A group of three friends who made music in a house in Lubbock,
Texas, recorded an album that wasn't released and went their
separate ways into solo careers. That group became a legend and
then--twenty years later--a band. The Flatlanders--Joe Ely, Jimmie
Dale Gilmore, and Butch Hancock--are icons in American music, with
songs blending country, folk, and rock that have influenced a long
list of performers, including Robert Earl Keen, the Cowboy Junkies,
Ryan Bingham, Terry Allen, John Hiatt, Hayes Carll, Lucinda
Williams, Steve Earle, and Lyle Lovett.
In The Flatlanders: Now It's Now Again, Austin author and music
journalist John T. Davis traces the band's musical journey from the
house on 14th Street in Lubbock to their 2013 sold-out concert at
Carnegie Hall. He explores why music was, and is, so important in
Lubbock and how earlier West Texas musicians such as Buddy Holly
and Roy Orbison, as well as a touring Elvis Presley, inspired the
young Ely, Gilmore, and Hancock. Davis vividly recreates the
Lubbock countercultural scene that brought the Flatlanders together
and recounts their first year (1972-1973) as a band, during which
they recorded the songs that, decades later, were released as the
albums More a Legend Than a Band and The Odessa Tapes. He follows
the three musicians through their solo careers and into their first
decade as a (re)united band, in which they cowrote songs for the
first time on the albums Now Again and Hills and Valleys and
recovered their extraordinary original demo tape, lost for forty
years. Many roads later, the Flatlanders are finally both a legend
and a band.
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