BOBBY PRICE & THE COUNTRY RAMBLERS - Rush On For the Moon (Unijon 1013)
Here's a strange little record out of Andrews, Texas by Bobby Price and the Country Ramblers from the late 60s. This Unijon production represents one of the earliest recording efforts by John Rowe who would create the Hare label which was home to the fabulously hard rocking combo Lynx ('Stomped HERE)
"Rush on For the Moon" is a moody country psych number that deals in the seemingly always current topic of the Apocalypse. Bobby puts his voice in low gear for the piece, but his voice can't quite cut it the whole song through.
In Bobby's world a colonization of the moon is the answer. Life on the moon will take us away from all of the shootings and riots that will come as "they" invade us. But who might the "them"? These nameless controllers that that will brainwash and possibly torture our sons and daughters? Aliens? Commies? Or worse yet... Democrats? OH, THE HORROR!
The Westex Publishing means that the record was likely done in Odessa at the AOK studios. The flip is straight country.
Not thrilled with condition, but still happy to have added a record that has sat atop my regional want list longer than any other. I first became aware of the Knightsmen on Bocaldun pver 10 years back and the hunt has been on ever since.
This goes out to the DJ duo Cult Heroes, aka Danny Salas and Reuben Salazar, of El Paso (read a piece on them HERE).
THE KNIGHTSMEN - Pistol Packin' Mama (feat. Sue Black) b/w Darling Why? (feat. Johnny Trujillo) (Bocaldun 1006/1005)
When talking El Paso, Tx ca. 1960 people tend to hang up on just a couple of combos - the Rock Kings and Bobby Taylor's Counts come to mind, as does Bobby Fuller a few years later- while forgetting there were dozens of other groups hitting on the popular sounds of the time. And most popular among the teen scene of El Paso and Las Cruces/Mesilla were the R&B sounds. A look at releases spread across area labels such as Yucca, Gum, F-G, and Bocaldun bears out this trend.
The origins and endings of the Bocaldun itself are a mystery. The imprint began with the re-release of the Gatorvettes's OUTSTANDING "Midnight" from the Thunder label as Bocaldun 1001/1002 ('Stomped HERE). The second 45 on Bocaldun is an unknown assuming it follows the pattern with numbers 1003/1004. In 1961 the label reappeared with an Odessa Texas address for its last release.
Las Cruces area native Johnny Trujillo got his feet wet in the El Paso/Las Cruces scene of the late 1950s and the Knightsmen were founded soon after. Johnny was a self-taught multi-instrumentalist and a fine, fine vocalist as can be heard on the excellent "Darlin' Why?". The Chicanos- in this case the Knightsmen- prove once again that there was not some arbitrary 1950-something cutoff date for doo wop. Throughout the 1960s the 'oldies' remained popular in Knights of Columbus halls, gyms, and armories all across the southwest and "Darlin' Why?" is a nice teaser for the style that remained popular for so long.
On the uptempo flip the Knightsmen backed a Miss Sue Black on a raucous gal'd up remake of the standard "Pistol Packin' Mama" which seems to have gotten its legs from Gene Vincent's 1960 version rather than the Al Dexter original. A few liberties are taken with the song, but all seem to set well with the sassy and confident Sue. Ol' Westex is particularly fond of the final verse wherein our gal raps "... I'm a real live Texas chick, I know what love's about...". Hispanic combos were more about the brass than strings so rather than some guitar slingin' at the break the listener is treated to a bit of wailing sax.
Perhaps due to the label being located a world away from El Paso in Odessa neither side seems to have done any real damage chartwise, though promotional copies were issued on red vinyl.
The Knightsmen would continue on through the 1960s from their base in Las Cruces with at least one other release on El Paso's Coronado label near the close of the decade. Johnny Trujillo would go on to front a few traditional groups before passing away.
No idea at all about Sue Black. ________________________________
What little info I have on Johnny was pulled from a blog on his nephew's MySpace page HERE. Would be grateful for any/all info about Johnny, Sue, and/or the Knightsmen.
In my 14 years of West Texas livin' I've fallen in love with the area's incredible musical history. From the hoakum swing of Bob Skyles and His Skyrockets to Buddy Holly to the funkiness of El Paso's Soul Ones... it's all so very amazing. But for every Buddy Holly or Roy Orbison there were a hundred Fred Crawfords plying their trade as well. It's these forgotten folks who slaved away in the honky tonks, teen centers, roller rinks, and dance halls of the region that will be served and documented here.
What is West Texas? For this blog's purposes the eastern boundary runs southwest from Wichita Falls along HWY 87 and then down HWY 277 to Abilene on through San Angelo and down to Del Rio on the border. That also ropes in spots in the road such as Amariller, Lubbock, Midland, Odessa, Big Spring, El Paso, and Tahoka.
Eastern New Mexico? Southeastern New Mexico might be a better description geographically as I'm concerned with the area that is bordered by HWY 70 which runs from Clovis southwest to Las Cruces.
This is a labor of love. The sounds are part of that love. If you are a copyright owner for a song I've posted and would rather it not be here please contact me and I will remove it.
Top 5 Listens at Rancho Westex
1. Where'd You Go- ROD CROSBY & THE INTRUDERS
2. Breakin' In A Brand New Girl- SONNY CURTIS (unreleased demo ca. '67)
3. Saddle Tramp - JAY BOY ADAMS (fr. his 2nd Atlantic lp)
4. Anything by JOSEPH BRUNELLE
5. The Last Ride - THE BEACH NUTS (a-side of Coronado 45)
10 Westex Wants: Actual Records I'm On the Hunt For
The Great Grannies- Sugar Man (Corridor) Sisters from Odessa, last name Toone. Also their other 45 on Corridor.
Big Martha on Espirit - Just found out about this one... shoutin' Midland r&b prod. by Ted Groebl & Ray Rush
Cliff Blakley- Get Offa My Toe (Starday) Jimmy Blakley's brother. From Roswell.
Sammy & the ?????- I have no idea on this. It's a chicano doo wop number out of Roswell and it's on a red label. Probably a 1962 or 1963 release.
Lewis Brothers- Sally Johnson (RCA-Victor) Hot sides recorded at an El Paso Baptist church in '29
the Night Crawlers- Let's Move (Shadow) Lubbock combo. What 60s punk should sound like... CLASSIC!
Epic Five- I Need Your Lovin' (Sully) Outstanding! From San Angelo, but on the Amarillo label run by Ray Ruff.
Bob Tucker and the Sky Riders- Quit Draggin' Your Feet(State) Swingin' cat outta Clovis that ran the Caron label.
(DONE 9/25/11)Orville Fox- Honey You Talk Too Much (Ellis) Some dern'd happy to have finally layed by claws on this one. Story to come.
(DONE 6/20/11)Johnny Trujillo and the Knightsmen- Pistol Packin' Mama (Bocaldun), El Paso area Chicanos on Odessa label (a flat copy would be great through)
(DONE 10/12/10)Friends of Mind- Movin' Through Your Mind (InSounds) Folk record with a psych production. California label, Odessa duo... Thanks Greg C.!