December 31, 2012 5:00 am by: Haley Howle
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll hear how the “Queen of the Accordion” took charge of her Houston realm.
Ventura Alonzo was born on December 30, 1904, in Matamoros, Mexico. When Alonzo was five, her family moved to Brownsville, Texas, where she learned to play piano and accordion. By the 1920s, she was living in Houston and had married a bajo sexto player named Frank Alonzo. In 1938, the couple started the band, Alonzo y Sus Rancheros. Ventura Alonzo not only wrote many of the group’s songs, but she was also the first
tejana accordionist to record. In 1956, the Alonzos opened La Terraza, one of the most popular Mexican-American venues in Houston. Ventura Alonzo performed in the house band but also worked as the club’s business manager, negotiating artist contracts and handling promotions and ticket sales....
» read more
|
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn about a small record label that had a big impact on Texas music. On December 28, 1953, Sarg Records of Luling, Texas, made its first recording, “Korean Love Song,” by country singer Neal Merritt. World War II veteran Charlie Fitch started Sarg Records as a way to supply recordings for his jukebox business. Sarg Records went on to record numerous Texas artists from a variety of ethnic genres. It also released some of the earliest recordings of Willie Nelson and a young Doug Sahm.
Although Sarg Records never earned much money, it helped document and preserve a broad range of musical styles found in Texas by recording dozens of German, Czech, Tejano, country, R&B, and rockabilly artists from throughout the Lone Star State.... » read more
|
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll recall a natural disaster that inspired a folk anthem. On April 14, 1935, an enormous dust storm blew through the Texas Panhandle, inundating the small town of Pampa.
Woody Guthrie, born in Oklahoma on July 14, 1912, had moved to Pampa,...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a singing schoolteacher whose hit song landed him in the national spotlight....
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll recall a special evening when the “Boss” showed up early for work.
On March 14, 1974, Austin music fans got a pleasant surprise. A young New Jersey rocker named
Bruce Springsteen arrived a day early for his two-night stint at the...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll visit a nightclub that used music to help break down barriers of racial segregation. The Galvan Ballroom in Corpus Christi opened on March 2, 1950. Rafael Galvan, Sr., built the elegant venue as a permanent home for his fifteen-piece Galvan Orchestra, the...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll learn about a world renowned musician who chose to make Texas his home.
Carl Venth was born in Cologne, Germany, on February 16, 1860. By the time he was nineteen, he began touring Europe and worked as a concertmaster in Paris. Venth moved...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll celebrate a jazz musician who gained fame playing country music.
Al Stricklin was born in
Antioch, Texas, on January 29, 1908. Stricklin always considered himself a jazz pianist and...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll honor one of the most influential musicians in American history. Huddie Ledbetter, better known as
Lead Belly, was born January 21, 1888, near
Mooringsport, Louisiana. When...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a West Texas wild man who contributed to both 1950s rockabilly and 1970s pop.
Rockabilly pioneer
Dean Beard died on April 4, 1989. Born in Santa Anna, Texas, on August 31, 1935, Beard was still a teenager when he befriended a young...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet a musician whose legacy quite literally helped leave a trail for others to follow....
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll hear a performance that signaled certain death to its audience. On the morning of March 6, 1836, the defenders of the Alamo heard a sound that meant their siege had reached its grim conclusion. Mexican General Santa Anna’s troops are believed to have...
» read more
This week in Texas music history, we'll meet a child prodigy whose tastes ranged from classical music to fiddle hoedowns. At her last public performance on February 23, 1991, pianist
Ruth Bingaman Smith was honored for her work by proclamation from Texas governor Ann Richards....
» read more
King Curtis was born Curtis Ousley on February 7, 1934, in Fort Worth. His parents gave him a saxophone at the age of twelve, and he soon began emulating his idols: Lester Young and Louis Jordan. In 1952, Curtis moved to New York City and became one of the most sought-after...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll meet one of the most successful yet least well-known musicians ever to come from the Lone Star State.
Gene Austin died on January 24, 1972. Born Eugene Lucas on June 24, 1900, in Gainesville, Texas, he was only 15 when he began singing in vaudeville...
» read more
This Week in Texas Music History, we’ll remember a man who preferred to let others have the spotlight. Steel guitarist,
Jimmy Day, was born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on January 9, 1934, but spent much of his life in Texas. While still a teenager in the early 1950s, he began...
» read more