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Some chord of Zen perfection is
struck when an all-female country band calls itself Cowboy's
Nightmare. Don't let the glossy photographs of these six well-groomed
Houston ladies lead you to make the mistake of thinking they
are just some cutesy, eye-catching novelty act with a gimmicky
name. Their songs, all originals, are rock solid, and their playing
and production is right on the money. Their Luck cd is
filled with great hooks, great voices, and a plethora of tasteful
country licks.
It just goes to show how upside down the music business is
today that these ladies, with only this one independently released
CD to their credit, have already had two #1 singles and a #3
on the English independent release country charts. It doesn't
take many listens if it takes more than one, it's been
too long since your last hearing test to understand that
the Cowboy's Nightmare sound is commercial radio friendly without
veering across the line into the schmaltzy false sentimentality
and saccharine pop sounds that make up many of the current country
hits on the US charts. Willie Nelson heard them and immediately
extended a personal invitation to appear at his Farm Aid show
in 2000. Now that's an endorsement any Texas country band would
kill for.
These ladies may all have manes of Texas big hair and plenty
of showbiz makeup and costuming, but they also put plenty of
oomph in their performance. They aren't some little dainty group
of wallflowers dinking around making soft, sensitive, pretty
tea party appropriate sounds with their instruments. Like much
of what passes for "Texas country" today and is entirely
acceptable at "country" venues, many of their tunes
use rock beats, rock progressions, and plenty of big guitar licks.
There is even the occasional sidetrack into a countrified power
pop sound with lush, full harmonies. I suspect their opening
track, "More Like Your Mama," is what Brooks and Dunn
might sound like after a sex change. It's a hard-edged, uptempo,
big-sound country rock track with lots of electric violin and
lead guitar. The sound is of a quality that would allow one to
assume this record was made in a Nashville studio, but the sound
is pure Texas circuit. "More Like Your Mama" was one
of the tracks from Luck that scored a #1 in England.
Lead singer Jeni Natchez has a full, husky, Tanya Tucker honky
tonk voice with a great East Texas/Louisiana inflection (and
a bit of sassy bad-girl growl when she needs it). She's a natural
singer and never more so than on the Cajun romp, "Fool's
Gold." Guitarist Dana Starr gets in plenty of tasty hot
licks, and fiddler Jonna Lee Garrett has that syncopated Cajun
sawing down pat. The lyrics are stone honky tonk.
Fool's gold is what you win
When you bet on the likes of him
He's a man no woman could hold
His love is fool's gold
Whether it's the full blast of a track like "Hot Little
Mama" or a carefully arranged ballad like "All I Need
To Know," Cowboy's Nightmare is impressively professional
sounding for a first-cd group. Most of the women have formal
musical training and served apprenticeships in local rock bands
before making the switch to the amped-up country that is the
Nightmare specialty. Drummer and group founder Joni Lovvorn and
bassist Ramona Gerene provide a Rock of Gibraltar foundation
for soloists Jonna Lee Garrett (violin) and twang-heavy guitarist
Dana Starr. Keyboardist Shauna Pryor fills out the arrangements,
provides the Cajun accordion sounds, and also plays acoustic
and bass guitars, mandolin, and washboard. Gerene doubles on
keyboards, harmonica, and a variety of horns, blowing a mean
sax solo on "Hot Little Mama." Every member of the
band sings. With so much talent in one band, Cowboy's Nightmare
is able to expertly handle a wide range of country and rock sounds
and to mix up their set with more variety than most bands can
manage.
Give Luck a fair listening and you'll discover a multi-talented
band that can work almost every corner of the country genre,
equally at ease with a ballad, a Cajun stomp, or those Nashville
style rocking-big-beat country anthems reminiscent of Brooks
and Dunn or Hank Williams, Jr. It's a nice novelty that Cowboy's
Nightmare is an "all-female band," but forget about
that. This is a just a solid, hard-working Texas county band.
I'm sure that just like any other ensemble, they just want to
be judged by the music on the disc. If it's good enough for Willie
Nelson, it's good enough for me.
* Cowboy's Nightmare has an extremely well done website at
www.cowboysnightmare.com
where you can purchase their cd and check their schedule.
Contact William Michael Smith at: wms-at-rockzilla.net
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