January 28, 2013 5:00 am by: Haley Howle
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn about a musical pioneer who drew inspiration from a barroom brawl.
Al Dexter died in
Lewisville, Texas, on January 28, 1984. Born in
Jacksonville, Texas, in 1902, he gained popularity writing songs describing his experiences in East Texas nightclubs. In 1936, Dexter released “Honky-Tonk Blues,” the first country record to use the term honky-tonk in its title. In that song and others, he described the rough-and-tumble nightlife found in many Texas beer joints. In 1943, Al Dexter wrote what would become his biggest hit after witnessing a jealous woman brandishing a gun while chasing her husband’s mistress through a barroom.
Al Dexter’s “Pistol-Packin’ Mama” achieved early country-crossover success when
Bing Crosby recorded it...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll visit a place that puts the official state seal on the sounds of Texas.... » read more
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a singer who blazed new trails both on and off the stage.
Etta Moten Barnett was born in
Weimar, Texas, on November 5, 1901. She began her singing career on Broadway in 1931 with...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a singer who was known as the “Sweetheart of the Americas.” On October 23, 1936, Eva Garza made her first recordings at the Texas Hotel in San Antonio. Born in the Alamo City on May 11, 1917, Garza began singing on local radio while still in high...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a rockabilly cat who sang his own version of a nursery rhyme.
Groovey Joe Poovey died on October 6, 1998. Born in Dallas on May 10, 1941, Joe Poovey was recording by the age of nine and fronting a country band on the Big D Jamboree by...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn how a country radio station helped launch the career of a rock and roll legend....
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a man who proved “Ideal” for recording classic Texas-Mexican music.
Paco Betancourt died on September 5, 1971. Born in Mexico in 1903, he and his family fled to Texas in 1910 during the Mexican Revolution. Betancourt went on to...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll remember a fiddler who was already turning heads at the age of five.
...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a singer who seemed to have an answer for everything. ...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll follow the trail of a cowgirl hall-of-famer.
Dale Evans was born Frances Octavia Smith on October 31, 1912, in
Uvalde, Texas. She first sang on radio in Memphis during the 1930s, but...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll honor a man who used music to fight racism.
Alphonso Trent died on October 14, 1959. Born in
Fort Smith, Arkansas in 1905, he achieved his greatest success in Dallas during the...
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This Week in Texas Music History we’ll remember the night a famous folk singer electrified Austin.
On September 24, 1965,
Bob Dylan performed at Austin’s Municipal Auditorium backed by a rock and roll band called
Levon and the Hawks. This was Dylan’s first...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll recall a bar fight that helped start a worldwide country music craze. On September 12, 1978,
Aaron Latham’s story “The Ballad of the Urban Cowboy: America’s Search for True Grit” appeared in...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll commemorate the Lone Star State’s own version of the Woodstock Festival. From August 30th to September 1st, 1969, just two weeks after Woodstock, Angus Wynne III organized the Texas International Pop Festival in Lewisville, outside of Dallas. The festival...
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This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll visit a Dallas bowling alley that featured everything from sock hops to glam rock....
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Beginning on August 3, 1925,
Carl T. Sprague recorded ten cowboy songs for the Victor Recording Company of New Jersey. Born in Brazoria County, Texas, on May 10, 1895, Sprague had learned cowboy songs as a child growing up on a cattle ranch. During World War I, he joined the U.S....
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