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    All Over the Map:
    True Heroes of Texas Music

    By Michael Corcoran

    (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2005)
    Number Seventeen in the
    Jack and Doris Smothers Series
    in Texas History, Life, and Culture.
    Illustrated. 176 pages.
    ISBN: 978-0-292-70976-8.


    Review by Dr. Kirk Bane
    “Waylon Jennings had it all. Movie-star looks. A warm, forceful voice. A gift for writing frill-less songs that roused the soul. But Jennings possessed one quality that rose above all the others. When he announced his arrival as a country music star with 1968’s ‘Only Daddy That’ll Walk the Line,’ he sounded like no one who had come before him. That’s only happened three or four times in the history of country music…In an era when label bosses kept their acts in the middle of the road, Jennings swerved from side to side and told them to eat his dust. That black hat wasn’t just for decoration, Hoss.” So begins Michael Corcoran in his engaging essay on the outlaw musician from Littlefield, Texas, one of thirty-five pieces in this conversational, captivating collection.

    In addition to Jennings, Corcoran, former music critic for the Dallas Morning News and the Austin American-Statesman, also features lively vignettes on Lone Star performers as diverse as Ernest Tubb, Doug Sahm, Sly Stone, Bobby Fuller, Archie Bell and the Drells, Cindy Walker, Selena, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Blind Willie Johnson, and the Butthole Surfers. He divides his study into seven parts: East Texas/Houston, Dallas Area, Waco Area, Austin, San Antonio and the Rio Grande Valley, West Texas, and Bonus Tracks, which includes such articles as “The New Sincerity: Austin in the Eighties” and “The Texas Top 40: Michael Corcoran’s List of the Best Texas Recordings Ever.” Corcoran’s artists not only come from various regions of the state, they also play a wide range of music, including country, blues, rock, rap, soul, gospel, Cajun, and Tejano. Hence his clever title, All Over the Map.

    “No state is more musical than Texas, whose very geography seems to hum. Almost every city reminds you of a song, and so it’s easy to break into a medley of ‘San Antonio Rose,’ ‘El Paso,’ ‘Streets of Laredo,’ ‘Amarillo by Morning,’ ‘Galveston,’ and ‘La Grange’ while checking out the ol’ Rand McNally…Indeed, Texas is the biggest and the boldest when it comes to its songs and sounds.” Corcoran offers unforgettable portraits of his subjects. Sly and the Family Stone, he maintains, “erased the boundaries of race, sex, and musical styles back when Prince and the Revolution were wearing swaddling clothes…The Family Stone’s eternal moment came at the Woodstock festival on August 16, 1969, when they tore up a crowd of four thousand with a wicked version of ‘I Want to Take You Higher.’ Because of transportation problems and scheduling snafus beyond their control, Sly and the band didn’t go on at Woodstock until 3:30 A.M. When they revved up their turbulent soul revue, though, it became midnight all over again.” Assessing Willie Nelson, Corcoran asserts that the “phases and stages of Willie’s career have found him evolving from the honky-tonk sideman to the hit Nashville songwriter, from progressive country pioneer to crooner of standards. And now the iconoclast has become the icon, with Willie achieving American folk hero status…This pot-smoking Zen redneck in pigtails, who sings Gershwin through his nose and plays a guitar that looks like he picked it up at a garage sale, transcends music and has come to personify the individual, the rectangular peg to the round hole of corporatization.” Or consider Corcoran’s observations on Selena Quintanilla. “By its very structure,” he contends, “Tejano is a blend of two cultures, and Selena was a bridge between them. Such tunes as ‘Techno Cumbia,’ with its Michael Jackson-like trills, and the reggae-heavy ‘Bidi Bidi Bom Bom’ present a seamless blend of convex styles. Dreaming of You also contains a duet with world music frequent flier David Byrne on ‘God’s Child,’ with Selena handling the Spanish parts with fire and grace. Like Elvis Presley, whose legend has overshadowed his skill, Selena could sing it all, from Latin soul to mariachi to Valley pop to lounge act schmaltz…The countless quickie bios tell us that Selena loved to shop at Wal-Mart, even after she was rich and famous. Her favorite restaurant was Pizza Hut. Like most Tejanas, her first language was English. She was very much a product of her surroundings.”

    Students of Texas popular culture, especially those interested in music, will relish this entertaining, informative anthology, a true treat to read. They’ll definitely demand an encore!


    Note: Corcoran’s latest publication is He is My Story: The Sanctified Soul of Arizona Dranes (Tompkins Square, 2012), a biography of the blind gospel singer from Sherman, Texas.

    - Review by Dr. Kirk Bane (Blinn College—Bryan campus)


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