A leading figure of the
progressive country movement of the 1970s, singer/songwriter
Ray Wylie Hubbard remains best known for authoring the perennial anthem "Up Against the Wall, Redneck Mother." Born November 13, 1946, in Soper, OK,
Hubbard and his family relocated to Dallas during the mid-'50s; there he learned to play guitar, eventually forming a
folk group with fellow aspiring musician Michael Martin Murphey. Befriended by the likes of
Jerry Jeff Walker and
Ramblin' Jack Elliott,
Hubbard later formed a trio named Three Faces West, which regularly performed at the Outpost club in Red River, NM, a musical hotbed also trafficked by artists including Steve Fromholz and Bill & Bonnie Hearne.
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A leading figure of the
progressive country movement of the 1970s, singer/songwriter
Ray Wylie Hubbard remains best known for authoring the perennial anthem "Up Against the Wall, Redneck Mother." Born November 13, 1946, in Soper, OK,
Hubbard and his family relocated to Dallas during the mid-'50s; there he learned to play guitar, eventually forming a
folk group with fellow aspiring musician Michael Martin Murphey. Befriended by the likes of
Jerry Jeff Walker and
Ramblin' Jack Elliott,
Hubbard later formed a trio named Three Faces West, which regularly performed at the Outpost club in Red River, NM, a musical hotbed also trafficked by artists including Steve Fromholz and Bill & Bonnie Hearne.
Upon the breakup of Three Faces West,
Hubbard toured the southwestern coffeehouse circuit as a solo act before forming another group, Texas Fever; they too proved short-lived, and he returned to New Mexico to again take up residence at the Outpost.
While in Red River,
Hubbard rekindled his friendship with
Walker, who in 1973 recorded
Hubbard's most famous (if least representative) composition, "Up Against the Wall, Redneck Mother." on his acclaimed
Viva Terlingua LP. The success of the album guaranteed
Hubbard instant cult status within
progressive country circles, and at the same time, he set about organizing a new backing band, dubbed the Cowboy Twinkies. Considered by many the first cowpunk group -- their regular set lists included everything from
Merle Haggard songs to a show-stopping cover of
Led Zeppelin's "Communication Breakdown" -- the Cowboy Twinkies' music met considerable resistance in both
country and
rock quarters; frustrated,
Hubbard funded a demo tape that won the group a contract with Atlantic. However, the label left the band in limbo, and they finally jumped ship to Warner Bros., which shipped them off to Nashville to record their debut LP, Ray Wylie Hubbard & the Cowboy Twinkies.
Released in 1975, the album suffered from label-imposed over-production and fared poorly;
Hubbard did not resurface prior to 1978, when he signed to
Willie Nelson's short-lived Lone Star imprint to record Off the Wall, which contained his own version of "Redneck Mother." The following year
Hubbard acquired a new backing unit in the form of the Lost Gonzo Band, previously
Walker's supporting group; comprised of guitarist John Inmon, bassist Bob Livingston, and drummer Paul Pearcy, they recorded the live LP Caught in the Act. By 1984,
Hubbard was backed by the Bugs Henderson Trio, which featured guitarist Henderson, bassist Bobby Chitwood, and drummer
Ron Thompson; with them he cut another live effort, Something About the Night.
Hubbard didn't record for another eight years, instead building a small but loyal following through constant touring. Finally, he issued Lost Train of Thought on his own Misery Loves Co. label in 1992, followed in 1995 by the Dejadisc release
Loco Gringos Lament. Dangerous Spirits appeared two years later, and in 1999
Hubbard returned with
Crusades of the Restless Nights.
Eternal & Lowdown, which was issued in summer 2001, captured the haunting poetics of religion, philosophy, and salvation. It was followed in 2003 by the raw and gripping Growl, the laid-back Delirium Tremolos in 2005, and Snake Farm in 2006. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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