Music Video

John Brannen "Just Restless"

His early life reads like a Southern Gothic novel.  John Brannen’s parents met in China, when his mother was working for the American consulate.  His father was a cotton broker who died unexpectedly and under strange circumstances in Brazil just before John was born.  John’s mother moved them to the South Carolina coast.  It was through his maternal grandfather that he got turned on to classic poets like Tennyson and Longfellow.  And that kindled the flame for the words that were to be woven into John’s path as a singer/songwriter.  Coupled with that was a heavy dose of wanderlust.  By eighteen, he had already hitchhiked across the United States, surfed extensively in Hawaii, and sailed the West Indies.  Enter music, which bit him hard enough for him to only do a bit of college before he left to follow his heart.  

“Just Restless.” I relate. I know where I been, but I don’t know what is around the corner.  And I am willing to throw the dice and take the chance.  Something in John Brannen’s music lit me up a long time ago.  I didn’t know then that he was a fellow seeker, a traveler like me.  But now that I think about his lyrics, it is really no wonder.  The day he came to see us at the Americana Fest in September, he had had one of those days, which included blowing his voice out some.  The passion, the intensity, it is all there anyway.  This song can be found on the 2006 "Twilight Tattoo" CD. This here is the Music Fog solo take.

- Jessie Scott

Just Restless - Twilight Tattoo

Zack Walther "If Love Was Enough"

Pronunciations can be tricky. I am working weekends on the air at KNBT 92.1 in New Braunfels, Texas, and whenever you start at a new radio station, you have to be very careful to pronounce things properly.  It adds to the mystique that you actually know what you are doing.  I've worked in several areas of the country that have a wealth of Native American names, and it can be really hard to ascertain where the emphasis should be. Like Osceola, for instance, which is pronounced “os CEE ola”, not “O cee ola.”  These kinds of things make for blink moments...“You’re not from around here!”  

Sometimes it's even difficult nailing the names of the artists you play.  For instance, Roger Creager is pronounced with the emphasis on the first syllable, and with the “A” present and accounted for, so Creager sounds like ‘CRAIG er.’ And Zack Walther is pronounced Walter, without the ‘H'. Now I wish I would have known that a couple of weeks ago when I played a tune of his, and Program Director Mattson Rainer called to correct me.  Whoops! Well, at least now you know.  The Zack Walther Band put out "Into The Fray" in May.  Back in January, we had a smashing time with them during The MusicFest at Steamboat Springs.  Zack on mellifluous vocals and guitar, Robert Cherry on guitar, David Pettit played bass, Tory “Thumper” Childers was on keyboard, and Don Dulaney was on drums.  The song?  “If Love Was Enough,” a cut off the new album, done Music Fog style.

-- Jessie Scott 

If Love Was Enough - Into the Fray

Jack Grace Band "Warm Rock In The Sun"

The era of space shuttle exploration is ending, sad to say.  I think it gave us something collectively to dream about.  In 1989, I moved to Florida to program 107.1 WAOA, and was able to absorb the culture around the Space Coast, through the different folks I met along the way that contributed their talents to the space program.  And one of my all-time career highlights has got to be the two shuttle launches I was able to broadcast from Kennedy Space Center.  

One of them was for STS 31 which launched the Hubble.  The other was STS 36, which took off in the middle of the night, lighting the entire sky.  Being on site for these, in the bleachers that were constructed next to the network news booths, we were as close as people could get.  Upon launch, the cameras would start to go black as the cords melted from the heat.

Feeling the power, hearing the roar, it made me so proud to be an American. Thinking about all the governmental and private industries that had to cooperate to make this happen is dizzying.  And that is a model for the future, for any collective dreams we might choose to conquer next. Yes, there are still things to be achieved.

We welcome the crew of the shuttle back from their last mission to our “Warm Rock In The Sun.” Bringing you a tune we recorded during or Music Fog Marathon in Austin during SXSW in March.  And I don’t know about you, but being greeted by a Mariachi Band is a most welcoming sight for anyone, whether astronaut or not.  The Jack Grace Band does the honors; road dogs all, though they haven’t quite taken to the sky yet. They are at work on new material, which Jack says, “Will be less country and more rock, with a lot of the Latin flavorings.”  This time of year, they wisely are staying in the northern tier for their touring pleasure, heading up into Canada in September.  Dare we even think about fall, and the cool air?  Let’s join the band on the Threadgill’s stage; here are Jack Grace, Daria Grace, Mark Gonzales, Stephen Butts, Bruce Martin, and Carolyn Mark.

- Jessie Scott