🌵 Where Red Raiders Turn Red Dirt

Something about Lubbock just breeds storytellers — maybe it’s the wind talkin’ too much, or the way the horizon goes on forever, leavin’ you alone with your thoughts and a half-tuned guitar. Either way, those Red Raiders down at Texas Tech been turnin’ textbooks into tour vans for years now.

It started with Wade Bowen, the godfather of the Tech troubadours. Back when he and his buddies were still passin’ beers and notebooks around dorm rooms, they formed a little outfit called West 84. That band laid the groundwork for what we now call the modern Texas country circuit — heartland rock grit with dance-hall soul. Wade didn’t just graduate; he built the syllabus for every Red Raider who picked up a six-string after him.

Then came Josh Abbott, who took Bowen’s playbook and ran it full-speed down Broadway, turning Lubbock’s local pride into a statewide movement. Abbott showed you could stay independent, stay proud, and still pack out arenas — all without leavin’ your Texas roots behind.

William Clark Green followed suit, diggin’ deep into the Caprock dirt with songs that sounded like blue-collar confessions. His verses could swing between heartbreak and humor, but they all smelled faintly of cedar, smoke, and stubbornness.

And then there’s Cleto Cordero, with Flatland Cavalry, who brought back the romance of a fiddle line and made poetry sound like something you’d hear at the county fair. Cleto’s the bridge between old and new — respectful of his roots, but unafraid to color outside the lines.

That’s the thing about this Lubbock scene: it ain’t about flash or fame. It’s about feel. It’s a bunch of Red Raiders who learned that you don’t need a record deal to make a record that matters. Out here, the dust does the producing.

🌬️ Still Blowin’ Through the Caprock

The wind never quits in Lubbock, and neither does the music. That same red dirt that coated Buddy Holly’s glasses is still gettin’ kicked up every weekend by a new generation of songwriters. One of ‘em — Hudson Westbrook — is proof that the tradition ain’t fading. He’s young, hungry, and carryin’ the same grit in his lyrics that’s been blowin’ through these plains for decades.

From Wade Bowen to Hudson Westbrook, every Red Raider who’s ever tuned up under a West Texas sunset is part of the same long story — one about hard work, heartbreak, and holdin’ fast when the wind gets rough.

So here’s to the next one who picks up a guitar and lets that Lubbock wind whistle through the strings.

Guns Up, and let the dust keep rollin’.

Whole Lotta Lubbock

Still got a whole lotta Lubbock left in me…

I have always thought that Terry Allen’s Lubbock (On Everything) was one of the greatest compilations ever created. There’s no doubt in my mind that Lubbock inspired Allen as well as too many other artists to mention in some way or another. William Clark Green is a perfect example of that.

Growing up 117 miles to the south my musical taste blew down from Lubbock like a dust storm , every time the wind blows, which is pretty often out here in West Texas. The mixed cultural influences of farmers and ranchers , the oil men, the money men, and those who will put in a hard days work to keep it all drilling…

My brother lives in Lubbock a loyal alumnus of the Texas Tech University. He went to school there and never left. My parents just moved up there. The medicine and the food and all that Lubbock offers. It’s the big city life for the ones who don’t like the big city.

William Clark Green says it perfectly in this song..: a song about where his humble beginnings came from.

Guns up

Pancho.

Ol’ Kade Anson

Tonight I tuned into one of my favorite podcasts to hear the voice of one of my favorite new songwriters, Kade Anson.

Kade was telling host Aaron Lee Bentley on “Off Mic Off the Record” some background behind some of his songs and how he began teaching himself guitar chords while in college to put a little background noise behind his poems.

Anson attended College at Lubbock’s Texas Tech University. I could go on all night about how many singer/songwriters in today’s music scene originated from this hub of the plains. After much thought , Kade migrated to Aggie Land in Bryan/ College Station Texas , which is also a huge Texas music Mecca as it is also home to guys like Robert Earl Keen, Lyle Lovett, and Rich O’Toole just to name a few.

Kade writes from his own experiences about real life situations. His songs come to him from almost nowhere and he takes the time and patience needed to turn them into masterful works of word and wisdom.

My favorites by him right now are “Sweet Ol’ Amy” and “One Less Town to Leave.” I recall spending hours one day searching Google Earth in order to find that exact spot on the map where the album art came from for “One Less Town to Leave.” Kade finally gave me some pinpoint on my direction via a shoutout on Twitter. He said the pic was taken while he was working a feedlot near New Deal.

It’s a great tune and not just because it came from the Cap- Rock.

I hope Kade Anson keeps on writing those bluesy songs about Texas.

Pancho.