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Stephen David Austin - A Bakersfield Dozen

Great storytelling, a dose of humor and a powerhouse backing band lend themselves to Stephen David Austin’s  release …
A BAKERSFIELD DOZEN

Los Angeles, CA —The wry gallows humor of Stephen David Austin is evident on his upcoming release, A Bakersfield Dozen (due May 8, 2012). When explaining why he is a ‘three-named’ performer, Austin tells us, “If I released the CD as Steve Austin, I ran the risk of being confused with the ‘Six Million Dollar Man’ of 1970’s television fame, or the ‘Stone Cold’ wrestler-turned-actor.” Backed by stellar musicians, the Tehachapi singer-songwriter emphasizes raw roots music and great storytelling. “If you can’t tap your feet to it, or tap your beer bottle against the tabletop”, Austin claims, “you’ve missed the target.”

Known mainly as a sideman and cover musician before A Bakersfield Dozen, Austin decided to take the reins of his career with encouragement from both Tom T. Hall and Dave Alvin. “I told Dave how much his music was like my life story,” Austin recently told the newspaper, The Bakersfield Californian. “Then we started talking about Okie history. At one point he said it sounded like Merle Haggard wrote was I was saying. I met him again when he was in town and we started talking about those same things. He finally said his songs were largely autobiographical, which I interpreted as ‘you should write your own life story’.” Austin sent his songs to Tom T. Hall, who wrote back to him that he liked his music and encouraged him to make a living at it, saying, “it’s lots of fun and beats working!”

Music these days seems to straddle several genres, and A Bakersfield Dozen is no exception. There’s a heavy dose of Americana with an emphasis on the Bakersfield sound (including a loving tribute to hero, Buck Owens). There is also great storytelling in the traditional country music sense, with the music running from old-timey string instrumentation through traditional Telecaster twang to in-your-face Americana roots-rock. Change is a constant theme throughout the record, presenting Austin’s vision of life as a subtle yet jarring shift. The subject matter is at times heavy, but his sense of humor prevails, never leaving us alone in the dark.

The 11 songs are autobiographical, with the exception being a cover of the Beatles’ “Baby’s in Black”. The song was covered as a favor to a friend, but Austin also cites the Beatles as leading him to the Bakersfield sound, saying, “I started noticing how much George Harrison played like Don Rich from the Buckaroos, particularly on the Beatles 65 album, where the band covered ‘Act Naturally’.” In “The Day Buck Owens Died”, Austin uses the well-known guitar lick from Owens’ signature song, “Buckaroo”.

The song “Best Ex I Ever Had” was a title that he had for a year before the rest of the words came to him. “I was sitting at a bar, doing shots with the bartender and talking about country songs, when we came up with the title”, he said. “Heroes and Heroin” is a cautionary tale about heroes becoming martyred and romanticized. Austin says that Gram Parsons, Jerry Garcia and Charlie Parker were the inspirations for the song. The song “The Cage” was taken straight from his life. “I picked up a hitchhiker, and as we got to talking, he told me he had just gotten out of prison that day. He was in for beating a man to death. I got a little nervous after that.”

The lineup of players on A Bakersfield Dozen reads like a list of ‘Who’s Who’ in the Americana music world. Both Marty Rifkin (Pedal and Lap Steel-Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty) and Paul Marshall (Bass & Vocals-I See Hawks in LA, The Strawberry Alarm Clock) had a heavy hand in the encouragement and making of the album (Rifkin also mixed and mastered). Other players are Shawn Nourse on drums (I See Hawks in LA, Dwight Yoakam), Teresa James on background vocals (Reba McIntire, Levon Helm), Brantley Kearns on fiddle (Dave Alvin, Mike Ness), Skip Edwards on piano and accordion (Gene Clark, Lucinda Williams, Buck Owens) and Austin’s longtime friend, Dave Currall, playing guitar on two songs.

Americana music is a lyricist’s domain, and the perfect vehicle for a storyteller-songwriter like Stephen David Austin. As The Midwest Record wrote about A Bakersfield Dozen “[Austin] displays his love for Buck and Merle but he does it through the eyes and ears of Kinky Friedman and Chinga Chavin. So left of center, it’s a must for subversive alt. country fans that like seeing the envelope pushed so far it tears. This is a great set to play just to see if the people around you are paying attention.”
 

(Note- The music player at the bottom of the page can be activated at any time to listen to full songs.)

Here's what the critics are saying (see "Press" page for full reviews)

“…here is a songwriting master craftsman in action. Brilliant stuff” – Country Music People, U.K.

“Stephen- I like your stuff. Hope you can make a living doing this. Lots of fun, and beats working!” – Tom T. Hall

“I just got around to listening to [A Bakersfield Dozen] last night…and it is awesome! Well done! When’s the next one?” – Robert Price, The Bakersfield Californian, KGET-TV (Bakersfield), author of “The Bakersfield Sound”

“There has been some use of the word “poet” in conjunction with Stephen David Austin, and I’m not sure that’s fair. Those who want REAL poetry may feel let down and those who hate poetry will be missing out. If it’s poetry, it’s Hank Williams poetry. It’s plain-spoken rural poetry, which I think is a harder stunt to perform and more fun to listen to.” – Grant Langston, Southland Serenade

“…an immensely talented creator and performer of a fresh helping of roots Americana…by a newcomer who could be on the national radar soon." – Ken Rosenbaum, The Toledo Blade

“…when the tunes are this good, complexities are no longer necessary.” – Baby Sue, Chatanooga, TN

“So left of center, it's a must for subversive alt. country fans that like seeing the envelope pushed so far it tears.” – Chris Spector, The Midwest Record

“Stephen David Austin has an eye that is hardwired to his pen.” – Danny McCloskey, The Alternate Root

“[Austin] comes at The Bakersfield Sound from left field. Influenced equally by Owens and Haggard, The Blasters, and The Beat Farmers, he writes blue collar Americana poetry with a recurring theme of "’you can't go home again’” – John Conquest, 3rd Coast Music, Austin, TX

“Wading through the many fine licks here one eventually finds his lyrics which are certainly a notch above what one expected. [Austin comes] across like a Telecaster wielding Randy Newman.” – Paul Kerr, Blabber ‘N Smoke, Glasgow, Scotland

“…a cocktail of catchy tunes, frequently playful lyrics and twangy guitar.” – Net Rhythms, U.K.

"...conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition...
The world...can never forget what they did here."
-Abraham Lincoln, The Gettysburg Address, Gettysburg, PA


CLICK HERE TO SEE FULL REVIEWS ON THE "PRESS" PAGE