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Roy Williams of Nervous Records remembers well when
our heroes were trying to get signed, in typical fuzzy
rockabilly folklore style the details are just that,
fuzzy, but he does recall a piss-up of monumental proportions
at a gig downstairs at the Clarendon organised by a woman
unknown who promised free booze for interested parties.
A phone call to Ray Frensham of Northwood records later
and the deadly duo were off 'to have a laugh and milk
the free booze for all they were worth'. Mission accomplished
Roy does not remember getting home. He does remember
with glee correcting the spelling on schoolteacher Mark
Ds letter to him, the wise old sage!

Not long after and all things were rockin along quite
nicely in the Texans camp with their growing legion of
fans treated to the release of Sodbusters, a cracker
of an album, hard to pigeon hole not psychobilly with
not a hint of a graveyard, Zombie or Vampire not rockabilly,
but a slap bass driven party album with what would become
their trademark mix of all sorts of styles. A few other
tracks appeared on Raucous and Nervous compilations to
keep the Rockin underground hungry for more. Anyway it's
getting a bit serious again.
Hard touring with the fan base building and the Album
selling soon followed hot on the heels by new releases
Los Me Boleros which included all time Texans favourite 'Indians'
and live blaster Five Beans In the Wheel. Saturnalia
was released on Picture disc to wide acclaim and included
classic Texans tunes Bloody, Cairo and No Tomorrow. One
of the Texans great talents was to cover songs and make
them totally their own, the other was to sing songs with
pretty miserable lyrics like Bloody and make them sound
happy and make you jump about even though the song was
basically about getting dumped by your bird and you knew
it.
Such was their live reputation the Long Tall ones soon
found themselves on the end of the Jettisounds lenses
where their show at the Night Of The Long Knives was
captured in all it's beer swilled glory and titled 'Blood
Sweat and Beers' for all that couldn't make it or weren't
born yet could see what they missed.
In the meantime the Texans had been embraced by the
Psychobilly masses of Europe regularly trundling off
with their van car or any other mode of transport they
could get their hands on to play gigs the length and
breadth of the continent to a fanatical following.
Singing To The Moon was another landmark direction for
the Texans, a sharp move towards or rather away from
what people expected, the Psychos listened, blinked,
listened again and loved it. The title track a cool as
cucumber echo laden reggae inspired sing along together
with a dub version that sat just as well with the jazzy 'Klub
Foot Shuffle' and the real life tragedy based rocker 'Suicide
at the Seaside' Things looked as if they could be going
even further for the Texans when Mark Denman 'Boggles'
left the band, at least in a live performance role. It
seemed for a while as if the wheels had come off of the
bandwagon just when it was gaining speed. The band played
at the Rumble that year with Gus (?) who was later replaced
by Cellmate Leicester Kev, Steve(?) and then Doug Shepard
formerly of the Rattlers.
With all the line-up changes that were going on with
Mark and Theo trying to replace a mate that had been
with them since day one you could have quite understood
that things would have gone pear shaped and that the
heyday of the Long Tall Texans was over. Guess again,
they had yet more surprises up their sleeve. One gig
I was at the curtains went back and the cry went up, 'Who
the fuck is the hippy?!' Standing stage right with hair
down to his arse and black trousers skin tight on legs
that made Carew look stocky stood new Sax man Paul Mumford.
The Texans with a sax? Though there had been guest instruments
on recorded stuff but full time in the line-up playing
old Texans favourites? It would never work, but it did.
Aces and Eights followed, Sax to the fore and once again
a mix of styles and even a fender bass on what turned
out to be one of the favourite tracks on the Album 'lip
Service'. The sax reworking of big time favourite 'Bloody'
was an unthinkable improvement, with even a Levellers
style track with Innocent Look and a guest guitarist
laying down a bit of metal on the closing track. This
album launched the band into the stratosphere, well a
tour of Japan. That was the furthest they went on tour
but the ones closer to home produced some cracking stories.
Ready?
After too much booze as Theo remembers a free for all
but good-natured scrap on the car deck of a cross channel
ferry with The Klingonz (from Mars so what they were
doing on the ferry god only knows). Other sources remembered
that the police were waiting with good descriptions of
the culprits, Klingonz are let's say hard to miss and
were apprehended while the more soberly haircutted Texans
slipped through the net.
Another story was when the Texans had agreed to give
a mate of Chuck Flintstone a lift home from Germany at
some hardship to themselves, all the band plus hitchhiker
were squeezed in a Ford Capri with Drums on laps and
Double Bass on the roof. All was going well until the
French/Belgian border where some over keen Customs officials
on the French side decide to stop the intrepid carload.
Almost as they opened the boot the assorted merchandise
started to fall about. On noticing the rather nifty Geo
Parkin designed Ts the customs guy made it known to Carew
he would like one, faced with the prospect of having
to load the car again after a full scale search he willing
agreed, and handed over a shirt, only to be told 'Non'
as the customs fella gestured to his three amigos who
had appeared as if by magic at the roadside. They all
got one, the last view from the Capri's wing mirror was
the four well chuffed Frenchmen holding up their new
Long Tall Texans Ts for size.
The other thing the Texans and Carew especially are
renowned for is the ability to sleep anywhere. At one
gig in Devon they were playing a birthday party where
the accommodation was the promoters two bedroom flat.
Support was The Gazmen and a local two-piece with a t-chest
bass and mullets, with even more mullet biker hangers
on. At the after gig party invaded by the mullets and
bikers who juggled their cider bottles for kix Carew
was happily curled up on the kitchen floor along with
Theo who had found some curtains to sleep in, trademark
smiles on faces, oblivious.
And that just about sums up the story so far for the
Texans, as at home playing to 2000 people at a festival
as in a beer soaked boozer in the middle of nowhere as
long as it is fun and with them it always is. The sight
of Mark Carew slapping that Bass with a smile as big
as Brighton on his face is one that anyone lucky enough
to witness will cherish for a very long time. And if
you haven't there's still time, though less prolific,
the Texans, minus the sax who left a few years back,
still make appearances around the country and Europe
and are currently working on new material. So as a famous
man once allegedly said... Something's (still) Cookin'.
Simon (cs) Nott
Bandmembers:
Mark Carew . Vocals Slappin Bass and Big Smiles
Theo . Drums and Yellin and Big Smiles
normally accompanied with big fag and big beer.
Mark Denman .Vocals, Guitar and a class of School Kids to
teach.
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