True West the 1980′s and a Place for 1000 Friends
True West was my favorite band back in the 80′s. In high school I developed a morbid fascination with Syd Barrett so when I heard about some band covering Syd’s “Lucifer Sam”. I kept their name in the back of my head. I’m sure Hollywood Holiday was available in Minneapolis, but I didn’t find it until I took a trip to San Francisco in 1984. I was reading an old Rolling Stone on the plane and there was a blurb about True West turning heads by covering”Lucifer Sam” and putting it backwards on the B-side. I had a copy of Hollywood Holiday a couple hours later. I recorded the album on to cassette, put it in my walkman and wandered around Golden Gate park.True West cured me of my classic rock problem and I remember going back to school and asking people if they ever heard of this great band. The guy with all the Replacements posters in his locker and his bangs dripping into his eyes said he liked their music, but the production was so bad he couldn’t listen to them.He was the only one I knew who had ever heard of them. I think he became a rock star later in life. Suburban Minneapolis was still listening to Pink Floyd, Led Zep, Skynard and the like. I made it my mission to get the word out and at the same time I loved the fact that I knew about this great band that nobody I knew was listening to. Sound familiar? If it does you should build your own little fan site on myspace. I started building my True West fan site a couple years back. Most of the band members have checked in and as it turns out they still get together and put on a show every once in awhile. I try and keep up and promote them. I’ve got some wild rare recordings and a T-shirt or two for my efforts! The site has over a thousand friends and I really feel like it gave some people a place to exchange memories. Check it out:
http://www.myspace.com/truewestfans
True West rolled through California’s paisley underground like a piece of purple sage in a dust devil. The band adopted Syd Barrett as a father figure (True West’s first release was a single of his “Lucifer Sam,”) and took Rocky Erickson and Alex Chilton as uncles. They played echo laden, dense drone with erie guitars and sinister vocals.Co-produced by guitarist Russ Tolman and Dream Syndicate’s Steve Wynn, the True West EP put’s the bands best foot forward. Russ, Gavin Blair and Steve had worked together as the Suspects, but they never busted sod like this. Hollywood Holiday contains the whole EP plus three more-polished tracks recorded later with a new rhythm section.
Drummer Jozef Becker rejoined Thin White Rope before True West went back to the studio to record Drifters. The album’s nine new songs and another version of “And Then the Rain”, highlight Gavin Blair’s vocals as much as Tolman’s thick chime like guitar work. A quieter record than Hollywood, Drifters hangs on to enough edge so as not to leave anyone asking where the rock went. The album has a thick atmosphere like an old mining town. The songs invoke cowboys without sounding anything like today’s alt. country bands or roots music. Russ Tolman left the band after Drifters, but True West was in no mood to quit while they were ahead. Hands of Fate got guitar help from the great Matt Piucci of Rain Parade and Chuck Prophet from Green on Red. True West broke up in 1987. Kevin Staydohar made albums with Thin White Rope and True West before he died tragically and unexpectedly of a heart infection. Singer Gavin Blair and guitarist Richard McGrath went on to become the Fool Killers. McGrath also played guitar with Wall of Voodoo’s Stan Ridgeway. Jozeph Becker joined Game Theory and Frank French spent a year with . Russ Tolman has made too many great albums to get into here. Russ has his own Myspace page, but the his other web pages seem to have gone missing. At least 6 compilations, reworks and repackages have been released since the band broke up. West Side Story came out in 1989 and features unreadable liner notes from Tolman. The 1983 demos make up the Best Western CD are as good as anything previously released.
There’s a pre-Drifters version of “Look Around”, a cleaned up version of Hollywood Holiday’s “Throw Away the Key” and a studio take of West Side Story’s “Burn the Roses.” TV Western has three live tracks from 1985. The Big Boot was recorded on a Sony D-6 Walkman with an Alwa stereo microphone at a club in Charlotte, North Carolina in 1984. This 63-minute disc is mostly made up of stuff from their Hollywood Holiday and Drifters. There are covers of “Lucifer Sam,” “Lust for Life,” “Happenings Ten Years Time Ago,” and, most unexpectedly, Elvis Presley’s “Suspicious Minds.” Two True (another fun pun) is Hollywood Holiday and Drifters with a live version of “Throw Away the Key”. In August 2006 Blair, McGrath and Tolman reunited for two gigs in Seattle and Portland. In December they opened for the Violent Femmes at The Filmore in San Francisco. They’ve been playing a gig or more a year ever since. True West still has a sound as big as it’s name. Listen and you will be swept away over the mountains and into wide open spaces. Put your head between your stereo speakers, drop the needle and you can hear the rocks and stones bumping and grinding under the muddy waters of the Rio Grande (good old vinyl!).






February 24th, 2010 at 12:10 pm
omg a lot of of the comments visitors distribute are such stoner remarks, occasionally i wonder whether they in actual fact read the writing and threads before placing a comment or whether they merely look at the titles and generate the first idea that drifts into their heads. anyhow, it is actually useful to browse keen commentary from time to time rather than the very same, outdated blog vomit that i invariably see on the internet
February 25th, 2010 at 12:31 am
hey this blog is great. I’m glad I came by this blog.
February 25th, 2010 at 4:01 am
Thanks for publishing the.
March 1st, 2010 at 4:57 pm
Thanks for the kind words, Pete!
March 1st, 2010 at 7:30 pm
and thanks for stopping by the blog! When’s the next big gig?