), however, remains very much in the Texan country tradition.

With many artistic projects always in the works, Allen has never had the need to record frequently. His singing and songwriting prowess remained undimmed, though, on 1996's Human Remains. He also expanded his musical horizons significantly with support from such noted stars and cult figures as David Byrne, Lucinda Williams, Ponty Bone, Lloyd Maines, and Joe Ely. Salivation followed in 1999.


I don't think I've ever seen anyone mention him here. A quick search didn't find anything but a few posts by me in the NP threads. Some magazine (Shindig!, I think) had a list of best country rock albums last winter that included

Terry Allen's 1975 debut album, "Juarez"

Image


AMG Wrote:
The story of two couples on a drinking spree that turns into a murderous chase through the southern California desert, Juarez is a tough-as-nails narrative with the deadpan, biting humor of crime fiction writers like Jim Thompson or Chester Himes. The album was recorded quickly and on a low budget, so the musical settings are ultra-spare, with Allen's whiskey-cured vocals and thumping piano often the only musical elements. As a concept album, the individual songs don't work as well out of context, but listened to as a whole, Juarez is one of the more fascinating country albums of its time, like Willie Nelson's Red Headed Stranger as reimagined by Quentin Tarantino.


I bought it and really liked it.

I didn't up this myself or test the link but since I found it while looking for a picture, here's a link if anyone wants to check it out.

Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?w93ibjujmni


Wanting to hear more, I sought out

"Lubbock (on Everything)"



AMG Wrote:
Although it's all but unknown outside of a devoted cult following, Terry Allen's second album, 1979's Lubbock (On Everything), is one of the finest country albums of all time, a progenitor of what would eventually be called alt-country. This is country music with a wink and a dry-as-West-Texas-dust sense of humor, but at heart, Lubbock (On Everything) is a thoughtful meditation on Allen's hometown. Recorded in Lubbock after Allen hadn't lived there for close to a decade with a small group headed by local legends Don Caldwell and Lloyd Maines, the songs alternate between biting character studies like "Lubbock Woman" and "The Great Joe Bob (A Regional Tragedy)," about a high school football star who ends up robbing a liquor store, and more loving tributes like "The Thirty Years War" and "The Wolfman of Del Rio." Salted through are a handful of songs about the pretensions of the art world (something Allen knows well in his day job as a sculptor and painter) that help keep the album's more cutting lines from sounding mean-spirited. A 20-song masterpiece, Lubbock (On Everything) is essential listening for anyone with an interest in the outer fringes of country music.


which seemed to be his most universally praised album.

Here's another untested link for Lubbock:

Code:
http://sharebee.com/bf18232b


I really like Lubbock too. It might be even better if not as mongerous. So any fans here? and if so what should I get next? "Human Remains," "Pedal Steel," or "Salivation"? I'd imagine that some people here would really like him (Tentoze?, Bloor?, Derris?, Kingfish?, Elvis Fu?, FT?). If you haven't heard him, check him out. HE GOOG.


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 9:38 pm 
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Is it wrong that I first thought of a former MIN/WAS running back?


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 9:40 pm 
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I can't really help on where to go afterwards but I've had Lubbock for a few years and back in like 2008 I played it a lot. Been awhile though. Thanks for Juarez.

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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 11:26 pm 
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Spinning this now.

Dude.

What the mong??


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 1:33 pm 
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Lrr Wrote:
Is it wrong that I first thought of a former MIN/WAS running back?



My first thought was Magnum TA from Mid South Wrestling.


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 2:56 pm 
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Gonna check both of these out


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:06 pm 
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I guess this is why I don't post about music more often. Anyone want to discuss the football player Terry Allen instead?


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:17 pm 
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billy g Wrote:
I guess this is why I don't post about music more often. Anyone want to discuss the football player Terry Allen instead?


Downloaded BG, but i'm swamped at work. Promise I'll bump when I hear. I've met his kid and other relatives, all nice and talented people, but haven't heard his tunes yet, so i'm looking forward to having a spare moment to digest.

-Phil

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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:28 pm 
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d/l ing Juarez now. Sounds like it's right up my alley.


<--- Still regularly playing Bare Jr's "Drunk And Crazy"

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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 5:36 pm 
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Well, Juarez isn't meant for passive listening, and that's all I can do at work, so in-depth discussion won't be coming from this here guy. First impression is that it's all about the lyric so I'll probably never give it a chance it may well deserve.


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 Post subject: Re: Terry Allen
PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 8:09 pm 
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schadenfreude Wrote:

My first thought was Magnum TA from Mid South Wrestling.


Post of the decade.

I d/l but haven't listened yet

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