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Review
of show with Bill Browder and Layton DePenning Sat., Feb. 16, 2008 Saxon Pub,
Austin TX
The
Austin Chronicle - I Before E - by Margaret Moser - May 31, 2002
"Cosmic Soulman Rusty Wier, Still Dancing After All These Years"
PBS
Premiere Date: 1986: Austin City Limits Reunion Special: Steve Fromholz,
Asleep at the Wheel, Greezy Wheels, Marcia Ball, Rusty Wier, Jerry Jeff Walker,
Gary P. Nunn and The Lost Gonzo Band
PBS
Premiere Date: 1977: Austin City Limits
- Jimmy
Buffett followed by Rusty Wier
PBS
Premiere Date: 1976: Austin City Limits - Rusty Wier
Rusty Wier was there in the beginning-and long before Austin developed a national reputation as a center for a special kind of poetry and boogie that became known as "progressive country" or, more accurately, "Texas music". When it's all over, Wier will still be dazzling audiences with his low-crowned, black hat and cowboy boots. He's so successful at getting listeners involved in his music that a club owner once stopped selling beer for a half-hour because he thought the customers were getting out of control.
--Rambler
Wier's musical variety is infinite, laced with humor and served to his audience with clarity, verve and unfailing professional finish. His soft Southern drawl, full-faced grin and relaxed attitude never change, onstage or off.
--Illinois Entertainer
In Rusty Wier's musical world, blues, country and rock come together onstage for crowds ready to whoop and holler. The veteran Texas singer-songwriter has been pleasing audiences for decades with his decidedly Lone Star mélange.
--Dallas Morning News
Rusty Wier has been called "everything that is home-grown Texas music". His expressive and thoroughly organic whiskey-throated vocals, sometime low and
growly, sometimes soaring to blues-tinged heights of barely controlled exuberance, are unmistakable.
--Times Record News
Rusty sticks to the belief that all music is good if done well. Nothing gets him riled up faster than somebody putting a label on his music. Most people just naturally assume he sings country-western music because he wears a western-type hat and boots. He does sing some country, some progressive
country; rock and you name it. He does songs because he likes them, not because they fit into some kind of musical pattern.
--Houston Party Line
It's good to see Rusty Wier again. Watching him perform is like checking up on an old friend you haven't seen for a while. There's this warm, familiar feeling that spreads across your heart as his eyes sparkle, that big grin unfolds and he coils his lanky frame upon a stool. He embodies the spirit of the Texas musician-persistent, yet jovial,
hard working, yet playful. And that's why he's more a friend than an attraction.
--Beaumont Enterprise
A local treasure, Rusty Wier has the power, range, and control of a great soul singer, but the heart and sensibility of a broken-down outlaw. Rusty romps through his honky-tonk game such as "I Hear You Been
Layin' My Old Lady", and life suddenly makes sense.
--Austin Chronicle
Rusty, all by his self with a guitar, can still put more
electricity in a room with an acoustic version of that song than Robert Duvall
ever got close to raising in "The Apostle." Weir is just
something else, it's amazing to me how few people outside of Texas even know he
exists. And his kid is one heckuva picker to boot.
--Dave Pilot
March 14,
2002 - Rusty Wier Inducted into the Austin Music Awards Hall of Fame
The Austin Music Awards kicked off SXSW
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