By Michael Corcoran AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Thursday, December 29, 2005
It's Spoon's time. Austin's most glistening gift to modern rock has earned the AMP Award for best Austin album of 2005, voted on by a collection of Austin Music Pundits, for the stunning "Gimme Fiction," which gets its Prince on with "I Turn My Camera On," sways and steps to "Sister Jack" and sounds like nothing and everything on "The Beast and Dragon, Adored."
You can almost take the "Austin" qualifer out of the award's title: "Gimme Fiction" just may be the best album of 2005, period. Britt Daniel and Jim Eno, the straight cowboys of Comeback Mountain, have been through the wringer, ridden the roller coaster — choose your cliché — in a career stymied by a lousy name (the "oo" sound doesn't rock, i.e. Doobie Brothers, Goo Goo Dolls.) For the band to look out over the tens of thousands of people crowding around their Lollapalooza stage July in Chicago, where critics hailed their set as a standout, must've been the sweetest redemption.
The Spoonsters, with 75 points (based on a weighted ranking system), didn't take this crown without a fight from a couple of KGSR faves. James McMurtry, who had two of the top five "Austin Song of the Year" picks, scored 72 points in second place with "Childish Things," while Eliza Gilkyson, who's been doing the best work of her career the past five years, finished third in the voting with 62 points for "Paradise Hotel."
Also strong with the voters were Charlie Sexton's "Cruel and Gentle Things" in fourth place and Jimmie Dale Gilmore's cozy cover LP "Come On Back" in fifth. Rounding out the Top 10 were "Weather and Water" by the Greencards, an outstanding album that no doubt would've finished higher if every voter still considered the new Nashvillians an Austin act; Elizabeth McQueen's pub rock romp on "Happy Doing What We're Doing"; Jimmy LaFave's "Blue Nightfall"; Cory Morrow's career-redefining "Nothing Left To Lose"; and the self-titled return of "Rick Broussard's Two Hoots and a Holler."
Just missing the Top 10 were newest releases from Guy Forsyth, whose radio-conquering "Long Long Time" was cited in the song of the year category; Ray Wylie Hubbard's delicious scrap, "Delirium Tremolos"; Marcia Ball's "Live! Down the Road"; "I Heard It On the X" from Los Super Seven; Marti Brom's "Sings Heartache Numbers"; and Ethan Azarian's "Cross'n Over."
As always, the song of the year category looks like a KGSR playlist, but let's give the station credit for playing so many local artists and having good taste. (Personal plea to Jody and Susan: Please, please, please cut down a little on "Childish Things." You'll never turn J-Mac into Norah Jones.)
Besides Spoon's well-deserved triumph, what was especially gratifying about this year's voting was the number of new names in the ranks: Brian Keane, Betty Soo, Glass Family, Back Porch Vipers, Dao Strom, Colin Brooks, Idgy Vaughn, Graham Weber, F For Fake and Sunny Sweeney. Such an infusion of fresh blood bodes well for the 2006 AMP Awards.
AUSTIN ALBUM OF THE YEAR
1. Spoon, 'Gimme Fiction' (Merge) 2. James McMurtry, 'Childish Things' (Compadre) 3. Eliza Gilkyson, 'Paradise Hotel' (Red House) 4. Charlie Sexton, 'Cruel and Gentle Things' (Back Porch) 5. Jimmie Dale Gilmore, 'Come On Back' (Rounder) 6. The Greencards, 'Weather and Water' (Dualtone) 7. (tie) Elizabeth McQueen, 'Happy Doing What We're Doing' (Freedom) Jimmy LaFave, 'Blue Nightfall' (Red House) 9. (tie) Cory Morrow, 'Nothing Left To Lose' (Smith Ent.) Rick Broussard's Two Hoots and a Holler, 'Rick Broussard's Two Hoots and a Holler' (Stag)
AUSTIN SONG OF THE YEAR
1. 'We Can't Make It Here,'James McMurtry 2. 'Time,' the Greencards 3. 'I Turn My Camera On,' Spoon 4. 'Childish Things,' James McMurty 5. 'Long Long Time,' Guy Forsyth 6. 'Paradise Hotel,' Eliza Gilkyson 7. 'The Big Wheel,' Stephen Bruton 8. 'Clay Pigeons,' John Prine (written by Blaze Foley) 9. 'I Hope,' Dixie Chicks 10. 'Little Rock,' Hayes Carll
The AMP electorate: John T. Kunz of Waterloo Records, Melanie Shrawder of KUT, Richard Skanse of Texas Music Magazine, Jody Denberg of KGSR, John Conquest of 3rd Coast Music and XL's Michael Corcoran, Joe Gross and Lynne Margolis.
REVEIWS
CD Review from NO DEPRESSION MAGAZINE (Sept-Oct, 2005)
Written by WILLIAM MICHAEL SMITH
RICK BROUSSARD’S TWO HOOTS AND A HOLLER,
Self-titled (Stag),
Once one of the surest draws in Austin, Rick Broussard’s band has been off the scene for almost a decade. Back in the day when hipsters waited in line at places like the Black Cat to catch Broussard’s flaming guitar and cowboy punk stage theatrics, a young Jesse Dayton was often in the audience, so this ten-track Dayton-produced comeback is filled with remakes of Dayton’s personal Hoots faves. The album isn’t wide enough in scope to fully reflect Broussard’s breadth; his punk and rockabilly sides have been ignored in favor of Texas roadhouse roots-rock (“Step Fast”), honky-tonk (“Blue Texas Northern”, “Good Used Heart”), and several Cajun stomps. But the set still satisfies immensely, especially for those seeking lots of rough-and-ready, rapid-fire Texas Telecaster twang-ing.
CD Review in Texas Music magazine Summer 2005 Issue #23
Reviewed by Rob Patterson
Until now, you had to have been there to understand why Rick Broussard and Two Hoots and a holler were an Austin legend-an overused term if there ever was one, but not in this case. Yet this smoking little platter, smartly produced by Jesse Dayton, even outshines those celebrated nights-usually drunken, often at the Hole in the Wall-when Broussard and the boys put the capital "R" in roof-raisin’ roots rockin'. Yep, this disc is better than the live reality and the rep it crated around this San Antone-reared talent as one of the Lone Star State's unsung greats. Broussard sings, plays and writes with the mature command and assurance that befits his eminence in the Capital City scene, tossing off charming popabilly ("Angels Cry"), kickin' country shuffles ("Good Used Heart"), spicy Cajun delicacies ("Leaving Lafayette"), blue norther laments ("Blues in the Night"), and Big Kahuna surf rock ("No Man's Land") like the star those who know say he should be.
With a history as tough and uncompromising as his band's sound, Rick Broussard returns from a self-imposed sabbatical with his hardcore roots-rock intact. Pyschobilly, garage, punk with sprinklings of Cajun, Two Hoots is tough. - Margaret Moser
Highly recommended!!! From the Cramps to Buddy Holly to Roky Erickson, this [Songs Our Vinyl Taught Us] is a CD of tunes that the Hoots have played live over the years but never recorded. Fronted by the talented, combustible Rick Broussard (Houston musician David Beebe calls him "the only real rock and roller I've ever met"), Two Hoots and a Holler have won Best Roots Band at the Austin Music Awards 7 times. Their CD "No Man's Land" has become a Texas cult classic and is a perennial seller for TMRU 13 years after it's 1991 release! - Matt Eskey Texas Music Roundup
"Rick (formerly Ricky) Broussard has never really done things the easy way. In 1982, before musicians and music fans in these parts were convinced that Johnny Cash and the Clash were kindred spirits, Broussard put together a band called Two Hoots and a Holler. The public finally caught up to Broussard, his bandmates and their approach to making sweaty, infectious, raucous, roots-based rock 'n' roll. The latest disc from Broussard/Two Hoots is "Songs Our Vinyl Taught Us," a first-class collection of covers that show Broussard and the band is still among the best at fusing influences.- Jim Beal; San Antonio Express News
The local music community fell in love with the ragin' Cajun since he started coming here from Seguin as guitarist in the Surfin' Cajuns in the early '80s. Fronting his next band, Two Hoots and a Holler, Broussard dripped with star power. Local musicians, meanwhile, were awed by Broussard's instinctive grace on the guitar; his single-string runs were songs within the songs. - Michael Corcoran; Austin American Statesman
For 20 years, Rick Broussard's Two Hoots & a Holler has epitomized the best aspects of Texas roots music, merging rockabilly with trad-country and adding enough punk abandon and songwriting flair to keep the whole thing from sounding retro-gimmicky or quaint. - Gilbert Garcia; San Antonio Current
"Hands down the most real, unaffected thing to EVER come out of Austin!" - Jesse Dayton
"I became a Two Hoots fan shortly upon arrival to Austin when I relocated from L.A. in '93. They seemed to fit this ideal for me that I had of a cool Texas band that could venture into British territory as well as classic American Music. They were a nice neat package as a three piece but they sometimes had an extra man on guitar or steel. Rick also had quite a few addictive original songs that soon became among my all time favorites. In fact, out on the road with Fastball, Miles and I would sometimes play "Step Fast" or "Blue is the Night" to try and spread the word.
In this collection of covers, you can find variety, but also a focus on the authentic vibe that, to me, is the main attraction to the band. Songs by Johnny Cash, The Cramps, Buddy Holly, even Roky Erikson, all seem to possess a common thread when sung by Rick Broussard. Flanked by his long time musical "hoots", Chris Staples and Vic Gerard, along with Austin guitar god John X Reed, Rick has put this collection together at the behest of his fans. Over the years people wanted recorded versions of songs the band covered live and I think this will probably satisfy them as well as recruit new devotees to this classic American band." -Tony Scalzo
"As the fire-breathing leader of roots-pop legends Two Hoots and a Holler, Broussard has a new band, Shadow Man, and his solo CDs include 1990's No Man's Land (on the French New Rose label) and 1992's Rick Broussard (Austin's Dynamic Records). As a musical bartender mixing Cajun, honky-punk, and pure rock forms, Broussard serves up an eye-blearing sonic cocktail-as evidenced by his numerous Austin Music Awards trophies for Best Roots Rock Band." - "Texas Music" Rick Koster
"Rick Broussard's guitar playing has always been instinctive, as if to suggest that there's no separation between the mind and the fingers." - Michael Corcoran; American-Statesman Staff
"Two Hoots and a Holler ruled Austin with their hardcore roots rock 20 years ago, and whaddaya know? They still rock! Messrs. Ricky Broussard, Vic Gerard, and Chris Staples currently burn up the European circuit with songs from their last CD No Man's Land and influences ranging from the Cramps to Roky Erickson." -Margaret Moser; Austin Chronicle
"We will make the Wayne the Train comparison not because Rick Broussard plays country music straight out of the Thirties and Forties (he doesn't), but because he's an earnest young man, with a purdy voice, whose love for roots -- all of 'em -- results in the kind of homespun, down-to-the-core, real Texas stuff people move to Austin for." - Austin Chronicle
PRESS
Jim Beal: 'Billy varieties bound to suit many tastes
Web Posted: 11/11/2004 12:00 AM CST
San Antonio Express-News
It's a 'billy weekend with variations on traditional rockabilly plus a show by psychobilly pioneers. There's also a high-powered, all-star music gathering in the Hill Country. So get busy.
Rick's Hoots/Holler
Rick (formerly Ricky) Broussard has never really done things the easy way. In 1982, before musicians and music fans in these parts were convinced that Johnny Cash and the Clash were kindred spirits, Broussard put together a band called Two Hoots and a Holler.
With Two Hoots, San Antonio native Broussard was ready, willing and able to play revved-up rockabilly, pure country and raw punk while pulling in other influences ranging from Cajun to soul, from blues to swing. A guitar-slinging ace with more energy than a dozen portable generators, Broussard seemed at home playing in country venues, punk clubs and in the big middle of the San AntonioRiver during special occasions.
It wasn't long before Broussard moved the band to Austin, where he found a performing home at the storied Black Cat Lounge. The public finally caught up to Broussard, his bandmates and their approach to making sweaty, infectious, raucous, roots-based rock 'n' roll.
It also wasn't too long before Broussard proved to be his own worst enemy, succumbing to the lure of the rock 'n' roll party, to drugs and alcohol. The promise hinted at on the 1991 New Rose-label CD "No Man's Land" went largely unfulfilled. Broussard dropped in and out of sight, in and out of rehab. The fury of his onstage shows continued off stage.
Broussard's odyssey was well-chronicled by Michael Corcoran in a story that ran in the Austin American-Statesman's Xlent magazine early this month.
"I'm feeling great," Broussard said. "I was pleased to do that interview with Michael Corcoran. I've known him half my life. It was OK to throw it down with him."
Broussard pulled up on the stick a couple of years ago. Clean and sober since '02, Broussard, based in Seguin for seven years, is back at it in earnest with Two Hoots, longtime collaborators Vic Gerard (bass) and Chris Staples (drums), both of whom are among the best in the country rollicking business. And there's a new CD.
Tonight, Broussard and Two Hoots and a Holler will join forces at the Cove with the Infidels. Show time is 9 p.m.; the Infidels will close the show. Cover will be in the $5 neighborhood.
The latest disc from Broussard/Two Hoots is "Songs Our Vinyl Taught Us," a first-class collection of covers that show Broussard and the band is still among the best at fusing influences. The 14-track disc includes songs from Johnny Cash ("I Still Miss Someone"), Nick Lowe ("Raging Eyes"), Buddy Holly ("Wishing") and the Cramps ("Garbage Man").
"It's kind of a fan-inspired record," Broussard said. "These are songs fans have asked me to put on record, so I did."
A new album of original material produced by Jesse Dayton is almost finished. The disc, "Rick Broussard's Two Hoots and a Holler," is set for release on Dayton's Stag label in February.
"For the Cove show, we plan to do songs from the record and maybe a dozen originals," Broussard said.
When it comes to kicking it into overdrive, both on record and onstage, Broussard and Two Hoots haven't lost a step. And, now that he's clean, it's time to look forward to more hot steps from Broussard.
XL Cover Story: Ricky Broussard jumps back into his music
Two Hoots and a Holler's frontman is enjoying his sober view from the Austin stages that are all too familiar to the band
By MichaelCorcoran
Nov. 4, 2004
His eyes were darting, terrified, like an animal not yet used to a new cage. Ricky Broussard looked spooked as he waited to take the stage at the Hole In the Wall -- a territory he once utterly owned -- on June 7, 2002. He stiffly nodded and smiled at well-wishers. When he stepped up, strapped on his guitar and plugged it into his amp, it was with the gleeful anticipation of a dicey medical procedure.
He looked around the club and saw the guy he used to buy cocaine from, the folks he used to drink with until the sun came up and more than a couple of fellas he'd battled in drunken bouts. Broussard took a deep breath and then got ready to play stone-cold sober for the first time in more than two decades.
"We used to fuss, we used to fight," he sang, separating the lines with four curt guitar notes, then repeated the words as the crowd erupted. "We used to hoot and holler late into the night and let the shotgun blast/We're plumb out of our minds/we're going nowhere fast."
Halfway through that first song, Broussard settled down and his band, Two Hoots and a Holler, played one of its best sets since its Black Cat Lounge heyday in the late '80s/early '90s. And when the crowd screamed and stomped for one more encore, Broussard and a friend from his support group back in Seguin were already in the car. The Austin music scene's notorious symbol of unrealized potential, who never let something trifling like morning light break up a party, was heading home before last call.
"I'd played the Hole hundreds, maybe even thousands of times," Broussard recalls of that gig, "but that was the first time I ever really felt the love from the people. It was like, everybody in the place was in my corner."
It was really always like that, but Broussard had previously been too messed up, too insecure, too defensive to notice. The local music community fell in love with the ragin' Cajun since he started coming here from Seguin as guitarist in the Surfin' Cajuns in the early '80s. Fronting his next band, Two Hoots and a Holler, Broussard dripped with star power. Such catchy, faintly exotic rock songs as "Blues in the Night," "Step Fast" and "Middle of the Night" defined Monday nights at the Black Cat, where the crowds lined up hours before showtime and didn't let up all night.
Local musicians, meanwhile, were awed by Broussard's instinctive grace on the guitar; his single-string runs were songs within the songs. "When you looked into the crowd at those early Two Hoots shows, you'd see a couple dozen guitar players," says musician Jesse Dayton. "A bunch of us would follow them from gig to gig because Ricky was doing something different than all the other roots or rockabilly bands in town. He wasn't mimicking his idols; he had his own hybrid that was like Joe Strummer and Bobby Fuller rolled into one guy that you absolutely couldn't take your eyes off."
Managers, label owners, club bookers, other musicians were always there to slip a business card or scribbled phone number into Ricky's hands. But for every person out to help Ricky's career, there were 50 who just wanted to hang out with him after a gig. Fans passed packets of cocaine and methamphetamine to him through their handshakes, young women yanked him into spare bedrooms, bartenders looked the other way as Broussard loaded cases of beer into the van after a show.
"I got swept up in it, big time," Broussard says. "The first time I saw people in the audience mouthing the lyrics to songs I wrote, that just blew me away. I was connecting, man, for the first time. It felt so good that I didn't want the party to stop."
He was the chosen one, blessed with so much talent, so much intensity. Everyone wanted a piece of Ricky Broussard before he got famous and moved away.
The singer/guitarist, meanwhile, was paralyzed with self-doubt and attendant substance abuse. "I kept wondering, 'Am I the real deal or have I been able to fool everybody?' " He self-medicated with heroin, whiskey, crack cocaine, really anything he could get his hands on. In true self-destructive form, Broussard's rage was often leveled at fawning supporters. One night, members of a University of Texas fraternity approached him to play a party for several thousands of dollars, and Broussard hurled obscenities at them and had to be restrained from fighting the whole group of them.
"I had 100 forms of fear running through my mind," Broussard says. "I started questioning the motives of everyone who was close to me. When (bandmates) Vic and Chris would come to me and say, 'We're worried about you,' I'd think, 'Yeah, they're worried about their gravy train going dry.' I pushed everybody away."
During the second South by Southwest Music Festival in March 1988, Two Hoots attracted the attention of Oakland-based Hightone Records, which had money to put into new bands after releasing a couple million-sellers by Robert Cray. "The label owner, Larry Sloven, came up to us after the set and said he really wanted to take us to lunch the next day," Two Hoots bassist Vic Gerard recalls. "I picked a spot that was a couple blocks from one of Rick's haunts, but he never showed up. Me and Sloven sat there for two hours and then he got up and said, 'Well, if he can't even meet me for lunch ...' "
Even his favorite club owners struggled with the singer's erratic behavior. In 1992, Broussard quit the Black Cat, a gig that was paying the group as much as $2,000 every Monday, after owner Paul Sessums made a crack about the singer's masculinity when Broussard bowed out early one set after hurting his leg on one of his trademark leaps.
"One night they had a sold-out crowd at the Continental Club and Ricky played about four songs and then handed me his guitar," says Dayton. " 'Here, finish for me, man. I gotta score,' " Broussard told Dayton, then disappeared out the back door. Broussard's association with the Continental Club ended in 1993 when he got in a drunken fight with a popular local singer he had been seeing. The angry words turned to blows and things really got ugly. "I just snapped," Broussard recalls.
The next afternoon, Broussard woke up with the worst kind of hangover, the kind when you piece together the events of the night before and go: "Oh, my God. Did I really do that?" Gerard called the singer at home on, appropriately, Jinx Street, with a solemn tone. Broussard was banned from the Continental, disowned by a family of club employees that he'd been very close to.
"I couldn't face what I had done to (the singer)," Broussard says. He went right to the liquor store and, for the next few months, was drinking booze every waking moment. His wife, who'd put up with so much in three years of marriage and about seven years of being together before that, finally left him. Then, Gerard joined the Derailers and drummer Chris Staples got a job with Whole Foods. Two Hoots and a Holler, once Austin's most promising band had hung it up after just one album, 1990's "No Man's Land" on France's New Rose label, only to play occasional reunion gigs at friends' weddings.
Addicted to heroin, going through withdrawals when he was sent to jail twice for DWI arrests, Broussard hit rock bottom. In 1996, the SIMS Foundation musicians assistance program stepped in and offered to send Broussard through rehab. He took them up on it but was back on the hard stuff a few weeks after his discharge. A second rehab stint a couple years later also failed to take hold, though Broussard says he was starting to learn the tools of recovery, of coping with his guilt.
"A lot of people knew the maverick, wild-eyed showman," says Gerard, "because Rick did his best to mask the super-sensitive side. He feels things very deeply."
The ninth of 10 children of a civil service worker at a San Antonio Air Force base, Broussard grew up idolizing his older brothers, two of whom were the only white members of soul band C.L. and the Teardrops. When drummer brother David, a Vietnam vet, died of a heroin overdose in 1979, it hit Ricky hard.
A year earlier he had a musical epiphany when he saw the Sex Pistols at Randy's Rodeo in San Antonio. "There was a real division between the metalheads and the punks and the local rock stations had been badmouthing the Pistols," Broussard says. "That's when I said 'I'm there.' " Galvanized by the Pistols' swagger in the face of their musical primitiveness, Broussard dropped out of school in the ninth grade and put together the trailer park anarchist punk band 60 Inch Bazookas. But his guitar playing, heavily influenced by Duane Eddy instrumentals, was taking him in a different direction.
"I saw Gene Vincent and Sid Vicious as connected," Broussard says. "The rage of rockabilly and punk came from the same place." Vincent and Vicious were also linked through heavy use of drugs and alcohol. Broussard could identify with the demonsand struggled with the idea that the only way to get sober was to hang up the Fender Telecaster.
In early 2002, facing a third DWI conviction, Broussard entered rehab in Fredericksburg and says he's been clean and sober ever since. He's back with Two Hoots and a Holler, who've just released a CD of covers called "Songs Our Vinyl Taught Us" on Freedom Records.
"That was a fun album to bash out," Broussard says. "It was a way to get reacclimated to the studio and to have something to sell at the shows, but I'm really excited about the next studio album."
Broussard, Gerard and Staples are currently mixing the album, with Jesse Dayton producing. "Rick Broussard's Two Hoots and a Holler," which mixes newly recorded old songs such as "Katy Ann" and Broussard's amazing claiming of "Sukiyaki" with new material, will hit stores in January.
"Ricky's really the same guy, with the same intensity," says Dayton, adding that Broussard was the last guy he thought would get sober. "When he plays, there's still a lot of anger there, but he's figured out how to bottle it in more productive ways." Dayton says Broussard's new material, including the brand new "I Cried the Day Doug Sahm Died," is as good as anything he's ever written. "One thing that hasn't changed is Rick's commitment to not do a boring show," Gerard says. "He still hates a crowd that just sits there politely."
When you get sober, the days get longer. And with all this new time, Broussard not only plays with Two Hoots, but he does solo acoustic shows and performs occasionally with the Mersey Lords, a Beatlesque cover band that includes Fastball's Tony Scalzo and songwriter Kevin Brown.
It was a spectacular Two Hoots set at SXSW 2003, in a tent in back of Opal Divine's, that convinced Broussard to quit his construction job in Seguin and concentrate on making a living playing music. "Man, we were firing on all cylinders that night," he says. "It was just like the old days, only I wasn't sticking a needle in my arm afterward."
The SXSW set, just a few days after the death of his idol Joe Strummer, concluded with Two Hoots covering the Clash's "Career Opportunities," a song of bleak prospects. At the end of the number, Broussard swung his guitar over his head and pounded the stage with it until it smashed into bits. Many in the crowd, longtime Broussard watchers, no doubt thought the violent burst signaled a return to past ways. Dayton, who stood near the side of the stage laughs when asked if the destruction was part of the show.
"That was just some Telecaster copy piece of crap guitar," Dayton says. "That was just Ricky's way of saying goodbye to Joe Strummer." Dayton pauses, as an out-of-control Broussard reel seems to run through his head for a few seconds. "Now there was a time when, if Ricky smashed a guitar, you could be sure it was his most precious, cherished, best-sounding one."
mcorcoran@statesmaan.com; 445-3652
SHOW AT THE SAXON PUB
Two Hoots and a Holler have rocked this town like no others for nearly ten years. There was a brief hiatus, but the threesome is back together and continues to dole out rockabilly, cajun, honky-tonk and punk at a pace and juxtaposition that has become the band's signature. Who else could play an original, cover Hank Williams or JohnnyHorton, and then seal it with a punked-up version of "My Generation" that rivals the Who's in intensity. The wild-eyed RickBroussard leads the band, singing and playing guitar with a passion that allows you to return to shows consecutively and never feel you've heard the same thing twice. Broussard is a real songwriting talent and his guitar playing, while not virtuosic, is genuine and does more than get the job done.--David Courtney
SXSW Scene City of anthems at Austin Music Awards
Later at Opal Divine's, one of Austin music's great failures, the brilliant and self-destructive Two Hoots and a Holler, were doing a RokyErickson song, "Starry Eyes," and it just all came back: why we live here. Why it would be hard to live anywhere else. RickBroussard's guitar playing has always been instinctive, as if to suggest that there's no separation between the mind and the fingers. And on this happy night the air felt especially receptive. At the end of the set they did the Clash's "Career Opportunities," as much a comment on their own unrealized potential as an homage to the late Joe Strummer, and Broussard hammered the stage with his guitar until it broke in half. Stunning. Amazing. Today, Two Hoots and a Holler are back at their jobs, welding, delivering, watching — whatever they do.
Sometimes that's all you get — 40 minutes in a tent on a Wednesday night. Sometimes it feels like the world's passing you by, that there's always a better party than the one you're at. But on Wednesday it felt as good to live in Austin, Texas, as it must've felt to smash a guitar. "This is still our town" — an anthem is born!
MichaelCorcoran American-Statesman Staff
Daily Texan: Two Hoots and a holler Local band inspires jitterbuggers
BYLINE RonEid - 09/25/1992
If you happen to get to a Two Hoots and a Holler show early at a place like Hole in the Wall, you might notice the audience acts a little strangely. Groups of people come in, walk straight to the tables in front of the stage, rearranging and pushing them away from the stage to make a dance floor. Two Hoots takes the stage, lead singer RickyBroussard strikes his guitar and the room comes alive. Many in the crowd move to the dance floor where partners render ^- with what appears to be effortless precision ^- skilled interpretations of the West Coast swing, the shag and the jitterbug. With dancers whirling in front of the stage, Broussard leans into the microphone and begins delivering a whirlwind of music that seems to come from somewhere in the wide-open spaces of the Southwest in the early '60s, jumping in the air, wringing the neck of his guitar and wailing song after song in a voice driven with emotion. Every show for Two Hoots means an enthusiastic performance. Even when the pace of the crowd slows (^[That's okay. If you're not gonna dance, we got plenty of slow songs,^{ Broussard cajoles, sending even more people to their feet), the band plays with such intensity that the interest within the crowd, even among the followers, never wanes. Two Hoots plays its own brand of South Texas roots rock, influenced by the Clash and RoyOrbison alike. ^[Just don't call us rockabilly,^{ says bassist VicGerard. Although they write most of their own music, the band have been known to cut a mean cover, churning out tunes like My Generation or California Sun. The band churns them out with their own rebel bent. Before starting the band more than eight years ago, Broussard played in a gospel oul revue with his brothers in San Antonio. Gerard and drummer Chris Staples played together in Chaparral, Hell's Cafe and Three Balls of Fire before joining Broussard in Two Hoots and a Holler 3 1^!2 years ago. Today, the trio preserves the garage roots style of hell-raising rock 'n' roll. This has given it the reputation of being something of a nostalgia band, a charge the band disputes, saying the themes in the music haven't changed in the last few decades. ^ that act out all this anger, but there was a lot of anger back then . ... When I was younger I saw a picture of my brother standing next to a '56 Buick, and I said, 'I want to be just like that.^{ In his song, Fifty Miles Away ..., he refers to today's anger-bangers as ^[all those phonies on MTV. ^{Two Hoots and a Holler is anything but fake. And maybe the anger is what Staples is talking about when he says, ^[We're not just a party band. There's a lot going on when we're up there, a lot of emotion.^{ And the emotion comes out in every show, drawing an enthusiastic crowd, one that wants to dance. Two Hoots is frequently accompanied on stage by people like CharlieSexton, John ^[the X-factor^{ Reed, Cesar Rojas of Los Lobos and PeteGordon, who plays for MojoNixon and plays like the Killer himself. ^[Pete can play anywhere he wants,^{ says Broussard. The spontaneity of Two Hoots makes it seem like anything could happen at one of its shows. Like that time last year at the Hole in the Wall , when an admiring drunk climbed on stage and began to sing. Deciding to contribute more to the show, he reached for Broussard's guitar and tried to strum it. Broussard shoved the man off stage, threw off his guitar and yelled a warning to the stumbling drunk. The crowd backed away from the stage-rusher, who was still struggling to his feet. He stood up and looked at Broussard, who then jumped into the crowd after him. The would-be Hoot sobered up quickly and realized he had gone too far. He ran out the front door with Broussard right behind him. Gerard, not surprised, shrugged to Staples and the two maintained a back beat. About five minutes later, Broussard returned, unscathed but still visibly pissed, jumped on stage and strapped on his guitar. He charged the mike and finished the final verse of the song with more ire than ever. Part of the bickering that goes on about Austin's live-music scene centers on whether to praise or criticize the audience's connoisseur-like appreciation for music. BrettCampbell, a free-lance writer from San Antonio, distinguishes between the Austin audiences at coffee shops and the crowds at bars where people go mainly to dance. Campbell commends the coffee-shop crowds because they ^[sit quietly at the tables and lean forward in their chairs so they can hear better. I've even heard people shushed for talking during the show.^{ He says he's never heard anyone shushed at a Two Hoots show. From the very first song, the dance floor is busy and the band is jamming. These are some authentic guys.