Gougers





Gougers
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The Gougers used to have a big, fancy bio. It cost $200 and had big words like "analogous" and "suffused" in it. It also had "sidehill." They decided that was lame and so they deleted it. One day at Zapato's Cantina in College Station, TX, Shane heard Jamie sing and asked her to come play in a band with him. She said "yes" and so they went back to Shane's house and listened to some records. They jammed out to Gram and Emmylou one day. Then Gillian and Dave the next. They tried to pretty much copy what they heard because it made them feel like highlanders feel when they are near other immortals. One day they hired this kid, Brian, to play fiddle. He played fiddle as good as Jamie sang and as good as Shane quoted dead philosophers. But he turned out to be a lame quitter and went to the Jug Band to make more money and get more women. He was immature. So then they met Cody. They hired him because his dad played in the NFL and they thought that was cool. Then Shane's mom co-signed and they bought a van. They met the Dedringers who drew nasty pictures in the dirt on the side of it. But Wrecks liked them so they were allowed to stay. They were good, too, and it was funny to watch Jonny gurm Townes's son. One day the invisible gouger said that they needed a drummer. He told them that if they put the feathers of a Mexican fighting rooster in a Crown Royal bag and buried it while saying some shit in Spanish, then a drummer would appear in three business days. And that's how they got Silva. They solidified the closing of the circle with a tattoo ceremony about heartache and the loss of god. And so, kids, this is the story of the Gougers. We ooze positivity. ---------- But here's the new fancy bio: For members of The Gougers, who each sport a tattoo of the band’s bird-and-broken-heart logo, it is more important that audiences hear the artful and profound lyrics of the songs created by the team of singer-writer-instrumentalists Shane Walker and Jamie Wilson — vivid imagery of human lives, subtle social comment, truth — than be concerned with what sort of genre the band’s music fits into. That’s because The Gougers’ sound takes in most genres, constantly moving in and out of country, rock, folk, roots, or mixing them up, as Walker and Wilson experiment and evolve as songwriters whose words stay with listeners and make them think. Dreamy ballad, up-tempo urban anthem: They’re playing with rhythm and instrumental effects, too, along the lines of influences and music mavericks Ryan Adams, Emmylou Harris and Bright Eyes and premier musical partners David Rawlings and Gillian Welch. Formerly as The Sidehill Gougers, the four-piece Americana band contributed to such albums as Palo Duro Records’ TEXAS UNPLUGGED: VOL. 2 (2006) — an example of the neo-traditional porch-and-parlor, mandolin-and-fiddle facet of its music, the tender “One Tiny Sin” — and recorded RUNAWAY SCRAPE (2003), the band's debut CD, and an EP, GONE TO SEED (2005), a harmonic and graceful collection of seven songs that intrigued fans and continue to mesmerize them. Now the Sidehill has been dropped, a drummer has been added, and there’s been a switch to electric guitar and bass. The outstanding vocals of Walker and Wilson wrap around a ringing guitar, sometimes a laidback one, a drum riff, echoes or reverb — and always a great lyric. Take, for instance, “Old Crow/Scarecrow,” which talks about boozing and ends with appropriate suddenness. “You get tangled like a kite so you go out and hang the sheets and blow hours off the clock like dandelion seeds that float away as flowers just to come back up as weeds. You live one day to wake up two days older. Using Old Crow for a scarecrow to keep the birds away, while you're crushing out Old Golds in a plastic ashtray.” That song’s on The Gougers’ latest album, A LONG DAY FOR THE WEATHERVANE, along with “Everybody Knows,” an excellent commentary on progress featuring Wilson’s pure tones, and “Manheim Station,” the working-man’s musical manual. Five songs on GONE TO SEED were re-recorded for WEATHERVANE, songs fans can’t get enough of, like “John Henry” and “It'll Get Better,” which Walker and Wilson wrote via text messages and voice mail. The Gougers is Shane Walker on vocals, guitar and harmonica; Jamie Wilson on vocals and acoustic guitar; Cody Foote on electric and upright bass; and John Ross Silva on drums and percussion, who kept his talents secret while he mastered the recording and then joined the band as it tours from Houston to Oklahoma City. Silva (with engineering credits for Dixie Chicks, Shawn Colvin, John Alagia and Lloyd Maines) had been a friend of the band and its incarnations for years, and it was he who brought in country-rocker-producer Keith Gattis, who oversaw the production. The two Texas songwriters teamed up this way: Walker, the deep singer-songwriter who played drums and piano by age 4 (and later guitar), heard Wilson singing harmony in a cantina in College Station where together they attended Texas A&M and was blown away. Both had grown up in small towns (he from Crawford, she from Sealy) listening to good country music and soaking up influences from Bob Wills and Johnny Cash to Bruce Springsteen, both of their fathers, and even writer/philosopher Joseph Campbell. Walker was also absorbing the songwriting skills of high-caliber pistols the likes of Gram Parsons and Townes Van Zandt. When the four put their talented heads together, what results is an eclectic blend of new music and lyrics refined to the basics — as stark yet as loaded with meaning as the band’s logo and band members’ tattoos: a crying bird ready to fly from its perch atop a broken heart.
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Average Rating : 0              Total Reviews: 56


Gougers  10/14/2006            
Davin Hope and family
By far the most talanted group of new singers in the country/folk music areana. I have seen them twice and will see them again today. The're two cd's have become family favoriates and are very pleasing to listen to over and over again. The Gougers embody everything great about a talanted musical act and deserve huge success. Thanks Jamie, Shane, and Cody for being the soundtrack of our Heartfelt Texas experience. Keep going until all your musical dreams are realized. The world needs you.
Gougers  09/16/2006            
Paul
Just heard this group in McGregor and was blown away! Bought both CDs and listened again on the way home. I hope "The Raven" is included on their next CD. And I hope they go far! Hope to catch them in Austin!
Gougers  07/19/2006            
Jordan
Possibly the most talented country trio around. I pray that they'll go far.
Gougers  07/03/2006            
cool kim
This album is a must have!!!! I love listening to it. GO GOUGERS!!!!
Gougers  06/20/2006            
Big Bad Love
Pour out my heart and drink the damned thing dry...
Gougers  06/15/2006            
mackenzie
superb sounds!! i absolutely love the cd and the little notes on how the songs came about!
Gougers  06/02/2006            
YerDaddy
It reeks of awesomeness. There aren't any better young songwriters in the state of Texas (and not many who are just as good).
Gougers  05/25/2006            
Texan wannabe
Simply another winner. It hasn't come out of my car's CD player since I got it
Gougers  10/25/2005            
Wootton Clan Member
I agree with MEM- artists like The Gougers, Mike Ethan Messick, and Gabe Wootton are what make songwriting work, especially in the Brazos Valley. Rich O'Toole may not be very talented when it comes to that, but he would never say all of those disgusting, bad things about people that have been said in the preceding pages. Besides, Rich is too concerned with rising to the top of Texas music to concern himself with petty bickering. MEM, keep on preachin'! Long live the Sidehill Gougers, and long live King Richard O'Toole!
Gougers  10/25/2005            
MEM
Okay, number one, the Gougers are top f'n notch and everyone should own the album, plus their next one, but also I'd like to add to the discussion that the actual Rich O'Toole rarely if ever says anything bad about other artists. So don't be tempted to believe otherwise.
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