Who was Mr. Bojangles?

Polka Dot Slim. Pork Chops. Babe Stovall. Re-Pete. They are the nicknames of African American street performers who worked the New Orleans’ French Quarter in the early and mid-1960s. One of them is likely Jerry Jeff Walker’s “Mr. Bojangles.” The true identity has remained mysterious. Was it really about an old man Walker met in …

Continue reading "Who was Mr. Bojangles?"

Jerry Jeff Walker memorial was like a deep dive into his archives

Tales of a pilfered puppy in Nashville, campfire songs in Ohio, sangria wine in Coconut Grove. Jerry Jeff Walker was remembered with affection and honored in song at an outdoor memorial tribute concert for 1,000 fans and friends in Luckenbach on Saturday. The sold-out event vividly brought to life and fleshed out stories which dwell …

Continue reading "Jerry Jeff Walker memorial was like a deep dive into his archives"

Original ‘Mr. Bojangles’ lyrics on display at The Wittliff

The earliest known surviving set of Jerry Jeff Walker’s handwritten lyrics for “Mr. Bojangles” exist because a plucky young guitar repairman in New Jersey asked Walker to write them down so he could learn the song. Walker wasn’t yet a star in 1968. But he did have an amazing folk song on the radio in the …

Continue reading "Original ‘Mr. Bojangles’ lyrics on display at The Wittliff"

Jerry Jeff Walker: The First Demo

The recording was unearthed in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in January 2018, more than a half century after it was made. The audio captured on the portable reel-to-reel tape machine – a German-made UHER 4000 Report-L popular in the early 1960s – is still clear and crisp. “I’m gonna do the whole thing,” announces Jerry Jeff …

Continue reading "Jerry Jeff Walker: The First Demo"

“It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll” in Tennessee and Texas

By Wittliff staff member, Library Specialist, Sherri Turner-Herrmann. Rock and roll hit me like a freight train early on. When I was 8, my cousin introduced me to Alice Cooper and that’s when the first train hit. Shock rock, hard rock, heavy metal and punk! Alice Cooper, KISS, Judas Priest, ACDC, Van Halen, Cheap Trick, …

Continue reading "“It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll” in Tennessee and Texas"

The Moving Sidewalks meet Jimi Hendrix

Texas music lovers hold ZZ Top especially dear. After 50 years, Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill, and Frank Beard feel more like friends than rock icons. Here at The Wittliff Collections, we love ’em, too. The new Netflix documentary “ZZ Top: That Little Ol’ Band From Texas” sent lead archivist Katie Salzmann digging a little deeper …

Continue reading "The Moving Sidewalks meet Jimi Hendrix"

Waylon and Lefty: Marine Corps pitch men?

The forgotten 60-second Marine Corps. recruiting spot fades in with the familiar symphonic chorus of “MacArthur Park” – “Someone left the cake out in the rain . . .”  But the voice is not that of actor Richard Harris, who sang the ubiquitous hit in 1968.  It’s Waylon Jennings singing his Grammy-winning, countrified version of …

Continue reading "Waylon and Lefty: Marine Corps pitch men?"

Houston’s glorious R&B past has a home at The Wittliff Collections.

The recent acquisition of the archives of Austin record collector/photographer/indie music newspaper publisher Doug Hanners, means the deep dives are beginning at The Wittliff Collections at Texas State University into one of the most important and fascinating aspects of the collection – the personal papers, ephemera and rare photos amassed by notorious Houston record producers …

Continue reading "Houston’s glorious R&B past has a home at The Wittliff Collections."

In Luck with the Red Headed Stranger

The Wittliff joined Willie Nelson and hundreds of his fans for a screening of a newly restored copy of the 1986 film “Red Headed Stranger” at his Luck ranch outside of Austin. The ranch buildings were constructed for the film, and many of the old-west style buldings are still standing today. The Wittliff helped add …

Continue reading "In Luck with the Red Headed Stranger"

Susannah Broyles discusses “The Ramón Hernández Tejano Music Collection.”

The Wittliff has recently acquired the extensive Tejano music archive of Ramón Hernández, a San Antonio publicist, journalist, and photographer. The collection includes music memorabilia consisting of various artist’s costumes, records, original marketing posters, handwritten sheets of music, personal photographs, and more, and will soon be available for research at The Wittliff. This accumulation is …

Continue reading "Susannah Broyles discusses “The Ramón Hernández Tejano Music Collection.”"