FROM THE FARM TO TEXAS (and one big smoke trail to the takeover)

In the late 1970’s, there was this old crumbling house that sat out on the edge of Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Looked like a stiff wind might lay it over. Porch sagging. Screen door hanging by a single hinge. Windows rattling any time the prairie breathed.

And the dirt… that red dirt…

Dirt that clung to everything — boots, guitars, denim, even the souls of the folks who wandered there. Try to dust it off and it only smeared deeper, like the earth insisting it had a claim on you.

Inside and around that busted-up house — the one they called The Farm — there gathered a tribe of musicians and poets. Not famous folks. Just wanderers with calloused fingers, beat-up notebooks, and stories too heavy to carry alone.

On cool nights they’d sit on that porch, wiping the red dust from their jeans, passing a guitar around like communion.

One would strum, one would hum, one would laugh, one would cry — and together they were accidentally building the beginnings of something no one had a name for yet.

That sound — stubborn as the soil, honest as confession — became Red Dirt, long before anyone knew the term would stick like the clay itself.

Ten years or so down the road — and more than a few beers later — four Oklahoma kids started stirring up their own brand of noise in a garage in Yukon. The kind of noise that rattled the siding, scared off the neighbors, and made the local cops slow down just to make sure nothing was on fire. Outta that rattletrap garage, with cords snaking across the concrete and amps humming like angry bees, Cross Canadian Ragweed was born.

Four misfits with dust on their boots and a spark they didn’t fully understand:

Cody Canada – Telecaster and a hunger in his eyes,

Grady Cross -steady as a fencepost in a windstorm,

Randy Ragsdale pounding the drums like they owed him money,

Jeremy Plato holding the low end down with all the quiet confidence of a man who knew exactly what he brought to the table.

They weren’t refined. They weren’t proper. They weren’t made for Nashville — and that’s exactly what made them matter.

But even in all that garage-band chaos, something in Cody’s chest kept tugging. A pull he couldn’t name. A feeling older than he was — maybe older than the music itself.

A pull that led him back up Highway 51 toward Stillwater, toward a sagging, half-forgotten house everybody simply called The Farm.

Nobody of sound mind didn’t just “decide” to go to The Farm. They found themselves there.

It was the same old place — boards soft as biscuits, screens buzzing with jealous wind, porch leaning like it was listening in on every whispered melody.

And on that porch sat the Okie prophets — Bob Childers, Skinner, the Red Dirt Rangers — picking, smoking, laughing, trading stories like playing cards.

Cody walked up those crooked steps with a guitar on his back and red dirt on his boots, and those old-timers looked at him the way a blacksmith looks at a fresh piece of iron:

“Yeah… yeah, we can make something outta this.” And that’s where it began —

Ragweed soaking up the spirit of The Farm like it was gasoline. The music getting louder, meaner, truer. Red Dirt was about to grow louder than anyone on that porch ever imagined.

Cody didn’t leave The Farm with instructions.

He left with permission — that quiet nod old pickers give a young one when they see a storm brewing in his hands.

And Ragweed… brother, they took that spark and turned it into a wildfire. They loaded their gear, filled the tank with whatever was cheapest, and pointed that Yukon-born, Stillwater-blessed sound toward Texas — a place wild enough and wide enough to handle it.

And that’s when everything changed.

The first time Ragweed pulled into Lubbock, the wind was howlin’, the sky was wide open, and the beer joints around the Depot were already shaking with flat-top guitars and honky-tonk heartbreak.

Then came College Station. Those Aggies weren’t expecting a Stillwater storm, but Ragweed brought it anyway. Fiddles and two-steps gave way to Telecasters and truth-telling.

They turned those dance halls into temples of sweat and sawdust — songs bouncing off beams older than the students dancing under them.

They didn’t know what “Red Dirt” was. They just knew something honest when they heard it.

Then the music rode south, floating on the currents of the Brazos, the Guadalupe, and the Pedernales. It drifted through New Braunfels, Gruene, San Marcos — river towns where the guitars ring out cleaner in the humid airand the Hill Country limestone throws the echoes back twice as strong.

Texas Said Hell yes we’ll take it,,

That’s where the sound met the songwriters we all love so much. Jason Boland, turning honesty into poetry. Mike McClure, forging steel out of sound. Randy Rogers, carrying melody like a man carrying a lantern through the dark.

They heard Ragweed and recognized it instantly — not as something new, but as something they’d been waiting on.

They grabbed that sound —that unvarnished Stillwater grit —and folded it into their own songs,their own rivers, their own late-night barroom confessions.

The Texas soil welcomed it like a long-lost cousin.

They didn’t steal the sound. They didn’t bend it. They adopted it, raised it, and sent it back into the world stronger than it left.

Oklahoma planted the seed.

Ragweed drove it south.

But Texas let it bloom…

Pancho-

Flatland Fiddle- Boland Approved

There’s a special kind of hurt tucked inside Jason Boland & The Stragglers’ original version of “Somewhere Down in Texas.”

If you know, you know. That song doesn’t just play — it settles in your ribs and reminds you of every mile you drove trying to outrun a memory.

I remember the first time it broke me clean in half.

I was working late nights down near Big Lake, crawling around a busted-up saltwater disposal, trying to track down an outage in the dark. Wind howling, pump whining, flashlight flickering like it was tired of the night just as much as I was. Then Boland’s voice came through the radio — that lonesome violin, that slow burn of a man missing someone he shouldn’t have let go.

Brother, I didn’t stand a chance.

Tears streamed down my cheek before I even knew they were coming. Missing her. Missing what I thought was forever. Missing everything except the truth.

Thankfully, life’s got a funny way of circling back with grace.

That part of my life is long gone now. I found the one — the real deal, the woman who didn’t just patch the empty places, she filled them. She’s the reason those old shadows don’t reach me anymore.

But I can still feel the way that song stung.

And now here comes Flatland Cavalry, stepping up to the mic with their brand-new single — a fresh take on “Somewhere Down in Texas.”

But let me tell you something straight: this ain’t just a cover.

What Flatland did is more like a handshake across generations, a passing of the torch from one set of Panhandle boys to another. Cleto and the crew didn’t try to out Boland — nobody could. Instead, they honored the bones of the song and let their own soul shine through the cracks.

Right from the first note, you can hear it:

reverence, not revision.

The fiddle floats like heat shimmering off a caliche road.

The steel bends just enough to hurt.

And Cleto’s voice — soft around the edges but steady as a windmill at dusk — walks into the story like he’s lived that heartbreak himself. Flatland plays this thing like they found it carved into a bathroom stall at the Blue Light. There’s a gentleness to their version, a softer ache.

Boland sang like a man drowning in heartbreak.

Flatland sings like men who’ve survived it — and remember it without bleeding all over again.

It’s the sound of looking back with clearer eyes —

the hurt still there, but the healing louder.

And that’s why this cover works. It bridges two eras of Texas country:

The Stragglers built the fire.

Flatland keeps it burning.

The Song That Grew With Me

That’s the magic of “Somewhere Down in Texas.”

Boland wrote it like a man bleeding on the page, and I first heard it at a time when my own heart was split wide open. It followed me through dark nights, Big Lake work sites, and long drives where I wasn’t sure if I’d ever feel whole again.

Flatland Cavalry comes along years later and sings it like a reminder that we do grow past the hurt — that the same song that once broke you can someday make you smile instead of cry.

Because now, when I hear Cleto sing that chorus, I don’t think about who left.

I think about who stayed.

About the woman who walked into my life and turned all that old pain into nothing but a distant echo.

Flatland kept the melancholy, but they added maturity — proof that heartbreak may shape you, but it damn sure doesn’t get to define you.

So here’s to Boland for writing the wound…

and to Flatland for singing the scar.

Somewhere down in Texas, the past met the present —

and for the first time in a long time,

I didn’t hurt when that song played.

I just felt grateful

GOAT

When I talk about Goats I’m talking about the Greatest of All Time. Those singer/ songwriters who everyone knows and loves. The ones who everyone one else is listening to and trying to be like.. A Goat is always an inspiration to others.

Charlie Robison is in this category in that ever growing list of Goats I carry in my mind he lives at the top. I cannot describe in words the impact it had when I learned of his untimely death yesterday.

Charlie’s songs are and always will be in the playlist of my life …. His way with words and his ability to tell a story through his song..

I don’t recall when I began listening to Charlie Robison. Sometime in the mid 90’s, when Texas Country music was in its infancy. There was bands like Cross Canadian Ragweed, Mickey and The Motorcars , Jason Boland and of Course Charlie.

My heart goes out to his brother Bruce, also a GOAT as well as all the men and women whom were inspired by his musical talents.

Rest in Peace Charlie. Your music will live forever.

Pancho.

Blue Light

The blue light is a wierd little place but it’s our place we like it

Blaze Butler

“The BlueLight is a weird little place but it’s our place we like it, “ Blaze Butler, bass player for Lubbock’s own Mason and the Gin Line, once told me. He was describing the iconic and historic venue nestled in Lubbock’s depot district. The BlueLight gave many a singer songwriter their first chance to play the songs that they had scribed on paper and picked over so many times a place to bounce off of fans and other musicians alike. Many success stories began in that little place. In the Texas country scene many names that we all know and love have performed on that little stage and keep that flame shining bright on Buddy Holly avenue.

Jason Boland started there. Cleto Cordero took his little band from Midland and grew it into the brand now known as Flatland Cavalry in that weird little place. William Clark Green, John Baumann, Josh Abbott have all been there. There were plenty others. Brandon Adams calls the place home so does Charlie Stout.

If you happen to be near Lubbock, Texas on any night of the week and you want something to do, the BlueLight is the place.

Bill Whitbeck, Robert Earl Keen’s longtime bass player, recently wrote a song named for this Texas Icon. The lyrics tell a story about one musician getting her start under that flame. Blue Light is a new single performed by Whitbeck and the Singer/Songwriter Robert Earl Keen.

https://open.spotify.com/track/7Ju9orKb5uBRHc2rV3vvO0?si=p7_Ur8K2RMuMiC6BGavwbw

Stream the song now on Spotify.

Pancho.