Tommy Alverson

Location:
Arlington, Texas, US
Type:
Artist / Band / Musician
Genre:
Country
Site(s):
Label:
PALO DURO RECORDS www.palodurorecords.com
Type:
Major
Even though Tommy Alverson's new album is called "Country to the Bone", he would like ya'll to know he's been to Nashville, country music's supposed nerve center, exactly once.



" I came home and kissed the ground and I"ve never been back," he confesses, adding, "I don't think I'm missing anything."

Alverson, a Ft. Worth resident, could easily have called his fifth release "Texan to the Bone". He emphatically makes that point at least once on every album: his new one includes "Got Here As Fast As I Could", a jaunty love letter that might serve as the answer song to Lyle Lovett's "That's Right You're Not From Texas". The chorus goes: " I wasn't born in Texas but I got here as fast as I could. I ain't never gonna leave here, no way in hell that I would."



Even the slogan on his website reads: " Texas Music the Way it Ought to Be!"

The album was released at Alverson's 10th Annual Texas Music Family Gathering, a steadily growing three-day festival that's about as Texan as it gets.



Alverson's been making music with a Lone Star State of Mind-and sound-for decades, yet his popularity is still growing. When he won the 2007 Best Country and Western Music Award from FWWeekly, the paper declared, "If there is such a thing as Cowtown country music's elder statesman, he's it."

In fact the album started out as a redo of some older Alverson compositions

("because songs evolve and change just like people do"), before it morphed into an homage to some of his favorite songwriters, from Jim Lauderdale and Doug Sahm to Mickey Newbury , Clay Blaker, and the team of Roy Robinson (aka Amos Staggs) and his wife Jerri Lynn.



"Jim Lauderdale and Doug Sahm and Clay Blaker, that's kind of a triad that we all followed probably 10 years ago," recalls Alverson, who used Sahm's guitar when he sat in at the legendary troubadour's last gig, the CD release party for the album Sahm produced for Alverson's friend (and Palo Duro label mate) Ed Burleson. Alverson knew he wanted to pay tribute to the late Texas Tornado: he just didn't know which song to use. So he searched for an obsure one nobody else had covered, and found "Be Real" on MySpace. "I'd never heard it," Alverson says, " I thought I'd heard em all."



He offer props to another hero in "Just Like Hank" a song borrowed from pal Walt Wilkins, and co-writer Davis Raines. Alverson and Wilkins, another label mate, co-produced the 2006 Palo Duro Release, "Luckenbach Compadres!" ( The Songs of Luckenbach Texas), the multi-artist celebration recorded live at Luckenbach. ("That was three of the best days I've ever spent anywhere," Alverson says fondly of the experience.



Alverson has been hanging around with great Texas songwriters since his Itasca High School days-even if he didn't quite know it then. He played varsity football for the Wampus Cats with Austin's Sam Baker, then known as Dick Baker. During junior college, he played guitar with James Hand, and later produced his first album, Shadows Where the Magic Was.



One might call all three late bloomers, career-wise. In their 50's, they're finally getting real recognition. Though Alverson has stood on Texas' honky-tonk and dancehall stages since way before he could be called an elder statesman of anything, the first time radio really paid attention was with the Jimmy Buffett-ish "Una Mas Cerveza", a song on the 1999's Lloyd Maines produced, "Me On the Jukebox". Ironically, that one allowed him to quit his 30 year day gig with Miller Brewing Co. so he could hit the road and sing more song with clever twists on one of country's favorites subjects, like "This Buzz is For You" and "Upside Down", which humorously examines the flip sid of irressponsible inebriation.



"Country to the Bone" contains another unmistakably Buffett-like tune, "Welcome To Paradise", but this one is an actual tribute to one of Alverson's other beloved artists (" I was a Parrot Head before the we called Parrot Heads", he proudly proclaims.) Though it, too, has references to tipsiness, it's more about the camaraderie Buffett inspires among fans.

There was a lot of camaraderie in co-producer Patrick McGuire's Alington recording studio, too. Topping a long list of players this time around are Alverson's regular band mates, The International Heroes: Ray Austin, Steel and Dobro, Ron Thompson, Drums, , Jerry Abrams, Bass, Thurston Selby, Fiddle, and special guests, Justin, Alverson's son, on Lead Guitar, and Heather Woodruff on Fiddle. Another special guest , Pauline Reese, who sang with Alverson on "Tequila Rose", a Robinson-Robinson composition Alverson turned into a duet.



Even though he's clearly "country to the bone" Alverson says he would rather be known as an "all over the map" artist than a traditional country performer.

Some these 14 cuts contain South of the Border influences and self-respecting Texas musician absorbs at some point: Alverson heads in a country-rock direction on the closer, "Texas Woman", (And he did go to France last summer , to perform at Couontry Rendez-Vous, one of Europe's biggest country music festivals in Crappone).



"I don't know what you'd call it. It's just what we do." Alverson says of fan favorite "Texas Woman," which label founder Chris Thomas listed in the July 2007 Cowboys and Indians magazine as one his favorite Palo Duro tracks. Thomas called it, "one of the finest love songs ever written. Another Texas classic."



After years of self-produced or poorly distributed releases, with his debut on Palo Duro, Alverson says, " I think I"ve finally found a home."

A Texas Classic himself, he got here as fast as he could.



Contact:

Media Relations: Kristin Dray -423-238-3848 ext 202 media@palodurorecords.com

Promotions: Ida Randall, 423-238-3848, ext 252

radio@palodurorecrods.com

Palo Duro Records PO Box 810, Ooltewah, Tn. 37363 USA

www.palodurorecords.com
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