Red Dirt Rangers
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BIOGRAPHY

GENRE: Red Dirt
(blend of Western Swing, Country,
Bluegrass, Rock, Folk)

By: John Wooley

Sitting right in the middle of the country, with music from the rest of the USA swirling through it from all sides, Oklahoma has understandably been the source of several influential pop-music movements. Invariably, those styles can be traced not just to a city, but to a specific place within that city - as well as to an act that sums up what it's all about.

You can begin in the 1920s with the Oklahoma City Blue Devils, who'd become a huge force in the creation of Kansas City jazz, coming out of the downtown OKC area known as Deep Deuce. Not long afterwards, Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys popularized the music now known as western swing from the Cain's Ballroom in Tulsa; several decades later that same town's Leon Russell turned a church into a studio, introducing the Tulsa Sound to the whole doggone rock 'n' roll world.

Like the others, Red Dirt music grew up in a specific place in a specific town. The town is Stillwater, home of Oklahoma State University. The place was a two-story, five-bedroom, funky old place called the Farm -- for two decades the epicenter of what would come to be called the Red Dirt scene.

The act that represents Red Dirt? You couldn't do any better than the Red Dirt Rangers, who've been carrying the banner for Red Dirt music since the late 1980s. And years before the band existed, Ben Han, John Cooper, and Brad Piccolo became an integral part of the Farm's musical brotherhood, trading songs and licks with the likes of Jimmy LaFave, Tom Skinner, and Bob Childers - and, later, with such now white-hot acts as Cross Canadian Ragweed, Jason Boland and the Stragglers and Stoney LaRue.

"We would keep on coming in, every weekend, and whoever was playing music at the time, we'd just chime in," recalls Ranger lead guitarist-vocalist Ben Han, whose journey to the Farm began in far-away Borneo. "Living-room jams became jams for beers, and then it was, `Hey, we've got something going on.' We just proceeded with what we already had, called a couple of friends, and the next thing you know, we're pickin' and grinning."

That casual approach to becoming a band is the very antithesis of the ambition-driven grab for the stars that makes shows like American Idol possible. But the Rangers' laid-back road-less-traveled style splendidly evokes the musicians who honed their chops in the living room, front porch, garage (aka "The Gypsy Café") and campfire-dotted acreage of the Farm, where the sheer joy of creating music with friends transcended everything else. As Rangers mandolinist-vocalist John Cooper has noted, " The Farm was as much an attitude as a physical structure. It allowed a setting where freedom rang and all things were possible. Out of this setting came the music."

The physical structure burned down in 2003. But the attitude prevails in not only every Red Dirt Rangers show and song, but also in the acclaimed new disc Ranger Motel – produced by Red Dirt godfather Steve Ripley at Tulsa's legendary Church Studio -- which finds the band consistently conjuring up the spirit of the Farm and Stillwater. Opening and closing with two direct evocations of their old hometown, LaFave's "Red Dirt Roads" and Piccolo's longingly wistful "Stillwater," Ranger Motel is chock-full of connections to those golden days at the Farm, In addition to songs penned by such Red Dirt compadres as Childers, Skinner, Mike McClure, Greg Jacobs and Ranger bassist Don Morris, it includes a spirited remake of "Lavena," a tune from the band's very first album, the cassette-only Cimarron Soul (1991).

Along with longtime musical pals Randy Crouch on fiddle and Tulsa Sound legend Jim Karstein on drums, Ranger Motel features appearances by another Tulsa great, harmonica player Jimmy Markham, and Texas-based keyboardist Augie Meyers, whose genre-twisting work with the Sir Douglas Quintet and Texas Tornados had a major influence on the Rangers' music.

Another influence on the disc is far less joyful. In the summer of 2004, the three Rangers all went down in a near-fatal helicopter crash. Guitarist-vocalist Piccolo believes that whole experience helped return them to their Stillwater roots.

"A lot of times, you're just kind of rambling along, and it takes an epiphany like that, a defining moment, to let you know what your purpose is," he explains. "Now, I just want to make good music and send a good feeling out there to people."

That's exactly what the Red Dirt Rangers do with Ranger Motel, channeling the deep and wondrous vibe of the Farm, and playing it forward to a new generation.

QUICK FACTS

GENRE: Red Dirt
(blend of Western Swing, Country,
Bluegrass, Rock, Folk)

  • Have been carrying the banner for Red Dirt music since the late 1980s.
  • Members John Cooper and Brad Piccolo star in the one-act play written by John Wooley and Thomas Conner called "Time Changes Everything." The play speculates on the outcome of the meeting of famous Oklahomans Woody Guthrie and Bob Wills, which research indicates never met.
  • Host a weekly radio show called Red Dirt Hour each Sunday on Tulsa's KVOO 98.5.
  • Wrote an album for "kids of all ages" called Blue Shoe.
  • Survived a deadly helicopter accident in 2004 when they were rescued from an upside-down helicopter in the Cimarron River in Oklahoma. Brad Piccolo is credited for assisting in the rescue of his fellow band members, John Cooper and Ben Han, by keeping them awake and talking.

QUOTES

"The Rangers have a sound that combines the legacy of Woody Guthrie and Bob Wills with the spirit of everyone from Merle Haggard to the Grateful Dead and all manner of American music in between."

-Greg Johnson, No Depression magazine

"The Red Dirt Rangers draw from a lot of influences, throw them all in the pot, and mix well. What comes out is a sometimes wild, but always an outstanding and enjoyable ride, all over the map of roots music."

-AnnMarie Harrington, Take Country Back

"These guys are hip cowboys...they play with soul, Tex-Mex with extra jalapeño and can give Bob Dylan a Bob Wills touch."

-Woodstock (NY) Times

"Writers with dirt under their fingernails, beat up snakeskin boots on their feet, whiskey and jalapeños in their bellies, and Kerouac on their minds."

-Real Groove, Auckland, New Zeland

"The Rangers always have epitomized and expanded on the Oklahoma red dirt sound - the elusive stew of country, folk, and whatever else is laying around..."

-Thomas Conner, Tulsa World

Events/Dates

Red Dirt Rangers Events/Dates - 2012

Mar

2

Grady's 66 Pub

10:00 p.m

Yukon,OK

Mar

8

Lorton Hall at The University of Tulsa

TBA

Tulsa, OK

Mar

9

Cain's Ballroom

9:00 p.m

Tulsa,OK

Mar

10

Brady Theater

8:00 p.m.

Tulsa, OK

Mar

16

Osage Casino

7:00 p.m.

Sand Springs,OK

March

24

Joseppi's

8:00 p.m.

Stillwater, OK

March

27

Bristow PAC

8:00 p.m.

Bristow, OK

April

13

Red Bull/Gypsy Cafe Songwriter Festival II

7:00 p.m.

Stillwater, OK

April

21

Stonewall Tavern

7:00 p.m.

Stillwater,OK

April

28

The Blue Door

8:00 p.m.

Oklahoma City,OK