Reporter
Rednecks, Armadillos, And Me
Thirty years ago my book told the inside story of the Austin music scene and received what you might call mixed reviews from some of its subjects. It's time to revisit those freewheeling years.
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Eddie: He comes in talking about how I run a beer joint? He don't know nothin' about running a beer joint. . . . The ahole that wrote that book is a groupie, and he quoted a junkie about how I'm trying to operate to keep alive. And it's in hardback, so it's history; there ain't nothing we can do about it. There ain't nothin' we can do about it. . . . That book is hardback, so it's history. You
Michael: There is one person sitting in this room that can do something about it.
Eddie: You go to the library in ten years. And if you're in the eighth grade and you're writing a paper on the Austin music scene and you pull that book out, no matter how many reviews I write, it's history. I was educated in those libraries.
Michael: I'll bet you one thing, though. I'll bet I'm the only one that can take that book off the market right now. And I've got a lawyer to prove it. [Wilson snorts.] Guess who doesn't have written permission from me to use that picture on the front of the book?
Eddie: He doesn't have written permission from me. And I'll admit my picture's kind of bad, but yours is good. Now, you can't deny that. You got a good picture.
Michael: Yes. But you're not on the cover.
No suit was ever filed. When I saw Michael again, his son, whom I had known as a toddler with knee-high red boots and a ukulele, was a tall, handsome young man playing guitar and singing on TV with his dad. Michael seemed happy in the life he had made in northern New Mexico as a minstrel of the last days of frontier cowboys and Indians. He came over to chat, and I was pleased to learn that the hatchet between us was long buried. I'm told he comes to the Kerrville Folk Festival in boots and a hat and dusterthe Lonesome Dove lookand boasts to the old hippies, Armadillos, and lefties that he and Rod Kennedy, the festival's founder, are the only right-thinking Republicans on the grounds. Eddie long ago became a friend of my family's and a frequent ally in our political agitations. But in 1974 I had completely alienated the performer who first drew me to the subject and the most important and enduring businessman and champion Austin music ever had. Among the people I had written about, there was no consensus that my book had gotten it right. And on that front, things got worse before they got better.
A PROMINENT TEXAS DISTRICT ATTORNEY with a broad knowledge of Fort Worth had told me that, rightly or wrongly, the police in that city used to associate Willie Nelson with drugs other than marijuana, and Willie was furious when he saw that in print. He made no secret of his love of cannabis but swore he'd fire anybody in his bunch whom he caught using hard drugs. The scene was changing quickly, however, and the changing fashion in drugs was part of it. "Everything changed in 1974," Marcia Ball told me flatly. "Eddie Wilson always maintained that Austin was predicated on cold beer and cheap pot. But 1974 was when we started seeing cocaine."
Freda and the Firedogs, the group Marcia sang and played with, ran its course like most bands, and its end was symbolic. A lottery had been instituted for the Vietnam draft, and the gifted West Texas guitar player John Reed drew one of the black beans. Without Reed, Marcia said, the band lost its center of gravity. Its last gig was at Willie's Fourth of July Picnic at an auto racetrack near Bryan and College Station in 1974. "It was the first time I yodeled onstage," she said. "I was debuting my 'Cowboy Sweetheart' routine, and I was so excited. At the start of the song, I'm singing and yodeling, when an airplane flies over, then these two guys parachute out of the plane with smoke bombs on their ankles. Every head in the crowd was turned. Nobody was paying any mind to me and my yodeling."
That wasn't the only smoke that picnickers came back discussing. Accomplished singer-songwriter Robert Earl Keen was then about to start his freshman year at Texas A&M. He had a flashy Ford Mustang and, he hoped, a hot date. But instead, smoke and flames erupted in a parking lot. Cars were consumed. In fear of exploding gas tanks, people ran for their lives. Robert Earl listened in disbelief to the announcement of a license plate number that belonged to him. His prized car was a total loss (a Mustang in flames would later make a droll cover for one of his records). When his date showed up laughing, he asked her, "What are you laughing about? We don't have a ride." She said, "I do," and left with two guys. "Everybody there felt so bad for me," Robert Earl recalled, "and somebody said, 'Hey, would you like to meet Willie?' They took me to his bus, and he came out for a minute. He said, 'I'd really like to talk, but I've got to go jam with Leon Russell.'"
The carefree music festival quickly deteriorated into a scene of outright thuggery. "I got in a lot of trouble over that festival," Marcia said. "I just saw a lot of things I didn't like. It was chaos. We came home, and some neighbors were out doing yard work. I told them all about it. Well, one of them was a UPI reporter, and he went right to work and wrote a very unflattering description of Willie's picnic, quoting me. I never saw the piece, but one day I flounced into Willie's pool hall to put up a poster for a gig. The room got very quiet. Then Willie's mama said, 'That's her. She's the one.'"
About that time, "outlaw country" became the generic for Austin music. The metaphor was employed to convey the musicians' rambunctious and far-roving styles and their rebellion against the industry, especially in Nashville. But some people took the outlaw routine to heart. David Allan Coe, a broad-shouldered ex-con and a country singer of considerable talent, went around boasting of murdering a man in prison with a mop wringer. At an outdoor Outlaw Concert west of Austin in 1976, Coe wore a sleeveless denim jacket stitched with motorcycle gang colors and a swastika. His Bandido biker cronies had pistols bulging in their jeans. His latest song on jukeboxes was "Willie and Waylon and Me."
Scarier than Coe was a biker from California who insinuated his way onto Willie's bus and into his entourage. Unlike the Bandidos, he wore his gun holstered. Everyone called him "the pistol whipper." Texas Monthly editor Bill Broyles talked me into writing about the hokum. They titled the story "Who Killed Redneck Rock?" A graphic artist illustrated it with the backside of a country singer who had a pistol in the back pocket of his jeans, a hunting knife lashed to one boot, and a cowboy belt hand-tooled with the words "Bad Ass."
Broyles was right to heap scorn on the mood of street-fighter chic that was taking over, but the byline didn't have to be mine. For an $800 payday, it probably wasn't the smartest career move I ever made. Willie let it be known in a trade journal interview that he was deeply offended, predicting that next I'd be writing about "the reincarnation of redneck rock." One night in the Austin airport, some shouting womenone of them Willie's wifeinformed me that a number of large and angry men were eager to get their hands around my neck. Poor John Reed. Not only did the guitarist get drafted; he had a name that closely resembled mine. One night at the Rome Inn, in Austin, the pistol whipper (who has since passed from this life) forcibly propelled him backward across the room and into a wall, thinking he was the author of the article.
First line of a country song: It was a severe case of mistaken identity.
FOR SEVERAL REASONS I DECIDED it was time to go live in the country. Melinda Wickman took photographs of Willie and many other musicians for a while and then caught on as a still photographer on movie sets. There she met the young director who became the father of her children. When that marriage ended, she stayed in their house in a Vermont village on the Canadian border, and she became a school librarian. All of us were stunned and sickened when a flood destroyed almost all the negatives of the vibrant pictures she had taken of the Austin music scene. David Lindsey, chastened by the beating he took as a publisher, bore down and became one of the country's most thoughtful writers of crime novels: A Cold Mind, In the Lake of the Moon, Body of Truth, and many more.
I bought a lot of music as albums turned into cassettes and CDs and the term "record" became almost obsolete. But I didn't write another line about music for twenty years. I didn't think I ever would again. My wife, Dorothy, and I would read the club listings and talk about going out to see some favorite singer or band, but we almost never did. Someday I hoped to have a long talk with John Reed. I always figured I owed that guy a drink.![]()
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