Artist: Butch Hancock
Column from web archive November 5, 2008
Chicago, by way of Austin
If anyone knows the way from Austin to Chicago, it’s Alejandro Escovedo. The Texas veteran’s recent gig at Park West extended his amazing streak of playing more different venues in the Windy City than even most artists who live here have played. Since he first reached these shores with Rank And File in the early [...]
Miked - Live Reviews from Issue #68 Mar-Apr 2007
Butch Hancock – Old Town School of Folk Music (Chicago, IL)
The Old Town’s pairing of Butch Hancock and Tommy Ramone — the latter redefining himself in the duo Uncle Monk as an Appalachian-style singer and mandolinist — had more wrinkles going for it than the respective artists do at this advanced stage in their careers. For all the obvious differences between Hancock, the renaissance Flatlander [...]
Waxed - Record Review from Issue #66 Nov-Dec 2006
Butch Hancock – War And Peace
It’s been eight years since Butch Hancock’s last solo disc, and while he’s been busy touring and recording with the Flatlanders, guiding river trips on the Rio Grande (oh, to have been a fly on the canyon wall when he took Ramblin’ Jack Elliot into Santa Elena Canyon backwards), and building a life for himself [...]
A Place to be - About a Place from Issue #32 March-April 2001
West Texas rivers and wind-blown campfire tunes
Driving west on I-10 from Austin, the desert creeps up on you, gradually revealing itself mile after mile after mile until the entire landscape has changed. The winding rivers, lazy lakes, scrubby trees and colorful flowers of the Texas Hill Country finally give way to barren creekbeds, rocky outcroppings, desolate plains and various forms of [...]
Miked - Live Reviews from Issue #21 May-June 1999
“A Night On The Townes” With Butch Hancock & Friends – Cactus Cafe (Austin, TX)
Sending the crowd home after more than three hours of intoxicating music, Butch Hancock advised, “As Townes would say, ‘When you leave out of here, drive real fast, and maybe they won’t catch me.’” The gathering of friends, fans and family at Van Zandt’s favorite Austin club had been billed as “A Night On The [...]
Not Fade Away - Reissue Review from Issue #16 July-Aug 1998
Butch Hancock – The Wind’s Dominion
It’s tempting to call The Wind’s Dominion Butch Hancock’s Blonde On Blonde, given that Hancock has often been referred to as “the West Texas Dylan,” and that this epic double-album arguably stands as his greatest studio achievement. Originally released in 1979, The Wind’s Dominion must have struck like a coming-of-age lightning-bolt for fans of Hancock, [...]
Waxed - Record Review from Issue #13 Jan-Feb 1998
Butch Hancock – You Coulda Walked Around The World
Bob Dylan’s Time Out Of Mind album has generated some of his best reviews in two decades and earned him the cover of Newsweek; Butch Hancock’s self-released You Coulda Walked Around The World isn’t likely to cause much of a ripple beyond the clubs where fans will come to hear these songs and perhaps buy [...]
