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KIM LENZ
Early Careeras of 1998
HIGHTONE INKS KIM LENZ AND HER JAGUARS
SELF-TITLED DISC ON HMG -
OAKLAND, CA - HighTone Records managing partner Larry Sloven has announced the
signing of Dallas-based rockabilly/roots combo Kim Lenz and her Jaguars, and
the release of the band's self-titled debut album on the label's
HMG imprint.
KIM is current in the midst a major tour that is taking her aroubf the US
and over to Europe. Led by the fiery-maned Lenz, whose singing and songwriting prowess have
already stirred-up considerable noise in the honky-tonk circuit around the
country, the band has generated a strong buzz in the Texas/Southwest region,
as well as at several special events, including Las Vegas' VIVA VEGAS 1998
Denver's Rock 'n' Rhythm-Billy Weekender in 1997. As the daughter of a rodeo
queen, Kim Lenz comes by her pedigree naturally, with influences ranging from
Janis Martin and Wanda Jackson to Charlie Feathers. The Dallas Observer voted
her as 1997's Best Female Vocalist.
Kim Lenz and her Jaguars recorded their first album in early
February, with Wally Hersom, bass player for Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys,
producing. The CD was recorded in Glendale, California, using all vintage
gear, with the majority of the material being original songs. The self-titled
disc is released on HighTone's HMG logo, which is distributed
independently through the REP Company. The band is booked by Minneapolis-based
Hello! Booking. Publicity Contact: Mark Pucci Media (404) 816-7393 / FAX (404) 816-7144
FROM THE DALLAS OBSERVER, 4/98:
Everything old Rockabilly queen Kim Lenz moves ahead by looking backward
By Robert Wilonsky
Kim Lenz takes no offense at the suggestion that she is like a page torn
from a history book. Quite the contrary, she finds it a flattering remark,
testimony
to the years she has spent looking backward while moving forward. Her
'50s
fetishism runs skin-deep and beyond: At this moment, she sports her red
hair
in a Bettie Page point over her forehead, wears an aqua-blue dress
bought in
vintage-clothing stores, wraps a silk scarf around her pale neck, covers
her
eyes in pointed sunglasses that are midnight-dark.
For the past decade, she has purchased everything she owns - down to
dishes
- at secondhand shops where people go to sell off their pasts. Lenz buys
their
yesterday things as she builds a monument to the 1950s in the Hall
Street
apartment she and her husband share near downtown. She's a 29-year-old
woman out of time and out of place, a living artifact.
"Some people think it's weird," she says, giggling, "but what's weird
anymore?"
That is why, she explains in a roundabout way, she plays rockabilly for
a
living - because it's music that has been discarded and left on the
trash heap,
like a rusted-out Edsel or a rayon shirt with a small hole in the
sleeve. For
her, it's pure, perfect music done right only by a handful of faithful
worshipers who mike the drums just so, who record all the instruments
and
vocals at the same time, who would rather the music was in your pants
than in
your face. She plays rockabilly, sings rockabilly, and writes rockabilly
because no one else does.
"It's complicated why I like rockabilly," she says, sipping a white
Russian
during a happy hour growing a little happier with each sip. "I love
rockabilly. To me, rockabilly is rock and roll at its most pure. It's
the
beginning of rock and roll. It's very passionate music to me. It's
simple, yet it
really gets a lot of feeling across. I'm one of those people, and this
will look
stupid in print, but I think I tend to be one of those people that
doesn't like
things that are popular, so rockabilly not being popular makes it
appealing to
me. Rockabilly right now is what punk used to be. You get made fun of
for the
way you dress. I mean, do I look weird to you?"
Not at all - at least, not for a woman who moved from Los Angeles to
Dallas
and decided one day she wanted to become a rockabilly sweetheart. Lenz
off-stage looks just like the woman onstage or on the cover of her
just-released CD, Kim Lenz and Her Jaguars, released on the
home-to-roots-rock HighTone label. She looks like any other female
rockabilly gal from the 1950s; she's a black-and-white photograph
rendered
in brilliant red and, at the moment, faded blue. Even the disc's cover
is a
pose-for-pose replica of an old Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps album
sleeve,
so perfect is Lenz's love for the golden age of rock and roll.
And on the disc, her voice recalls the
echoes of Wanda Jackson or Barbara
Pittman or any of the handful of
other women who traveled knee-deep
in rockabilly testosterone 40 years
ago ÷ indeed, it takes a strong
woman to play to the leather-and-greased-back crowds even now. She has a
voice as pretty as sharp steel, and if it's a bit more tame than
Jackson's
orgasmic yelp - Jackson was an Okie who sang country as though she was a
blues belter ÷ Lenz is no less convincing when she's screaming about
rockin'
and rollin' till she rips her dress or loving her kiss-and-tell baby or
scratchin' that itch with a brand-new man.
Lenz is more revivalist than revisionist (unlike, say, Reverend Horton
Heat
or even Ronnie Dawson, whose swing has always been more blues than
country). Her album was recorded with her band live to one track using
nothing but vintage equipment, and the result is like listening to music
made
in a tin cup. It's too sturdy to be considered novelty but too then to
sound
now. When Cowhide Cole spins a tune from the record on his KNON
rockabilly
show, between a couple of oldies from Mac Curtis and Johnny Carroll, you
can
hardly notice the difference - they all sound like they were made on the
same
day in the same studio with the same band. Which is precisely what she's
going
for.
Yet there's something to be admired, and something intrinsically
appealing,
about a woman who so defiantly refuses to move into the...1960s. You can
count on two fingers the number of women who perform rockabilly these
days, Lenz and New York-to-Los Angeles transplant Josie Kreuzer, the
latter
of whom doesn't really dress the part, but has a voice like a Gene
Vincent 45
sped up to 48 rpm. And it's not as though Lenz is riding a trend; she's
40
years late to the party but ready to rock nonetheless, part of a
subculture that
refuses to die long after Vincent and Eddie Cochran and Carl Perkins
cashed in
their drink tickets. She adores the "butterheads" and "greasers" who
show up
to the rockabilly conventions and dances (such as the San Francisco
Greaseball) and party like it's 1959. She's drawn to the music not just
because of how it sounds, but for what it once meant.
"I'm stuck in the 1950s," she says, smiling. "In the '50s, especially
the mid-
to late '50s, there was a sense of hope in America. I mean, it's like,
there was
all that rocket-age stuff. People thought we were gonna be living on the
moon
in 20 years, ya know? Myself and a lot of people, we think romantically
about
that time period, because the time period we live in now doesn't have a
lot of
hope, and everybody is so jaded and Grinchy. Nobody cares about their
surroundings. Nobody cares about how they look. I mean, I do have a
microwave and a brand-new TV, and I wear modern underwear. I don't like
the
vintage underwear thing. That goes a little too far for me."
Lenz grew up in San Diego, the daughter of a rodeo queen who grew up on
an
Oregon ranch and a Kansas boy who was a 1950s greaser whose radio was
always tuned to Wolfman Jack broadcasts - Lord, how does that sound for
a storybook beginning? She only recently began remembering that rockabilly
and old country were very much the music of her past, and the very sound
she
rebelled against during her teenage years. Indeed, in the 1980s, she
fashioned
herself something of a Mod, listening to the Jam and the English Beat as
she
and her pals rode their Vespa scooters around San Diego, looking to pick
fights
with the very rockers she'd come to adore only a few years later. Her
life was
Quadrophenia bathed in Southern California sunlight. Twelve years ago,
her
idea of rockabilly was the Stray Cats, and she absolutely hated it.
When she was 20, she moved to Los Angeles and got a job in the music
business, working for a management firm. She didn't even consider
getting on
a stage herself, but she was drawn to the big-band sound she heard
played
every afternoon on a local public radio station; soon enough, she was
enamored
of the Gershwins and Cole Porter and Frank Loesser and the other Tin Pan
Alley greats who created American pop music.
"I listened to that music every day for six years, and I think that
reawakened
my love for traditional American music," she says. "I know every word to
every standard ever written. I love the old style of songwriting where
songs
really had feeling."
And it was in Los Angeles that Lenz discovered her love for swing music,
not
just rockabilly but the music of Louis Jordan and Nat Cole. If swing is
a trend
now, in L.A. back then it was an underground movement, played in dark
clubs
after hours. Lenz began hooking up with musicians, trekking to places
such as
the King King or the Palomino to see the Paladins, Royal Crown Revue,
Dave &
Deke Combo, or Big Sandy and His Fly-Rite Boys, all of whom were just
beginning to play around L.A. at the beginning of the decade. For them,
retro
wasn't a fad; it was a lifestyle, and Lenz embraced it to the point
where she
wanted to participate in the scene, not simply observe it.
"I used to listen to all kinds of music when I was growing up, but I
never
thought of myself as a creative person," she says. "I had a guitar, and
I'd
strum a few chords on it, and I played piano, but I don't think I was
encouraged
by my family. It seems like the people I hung around with as a teenager
and
the people I dated and ended up living and being involved with were
artistic or
musical, so I always felt kind of insecure. I never felt like I could
explore it,
because they were all so much better than me."
Meeting and marrying a mathematician (four years now) with a like-minded
love for rockabilly helped her get over her fear of trying; she no
longer had to
compete with someone else's abilities. So when Lenz and her husband,
Charlie,
moved to Dallas in 1994, she ended up at the University of North Texas
and
discovered she was probably the only person in Denton who didn't have a
band.
"So we had a house, and I just figured, well, I'll start a band," she
says,
recalling the Andy Hardy beginnings of her first group, Rocket Rocket,
which
featured members of the Grown-Ups, Slobberbone, and Wayward Girl.
The band performed no more than five shows around Denton, and it was
indeed
one of those kinds of bands that happens only in Denton: Everybody sang,
they
played at the Karma Cafe, and the repertoire consisted of vintage 1950s
and
'60s tunes. Lenz, of course, sang Wanda Jackson songs.
"The first time I got up on stage, I got hooked on it, like heroin," she
says. "I
didn't know. It was like the first time you have sex. You don't know how
great
it's going to be, and then when it's over with, you're like, Let's do
this again
tomorrow night! I think for the first time in my life I discovered what
my
passion was." But Rocket Rocket would disband in short order, and Lenz
moved
back to Dallas, where she decided she didn't want to share the
microphone with
anyone else.
It would take her several stop-and-start efforts to form her first band;
she
had a hard time finding musicians who could play straight rockabilly,
who
didn't want to mess it up with some fast-and-loud punk riffing or
laid-back
country shuffles. She had become a purist in short order and demanded
the
same out of her band. In the end, she would go through a handful of
drummers,
guitarists, and bassists before settling on the lineup that would record
Kim
Lenz and Her Jaguars.
Cynics will say that Lenz isn't too unlike a Joey Ramone look-alike
making
music out of three chords or a woman in a faded peasant dress singing
Dust
Bowl laments. But she's a purist, a fanatic, unabashed about her
passions and
unashamed of the results. And in the end, Kim Lenz and Her Jaguars and
the
single she released last year (featuring two tracks from the record and
the
never-before-heard "Bop City," originally performed by Sherry Davis at
the
Big D Jamboree in the 1950s) are swinging, thrilling exercises in
forward-looking nostalgia, recreations of a past ignored so often, it
might as
well be the present.
"Writing rockabilly is like writing haiku," Lenz says. "There are
boundaries,
what some people might consider limitations, but there's so much you can
do
inside of that. I think there's so much new stuff that can be done. It's
not for
everyone, but for me, a good rockabilly song gives me goose bumps, makes
me
want to dance. It makes me feel good."
KIM'S BACKGROUND
Take one fiery-headed untamed guitar-strummin' songstress, add one red-hot
guitar picker, a bass that won't stop slappin' and a rock-hard solid backbeat and
you have the secret formula for Kim Lenz and her Jaguars.
This combo has already made a name for themselves with the rockin' set in their
home town of Dallas, Texas and have started tearing up the honky-tonks and
juke joints in the surrounding countryside. They've recently returned from the 1997
Denver Rock N' Rhythm-Billy Weekender where they made quite a commotion. When
was the last time you saw a gal sing the hell out of rockabilly?
Daughter of a rodeo queen, Kim Lenz caught the bug early for the "billy" side of
rock 'n' roll. Her vocal influences include female rockabilly greats like Janis
Martin, Barbara Pittman and, of course, Wanda Jackson, but also include the
crazy ravings of male singers like Charlie Feathers and Johnny Powers. She
was recently voted '97s Best Female Vocalist by her hometown music paper, the
"Dallas Observer." Strummin' her guitar and singin' her songs, she's helping to
keep authentic rockabilly alive and kickin'.

From the banks of the Mississippi comes Memphis-born lead guitar player Mike
Lester. He plays a early model National Val Pro guitar through a '53 Fender Pro
amp to get his trademark "ringtail tooter" sound. Mike was raised on backwoods
music and you can sure hear it in his guitar pickin'! You'll like the cut of
his jib.
Straight from he Oklahoma hills where he was born, Jake Erwin keeps the
ladies attentions while slappin' his beautiful blond 50s Kay bass fiddle. His heroes
are Fred Maddox, Bill and Johnny Black, Dorsey Burnette and Tom Mix. You will
agree that when it comes to pullin' duty on doghouse bass Jake is one top
hand who is no slouch.
Dutch the Cattlebaron, a Texas native, drives a chopped '51 Merc and really
knows how to cook a mean steak. Though busy with his livestock trade and
auctioning dates, he never fails to appear on time to pound out the savage
backbeat that rounds out the Jaguar sound.
KIM'S OWN HOME PAGE

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