LOST ART RECORDS
Blazefoley.com
blazecd@aol.com
Blaze Foley CD Released
Storied Austin Songwriter Left Legacy of Exceptional Songs
(Austin,
Texas) Blaze Foley
has long been celebrated by the Austin music community as a master
songwriter.
With the release of "Blaze Foley - Live at the Austin Outhouse," his
songs
are now available for the first time nationally.
The release comes ten
years after his death at age 39.
Originally
issued as a cassette
in 1989, "Live at the Austin Outhouse" captures some of the best of
Foley's
songs.
It includes "If I Could Only Fly," which Merle Haggard called
"The
best country song I've heard in 15 years."
Haggard and Willie Nelson
recorded
the song in 1987, and Haggard still includes it in his performances.
"Our
hope in releasing the
Outhouse CD is that Blaze and his songs will be exposed to a wider
audience,
so he can achieve the recognition he rightfiilly deserves as one of
Texas'
finest songwriters," said John Casner,
Foley's friend and partner in
the
Outhouse recording project.
At
the time of his death,
Foley (whose real name was Michael David Fuller) was little known
outside
of
Austin's renegade songwriter circles. But recent events have sparked
widespread interest in the Foley songbook.
In 1999, two tribute CDs of
Foley songs were released, with a third tribute in the works.
Further,
Lucinda Williams' "Drunken Angel," and Townes Van Zandt's "Blaze's
Blues,"
personal tributes to Foley,
are adding to a legacy that was once nearly
forgotten.
Born
in Arkansas in 1949,
Foley grew up in West Texas, performing at an early age in a family
gospel
act called the Fuller Family.
He led a colorft~l and storied life. Even
in Austin, a city of non-conformists, Foley stood out. He slept on
friends'
couches
or on the pool tables in clubs. Periodically banned (if only
temporarily)
by many Austin clubs,
he made the Austin Outhouse his surrogate home.
Above
all, Foley is remembered
for the stark honesty of his songs. They tapped emotions so deep, they
sometimes reduced
his lumbering frame to tears while performing. From
aching
love songs to provocative political commentary,
Foley's songs reflected
his uncompromising artistic vision.
Intensely
devoted to his
craft, Foley never held a "day" job. He wrote hundreds of songs and
made
several recordings.
Unfortunately, most of the master tapes have been
lost
or stolen. One master is even reported to be in the hands of the
FBI,
or
the DEA, depending on who is telling the story.
Always
an advocate for the
underdog, Foley pledged a portion of the profits from the original
cassette
release to an
Austin homeless shelter. Circumstances prevailed,
however,
and proceeds went instead to defray his burial costs.
In keeping with
Foley's
wishes, 20 percent of the profits from this release will go to the
Austin
Resource Center for the Homeless, in his name.
Playing
a borrowed guitar
for these sessions, Foley is supported by some of Austin's finest
musicians.
Initially
a four-track recording, the tape has been digitally remixed
and
edited, to flilly capture the intimacy
of those December nights in 1988.
Four
weeks after making these
recordings while trying to protect an elderly man he had befriended
Foley
was shot and killed.
Lost Art Records is dedicated to promoting the work
ofdistinctive, independent Texas artists.
Founded in 1999, Lost Art Records,
first release is
"Blaze Foley - Live at the Austin
Outhouse."
Blaze Foley
About
the Original "Live At the Austin Outhouse" Recordings
"Someday,
historians of Texas
music will stumble across this tape and realize what Merle, Willie,
Timbuk
3 and Blaze's few
hard-core fans already know - one of Texas' most
promising
songwriters was tragically cut down long before his time.
" Lee Nichols,
Daily Texan 'When
you put the Live at
the Austin Outhouse tape on,
Blaze is all of sudden in the room."
Townes
Van Zandt "A
remarkable record." Calvin
Russell
"As
far as the "Live at the
Austin Outhouse cassette is concerned, I was totally flattened.
Foley's
talent was as bright and sharp as a new cut diamond." Kerrville Kronicle
About
Blaze Foley
"Blaze
Foley was a genius
and a beautiful loser." Lucinda Williams
"Blaze
Foley was really two
people. There was the caring, loving altruist, and then there was the
ornery,
drinking poet.
The former killed him, the latter always was killing
him."
Casey Monahan, Austin American-Statesman
"One
of Austin's most remarkable
singers/songwriters." John Conquest, 3rd Coast Music
"He
wanted a colorfiil, memorable
name. He liked Red Foley's name and considered becoming Blue Foley. Or
Blues Foley.
He kept working with the name and got Blaze Foley and new
it was right. He became Blaze Foley and he burned brightly,
sometimes
dangerously
so." Larry Monroe, Austin Weekly
"He
was an exceptional talent,
not only as a writer but as a singer." Kimmie Rhodes
"And
then there was the duct
tape. Blaze liked to tape up his shoes and other things with duct tape.
He'd have a sports jacket or
something, and he'd have it very
artistically
covered with duct tape. Just everything was duct tape." Jubal Clark
"Blaze
is remembered by Austin's
poets, pickers, pundits and police officers alike as one of the
finest
songwriters ever to howl at the moon." Michael Elwood
"Blaze
was one of the most
spiritual cats I've ever met; an ace finger picker; a writer who never
shirks the truth; never fails to rhyme;
and one of the flashiest wits
I've
ever had to put up with." Townes Van Zandt
Songs
about Blaze Foley
"Drunken Angel"
"Some
kind of savior singin'
the blues
A
derelict in your duct
tape shoes
Your
orphan clothes and
your long dark hair
Lookin'
like you didn't
care
Drunken
angel
Blood
spilled out from the
hole in your heart
Over
the strings of your
guitar
The
worn down places in
the wood
That
once made you feel
so good
Drunken
angel"
Excerpt from Lucinda Willams' "Drunken Angel, "from
"Car wheels on a Gravel Road"
"Blaze's
Blues"
"I
gotta guitar all my own
I
gotta quarter for the
telephone
I
ain't headed down this
highway all alone
Headed
down to Alabam
Cause
some trouble if I
can
Aw
buddy would you like
to come along
It's
a place I never been
And
you know I could use
a friend
They
say they'll give us
twenty bucks a song"
Excerpt from Townes Van Zandt 'S "Blaze 'S Blues,
"from
"No Deeper Blue"
"Foley"
"Last
time I saw I seen my
old pal Foley down in Austin town
He
was looking good and
he gave me $20 dollars and said we'll be seeing you around
And
all I remember from
a phone call late at night was something about drinking
Somebody
pulled a gun and
they put out Foley's lights, boys, they put out Foley's lights"
Excerpt from Richard Dobson 'S "Foley, "from "Blue
Collar Blues"
Duct Tape
Messiah Had Authentic
Austin Sound
Blaze
Foley never had a
place to sleep, a car to drive, nor a day job; he just wrote songs
BY
LARRY MONROE
Guns
can change things quickly.
drastically, and tragically.
The
Duct Tape Messiah died
in a single blaze of rifle fire on February 1, 1989. He was 39.
My
first memories of Blaze
Foley date back to emmajoc's. He was decked out in duct tape and
Mercuro
chrome. He was asleep under the pool table. A game of 8-ball was in
progress
on the green
felt above him. Every umc sonteone made a hall and it
dropped
with a thud, Blaze would rouse up, smack his forehead
on the bottom of
the table, and sprawl back out. Several championships were decided over
his head as he slum bered on.
The
week "Pancho and Lefty,"
sung by Willie and Merle, hit No. I, Townes Van Zindi, who wrote it,
checked
into
the State Hospital on Tuesday. On Saturday. he checked himself out
to play his end of the month rent gig at emmajee's.
Sober and deter-
mined,
but strained and weak, Townes struggled through his set that night.
During
"If I Needed You,"
he forgot the lyrics and faltered. Blaze glided gracefully to his side
and sang the words for him,
then harmonized with him as Townes got back
on track. After the song, Blaze quietly sat back down near the stage.
Townes
grew stronger from that point and it almost seemed that a direct energy
transfer from Blaze had occurred.
My
opinion of Blaze had been
vaguely negative until that night. That single gesture caused me to
change
my mind. I realized
he had character. He had dis played courage,
caring,
and perfect timing. From that moment on, I took him more seriously.
I
began
to listen to his music. And I got to know him.
At
my house one night, I
asked Blaze if he might be related to an old friend of mine, Mike
Foley,
who resembled him somewhat.
He said no, he had changed his name for
show
business purposes. He'd wanted a colorful, memorable name.
He liked Red
Foley's name and considered becoming Blue Foley. Or Blues Foley. He
kept
working with the name and got
Blaze Foley and knew it was right. He
became
Blaze Foley and he burned brightly, sometimes dangerously so.
That
night he told me that
he was totally committed to his career as a songwriter and would never
have a day job
because that might dull his ambition or detour him from
his artistic goals. He was uncompromising on that point and I never
knew
him to hold down a job just so he could pay rent. Blaze preferred the
sofa
Circuit and he rotated among friends and lovers
for sleeping quarters.
He didn't even have a car to sleep in, in a pinch. And he didn't care.
Blaze
knew Newt Gingrich
before Newt took his hard right turn and got elected to Congress.
Newt
liked to hear
Blaze
sing, and he called
him "My own Bob Dylan."
The
afternoon of June 26,
1986 I got inside information that Dylan was shopping at Electric
Ladyland.
My daugh ter
Saraandlhoppedin thecar and drove there. Sure enough Dylan
was in the store select ing masks, headgear, jackets, and other
articles
from the stock of costumes and fancy clothing and piling them on the
counter.
I tried to think of how to tell him
that I'd been playing his records
on
the radio for 25 years without spooking him and making him think I was
a jerk,
but Sara kept asking me to come look at stuff and that
opportunity
slipped away.
Blaze
came in the store and
went into the room with Dylan. A few minutes later Blaze came in the
store
again.
He said, "Bob Dylan is outside talking to Townes. Come on, I'll
introduce you to him." By the time we got out in front
of the store the
drifter had escaped and Townes was sitting in the car with Pussycat and
Indian Gary.
They had all been on a binge and none of them was seeing
too
straight.
Blaze
told me he had walked
up to Dylan, introduced himself and said Townes was out front. Dylan
had
wanted
to
meet Townes, and they
had immedi ately gone outside. Blaze had seen me on the way Out
and had
come back in to get me after he introduced Dylan to Townes.
Blaze
talked Townes and Linda
Shaw out of enough money to go back into Electric Ladyland to buy a
Ronald
Reagan mask.
He carried that mask around for months, sometimes sneaking
a few beers out ofthebarin itafter hours.
Blaze
pulled a beer Out of
Ronald Reagan's head and popped the top on the way out the door. We bad
been talking and listening
to music at my house since the clubs had
closed
three hours before. I was giving him a ride to a friend's place a dozen
blocks away.
His friend got up at 5:30 a.m. and went to work at six.
Blaze
was going to sleep in his bed while he was at work.
It
was a hot Austin summer
night. Blaze set his Corona on the roofof my carso he could open the
door
and stow his stuff in the
back seat. When he reached for the
beer,
he knocked it over and it rolled down the slope of the roof. emptying
itself
along the way.
The bottle bounced on the street and didn't break. We
laughed
about it and headed for Blaze's borrowed bed.
After
I dropped him off I
drove to the car wash and washed the beer off the car. I knew the
blazing
Texas sun would bake the beer
into the finish and damage the paint if I
didn't. Running with Blaze was always an adventure, and having to
wash my car at dawn didn't faze me in the least.
Blaze
was a good judge of
talent and, early on, gave me copies of Pat MacDonald's pre-Timbuk3
albums.
The last time I saw Blaze he was sitting in with Timbuk3 at The Hole In
The Wall.
If
you cover the Austin music
heat you often see musicians called up from the audience for a short
guest
set, usually two songs,
sometime more. I had noticed that when BIaic
got
called up he'd do one of his own compositions, sometimes
"Oval Room,"
other
times "If I Could Only' Fly," and he would also do Mississippi Fred
MacDow
elI's "You 'Got To Move."
One time I asked Blaze why he always sang
"You
Got To Move" instead of singing two of his own songs so people could
hear
what he wrote. I ean't recall his exact answer - it was years ago - but
he reminded me of my question, in public, the last night that I saw him.
Billing
themselves as Fred
and Wilma to avoid an over-large crowd, Timbuk3 played at The Hole In
The
Wall on January 25 with
Blaze opening. Daring the last set, Pat and
Barbara
K. called him to the stage, saying: "Blaze Foley was our first
friend
in
Austin. He was on the street, we were on the street.."
Blaze
strapped on his guitar,
thanking Juhal Clark for the loan of it. He looked over at me
and
smiled that smile that crinkled his face,
and with that twinkle in his
eye he said into the microphone: "This is a Mississippi Fred MacDowell
song. Larry Monroe
wonders why I always sing this song..~and I'm glad
he
does."
Then
Blaze and the folks
who called him their first friend in Austin sang:
"You
Got To Move,
You Got To Move,
You Got To Move, child,
You Got To Move.
When the Lords gets ready,
You Got To Move."
One
week later, Blaze was
dead and I understood why he always sang "You Got To Move."
After
services in an overflowing
chapel, several of us got lost on our way to the cemetery. Blaze
smiled.
With a few songs to send him
off and some shared tears among his
friends,
the gathering at graveside broke out the duct tape and decorated
his
coffin.
Blaze laughed out loud. In a
cornn covered with duct
tape, one of the most unique characters who ever resided in the
Austin
music community was lowered into the ground. He will be sorely missed.
__________________________
Ladies and gentlemen...
Blaze Foley has left
the building.
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