Austin Austin's artistic community helped popularize artists such as
Stevie Ray Vaughan,
Stevie Nicks of
Fleetwood Mac,
The Police, and
Elvis Costello in the Southwest. Tex-Mex/
new wave bands Vallejo and
Joe King Carrasco & the Crowns gained some national fame. Local punk and new wave bands in the late 1970s included The Huns and
the Skunks, along with The Delinquents, Standing Waves, and Jack Limbo. These bands soon clashed with an influx of
hardcore punk bands like
The Dicks,
The Offenders, and
Big Boys. Other notable Austin bands, such as ambient duo
Stars of the Lid, eschewed this clash all together. Austin, especially through its central music scene in the corridors of Red River Avenue, South Congress Avenue and
6th Street, has been dubbed "The Live Music Capital of the World". The Texas Music Hall of Fame and Texas Music Museum are also located here. The Austin area is home to
Austin City Limits Music Festival and
South by Southwest (est. 1987), one of the largest annual music festivals in the United States. Austin has long been a hub of innovative psychedelic sound, from the pioneering
Roky Erickson and the
13th Floor Elevators to the
Butthole Surfers, and hosts an annual festival celebrating the genre and Austin's contributions to it called
Austin Psych Fest. Austin is currently home to a number of bands that are enjoying popularity as part of the American
indie rock scene. These include
Spoon (singer
Britt Daniel attended the
University of Texas),
Ghostland Observatory,
...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead,
I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness,
Explosions in the Sky,
Okkervil River,
The Black Angels,
The Bright Light Social Hour, and
White Denim, among others. The transition of the Austin music scene from the mid-seventies progressive country scene to the punk/new wave and alternative influence that followed is captured in
Jesse Sublett's memoir, ''Never the Same Again: A Rock n' Roll Gothic'', which details Sublett's experiences with
the Skunks and other bands during that time period. Sublett has also documented the Austin music scene in his music-themed crime novels,
Rock Critic Murders,
Tough Baby, and
Boiled in Concrete.
Beaumont-Port Arthur This area on the Gulf Coast northeast of Houston is also home to many legendary musicians:
George Jones (d. 2013),
Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown,
Janis Joplin,
Barbara Lynn,
Edgar and
Johnny Winter (d.2014),
J.P. Richardson a.k.a. "The Big Bopper", country stars
Mark Chesnutt,
Tracy Byrd,
Clay Walker, and Jimmy and David Lee Kaiser, and rappers
Pimp C (d.2007) and
Bun B of
UGK.
Corpus Christi Known primarily for Tejano star
Selena Quintanilla,
Corpus Christi was also home to
Reverend Horton Heat singer Jim Heath and
garage rock band
Zakary Thaks.
Dallas Dallas has a rich musical heritage. The number of prolific musicians who played in the Deep Ellum Central Track area was rivaled in the South only by
Memphis'
Beale Street.
T-Bone Walker,
Lead Belly,
Blind Lemon Jefferson,
Blind Willie Johnson, and even
Robert Johnson himself first recorded in this area, just as
Bob Wills and the
Light Crust Doughboys were leaving the studio. In the 1960s, Dallas produced notable entertainers
Trini Lopez and
Stevie Ray Vaughan. Other notable musicians from Dallas include
Erykah Badu,
Cedar Walton,
Gibby Haynes of the
Butthole Surfers,
Mike Nesmith of
The Monkees,
The Polyphonic Spree,
Old 97's,
St. Vincent,
Edie Brickell & New Bohemians,
LehtMoJoe,
Meat Loaf,
Norah Jones,
Willie Hutch,
Baboon,
The Secret Machines,
Dorrough,
The Paper Chase,
Devourment,
Absu,
Course of Empire,
MC 900 Ft. Jesus,
Jena Rose,
Reverend Horton Heat and
Pantera. Dallas has a vibrant live music scene around
Deep Ellum, an area near downtown that is currently gentrifying.
Denton The music culture that exists in
Denton arose with the founding of the
University of North Texas College of Music Jazz studies program in 1947, the first of its kind in the country. In the last 20 years Denton's vibrant and diverse music culture has grown beyond the collegiate world of UNT's College of Music. In 2007 and 2008, Denton's music scene received feature attention from
The Guardian,
Pop Matters, and
The New York Times.
Paste Magazine named Denton the best music scene in the United States in 2008. The Denton music scene received the #1 rank for "Top 10 under recognized music locations" in the world, on a culture blog called Listverse. Denton bands include longtime mainstay and two-time Grammy Award-winning
Brave Combo, EXIT 380,
The Wee-Beasties,
Norah Jones, Deep Blue Something, The Ducks (not the former Moby Grape band),
Lift to Experience,
Centro-Matic,
Brutal Juice, Six Hard Brothers and a Dog, Drunk Skunks, Harry Has a Head Like a Ping Pong Balls, SayWhat, Chyeah Boi, the Don't Be Scurd, OkieDoke,
South San Gabriel,
Slobberbone, Pops Carter and the Funkmonsters,
The Drams,
Bosque Brown,
Eli Young Band, Matthew and The Arrogant Sea,
Midlake,
Record Hop, History At Our Disposal,
The Marked Men,
Fergus & Geronimo, The Wax Museums, Violent Squid, and
Neon Indian. Several music festivals are hosted in Denton, including
35 Denton and the
Denton Arts and Jazz Festival.
Fort Worth From the 1960s to the 1980s, an independent label out of Fort Worth known as Bluebonnet recorded numerous albums of high-quality material by many pioneer artists in the country music and religious genres such as
Bradley Kincaid, the
Girls of the Golden West,
Buddy Starcher,
Yodelin' Kenny Roberts, and many other country music and gospel pioneers, many of whom had been popular on radio in the first half of the 20th century. Before this, however,
Bob Wills got his start just north of Fort Worth in Saginaw at the Light Crust Flour Mill. This is where Bob Wills, Leon McAuliffe, and Tommy Duncan first started playing music together. Wills recruited the Light Crust Doughboys and they later changed their name to Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys.
Free jazz pioneer
Ornette Coleman was born and raised in Fort Worth, as were fellow
jazz artists
Ronald Shannon Jackson,
Charles Moffett,
Prince Lasha,
John Carter,
Dewey Redman,
Julius Hemphill, and
Cornell Dupree, all of whom attended
I.M. Terrell High School, where G.A. Baxter was the music instructor. In 1971,
Bloodrock had three albums at once on
Billboards top 100 charts. After eight albums on E.M.I./Capitol, they maintain a worldwide cult following. A co-writer of Bloodrock songs and hits, Johnny Nitzinger still plays local venues and creates recordings.
Toadies' debut album
Rubberneck went platinum in 1996.
T-Bone Burnett grew up in Fort Worth.
Nintendocore band
Sky Eats Airplane formed in Fort Worth. Many songwriters of note have come from Fort Worth, including
Townes Van Zandt,
Delbert McClinton,
Ray Sharpe, Johnny Redd and David Persons.
Houston Houston has been home to some of the more experimental music of Texas. From
Mayo Thompson's psychedelic free music group the
Red Crayola and the experimental work of composer
Pauline Oliveros to the hardcore rap of the
Geto Boys and the primordial sludge rock of Rusted Shut, Houston has long been home for experimental music.
The Pain Teens,
Charalambides, and
Richard Ramirez are among the better known Houston artists. Notable rising bands include
Spain Colored Orange,
Southern Backtones, Jennifer Grassman, and The Ton Tons. Among the city's most influential punk bands were the hardcore
Really Red and
DRI. The local scene has also included
Culturcide,
Verbal Abuse, Stark Raving Mad, Sik Mentality,
Dresden 45, Legionnaire's Disease, The Hates, AK-47, The Killerwatz, Free Money,
Asmodeus X,
The Black Math Experiment, The Recipients,
30 foot fall, Gone Rogue, and
The Degenerates. Houston is known for its
chopped and screwed rap music, popularized by
DJ Screw and the
Screwed Up Click. Houston also is the home of
lo-fi music straddling blues, folk, and antiphonal traditions, as epitomized by elusive cult hero
Jandek and the slightly more visible
Jana Hunter. Houston is the birthplace and final resting place of
Chris Whitley (1960–2005) who won a Grammy for his
Living with the Law, revolutionized the steel
dobro guitar, and enjoyed a massive cult following, but died prematurely of lung cancer in 2005. Houston is home to
Beyoncé,
Hilary Duff,
ZZ Top,
Kelly Rowland, and the other original members of
Destiny's Child. Houston is the birthplace of Grammy Award Winning Gospel Artist
Yolanda Adams; who in 2009 was named the #1 Gospel Artist of the last decade by
Billboard Magazine.
Jazz artists born in Houston include saxophonists
Billy Harper and
Walter Smith III, pianists
Robert Glasper and
Jason Moran, and drummer
Eric Harland.
Prairie View Co-eds formed at
Prairie View A&M University in the 1940s.
Kashmere High School was home of
Kashmere Stage Band from the late 1960s to 1978. Houston has had sizable folk-country and blues scenes dating back to the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, which included many now famous performers such as
Nanci Griffith,
Guy Clark,
Townes Van Zandt,
Lyle Lovett,
Robert Earl Keen (Lyle Lovett and Robert Earl Keen both attended
Texas A&M University) and
Lightnin' Hopkins,
Albert Collins,
Big Mama Thornton, and
Johnny Copeland who were signed with the hometown
Peacock Records.
San Antonio Still known primarily for
Tejano music and
Heavy Metal,
San Antonio throws the
Tejano Conjunto Festival, an annual three-day event celebrating
Conjunto music, the largest of its kind in the world. Many of the Conjunto legends lived and recorded here. Names like Valerio Longoria,
Santiago Jimenez Sr. and Jr.,
Flaco Jimenez (who has recorded with everyone from Bob Dylan to the Rolling Stones), Steve Jordan and many others. San Antonio was also one of the major centers for
Chicano Soul along with Los Angeles, California.
Sunny & the Sunliners cracked the Top Ten and were the first Mexican American act to appear nationally on Dick Clark's
American Bandstand. Other significant Chicano Soul bands included Rudy & The Reno Bops, Royal Jesters, Dimas Garza, The Dell Tones, Joe Bravo, The Lyrics, and Sonny Ace. At first thought, San Antonio, Texas, is not immediately associated with the development of jazz, yet the city does have a long and very creditable history. In the 1920s and '30s, many of the legendary
territory bands played there as they swung through south-east Texas, among them
Alphonso Trent and Tenrrence T. Holder. Resident in San Antonio itself for long periods was Troy Floyd's band, sometime home to trumpeter
Don Albert, and tenor saxophonists
Herschel Evans and
Buddy Tate. Floyd's band regularly played at both the Shadowland Ballroom and the Plaza Hotel; from the latter, they were broadcast over station HTSA. When Don Albert later formed his own band, which included clarinetists and saxophonists
Herb Hall and
Louis Cottrell plus trumpeter
Alvin Alcorn, they, too, played the Shadowland. Albert, incidentally, was the first bandleader to use the word "swing" in his billing: "America's Greatest Swing Band". And drummer Clifford "Boots" Douglas formed his band, Boots and his Buddies, in San Antonio in 1932 and remained based there. Among individual musicians with long associations with the city were brothers
Ernie and Emilio Caceres. Clarinetist and saxophonist Ernie played with many swing-era bands, including those led by
Jack Teagarden,
Glenn Miller,
Benny Goodman,
Tommy Dorsey, and
Woody Herman. After years in New York, where he played with
Eddie Condon and
Bobby Hackett, he settled in San Antonio, remaining there for the rest of his life. His brothers, the violinist Emilio and trumpeter Pinero, also played in San Antonio. Another member of the Caceres family, David, was a bop altoist at nightclubs throughout the 1990s. San Antonio also spawned the
Butthole Surfers, a hardcore
alternative rock band which broke into the mainstream in the mid-1990s, signing to
Capitol Records and successfully charting several singles and albums. Other successful acts born and bred in San Antonio are:
Boxcar Satan,
Two Tons of Steel,
The Union Underground, Las Cruces, Sane,
Hyperbubble and
Fearless Iranians from Hell. San Antonio has deep roots in America's classical music,
Jazz, with
KRTU-FM representing one of the most significant jazz radio stations in the country, and the
Jim Cullum Jazz Band serving as a staple act on the
San Antonio Riverwalk. Fellow college radio station,
KSYM-FM, features 'The Best of the Beatles' with Richard Turner, relying on one of the most comprehensive collections of Beatles recordings ever amassed to spin on his weekly show. San Antonio is also home to Local782, a musician-led, non-profit initiative seeking to educate and empower Texas-based musicians by organizing events throughout the year, including seminars, performances, mixers, showcases, and fundraisers. A slew of new rock bands started in the 2000s have joined a couple longer-running favorites,
Girl In A Coma - whose song "Clumsy Sky" won Best Punk Song in The 7th Annual Independent Music Awards - and Buttercup, to develop a burgeoning 'indie' scene. These bands include: Blowing Trees, Morris Orchids, We Leave At Midnight, Cartographers, and Education, the last of whose 2011 album,
Age Cage, was produced by
Gordon Raphael, producer of
the Strokes'
Is This It and
Regina Spektor's
Soviet Kitsch. Exponential Records has helped put San Antonio
Electronica on the map, catapulting artists like Diego Chavez, a.k.a. Aether and Ernest Gonzales, a.k.a. Mexicans With Guns, to much wider audiences. San Antonio has a thriving
hip hop community as well, including emcee/producer
Worldwide, the
R&B-tinged duo Mojoe, of Classic.Ghetto.Soul fame, the rapper Question, collaborator with
Talib Kweli and
Bun B on the track "I'm So Tall", the producer/rapper
Richie Branson, born Marcus Brown, whose clientele include Def Jam Recordings and
Sony Music Entertainment, and
the Vultures crew, whose album
Desert Eagles, Vol. 1 was praised by the
San Antonio Current's Best Music Advocate of 2010 as "the most complete record to ever come out of San Antonio". San Antonio is also home to Texas Death core band
Upon A Burning Body.
Christopher Cross from San Antonio had two #1 hits on the
Billboard Hot 100, including "
Sailing" in 1980.
San Marcos San Marcos, in the greater Austin area, has a number of local bands, including
This Will Destroy You,
BROCKHAMPTON, and
The Oh Hellos. ==Hits==