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wayne hancock

Billy Bratcher

Billy Bratcher – In the lobby

Cow Island Music – CIM 021
Big Time Woman – Who’s Sorry Now – TB BLues – My Walking Stick – The Sweeper and the debutante – Why – He calls That Religion – Sweet Sue, Just You – Any Old Time – My Melancholy Baby – Maybe It’s the Blues – Someday Sweetheart – Champagne Charlie – Diamonds Don’t Mean A Thing – This Hotel Room – Going Back To Tampa – She Ain’t Rose – If We Should Never Meet Again (This Side of Heaven)

Billy Bratcher

Billy Bratcher is well known for being the slappin’ drivin’ rhythmic force behind the rockabilly/honky tonk band the Starline Rhythm Boys. He also toured with Wayne “The Train” Hancock.

His debut solo album is a joyful collection of music from the 20s and the 30s (or at least played in that style for three of them), drawing upon the same source as Leon Redbone. Redbone’s influence can be heard throughout the album, and Billy Bratcher acknowledges it, but this collection of songs is very much his own. His arrangements are perfect, and the band, featuring saxophones, clarinet, trombone, cornet, piano, dobro, jug, bones, and a Venuti-esque violin, is simply perfect. Bratcher is a solid ragtime guitar player, but his voice wins the game most of all. If we had heard him sing harmonies and backing vocals with the Starline Rhythm Boys, little would we have known that he had such a beautiful and warm voice.

With In the Lobby, you have the perfect album to relax and chill. So sit in your favorite armchair, pour yourself a drink, close your eyes, and enjoy. Hey, look! There’s Dorothy Parker passing by. Won’t you buy her one, too?

Fred “Virgil” Turgis

Ridgetop Westernaires (the)

Ridgetop WesternairesRidgetop Westernaires (the)

Lookin’ For Better Days / Johnson City
Jet Tone – JET 102 [1996]

I first believed that the Ridgetop westernaires single was one of the very first recording made by Wayne ‘the train’ Hancock but considering the release date, 1996, this is more likely a side project (Wayne’s debut album being released in 1995.)
The Ridgetop Westernaires consisted of Wayne Hancock, Kevin Smith on double bass, Shaun Young on drums (who also recorded it at his own Jet Tone studio), Chris Miller on steel and Todd Wulfmeyer on guitar (in other words the Jet Tone Boys). All the ingredients of Hancock’s music are here and the musicians are top notch as youcan guess. One can even hear a drum solo which is not usual in Hancock’s music. Both songs will later be re-recorded on later albums. Lookin’ for better days will appear on Wild Free and Reckless and Johnson City on That’s What Daddy Wants still with Miller on steel.