Undermain Theatre presents:
Waiting for a Train
September 16, 2006
One of the first recording artists to sell a million records, Jimmie Rodgers was born in Mississippi, but performed more in Texas than anywhere else in the world. His 111 recorded songs include â Blue Yodel (T for Texas)â, âWaiting for a Trainâ and âIn the Jail House Nowâ. He built his home in Kerrville and had several recording sessions in Dallas at the Jefferson Hotel. In 1931 he toured Texas with Will Rogers in a Red Cross benefit for drought relief. His influence on popular music was profound and inspired countless artists. Tom Piazza of the New York Times writes âhis career was a meeting point for images and folk material from the American South and West, from black and white traditions, and it offered clues to ways in which that material could be blended into the mainstream of popular music.â
In recent years his work has inspired numerous tribute albums by the likes of Merle Haggard and Bob Dylan, who wrote in his liner notes: âJimmie Rodgers is one of the guiding lights of the 20th century ... a blazing star whose sound was and remains the raw essence of individuality in a sea of conformity, par excellence with no equal.â The first artist to be inducted in the Country Music Hall of Fame, Rodgersâ success helped the popularity of phonograph machines, recordings and guitars. An East African tribe even chose him for a deity. In 1986 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
The Undermainâs play follows Rodgersâ path through drama, song and dance along with images of the early 20th century. The play explores Rodgersâ childhood adventures performing in medicine shows, his work on the railroad and his early tutelage from black musicians he encountered in these formative stages. The interwoven plot provides brief glimpses of his partnership with Ralph Peer who produced his recordings for the Victor label, his relationship with his wife Carrie and his collaborations with other songwriters and recording artists including Louis Armstrong and the Carter Family.
Here are some nearby...
Places to eat:
Drink Specials:
- Adair's Saloon: 4 pm - 8 pm: $6 pitchers, $1.75 singles, $2.25 cans
- Monica's Aca y Alla: 11 am - 3 pm: $1 house margaritas & $1.50 mimosas
- The Amsterdam Bar: 12:30 pm - 7 pm: $1 off all drafts & wells
- Muddy Waters : 4 pm - 8 pm: $2 domestics, $3 wells
- »Blackstone Winery visits Dallas to spread word of Reserve
- »Gallery review: States of Exception at Centraltrak
- »Dallas-based company donates tools after supplies were stolen from Habitat home in Collin County
- »Kinesiology professor at University of Texas at Arlington studies potential for living on the moon
- »Barefoot Brigade shares inspiration for NOTcracker performance
an event
|
a restaurant
|
a garage sale
|
a drink special
|
a movie showtime
|
local music
|
a job
|
a house
|
a deal
|
a pet
|
