This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: A.O. Babel

January 14, 2013 5:00 am by: Haley Howle

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a piano playing cowboy who was not really a cowboy at all. A. O. Babel died in Randolph, New York, on January 19, 1896. The son of a music professor, Babel was born in 1858 in Seguin, Texas. He got his start playing piano in Houston-area saloons. In 1885, Babel took his talents north, performing in Chicago as the “cowboy pianist.” Despite his classical training, Babel promoted himself as a genuine Texas cowboy who only played by ear. His clever marketing paid off in 1890, when a popular novel celebrating both his piano playing and his supposed heroic adventures in the Wild West made him a national sensation. Several people who had known A. O. Babel back in Texas disputed his claims of being a heroic Wild West figure. Nevertheless, by the time of his death in 1896, Babel’s reputation as a piano playing cowboy had spread throughout North America and across Europe....
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This Week In Texas Music History: Maggie Jones

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week In Texas Music History: Magg...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll honor one of the Lone Star State’s very first female recording artists....
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This Week In Texas Music History: Lee Roy Matocha

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week In Texas Music History: Lee ...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll remember an accordion player who squeezed a lot of music into one lifetime. Lee Roy Matocha died on July 12, 2003. Nicknamed the “Fayetteville Flash,” Matocha was born on August 2, 1932, in » read more
This Week in Texas Music History: Robert Johnson

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Robe...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn about a Dallas recording session that some believe involved a deal with the devil....
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This Week in Texas Music History: Love Street Light Circus and Feel Good Machine

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Love...

On June 3, 1967, the Love Street Light Circus and Feel Good Machine opened in Houston. The venue became the city’s premier club for such psychedelic Texas bands as Bubble Puppy, Red Krayola, and Fever Tree. Other local groups that played Love Street include the Moving Sidewalks, whose lead...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Don Robey

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Don ...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn about a record label that was a real feather in the cap of the Texas recording industry. On May 23, 1973, Don Robey sold Duke-Peacock Records to ABC-Dunhill, bringing an end to an important era in the Texas recording industry. Owner of the popular...
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This Week In Texas Music History: The Chuck Wagon Gang

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week In Texas Music History: The ...

Rosa Lola Carter, of the gospel quartet, the Chuck Wagon Gang, died on May 13, 1997. Formed in Lubbock in 1935 by David Carter and three of his children, Ernest, Rosa Lola, and Effie, the group first performed on local radio as the Carter Quartet. By 1936, the Carters had moved to Fort Worth,...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Sacred Harp Singing

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Sacr...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn about one of the oldest and most distinctive musical traditions in Texas. On April 28, 1900, the South Union Singing Convention first met at the Round Top schoolhouse in Caldwell County, Texas. Later renamed the Southwest Texas Sacred Harp Singing...
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This Week In Texas Music History: Peppermint Harris

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week In Texas Music History: Pepp...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a singer who had a minty fresh moniker. Harrison Nelson, Jr., better known as Peppermint Harris, was born in Texarkana, Texas, on July 17, 1925. In the late 1940s, he moved to...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Gale Storm

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Gale...

Actress and singer, Gale Storm, died on June 27, 2009. Storm was born Josephine Owaissa Cottle on April 5, 1922, in Bloomington, Texas. In 1939, she changed her name to Gale Storm after moving to California as the winner...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Bruno Villareal

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Brun...

This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a wandering performer who left a lasting mark on Texas music. On June 12, 1930, South Texas accordionist Bruno Villareal made the first known conjunto recordings on a major label, Okeh Records. Villareal was partially blind and worked as a street...
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This Week In Texas Music History: Count Basie & His Orchestra

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week In Texas Music History: Coun...

This Week In Texas Music History, we'll meet some musicians who really knew how to honk their horns. On May 31, 1940, Count Basie & His Orchestra recorded the song "Super Chief" for Okeh Records. Tenor saxophonist...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Robert Shaw

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Robe...

Robert Shaw died on May 16, 1985. Born in Stafford, Texas, on August 9, 1908, Shaw was not allowed to study piano as a child, since his parents thought that was not appropriate for a boy. Undaunted, the young Shaw hid underneath the house and listened while his sister practiced her...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Carl Gardner

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Carl...

Carl Gardner, lead singer of the pop group the Coasters, was born on April 29, 1928, in Tyler, Texas. In the early 1950s, Gardner moved to Southern California and started the doo-wop band the Robins. By 1955, Gardner and bassist Bobby Nunn had relocated to New York and formed a new...
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This Week in Texas Music History: Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown

This Week in Texas Music History

This Week in Texas Music History: Clar...

This Week in Texas Music History, we honor a man who helped inspire the creation of one of the state’s most popular record labels. Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown was born in Vinton, Louisiana, on April 18, 1924. When he was three weeks old, Brown’s family moved to Orange, Texas, where he...
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