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Tag: Jimmie Vaughan

  • Robin Guitars Immortalized in New Book – Houston Press

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    Folks who frequent Montrose are familiar with Rockin’ Robin, the guitar shop on Shepherd with murals of Freddie King (“The Texas Cannonball”) and Stevie Ray Vaughan painted on its side wall.  But what they may not know is that the founders of Rockin’ Robin – Bart Wittrock and Dave Wintz – also started a company that manufactured guitars in Houston beginning in the ‘80s and marketed them under the banner of Robin Guitars.

    The history of this relatively little-known (compared to Fender, Gibson, et al.) brand has been documented in a new book, Thunder Out of Texas: The Illustrated History of Robin Guitars (Acclaim Press, 128 pp., $29.95), written by Willie Moseley, the senior writer for Vintage Guitar magazine.  Don’t be deceived by the relatively low page count.  The book is designed in an 8 ½ x 11 format and contains over 500 photos, most of them in color and printed on high-quality stock. 

    Moseley has written several books dealing with the history of the guitar and of specific brands, among them Peavey Guitars: The Authorized American History.  Why Robin?  “Robin had attracted my attention fairly early in my career with Vintage Guitar,” Moseley says.  “I toured the factory and the Rockin’ Robin store in 1993 when I was in town to work the Vintage Guitar booth at a guitar show at the George Brown Convention Center that the magazine was co-sponsoring. Many of their models had a distinct and interesting aesthetic but still maintained a perceptible retro vibe in their design.”

    Initially, Robin guitars were manufactured in Japan by the Tokai company.  These instruments were, by and large, similar to Fender Stratocasters, with some Gibson Explorer-ish guitars thrown in for good measure.  But when the American dollar took a nosedive in relation to the Japanese yen in 1987, Wittrock and Wintz realized that the time had come to move their manufacturing stateside. Wintz set up shop in a facility west of downtown Houston, later moving the operation to an office park off T.C. Jester.  Moseley quite correctly refers to the development as “homecoming in reverse.” 

    This shift ushered in an era of distinctive (wild?) designs, both in terms of body shapes and graphics.  While the Medley guitar featured a Strat-style body, that particular model was available with either a reverse headstock or a decidedly non-standard “Y” shaped headstock with four tuners on one side and two on the other.  Later, the Machete debuted with a body style inspired by Gibson’s Firebird that also vaguely resembled an Explorer with rounded corners.  By the ‘90s, Robin was offering customers the option of custom graphics.  Photos in Thunder Out of Texas show a Bart Simpson design, a U.S. Air Force motif and a rendering of the three crosses on Calvary.

    In addition to Wittrock and Wintz, a number of Houston names show up in the narrative.  First-call luthiers Neil Sargent (Robin’s first employee) and Ron Pace are mentioned, as is Allen Hill (of the Allen Oldies Band), who worked as an artist relations representative for Robin, along with Freddie Cisneros (aka “Little Junior One-Hand”), who managed Rockin’ Robin for a time.  Also mentioned is attorney Dahr Jamail, a Robin guitar owner whose band Titty Bingo probably spent more on bumper stickers than guitar strings.

    Texas musicians who are mentioned as Robin players in Thunder Out of Texas includeBilly Gibbons and Dusty Hill (ZZ Top), Stevie Ray and Jimmie Vaughan (who frequently played a double-neck Robin at the same time), Eric Johnson, David Grissom and Ray Benson (Asleep at the Wheel).

    Robin was a company that had a unique aesthetic.  How to describe Robin guitars to someone unfamiliar with the brand?  “If they were only familiar with Fender and Gibson—a likely occurrence—I would first brandish a Robin Wedge in front of them to get their attention,” Moseley says, noting that players should “be careful with any guitar that looks like a medieval battle weapon.” 

    The Wedge was perhaps the most radical of Robin’s designs. Mosely points out that the instrument was “a lot more balanced and comfortable—standing or sitting—than you might think, as hyped by Bart Wittrock. He used to love to strap one onto someone who’d never played the model, to watch their reaction.  And that included me, on my first visit to Rockin’ Robin. He probably said, ‘I told you so’ to hundreds of players!”

    Robin ceased taking orders for new instruments in 2010, in part due to the economic downturn which followed the financial crisis of 2008.  The new reality meant that profit margins were shrinking, and rather than raise prices – something he didn’t think would have been fair to his customers – Wintz elected to shut the company down.

    YouTube video

    However, two Houstonians – entrepreneur Jack Brandt and amplifier builder Jake Rynearson – began their work to resurrect the brand in 2023.  Operating out of the Robin manufacturing facility on T.C. Jester, the new company will manufacture Robin guitars, Rio Grande pickups and Steamboat tube amplifiers.

    “I think they’re taking the right approach with the guitars by easing back into the market, and this time accompanied by an amplifier line,” Moseley says.  “I think they have the potential to succeed again. As we are conversing, the October 2025 guitar show in Mesquite is going to be an important event in reintroducing the line to the public.”

    Did the fact that Robin was a Texas company make a difference?  “Absolutely. Texas is its own musical planet. It’s located just to the left of the heartland of American music – New Orleans, Mississippi delta, Memphis, Muscle Shoals, Nashville, Macon – so a lot of those locations and the genres nurtured therein have, of course, seeped into the Lone Star State. There’s also the influence of Mexican music,” Moseley says.

    “Texas doesn’t have a proportionally large guitar-making history, however. Messrs. Wintz and Wittrock tried to exploit the hyper-diverse Texas music scene in an admirable manner with some great designs.”

    For more information on Thunder Out of Texas, visit AcclaimPress.com.

    For more on Robin Guitars (along with a ton of photos), visit RobinGuitars.com.

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    Tom Richards

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  • Houston Concert Watch 9/24: Jimmie Vaughan, Whiskey Myers and More

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    We music geeks are, by and large, completists. Record companies know this, which is why, even in an era when physical media is becoming a thing of the past, they keep releasing “deluxe,” “expanded” or “complete” editions of classic rock albums.

    The formula is generally this.  Remix the album in question, add a disc or two of alternate versions of songs and maybe a few tunes that didn’t make the cut when the album was initially released, and find some live recordings (sometimes an entire concert) from the era. Throw in reproductions of ephemera (backstage passes, decals, maybe a poster) and perhaps a modest coffee table book, and you’ve got something that can be sold for a premium price. And that’s how you generate some cash flow from material that has already been bought and paid for.

    Do I sound skeptical or, at the very least, cynical? Of course I do. I’m a music writer. Or maybe my attitude has to do with having bought bootlegs that promise “revelatory” alternate takes and mixes which, in point of fact, offer little more than slight variations on what was actually released. But, having said that, there are some box set behemoths that are slated for release within the next few months that are, in fact, worthy of consideration.

    Pink Floyd – Wish You Were Here 50th Anniversary Deluxe Box Set (2 CD / 4 LP / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Jethro Tull – Still Living in the Past (5 CD / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Bruce Springsteen – Nebraska ’82 (4 CD / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Little Feat – The Last Record Album (4 CD)
    The Who – Who Are You? Super Deluxe Edition (7 CD / 1 Blu-Ray)
    Jimi Hendrix – Axis Bold as Love (4 CD)
    The Beatles – Anthology 2025 (8 CD)

    Ticket Alert
    Christmas music comes in all forms, so if your jam is of the singer-songwriter variety, you can load up the sleigh and head to the Heights Theater for Jack Ingram’s “Acoustic Holiday Tour.” Tickets for the Houston (Fine, Woodlands) native son’s show on Saturday, December 13, are on sale now.

    Cardi B has a new album (Am I the Drama?) coming out, and she is taking the unusual step of appearing at Walmarts across the country to pimp it during the record’s rollout. The Houston Walmart stop took place yesterday, but don’t despair if you missed it, since Ms. B will be perform at Toyota Center on Wednesday, March 3. Presales are in progress, with the general sale set for Thursday. Hmm. Makes you wonder. Is a ZZ Top promotional tour at Buc-ee’s across Texas in the offing?

    In the tradition of Prince, who for a time went by the moniker “The Artist Formerly Known as Prince,” Kanye West, who legally changed his name to “Ye,” and Sean Combs, who has been known as “Puffy,” “Puff Daddy,” “P. Diddy” and just “Diddy,” Machine Gun Kelly has decided that he will henceforth be known as MGK. OK. The musical chameleon will play the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion on Saturday, May 23, with Wiz Khalifa and Beauty School Dropout opening.  Tickets are on sale now.

    Concerts This Week
    Granted, there aren’t many original Temps or Tops remaining, but you can’t argue with the catalogs that both acts assembled during the ‘60s and ‘70s. The Temptations: “My Girl,” “Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me),” “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg,” “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone.” The Four Tops: “Baby I Need Your Loving,” “I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch),” “It’s The Same Old Song,” “Reach Out I’ll Be There.” If that list doesn’t get your head to bobbing, well, I don’t know what to tell you. Get your groove on tonight at the Smart Financial Centre.
    Chance the Rapper is not your typical rap artist. Gospel and jazz influences pop up in his work, and his lyrics have dealt with subjects not usually addressed in rap, such as Christian theology. Chance will perform on Friday at the Bayou Music Center, and you can find out more by taking a look at this Houston Press interview.
    There are two shows of note this week at the Mucky Duck. On Friday, blues / Americana artist Seth Walker will be in town to showcase tunes from his most recent album Why the Worry. Then on Saturday, the West Texas Exiles will celebrate the release of their new record 8000 Days with early and late shows. For more on the Exiles, check out this week’s Houston Press interview with the band.. Tickets for all performances are in short supply, so getting while the getting is good would be the recommendation.
    Charlie Wilson earned his bona fides as the lead singer of the Gap Band for the entirety of the group’s existence, 1967-2010. Wilson has also distinguished himself as a solo artist and a producer. On Friday, Wilson will bring “Uncle Charlie’s R&B Cookout” to the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, presenting a bill that also includes venerable old-school artists Babyface and K-Ci (of Jodeci fame). Now, since this event is billed as a “cookout” and is designed to engender a “cookout” atmosphere, there will, I image, be a code of behavior that should be followed. This video might help those who have not yet been schooled. And this one, re: potato salad.
    Whiskey Myers and its “What We Were Born to Do” tour rolls into the Pavilion on Saturday. This band, the pride of Palestine, TX, has a country twang but still rocks hard when the need arises. Dexter and the Moonrocks, purveyors of what they call “western space grunge,” and Landon Smith will open.
    Jimmie Vaughan was, at one time, a wild-ass teenaged guitarist lighting it up with the Chessmen in the mid-‘60s and making a name for himself as one of the best players in Texas. After a few years, though, Vaughan looked to the past, refining his style and wholly embracing the blues. He formed the Fabulous Thunderbirds with Kim Wilson and recorded classic albums like What’s the Word? (1980) before departing the band to explore less commercial but more authentic musical pastures. Vaughan and his Tilt-a-Whirl band will play the Heights Theater on Sunday, conducting a master class in the blues, with Houston’s own rising star Mathias Lattin opening.

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    Tom Richards

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  • The Fabulous Thunderbirds Have Been “Struck Down by the Blues”

    The Fabulous Thunderbirds Have Been “Struck Down by the Blues”

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    Any musician who has labored in the trenches for 50 plus years could be excused for being burned out, jaded or just plain tired. Kim Wilson is none of these.

    On the contrary, Wilson is completely psyched about the release of the album Struck Down, which celebrates the 50th anniversary of his band, the Fabulous Thunderbirds. The record captures the classic T-Birds sound, but in no way does it sound dated. Houston audiences will have a chance to hear the new material live when the band plays for two nights at Main Street Crossing on Wednesday and Thursday, August 7 and 8.

    Vocalist / harmonicist Wilson founded the T-Birds – along with guitarist Jimmie Vaughan – in Austin in 1974. At the time, Vaughan described the band thusly: “We’re an encyclopedia of music from the Gulf Coast, you know, Lightnin’ Slim, Lazy Lester, Texas shuffles, rockin’ Cajun. We are all 27, handsome motherfuckers that dress cool, and our music drives girls wild.”

    Flash forward a few decades, and Wilson is the last T-Bird standing, having led the band through numerous personnel changes since Vaughan’s departure from the group in 1990. There have been many hills and valleys, but Wilson is bullish on the new album and the band’s future.

    Contemporary blues acts often strike a precarious balance between “authenticity” and “relevance,” and Wilson seems comfortable with maintaining this equilibrium. “This is not a museum piece,” Wilson says via Zoom from his home in California. “This is a modern recording, but the sound of it is incredible. Shelly Yakus (John Lennon, Tom Petty, U2 and dozens of other heavy hitters) did the mixing.

    “I haven’t recorded digitally in about eight years, and I found out what they’ve done with digital recording, and it’s kind of blown my mind, how good they can make it sound. They’re about ready to make me a believer. I had a couple of Grammy-nominated CD’s, and they were recorded straight to analog mono. So this is a departure from that. But, that being said, it’s an incredible sounding CD.  Since the Tuff Enuff days [ca. 1986], it’s really the best thing we’ve done, by far,” Wilson says. “Between the material, the sonics, the performance, it’s the best record we’ve done. Including Tuff Enuff.  It’s a true T-Birds record.”

    Wilson and Yakus had never worked together prior to Struck Down, but they quickly discovered a simpatico approach to making records. “The first thing Shelly said is that you have to mix with emotion. And I said, ‘Oh. This is my guy.’ I’ve never had anyone tell me that. You have to have someone who’s a little bit old school for a band like this.”

    So, the album’s title song, “Struck Down by the Blues.”  What exactly does that mean? “It means you just get hit by it. It’s like a truck. And you don’t care what happens after that, you’re gonna do it,” Wilson enthuses. “You’re gonna do it no matter what. I used to say that I was either going to be a musician or a wino. But I had no choice. I was gonna do it no matter what. And it worked out great.”
    From there, the conversation takes a philosophical turn, with Wilson (who would know better?) reflecting on the notion of what it takes to be a real bluesman, as opposed to a poser or a pale imitation. “You have to be you and do it to death. That’s what I learned from all those old guys that I played with. I was friends with everybody. Muddy Waters, Jimmy Rogers, Buddy Guy. And when I was I kid, I was playing with some Texas guys – Albert Collins, Pee Wee Crayton and Lowell Fulson. I was 18, 19, 20 years old when I was playing with these guys.

    “And I learned from them immediately, you’re gonna do it to death, and that’s it. You’ve got to have a monstrously high standard. You’ve got to believe in yourself, because if you don’t believe in yourself, ain’t nobody gonna believe in you.

    “Here’s the thing about blues,” Wilson says, as the master class continues. “All these guys who originated it – and the women – they’ve all got their take on things, they’ve all got their own personality, they’ve all got their own style, they’ve all got their own quirks. It’s an amazing thing to gather all that stuff in. Now it’s more like everybody’s singing church music and calling it blues. It’s very generic. When they mixed rock with blues – not rock and roll, rock – that’s when things got really muddled.”
    Happily, old-school T-Birds fans don’t need to worry about those sorts of things. Wilson makes it clear that he and the collection of musicians that he has assembled are staying true to the spirit and the essence of the blues. “What I love about these guys is that they have their own take on things,” Wilson says. “No matter what I tell them, it’s going to translate and come out of their soul in a whole different way, their own way. That’s very important.

    “In this homogenized, generic world that we live in, it’s really good to have your own identity. And this band is expounding on the past of this band [the T-Birds], which was expounding on the past of music. If you expound on the past, you can hear the past, you can hear the present, you can hear the future. I think there’s a true future with this band. And people are going to realize that when they hear this record.”

    The Fabulous Thunderbirds will play at 8 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday, August 7 and 8, at Main Street Crossing, 111 W. Main in Tomball. For more information, call 281-290-0431 or visit MainStreetCrossing.com.

    For more information on the Fabulous Thunderbirds, visit FabulousThunderbirds.com

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    Tom Richards

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