This weekend - okay, yesterday - I attended a wedding reception in the small Alberta (Canada) town of Rosalind. The band that played there was the River Jacks.
Now, I'm more punker than a C&W guy, but this group was tight. Yes, there were lots of covers I didn't recognize, not being up on the latest country hits (I was more of a country fan up-to 1975) and they took me by surprise. I actually stayed longer than planned to hear them. That being said, they did a killer and much different version of "Take Another Little Piece of My Heart," one of the few pieces I did recognize.
The River Jacks are well known around the Camrose area (if I got the story straight, Chad went to Bawlf school with the Maid of Honor), and I'm not surprised. They are (alphabetically):
Tom Lichak (vox, guitar, bass)
Jeff Orom (drums / vox)
Myra Marshall (vox /guitar)
Garrett Richard (bass)
Chad Szott (guitar/vox)
If you get the chance to see them play at some fair or wedding or corporate event, and you're in a C&W bent, check 'em out.
For the
more than a decade that I’ve known Brian Dickson, his fandom of the
multi-talented Hoyt Axton has been evident. If Hoyt had been younger, it’s
possible he could have been called country punk, along with the likes of Rank
& File, but he was more of the generation of Townes van Zandt and the
hyper-realistic country that was both harsh and beautiful. This, in part, is
why I asked Brian to write something about Hoyt, since little is known about
him these days, and he deserves the credit he can get. Besides, feeding a
musical obsession is something I will usually stand behind, especially if the
subject is as worthwhile as Axton. – Robert Barry Francos / FFanzeen, 2014
By Brian
Dickson, 2014 Images
from the Internet
I was pleasantly surprised when Robert dropped me a line and
asked if I would like to write a piece on Hoyt Axton for this blog, but I had
to ask him: “Are you sure Axton fits the bill for ‘Rock n’ Roll Attitude with
Integrity’?” Robert's reply: “Hoyt was as punk as Johnny Cash or Townes Van Zandt,
as far as I’m concerned.” Which I believe is true in several ways. Hoyt enjoyed
a long, colorful career that included not only music composition and performance,
but acting, record production and commercial voice-over work. But part of my
fascination with the man, I think, is that his musical approach always eluded
definition. He could never be bracketed into one genre or another.
Hoyt Wayne
Axton. If you
don’t know the name, chances are you’d recognize him from films and TV. “Bonanza.“
Smoky (1966). The Black Stallion (1979). “WKRP in Cincinnati.”Heart Like A Wheel (1983).
Gremlins (1984) [He played the dad who gave his son the Gremlin – RBF]. We’re No Angels (1989). A slew of others.
But if you can’t place the face, chances are you know the voice. Extoller of the
Big Mac, Pizza Hut, and Busch beer. And of course, writer and singer of some
truly great songs.
Born in Duncan, Oklahoma, in 1938, and raised in Comanche; the eldest son
of John T. Axton and Mae Boren (Mae, later known as ”The Queen Mother of
Nashville,“ co-wrote “Heartbreak Hotel” for Elvis). He served a brief stint in
the U.S. Navy after attending Oklahoma State University on a football
scholarship. His career in music began in West Coast coffee houses and folk
clubs in the early sixties.
I’ll
admit I’m showing up at the party pretty late here. I was born in ’73; by that
year Axton had recorded ten albums for six different labels. Nineteen
sixty-nine saw the release of My Griffin
Is Gone on Columbia Records, followed by two on Capitol Records in 1971 (Joy to the World, and the lesser known Country Anthem). In ’73 came Less Than the Song on A&M, the first
of four albums on that label, which is widely recognized as Hoyt’s creative
peak: Song in ’73, Life Machine (1974), Southbound (1975) and Fearless (1976).
But being
an ‘80’s kid, I became aware of Hoyt not through his music, but by seeing him
in movies - Gremlins, primarily - and
on television, namely, “WKRP in Cincinnati” and “Diff’rent Strokes.” In tenth
grade it became a daily routine after walking home from school to catch a
re-run of “WKRP”at 4. I fondly recall
that classic first-season episode entitled, “I Do, I Do…For Now.” Hoyt, playing
the imposing “T.J. Watson from Rockthrow, West Virginia,” arrives at the
station to reclaim his childhood sweetheart, Jennifer Marlowe (Loni Anderson),
who hastily pretends to be married to Dr. Johnny Fever (Howard Hesseman). Hoyt
sings “Jealous Man” to a captive and terrified Fever in the station lobby (“You got the knife, I got the gun / c’mon
boy, we’re gonna have a little fun…”). He proceeds to tell a story about
his dear ol’ pappy. And how the woman his pappy loved – his mama – was already
married to another man by the name of Jenkins. But Jenkins didn’t wanna give
his mama up. So his pappy - bein’ the man he was - went down to see Jenkins…and
called him out. “Called him out?”
Fever replies nervously. That’s right, T.J. says – called…him…out. Fever (hope diminishing): “To talk.”
Hoyt: “Uh-huh. Then he shot him.” This is one of my favorite scenes in all of TV
history.
It wasn’t
until a road trip in the first car I ever owned – an ‘85 Plymouth Turismo, paid
$650 cash – that I found Hoyt on a purely musical level. This was a solo run from
Ottawa to my home province of New Brunswick, Canada, in 1999. I had been
browsing CDs in a music store a couple of days prior, and stumbled across the two-disc
A&M Years package, which contains
Axton’s four albums released on A&M Records from 1973-76. I remember
thinking, “Well, looky here. Hoyt Axton.” On that trip I cranked up songs on
that old Duster’s player like “Peacemaker,”
“Life Machine,” “Idol of the Band,” “Geronimo’s Cadillac,” and “No No Song.” I discovered
Hoyt’s music with road tunes from Southbound
and Fearless on the highway outside
of Montreal that morning, which made me realize what an underrated figure the
man was and is, to this day.
Hoyt is generally considered a country artist, particularly
from his musical bend in the mid-to-late ‘70s and on. But let’s go back to the
beginning: 1963. Consider his first folk recordings on Horizon Records: Greenback Dollar, Thunder’n Lightnin,’ Saturday’s Child. Bob Dylan broke down the
door, and Axton moseyed through – not with the same lyrical prowess as Dylan,
but with attitude, groove, and a voice like no other.
The following year saw Hoyt
“explode”! Released by Vee-Jay in ’64, Hoyt
Axton Explodes! is a mid-‘60s curio that might be loosely described as
“garage folk-rock.” If Axton has a blues record, it would be Sings Bessie Smith (1965).My
Griffin Is Gone (1969) is a lesser inclusion among the pantheon of classic albums
of the period, but an atmospheric gem of that era, nonetheless. And Joy to the World is a rock album. A rock
album with folky ballads making up half of each side, though. Folk n’ roll? Listen
to the title track and “Never Been to Spain” (big hits for Three Dog Night). Regard
others like “The Pusher” (big hit for Steppenwolf), “California Women,” or that
classic party song, “Lightning Bar Blues.” Also a tune called “Captain America”
from 1973. These are rock songs. His aforementioned albums on A&M from
1973-76 started with a somewhat experimental, progressive folk/blues oddity (Less Than the Song), but which somehow…wasn’t.
The albums Life Machine, Southbound and Fearless were “country-rock,” but…weren’t. Hoyt’s other albums for
MCA and the ones on his own Jeremiah label appeared to be country, but also
quietly defied categorization. For the most part, his music encompassed folk,
blues, rock ‘n’ roll and country simultaneously. Michael Curtis, co-writer of the Crosby, Stills
& Nash hit “Southern Cross,”
said of Axton: “Hoyt had his own way of writing. He didn't exactly break the
rules of songwriting, but he would often ignore them. He taught me a lot.” [Quote from HERE]
Hoyt:
I'm one of those fringe dudes -- Half folkie, half hippie, half Okie. My input
has been very eclectic. I was always surrounded by all kinds of music as my
family moved around the country: jazz, classical, gospel, whatever. The
influences enter from a lot of directions. [Quote from HERE]
Hoyt died of heart failure in Victor, Montana, in October of
1999, at the age of 61. I never had the opportunity to meet him, or see him in
concert. But from what I’ve read in recent years (and learned from members of
my Facebook tribute group Fans of Hoyt
[HERE] who actually knew him or met
him), he was a genuinely nice fella. In a People
magazine article published shortly after his death, his third wife, Donna Axton, said, “He used to throw twenty-dollar bills out the car
window and say, 'That will make someone happy.’” Look at almost anything
autographed by him and he will have written, “Joy to you, Hoyt.” “Joy” was his
watchword.
Currently living in Saskatoon (email at RBF55@msn.com for address). From 1977-88, I used to publish a print version of a music magazine in New York called FFanzeen, which dealt with the wide-ranging independent music scene. I also photographed many bands from the period (and since). Now I write this blog. And the beat goes on.