
RESCHEDULED: Charley Crockett
Start Time: 7:00 pm
Charley Crockett's Indianapolis date at HI-FI Annex has been rescheduled for Wednesday, October 27, 2021. All tickets purchased for the original date will be honored on the rescheduled date. Please direct any questions to boxoffice@mokbpresents.com. You can follow our ongoing list of affected shows HERE.
Message from Charley:
We unfortunately have confirmed cases of COVID-19 within the Charley Crockett band/crew. For the safety of the band, crew, venue and fans, we will unfortunately be quarantining through the end of August.
All tickets to rescheduled performances will automatically transfer and be honored for the new show date.
Thank you for your understanding. We canβt wait to see yβall back on the road again as soon as we are safely able to do so.
π₯ New Dates π₯
October 26 β Louisville, KY β Mercury Ballroom
October 27 β Indianapolis, IN - HIFI
October 28 β Lakewood, OH β Winchester Music Tavern
October 29 - Detroit, MI β El Club
Download the Bindle Mobile Health App and verify your vaccination status to expedite entry to the venue.
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ARTIST PROFILE | Charley Crockett
Since self-releasing his 2015 debut A Stolen Jewel, Charley Crockett has distinguished himself as an artist extraordinarily in touch with his instincts. Turning out 11 albums in just seven years, the South Texas-born singer/songwriter has resolutely followed his vision, handling everything from honky-tonk to blues to folk with wholehearted ingenuity (an element that helped him earn the Emerging Artist of the Year prize at the 2021 Americana Music Awards). But while his ever-growing success has caught the attention of countless hitmaking and highly decorated producers, Crockett chose to continue forging his own distinct path for his twelfth album, The Man from Waco. The result: his most powerful and immediately compelling body of work to date, adding new intensity to his signature Gulf & Western sound and bringing even greater depth to his spellbinding storytelling.
Produced by Bruce Robison (Crockettβs manager and an acclaimed artist/songwriter in his own right), The Man from Waco took shape from a series of fast-and-loose sessions at Robisonβs studio in Lockhart, Texas. βAfter we got about half the recordings down, Bruce said to me, βAs your manager, itβs my job to tell you that you have the opportunity to work with just about anybody on this record,ββ Crockett says. βBut Iβve been in rooms with guys whoβve got 20 Grammys, and itβs my experience that a lot of them donβt see the artist for who they are. Theyβre more interested in sanitizing everything and watering it down to try to get a hit, and in the end all the magic gets lost. I donβt think a record like The Man from Waco couldβve been made if Iβd gone in that direction.β
Recorded live to tape, The Man from Waco marks the first time Crockettβs longtime band The Blue Drifters have joined him in the studio from start to finish. Thanks to their relentless touring over the years, Crockett and his bandmates have developed a potent and palpable chemistry, infusing every track with equal parts razor-sharp precision and unbridled energy. βMost of these songs were cut in a few takes,β he says. βThere was a looseness that led to a lot of inspired performances that felt good right away.β Also featuring The Greyhoundsβ Anthony Farrell (a multi-instrumentalist whom Crockett calls βthe recordβs secret weaponβ), The Man from Waco ultimately bears a lush and timeless sound that endlessly spotlights the singular character of his songwriting.
Centered on the wildly colorful story of an outlaw on the run, The Man from Waco takes its title from a slow-burning murder ballad showcasing Crockettβs captivating baritone. With its brooding rhythms and darkly hypnotic guitar riffs, βThe Man from Wacoβ first came to Crockett as he and his band rode through the titular Central Texas city late one night on tour. βWe were driving over the Brazos River and started talking about a guy named James Hand, who passed away in the pandemic,β he recalls, referring to the Waco-born country singer who inspired his 2021 tribute album 10 for Slim: Charley Crockett Sings James Hand. βOne of the guys was playing accordion and I started singing a melody, and over time what started as a joke song turned into a whole saga.β
Summing up the albumβs narrative as βthe story of a man who loses control, and knows that what heβs done is going to catch up to him someday,β Crockett brought The Man from Waco to life by tapping into an incredible breadth of inspirations. In penning the albumβs soulful lead single βIβm Just A Clownβ (one of several tracks graced with a blazing horn section), he looked back on the vagabond days of his formative years and early adulthood. βAs a person whoβs lived many lives and spent some time on the street, I know what itβs like to be the clown, the drifter, all those things,β he notes. A sublime and smoldering blues number, βTom Turkeyβ emerged as Crockett spontaneously expanded on a demo recorded by Bob Dylan for the soundtrack to 1973βs Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid. βIt ties into this album because Billy the Kid was on the run tooβIβve always been fascinated by his story, a young guy with some bad luck who was dead by 21,β says Crockett. βThe version thatβs on the album was just a warm-up, but we kept it because itβs got that magic of people not thinking. It can really be easy to think the magic right out of a record.β And on the quietly haunting βJuly Jackson,β Crockett puts a poignant twist on the quintessential murder ballad. βI wanted to tell a story where a woman takes the law into her own hands, because obviously society wouldnβt hold the man in her life accountable for what heβs done,β Crockett reveals.
One of the catchiest moments on The Man from Waco, βTrinity Riverβ revisits a standout from A Stolen Jewel and breathes new life into its brightly swinging, trumpet-laced arrangement. βWeβd been playing that song live a long time, and kept doing it better than before,β explains Crockett, who names Jim Jarmuschβs Dead Man as an inspiration for the deceptively upbeat track. βI wrote it about all the spirits who wouldβve inhabited that river over the years, and it fell right into the narrative of the new album: the journey that the main characterβs on, the desperation he feels, the idea of destiny being determined.β As one of the first tracks Crockett ever recorded, βTrinity Riverβ illustrates the unstudied sophistication thatβs defined his songwriting from the very start. To that end, heβs found an enduring touchstone in a piece of wisdom gleaned from Robert Frost by way of Townes Van Zandt: βWorry about the phonetics, and the meaning will take care of itself.β βMy writing comes from that school, which is not having a school at allβitβs about letting melody lead the way,β says Crockett, who first started writing on a pawn-shop guitar given to him by his mother at age 17. βI donβt ever tell myself, βIβm gonna write this type of story nowβ; itβs always been about letting the song tell me where itβs going. Iβve never known what the story was about until it was all done.β
For Crockett, preserving the uncalculated nature of his creative process has only become more urgent as his career reaches unprecedented heights. βWe live in a tough world where thereβs a significant gap between whatβs commercially viable and whatβs authentic to who the artist really is,β he says. βThe more Iβve broken through, the harder it gets to avoid the voices trying to get me to work with an approved list of people, but in my opinion all that outside influence makes it easy for the artistβs personality to get completely lost. So instead of thinking about how to get something on the charts or get award recognition, Iβm thinking about how these songs are going to hold up 20, 30 years from now. Because if Iβm making any legitimate contribution at all, itβs because Iβm telling a story thatβs worthy of getting passed down and surviving all that time.β
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