Wade Bowen



































Wade Bowen
Wade Bowen Videos


Across five independent albums and a decade-plus of touring, Wade Bowen has amassed a string of regional hits and awards, 

and also a fan base who is passionate about music. Indeed, in the fourteen years since Bowen launched his career at Stubb’s Barbecue

 in Lubbock, Texas, he’s risen from collegiate

greenhorn to the top of the Texas music and Red Dirt circuit. His colleagues and friends Pat Green, Jack Ingram, Eli Young Band and

others had made the major-label leap, helping to take a vibrant regional sound to the rest of America. Now Bowen is poised to bring

that Red Dirt and independent spirit to country music at large.

 

Wade’s baritone is dense and concentrated, with traces of whisky and smoke and an

autumnal warmth. Bowen takes command of his songs, cutting over the top of producer Justin Niebank’s sculpted guitar-scapes on his latest release "The Given." The

sound is one hundred percent country, rife with pedal steel and vivid emotion, but it’s also music that could easily find a home with fans

of Bowen’s rock idols – folks like Bruce Springsteen and Jackson Browne. Take a few passes through this project and you’ll hearing a

singer’s singer and a focused songwriter who’s adding layers to his music all the time.

 

On a live circuit where the overwhelming mandate is to stir up a party, Bowen has aimed to leave folks with

a memory. As a writer, even one from a state with some tall literary traditions, he’s not trying to earn a PhD in poetry; he’s trying to

communicate. “My style,” he says, “is more to try to evoke an emotion. I’m more about trying to leave a mark on people.”

Growing up in Waco, Bowen’s exposure to the music of Texas was limited to whatever made it on FM country radio. George Strait

was king. Guy Clark was a name he’d not have recognized before getting to college. But at school, in Lubbock, he discovered the full

spectrum of Texas artistry, starting with Robert Earl Keen. “He was a big changing point in my life,” says Wade. “I realized by listening

to him that there was way more out there than I ever knew. So I started getting into Guy Clark and other great Texas music. But I was

obsessed with Robert Earl. When we started the band we were sort of a Robert Earl cover band.”

That band was called West 84, and they found that with their large posse of friends who’d always show up for a good time, it was easy

to land gigs. Bowen meanwhile began to channel a lifelong love of writing into songs, and when college ended he made two major

decisions. He took on the role of solo artist, and he moved to Austin. By then, about 2001, fellow Waco native Pat Green had busted

out to national prominence and the Texas music phenomenon was the buzz of Nashville. It was part of Wade Bowen’s inspiration to

charge ahead.

Try Not To Listen is the album Wade regards as his true debut, the project that kicked off a life and living made of 200-plus nights a

year on the road and patient grassroots fan development. Then with Lost Hotel in 2006, things really began to click. The opening track

“God Bless This Town” reached No. 1 on the bellwether Texas Music Chart, and to date, 

 Bowen has had a total of 10 Number 1's and 15 Top 5 Singles on the Texas Music Chart. 

He achieved another landmark in 2010, when he was invited to add his name to the roster of great artists

who’ve made a Live At Billy Bob’s CD/DVD combo at the iconic club in Fort Worth. 

Date Venue City State Note
No Tour Dates Available
08/27/2010 - Local Favorite Bowen Returns With New Hit Single From Live CD - Read More
05/30/2010 - Dreams continue for Wade Bowen - Read More
03/31/2010 - Brazos Nights Concert Series Begins Friday  - Read More
02/01/2010 - Wade Bowen makes history in Texas  - Read More
More News
No Blogs Available
02/01/2006 - Wade Bowen Q&A - Read More
More News
Average Rating : 0              Total Reviews: 395


Wade Bowen  02/07/2004            
Lauren
Wade and West 84 are so awesome, and they always put on a great show. They are such great guys. Best of luck to them!
Wade Bowen  01/29/2004            
Chip Spurlock
I saw Wade Bowen and West 84 play last night at the Varsity Theatre in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. I am a big fan of country music but I am disappointed in where Nashville is taking the Country Music Industry. Let me tell you that they, along with Cross Canadian Ragweed, put on the best fucking show I have ever been to. I was worried that country was going to all those pop faggets but now that I know how much talent there is out there it gives country music a damn good future. These guys are definitely something special. I say fuck Nashville! Let's move everything to Texas and make country music sound the way it was supposed to sound. If West 84 is reading this....Keep doing what you are doing because people wont forget the quality of music you are putting out there. And if any one knows where I might find some tablature for them let me know.
Wade Bowen  01/27/2004            
hr
Since when is Wade Bowen from Oklahoma Pal. He was raised in Waco and Went to Tech not that it matters if he was from OK. It just shows what the hell you know robby.
Wade Bowen  01/23/2004            
tiffani
hey guys, i'd just like to say if you have posted more than one review badmouthing wade bowen & west 84 you need to get a life! i fell in love with their music about 5 months ago. because of them i gained so much more respect for true country artists. these guys are awesome!! i love yall!
Wade Bowen  01/20/2004            
Robert
Wow. I thought this was an opinion page. Wade has good songs. The music is good. The band is very tight together. I'm not saying they suck. What I'm saying is it ain't country. I guess since no one likes honky tonk shit Wade Bowen and Reckless had a very small crowd at Billy Bob' that night. And since when is Rascall Flats country. That was just a dumb remark. Look I'm giving Wade 5 Stars this time so everyone can get along. A Honky Tonk should have Honky Tonk music. If that is crazy thought. I guess I'm crazy. And as for "the new sound" you speak of,... "southern rock". I guess John Fogerty and LS were a fiction in my imagination. New sound. that's just funny. Welcome boys and girls to commercial Texas Music. For your entertainment tonight the "new sound" of Wade Bowen. Unstarch your pearlsnaps and don't shave. Let's all be Texas Hippies. 5 Stars. 5 Stars. 5 Stars
Wade Bowen  01/18/2004            
okie
if you dont like it, dont listen. not everyone likes that honkey tonk shit. country needs a new sound and all these new guys are trying to keep it from killing itself with all the bullshit they are playing on the radio. if you like honkey tonk music, go to nashville and visit a kareoke bar. if you dont like west 84, quit wasting your time on thier reviews. go to rascal flats web page.
Wade Bowen  01/17/2004            
kristie
Hey, these guys are great. As for Robert, they are Texas country, not even from Oklahoma. And if you had listened to the songs you would relize there is a ton of country heart and sole in every one. If you are looking for some puppet from Nashville that sings songs someone else wrote go some where else. These guys are excellent.
Wade Bowen  01/17/2004            
Robert
Wade Bowen and 84...yet another reason why we need to put border patrol on the red river. Wade is just another Okie making Texas Country die. His nazi booking agency is trying put a square block in a circle hole. They have talent. No doubt. but it ain't country. Not even a little bit. So don't play Billy Bob's. Look I know he doesn't claim country. But he plays country venues. Go back to Oklahoma and pursue you MTV, LA, dreams. quit tainting my honky tonks. thanks for waisting my time tonight.
Wade Bowen  12/28/2003            
taylor
hey guys i just went and saw yall for my second time in helotes and it was off the wall it started out slow everyone was sitting down but once everyone got into it it was bad ass my buddies ears were still ringin the next morning! it was bad ass i cant wait to see yall again
Wade Bowen  12/19/2003            
Amy
I have to admit I was at a show and I didn't realize I made such a bad impression. I was just trying to say that I want more music and less speeches. We all get what you are saying and you do it better in song :-)
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