Last of the
Neon Cowboys; Jason Ringenberg keeps one foot in the honky tonk, with
or without the Scorchers
By Brian Baker
Dallas Observer
January 18, 2001, Thursday
Copyright 2001 New Times Inc.
Jason Ringenberg's career path has taken a
number of detours, no matter how you simplify it on paper or whose
side you take. His longstanding band, Jason & the Scorchers, has
been an alt-country favorite since its debut in 1981 and has regularly
been picked to be the next Next Big Thing, a fate that has so far
sadly eluded it.
After a handful of mythic and
mediocre releases and one semi-split, Jason & the Scorchers released
1998's Midnight Roads & Stages Seen, the double live album that,
as anyone who has ever seen the band can attest, should have been
put out years ago. Although well received, it was simply more preaching
to the converted, and it ultimately didn't move the needle very far.
Again.
As much as Ringenberg wanted
to break up the Scorchers at that point, he and the rest of the band
decided the best thing to do would be to call it a "hiatus"
and move on separately for the time being. Ringenberg hadn't written
an album's worth of new material since 1996's Clear Impetuous Morning,
and the break offered by the live album merely reinforced his need
to return to writing. As he began to write again, Ringenberg chose
to make the songs he was working on extremely personal, primarily
because he never intended for them to get much further than his living
room.
"Most of these were written
for the pure fun of writing songs and for little gifts for my family,
quite frankly," says Ringenberg via phone from his Tennessee
farm. "I wrote 'A Pocketful of Soul' as a birthday present for
my wife, I wrote 'For Addie Rose' so I could sing a song to daughter
Addie Rose, and on 'Oh Lonesome Prairie,' I just had this hankering
to do a song about my heritage. So I wasn't really thinking 'album'
when I was writing a lot of that material. As more songs started coming
together, it was obvious I should start thinking about a record."
When Ringenberg began tentatively
singing these scrapbook songs in public, the response he received
indicated to him that maybe he should reconsider releasing them. His
deal with Mammoth Records--which released the live album--was dissolved
when Disney bought the company, so he decided to start his own label
(called Courageous Chicken) and release the album, A Pocketful of
Soul, himself.
"Until I started getting
out and having people hear it, I thought it was just such a personal
experience to listen to it, I didn't know that anybody else would
get into it," Ringenberg says in retrospect. "It really
connected with a lot of people on some pretty deep levels. Not everybody.
A lot of folks didn't get it, people who were into energy music, or
people who were more into the rock-and-roll part of what I've done
in the past. But at that point, I started realizing that this was
something beyond just an indulgent thing for Jason to do."
This isn't Ringenberg's first
foray into the solo realm. Eight years ago, armed with major-label
money and guidance, he threw his trademark hat into the solo ring
with One Foot in the Honky Tonk, credited as simply Jason (going for
that Madonna/Cher cachet, one would assume). The album was a pastiche
of ill-conceived writing partnerships, overblown production, and poor
promotion, and it sank accordingly. Ringenberg's life was in such
a shambles at the time, he allowed the album to develop the way it
did and was ultimately ambivalent about its failure.
"The first record shows
myself as an artist completely out of control," Ringenberg says.
"And I'm not blaming the people involved with that record for
that. It was as much my fault as anyone's. I just didn't have a vision
of what I wanted to do. I was really messed up after my divorce and
after the Scorchers broke up, supposedly permanently at that point.
I was crushed. The fact that somebody wanted to make a record...I
was totally happy with that. But the idea that Jason could compete
in the world of Clint Black and Garth Brooks was completely absurd.
Then, it didn't seem so far-fetched."
Once Ringenberg decided to record
A Pocketful of Soul, his first concern was studio costs, since he
could ill afford to incur any. He turned to George Bradfute, former
guitarist with Webb Wilder and the owner of one of the most eclectic
and comfortable home studios in Nashville, the Tone Chaparral. Ringenberg's
folio of quirky and intimate songs couldn't have been in more capable
hands.
"George is sort of a legendary
underground Nashville cat," says Ringenberg. "I call him
the Van Dyke Parks of Nashville. He's just one of those guys that
hangs out and makes great music. None of his records have ever sold
big, but they always have a vibe about them. It made sense financially,
because he records incredibly cheaply. It made sense from a production
standpoint, because he can play anything and does."
When Ringenberg started bouncing
around label names, he decided to keep that aspect of the project
just as personal as the songs themselves.
"I toyed around with some
pretentious-sounding record-biz names," Ringenberg says with
a laugh. "But that didn't seem to make sense, because this was
just me having fun and hoping to make a little money and keep making
music. Chickens are big in our family--we have chickens for pets and
for eggs, my wife loves chickens, and we bought a farm that used to
be a chicken farm. I thought that was cool; then I thought, 'What
can I do to make this so there's a little twist to it?' So I did that
double entendre with Courageous Chicken. It kind of describes how
I feel about music sometimes."
Neither the label nor the album
is an isolated occurrence for Ringenberg, who plans to release another
solo acoustic album on Courageous Chicken and is looking into the
possibility of putting out a legitimate version of Jason & the
Scorchers' legendary bootleg Rock On Germany on the label as well.
Less likely, however, is a new Scorchers album, which, simply from
the logistical standpoint of studio time, production values, and promotion
and distribution assistance, will probably wind up on a larger, more
established label.
For now, Ringenberg has his hands
full with A Pocketful of Soul. One interesting aspect of the album
is the material that Ringenberg didn't write alone. "The Last
of the Neon Cowboys," a song he co-wrote with Kevin Welch (one
of Nashville's best-kept songwriting secrets), was a leftover from
his first solo album, and he covers Johnny Horton's "Whispering
Pines" and Guadalcanal Diary's jangle-pop ode "Trail of
Tears."
Going from Johnny Horton to Murray
Attaway is a genre stretch no matter how you look at it, but Ringenberg
found the common thread.
"I wanted to show the two
sides of my roots heritage," he explains. "One going back
to a person like Johnny Horton, and the other one to go back to fellow
figures from the early '80s roots explosion in America. I thought
that was a nice range to include someone from both sides, and those
songs have always meant a heck of a lot to me."
It's not surprising that Ringenberg's
love of songcraft shows up in his choice of covers as naturally as
it does in his own work. Nor is it surprising that he has once again
been lionized by the press, recently earning a coveted spot on the
Associated Press' list of the Top 10 Country Records of 2000. After
close to two decades of his papering his walls with similar accolades,
one can only hope that A Pocketful of Soul will finally mark the moment
that a substantial number of record buyers put Ringenberg's name on
their want lists.
"I'm real happy with the
way the live thing's going, especially after coming off Jason &
the Scorchers," he says. "When I looked at doing this, that
was the scariest part of it. How do I walk out on stage after being
with the band for 20 years? People say we're the best live band in
the world. Not a lot, but some. Enough to make me scared. I was terrified
of playing solo . The first show was in Denmark, and it was the first
time in 15 years that I was nervous, really nervous. I just went with
the flow, and to this day I just walk on stage, and what happens happens."
Jason Ringenberg
January 21
Poor David's Pub
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