Kenya?.....Sorry 'bout that!
Here's some "Steven" quotes and some quotes about Steven and his music by other folks!
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From an interview with Lee Nichols of The Austin Chronicle:
"I haven't had a day job since 1969," Fromholz says with justifiable pride. "And I don't intend to get a day job. I'm a professional
entertainer - I do this for a living!" - Steven Fromholz
From an interview with Jeff Prince of Ft. Worth Weekly:
Comments on strokes -
"Life is life and sometimes it can suck but that’s all right too. This is the largest suckage factor I’ve ever been involved in — 10 on
the suck scale.”
-- Steven Fromholz
After a nine-day hospital stay, Fromholz went home to Sugar Land. He had an adverse reaction to some medicine, which caused
excessive itching and scratching. He took it in stride, and, as usual, made it into a joke. His sister said he was scratching and
staring at the sky one day, and when she asked what he was looking at, Fromholz, wondering how many things could go wrong at
one time, said, “I’m just waiting for the locusts.”
-- Steven Fromholz
Eric Taylor in an interview with Mike Leonard, The Scene in Bloomington, Indiana:
He chuckles that his dear, departed friend, Townes Van Zandt, is selling more albums in death than he did in life:
"Fromholz, who had a bad stroke, said if Townes is still dead, maybe we could at least open for him" -- Eric Taylor
From an interview with Lee Nichols of The Austin Chronicle:
"Because it was a bunch of bullshit," states Fromholz. "'Progressive country'? I don't know a musician in the business today to whom I give any
credence, to whom I acknowledge any class, who ever claimed or admitted to be a 'progressive country musician.' Nobody did. I never did. Many of us
were called 'outlaws,' and that's probably more the case than 'progressive country.' I always blame some guy from Rolling Stone. Maybe it was Chet
Flippo, for godsake, I don't know. But it was something somebody made up because they didn't know what was going on.
"What happened was all these guys who were drinking tequila and all these guys who were smoking pot said, 'Here,' and they swapped. And it took.
That's what happened. And the rednecks who used to hate the hippies and the hippies who were afraid of the rednecks kind of melded and became this
hybrid. You had rednecks, you had hippies, and they were all there for one reason: They loved to get loaded and listen to music and we were doing
something they all liked. It was kind of crazy. No one had ever done something like [that]. Frankly, no one gave a shit. All the players said, 'Let's go play,'
...not... 'Let's go make a bunch of money!'
-- Steven Fromholz
THE FIRST MOONING OF THE KLAN was organized by Texas musician Steve Fromholz in 1993 and proved to be an effective means of making counter protesters smile and Klanspeople cringe.
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From a review of Step Inside This House - Lyle Lovett, Artist
by Hobart Rowland, Houston Press
A spare but full-bodied rendition of Steven Fromholz's sprawling regional classic, "Texas Trilogy," kicks off the second disc of Step Inside This House,
Lyle Lovett's loving tribute to his Lone Star influences. And despite stiff competition from the likes of Townes Van Zandt, Vince Bell and Guy Clark, the
three-movement suite may well be the most majestic moment on an album full of them -- just as the Lovett version of Fromholz's "Bears" is the
collection's most playful diversion. The real item is also a study in contrasts: aside from his work as singer/songwriter, the longtime Austinite is
part-time actor and a rafting guide. As is the case for anyone who's lived a little, the years haven't always been easy on Fromholz, and the hard mileage
can show on-stage. But, in the end, if the songs -- and the stories that accompany them -- are all he has to fall back on, then fair enough. They're
timeless.
From a Record Review by Jerry Renshaw:
Guys like Pat Green or Owen Temple might sing about Lone Stars, the Hill Country, and other such Texana, but Fromholz has the cred to pull it off,
having been here almost as long as Barton Springs. He's a touchstone to what Austin used to be like without dwelling on hoary,
remember-the-Armadillo nostalgia.
SAGE ADVICE
When asked for career advice by a young guitar player, Fromholz replied:
"Change legs... and your back won't go out!"
--Steven Fromholz
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MORE SAGE ADVICE
"Never break
more than
one law at a
time!"
-- Steven Fromholz
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Live Performance Review - Bottom Line Club, New York, NY:
Murphey's songs of life on the range went over far better with the Yankee audience than his cowboy jokes did, but he did have the disadvantage of being
behind rapscallion Fromholz in the batting order. "I can't follow that," Murphey grumbled each time Fromholz polished off a nugget like "I Gave Her a Ring
(She Gave Me the Finger)." Few folks could have!
-- Rolling Stone Magazine
Photo by Anita Porterfield
You are listening to.... The Old Fart In The Mirror Artist: Steven Fromholz CD: Live At Anderson Fair
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