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Featured
Artist: Hayes Carll |
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(Bio from LoneStar
Music) Hayes
Carll is, by his own admission, a bit of a gambler.
And judging from the 28 year-old singer-songwriter’s
stage presence, he must have one hell of a good
poker face. Whether he’s facing an intimate
listening room audience or a packed dance hall of
noisy, potentially hostile patrons hungry for the
headliner, it’s always the same Hayes: shambling
more than walking on stage like a guy who’s just
woken from a restless sleep with a horrible
hangover, reaching for an acoustic guitar when a pot
of black coffee seems more in order. “This guy,” you
invariably think, “is a mess.” That’s when he shows
his hand, and you find you’ve been hustled.
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“I like to watch him,”
offers Hayes’ friend Ray Wylie Hubbard, a rumpled
hustler of a troubadour in his own right, “because
it’s kind of like watching two trains heading full
speed toward each other on the same track: it’s just
a matter of time.
But he’s always very in control, even though
sometimes he doesn’t give that appearance. He walks
on that stage, and he just owns it — like it’s his
time, his stage, and he has total control and keeps
your attention his whole set. And I admire that.”
That’s no mere blurb or nod of approval from one
Texas
songwriter to another; it’s a dead-on portrait of
the artist as a young man: off the tracks with a
clear sense of purpose. As Hayes declares in “Wish I
Hadn’t Stayed So Long,” from his second album,
Little Rock, “I’m gonna burn down all my bridges,
grab a car and drive away.” That’s not reckless;
that’s a man with a plan.
“I’ve kind of been searching this out for a long
time,” muses Hayes, reflecting on the oft curious
and at times downright puzzling path he’s followed
in his life and career thus far. “I’d live wherever
I could or do whatever job I could to find the
material and find the point of view for the songs,
and to be successful at it. And all in all, it’s
working out pretty good. I’m a pretty content human
being … with not a whole lot more demons than your
average, twisted folk singer.”
At the moment, said twisted folk singer is sitting
on his porch in Conroe, Texas, a little town a mere
five minutes north of The Woodlands, the affluent
Houston suburb where Hayes grew up. Considering that
it wasn’t that long ago that Hayes couldn’t escape
The Woodlands fast enough, his current proximity to
home suggests a prodigal son settling down —
complete with a 14-month-old son and a fiancé —
after a few good years of devil-may-care rambling.
Truth is, both the man and his career have never
been more on the move.
“This has actually been my busiest year,” says
Hayes, who recorded the bulk of Little Rock in
January 2004 and spent the rest of the year playing
just shy of 200 gigs across not only his native
Texas but the rest of the U.S. and up into Canada.
All of those shows found him still faithfully
working his 2002 debut, the acclaimed Flowers and
Liquor. Now that Little Rock is finally ready for
its public, he’s chomping at the bit to really hit
the road.
“That first record came out two-and-a-half years
ago, and that’s a long time to wait,” says Hayes.
“It drove me nuts for a while, because I want people
to see my new songs and what I’ve done or where I’ve
gone, and it’s just hard to keep handing out the
same product. It’s still me, but it’s from a
different part of my life and I’m ready for them to
see a new part.”
To wit, while the bulk of Flowers and Liquor offered
a whisky-soaked snapshot of Hayes’ life right out of
college, living amongst the “rednecks and outlaws”
that populated Crystal Beach, Texas on the Bolivar
Peninsula, Little Rock is all about where he is now.
“When you’re young, it’s hard to think of original
ideas other than loneliness, alcohol and sex,” Hayes
says of his debut, with a hint of the deadpan
self-deprecation that makes his stage banter as
entertaining as his songs. “I can’t say that I’ve
really evolved all that much since then — I still
sing about alcohol — but I don’t want ‘Flowers and
Liquor’ to be my anthem or something that I have to
be singing for years down the road. I’d like to
evolve a little as a writer, and this time around,
there were just some other interesting things to
sing about.”
Recorded in Nashville with producer R.S. Field
(Billy Joe Shaver, Buddy Guy), Little Rock kicks off
with the aforementioned “Wish I Hadn’t Stayed So
Long,” a wry and gritty rocker of a Dear John letter
to Crystal Beach, Nashville, Austin and other stops
along the way that the young songwriter should have
no qualms about singing for the rest of his life.
Not every artist is good or lucky enough to turn out
their very own “Guitar Town” quality anthem this
early in their career (if ever), but Hayes pulls it
off with the same casual, broken-in comfort of his
live performances. The rest of Little Rock similarly
rises to the occasion, from the good time roll of
the title track (an affectionate nod to Hayes’ home
away from home, Arkansas) to the greasy blues of
“Chickens” (co-written with Hubbard). “Long Way
Home,” a bittersweet tribute to a talented musician
friend of cut down in his prime by a heroin
overdose, would do Hayes proud in a guitar pull with
Steve Earle and Guy Clark, as would the outlaw’s
lament, “Rivertown,” co-written with Clark himself.
“I was certainly nervous about it,” admits Hayes of
sitting down to write with the dean of Texas
songwriters, “but he was extremely gracious and
totally a craftsman and disciplined about it. I tend
to write more stream of conscious style, and just
give lines a certain feel but not put much emphasis
on each word, but with him it was like every single
syllable had to have a meaning and a point. It was
really eye opening.”
It was a hunger for eye-opening experiences that led
Hayes to where he is today, and continues to fuel
his muse and wanderlust. The son of an attorney
father and an attorney/school teacher mother, Hayes
could have very easily ended up taking a briefcase
to work every day instead of a guitar. Fortunately,
a discovery of songwriters like Bob Dylan and fellow
Houston-area native Lyle Lovett led Hayes to pick up
guitar in his teens. By the time he graduated, he
was itching to get as far away from The Woodlands as
possible. “Far away” ended up being tiny Hendrix
College in Arkansas, just a state away. But it was
far enough.
“I almost ended up at UT or Baylor or a number of
places in Texas, and I’m really glad I didn’t,”
Hayes reflects. “That’s the time in your life to go
out and have experiences and meet new people, and
I’m really happy that I did, because I don’t think
I’d have the confidence or the ability to do what I
do if I hadn’t done it. “I grew up in the suburbs, a
pretty one-color, right-wing affluent town, and I
always knew there was something else out there,”
says Hayes. “I had to go out and find it, and for
some reason Conway, Arkansas seemed like a good
place to start. So I ended up there, and I’ve just
kind of followed that path since I got out of there.
The idea that there are other things than suburbs in
the world, and other people than the ones who drive
Mercedes.”
After graduation (he majored in history and minored
in theater), Hayes spent a summer picking corn in
Iowa, spent another six months in Croatia visiting
his best friend from college and tried,
unsuccessfully, to survive in the self-proclaimed
“Live Music Capital of the World,” Austin. But his
home for the better part of three years was a remote
cabin in Crystal Beach, 40 miles from the nearest
town. “It was a lonely time and a weird time of my
life, but it was good creatively,” he says. The
denizens of Crystal Beach offered rich pickings for
song inspiration (as Flowers and Liquor attests),
but the low-paying bar gigs he was able to pick up
in town left a lot to be desired. Luckily, a ferry
ride across the bay to Galveston led to his
discovery of the Old Quarter Acoustic Café.
“The Old Quarter was where I kind of got into the
legitimate music scene,” says Hayes. “That’s where I
met Sisters Morales [whose Lisa Morales would
produce Flowers and Liquor], Ray Wylie, Willis Alan
Ramsey … all those guys came through there on the
circuit, and I was kind of the perennial opening act
for everybody.”
After the release of Flowers and Liquor on Compadre
Records, Hayes became the opening act of choice for
any number of Lone Star legends not just at the Old
Quarter but at venues across Texas. That exposure
has since made Hayes a rising marquee name in his
own right in Texas and beyond — a status certain to
continue to rise with the release of Little Rock.
But rest assured that when fame really catches up to
Hayes’ talent, the rendezvous will be on his own
terms. After his one-album deal with Compadre, Hayes
was set to sign a five-record contract with a
nationally established “major” independent label
(one home to many of his heroes), but he ultimately
decided to release the record on his own.
“I was really excited about the the deal at first,
but the more I got into the economics of it and
control issues, the more leery I got,” Hayes says of
his decision. “I’m up to my ass in debt,” he admits,
“and it would have been a huge financial relief not
to worry about that for the next 10 years, but at
the same time, I just couldn’t see spending the next
10 years of my life not controlling what I have.”
Some might call that a gamble. But don’t count on
Hayes folding his cards and leaving the table
anytime soon. As Ray Wylie Hubbard says, this is his
time, he owns it, and he’s just getting warmed up.
“It’s up and down, and it’s not always an easy
life,” he admits of the singer-songwriter game, “but
in the big picture, I can’t complain. I know that
most of the people I meet would rather have my job
than theirs — and I’d rather have my job than
theirs, too. I’m doing what I never thought I’d be
able to do, but always wanted to do, you know? I’m
living that dream.”
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