Omar & The Howlers

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Boogie Man 05:04 Tools
Bamboozled 00:00 Tools
That's Just My Life 03:48 Tools
Black Bottom 04:19 Tools
White Crosses 04:53 Tools
Hard Times In The Land Of Plenty 03:55 Tools
Monkey Land 04:36 Tools
Life Without You 04:04 Tools
I Gotta Let You Go (feat. Gary Clark, Jr.) 03:07 Tools
Steady Rock 00:00 Tools
Magic Man 00:00 Tools
Bad Seed 00:00 Tools
Border Girl 00:00 Tools
Wall Of Pride 00:00 Tools
Dirty People 00:00 Tools
Hoo Doo 00:00 Tools
Muddy Springs Road 00:00 Tools
Loud Mouth Woman 00:00 Tools
Modern Man 00:00 Tools
Lee Anne 05:10 Tools
Big Town Shakedown 05:04 Tools
Mississippi Hoo Doo Man 05:14 Tools
East Side Blues 06:04 Tools
Honest I Do (feat. Gary Clark, Jr.) 03:12 Tools
Shake For Me 00:00 Tools
Fire in the Jungle 00:00 Tools
She's a Woman 03:03 Tools
Low Down Dirty Blues 00:00 Tools
Night Shadows 00:00 Tools
Tonight I Think of You 00:00 Tools
Mystery Walk 00:00 Tools
Next Big Thing 00:00 Tools
Ding Dong Clock 00:00 Tools
Right There In The Rain 00:00 Tools
Full Moon On Main Street 00:00 Tools
Snake Oil Doctor 00:00 Tools
Stone Cold Blues 00:00 Tools
When Sugar Cane Was King 04:58 Tools
Midnight Ramblin' Man 00:00 Tools
Too Much 00:00 Tools
Snake Rhythm Rock 03:59 Tools
Pushin' Fire 00:00 Tools
Life Is Just a Circle 00:00 Tools
Ton of Blues 03:37 Tools
Don't Rock Me The Wrong Way 03:32 Tools
Down in Mississippi 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Got You (feat. Gary Clark, Jr.) 02:44 Tools
Hit the Road, Jack 00:00 Tools
Don't You Know 03:58 Tools
Big Chief Pontiac 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Mud 00:00 Tools
All About the Money 00:00 Tools
Radio Man 00:00 Tools
World of Trouble 00:00 Tools
Work Song 00:00 Tools
You Don't Have to Go (feat. Gary Clark, Jr.) 00:00 Tools
Burn It To The Ground 00:00 Tools
Get Hip 00:00 Tools
You Ain't Foolin' Nobody 00:00 Tools
Take Out Some Insurance 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Ruin You (feat. Gary Clark, Jr.) 00:00 Tools
Down to the Station 00:00 Tools
Hoo Doo Ball 00:00 Tools
Bessie Mae 00:00 Tools
Sugar Ditch 00:00 Tools
Caveman Rock 00:00 Tools
High and Lonesome 00:00 Tools
Bad Ol' Man 04:38 Tools
I Want You 00:00 Tools
Dancing In The Canebrake 00:00 Tools
That Ain't It 03:03 Tools
Shakin' 00:00 Tools
Exactly What I Thought She'd Do 00:00 Tools
Drowning In Love 00:00 Tools
Under My Spell 00:00 Tools
Girl's Got Rythym 00:00 Tools
All The Love We Can Stand 00:00 Tools
Alligator Wine 00:00 Tools
Dangerous Man 00:00 Tools
Linin' Track 00:00 Tools
Ice cold woman 00:00 Tools
That's Your Daddy Yaddy Yo 00:00 Tools
Rattlesnake Shake 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Queen 04:14 Tools
Shadow Man 03:45 Tools
I'm Gone 00:00 Tools
Same Old Grind 00:00 Tools
Quiet Whiskey 00:00 Tools
bad in a good way 00:00 Tools
Everywhere I Go 00:00 Tools
Going To New York 00:00 Tools
Mr. Blues Is Coming to Town 03:12 Tools
Drunkard's Paradise 00:00 Tools
So Mean to Me 00:00 Tools
Soapbox Shouter 00:00 Tools
Got My Heart Set on You 00:00 Tools
Yellow Coat 00:00 Tools
Lone Star Blues 00:00 Tools
Give Me A Chance 00:00 Tools
Automatic 00:00 Tools
Roll in Rhumba 00:00 Tools
Omar's Boogie 00:00 Tools
Ain't That Just Like a Woman 00:00 Tools
Rocket To Nowhere 00:00 Tools
I'm Wild About You 00:00 Tools
One Room Country Shack 00:00 Tools
The Screamin' Cat 00:00 Tools
One Hundred Pounds of Pain 00:00 Tools
Wild and Free 00:00 Tools
Don't Lead Me On 00:00 Tools
Don't Lose Your Cool 00:00 Tools
Conversation Mambo 00:00 Tools
Hurry, Hurry 00:00 Tools
I Told You So 00:00 Tools
We Gotta Get Out Of This Place 00:00 Tools
Do It For Daddy 00:00 Tools
Party Girl 00:00 Tools
Goin' Back to Texas 00:00 Tools
Rock It While You Can 00:00 Tools
Shame, Shame, Shame 00:00 Tools
I'm Mad Again 00:00 Tools
Hit The Road Jack 00:00 Tools
Move Up To Memphis 00:00 Tools
Too Many People Talkin' 00:00 Tools
Dimestore Hoo Doo 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town 00:00 Tools
Movin' 00:00 Tools
You Keep Watchin' Me 00:00 Tools
South Congress Blues 00:00 Tools
Let Me Hold You 00:00 Tools
Tears Like Rain 00:00 Tools
Drug Store Candly Smile 00:00 Tools
Kings Ransom 00:00 Tools
Judgement Day 00:00 Tools
Take Me Back 00:00 Tools
Hey Joe 00:00 Tools
I'm Wise To You Baby 00:00 Tools
I Gotta Let You Go 00:00 Tools
Going Up to the Country 00:00 Tools
Sleeping In The Ground 00:00 Tools
Angel Blues 00:00 Tools
Meet Me Down At The River 00:00 Tools
Rose Tattoo 00:00 Tools
Honest I Do 00:00 Tools
Leave Here Running 00:00 Tools
Run For The Levee 00:00 Tools
Pot Of Gold 00:00 Tools
Big Round World 00:00 Tools
Red River 00:00 Tools
Someday Baby 00:00 Tools
Diesel Don Juan 00:00 Tools
Born On The Bayou 04:20 Tools
Mail Order Mojo 00:00 Tools
Special Love 00:00 Tools
You Don't Have to Go 00:00 Tools
Meaning of the Blues 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Got You 00:00 Tools
I Don't Know Why 00:00 Tools
Highway 49 00:00 Tools
Fire In The House 00:00 Tools
No More Cane 00:00 Tools
Blues Parcel Post 00:00 Tools
Caledonia 00:00 Tools
Roadrunner 00:00 Tools
Jumpin' The Gun 00:00 Tools
Zoltar's Walk 00:00 Tools
Keep Your Big Mouth Shut 00:00 Tools
I've Tried 00:00 Tools
Enough Is Enough 00:00 Tools
Jimmy Reed Highway 00:00 Tools
You Made Me Laugh 00:00 Tools
Booger Boy 00:00 Tools
St. Louis Bound 00:00 Tools
Think It's Time To Go 00:00 Tools
Come On Pretty Baby 00:00 Tools
Firewalker 00:00 Tools
What Can I Do 00:00 Tools
Built For Comfort 00:00 Tools
Moon Bit Fool 00:00 Tools
Everybody Knows About My Good Thing 00:00 Tools
False Faces 00:00 Tools
I'm Gonna Ruin You 00:00 Tools
Rock & Roll Ball 00:00 Tools
Fire and Gasoline 00:00 Tools
Scared to Speak 00:00 Tools
Cutie Named Judy 00:00 Tools
The Battle Rages On 00:00 Tools
Angel Child 00:00 Tools
Up The Line 00:00 Tools
Big Brown Shoes 00:00 Tools
Stay Out Of My Yard 00:00 Tools
Blues In A Bottle 05:36 Tools
Always Been a Drifter 00:00 Tools
Don't You Know (Live) 00:00 Tools
I'll Keep On Dreamin' 02:10 Tools
Give Me Back My Wig 00:00 Tools
Mr. Freeze 00:00 Tools
Dixie's All Night Bar 00:00 Tools
Hello Operator 00:00 Tools
Dust My Broom 00:00 Tools
Can't Hold Out 00:00 Tools
Hoy, Hoy, Hoy 00:00 Tools
Lover Man 00:00 Tools
Bessie Mae - Omar And The Howlers 00:00 Tools
Big Legs 00:00 Tools
Who Do You Love 00:00 Tools
Climb on Board 02:28 Tools
Move up country 00:00 Tools
Wine Headed Woman 00:00 Tools
Rock N' Roll Ball 00:00 Tools
13 Keys 00:00 Tools
Gotta Good Friend 00:00 Tools
World Of Trouble - Omar & The Howlers 00:00 Tools
Rock And Roll Ball 00:00 Tools
Talk to Me Baby 00:00 Tools
Omar's Blues 00:00 Tools
Daddy Daddy Ya 00:00 Tools
Goin' Down Slow 00:00 Tools
Can't Judge a Book 00:00 Tools
Linin Track 00:00 Tools
Can't Sit Down 00:00 Tools
Hoy Hoy Hoy 00:00 Tools
Monkeyland 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Hoodoo Man 00:00 Tools
Big Town Playboy 00:00 Tools
100 LBS Of Pain 00:00 Tools
Rock 'n Roll Ball 00:00 Tools
Muddy Spring Road 00:00 Tools
Spoonful 00:00 Tools
Talk to Me Baby (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Caldonia 00:00 Tools
Wang Dang Doodle 00:00 Tools
Omar´s Blues 00:00 Tools
Don't You Know (Live) - Omar & The Howlers 00:00 Tools
Back Door Man 00:00 Tools
Pushin Fire 00:00 Tools
13 Keys (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Killin' Floor 00:00 Tools
Runnin' with the Wolf 00:00 Tools
02 Bamboozled 00:00 Tools
Hoy Hoy 00:00 Tools
The Red Rooster 00:00 Tools
Goin' Down Slow (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
I´m Wise To You Baby 00:00 Tools
05 Drowning In Love 00:00 Tools
Hard Times In Land Of Plenty 00:00 Tools
One Hundred 00:00 Tools
King Bee 00:00 Tools
Daddy Daddt Ya 00:00 Tools
06 Shakin' 00:00 Tools
So Mean to Me (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Can't Judge a Book (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Ooh Baby Hold Me 00:00 Tools
Howlin' for My Baby 00:00 Tools
East Side Blues - Live 00:00 Tools
07 Right There In The Rain 00:00 Tools
Angel Child (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Exactly What I Thought She'd D 00:00 Tools
03 Stone Cold Blues 00:00 Tools
Man Down There 00:00 Tools
10 Mississippi Mud 00:00 Tools
When Sugar C 00:00 Tools
Smokestack Lightning 00:00 Tools
Lee Annie 00:00 Tools
Do the Do 00:00 Tools
08 Bad In A Good Way 00:00 Tools
Can't Sit Down (feat. Grady Fats Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Up Side Your Head 00:00 Tools
Mr.Blues Is Coming 00:00 Tools
No More Doggin' 00:00 Tools
Who's Ben Talking 00:00 Tools
Riding in the Midnight 00:00 Tools
Down In Mississipi 00:00 Tools
11 All The Love We Can Stand 00:00 Tools
09 That's Just My Life 00:00 Tools
Missisipi Hoo Doo Man 00:00 Tools
Think 00:00 Tools
Close Together 00:00 Tools
Hard Times In The Land Of Plenty (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Mr Blues Is Coming To Town 00:00 Tools
When Sugar Can Was King 00:00 Tools
Everybody Knows About My Good 00:00 Tools
I'm Leavin' You 00:00 Tools
Tell Me What I've Done 00:00 Tools
Worried All the Time 00:00 Tools
Dream Girl 00:00 Tools
I Can't Judge Nobody 00:00 Tools
Mary Mary 00:00 Tools
Since I Met You Baby 00:00 Tools
Meanin' Of The Blues 00:00 Tools
Don`t Rock Me the Wrong Way 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Hoo Doo Man / You Ain't Foolin' Nobody 00:00 Tools
Hoo Doo Man 00:00 Tools
Hello Mary Lee 00:00 Tools
Think It's Time T 00:00 Tools
Wall of Pride Pride 00:00 Tools
Mr 00:00 Tools
Drug Store C 03:24 Tools
Snake Oil Do 06:15 Tools
Shake For Me (Live) 00:00 Tools
Dancing In The Canebreak 00:00 Tools
Born On Bayou 00:00 Tools
Magic Man (live) 00:00 Tools
Shake for Me - Live 00:00 Tools
14 - LIFE WITHOUT YOU 00:00 Tools
Girls Got Rh 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Hoo Doo Man - Live 00:00 Tools
Exactly What I Thought She's Do 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Hoo Doo Man (Live) 00:00 Tools
Bamboozled - Live 00:00 Tools
Wall of Pride Pride - Live 00:00 Tools
Don't You Know [Live] 00:00 Tools
Bad Seed - Live 00:00 Tools
Exactly What I Thought She's D 00:00 Tools
Don´t Lose Your Cool 00:00 Tools
Border Girl-Omar & the Howlers 00:00 Tools
Rock 'n' Roll Ball 00:00 Tools
31,1 Hit The Road, Jack 00:00 Tools
Magic Man - Live 00:00 Tools
Muddy Springs Road - Live 00:00 Tools
Omar & The Howlers (Hey Joe) 00:00 Tools
Omars Blues 00:00 Tools
/ Bessie Mae 00:00 Tools
Hard Times In The Land Of Plenty (Live) 00:00 Tools
Bessie Mac 00:00 Tools
Black Bottom [Blues] 00:00 Tools
St Louis Bound 00:00 Tools
Too Many Peo 00:00 Tools
Hard Times In The Land Of Ple 00:00 Tools
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A gritty, veteran boogie-blues band from Texas, Omar and the Howlers have been delivering their soulful, original songs to dedicated fans in Europe and the U.S. South for more than a generation. Austin, besides being the Texas state capital, is home to much of the best in American roots music. Since the 1970s, ballsy blues players, renegade country pickers, and raw-voiced rockers have mixed & matched their musical styles in Austin’s thriving club scene. And that’s where Kent “Omar” Dykes holds court too. And it’s also where he’s recorded his latest Ruf album, Boogie Man, working with some of his adopted hometown’s most famous songwriters and musicians. He hails from McComb, Miss., a town with the curious distinction of being home turf for both Bo Diddley and Britney Spears. It’s well established that Omar started playing guitar at seven, took to hanging out in edge-of-town juke joints at 12, joined his first band at 13 – the next youngest player being 50 – and played the sort of music where somebody bustin’ a cap at somebody else was just added percussion. He was still Kent Dykes in those days, but by the time he hit 20 he had hooked up with a crazy-assed party band, called the Howlers, who specialized in playing frat parties. Looking back, he says, “We had two saxophone players on baritone and tenor who wore Henry Kissinger masks. They were called the Kissinger brothers. Not on every song, mind you. Sometimes it was Dolly Parton playing saxophone. Or Cher. And we had these cardboard cutouts from record stores for skits.” They even did fake ads for Sunshine Collard Greens and Howlers’ Fried Chicken – “for that old-fashioned taste that tastes just like Grandma.” It was a crazy time, but a helluva lot of fun too, with the rough & tumble Howlers playing R&B, R&R and even the occasional polka and western swing tune. A decade earlier and 250 miles north of McComb, Steve Cropper and Duck Dunn had learned their chops exactly the same way as members of the Memphis party band the Mar-Keys. But Kent Dykes mostly just wanted to play blues. And by then the other Howlers had taken to calling him “Omar Overtone” because he tended to let his guitar feed back on stage while he dropped to the floor to spin on his back in a spontaneous, Big & Tall Store take on break-dancing. As he says, those performances were “sometimes fueled by, a-hmm, alcohol.” By 1976, the Howlers decided they were ready to bust a big move and relocate to Austin, where such clubs as the Soap Creek Saloon, the Broken Spoke, the Armadillo World Headquarters and Antone’s had created a haven for renegade music. “We worked out of Austin for about a year,” Omar says, “but a lot of the guys decided they weren’t cut out to play music full-time for the rest of their lives. They headed back to Mississippi and Arkansas, and I decided to keep the name. Nobody objected.” And as Dykes says, Omar & the Howlers works better than Kent & the Howlers. Of such decisions are careers made. Fronting a new lineup, Dykes honed a band capable of the sort of raw, rowdy, rambunctious blues that made Howlin’ Wolf and Hound Dog Taylor legends and inspired Don Van Vliet to become Captain Beefheart. By then the Fabulous Thunderbirds were also getting started in Austin and T-Bird member Jimmie Vaughan’s kid brother, Stevie Ray, had formed Triple Threat with Lou Ann Barton, future Double Trouble-r Chris Layton and Jackie Newhouse (LeRoi Brothers). The T-Birds were the first to record, cutting their debut in 1979, but Omar wasn’t far behind with Big Leg Beat in 1980. His second, I Told You So, in 1984 made them the big men on the block – or at least along Austin’s famed Sixth Street – earning them consecutive Austin band-of-the-year awards in 1985-1986. The following year Omar signed with Columbia Records and cut Hard Times in the Land of Plenty (1987), which sold in excess 500,000 copies, and Wall of Pride (1988). Since then there have been another dozen albums, all of them featuring Omar’s guitar and baritone voice, which reviewers describe as a cross between Howlin’ Wolf in his prime and the warning growl of a large primate. Hyperbole aside, the big man’s talents have earned an international following, prestigious awards and induction into the Texas musicians’ Hall of Fame. For Boogie Man, his newest release on the Ruf label, Omar has brought in some of the songwriter friends he’s made in the 27 years since he left Mississippi for Texas. Ten of the 11 tracks on the 55-minute disc are collaborations. “Co-writing at this point in my life is a lot of fun. To me it’s like free songs. These are ones that I wouldn’t have had the patience to sit down and write on my own. But when you get with friends and drink coffee, tell jokes and stories, and then write something, it always turns out to be something different than what you might have done on your own.” Plus it’s not exactly heavy lifting to work with such Texas icons as Ray Wyle Hubbard, Darden Smith, Alejandro Escovedo and Stephen Bruton. “Some of them I hadn’t seen for a while,” Omar says, “because like me they’re in bands and on the road. So when we got together, we end up reminiscing a lot. For instance, I’ve known Ray Wyle off and on for 20 years – acquaintances for a long time but pretty good friends now. In the old days, he was busy drinking and partying on his own, and I had my own party going on too.” Besides the songwriting collaborators, Omar also brought some friends into the recording studio, including guitarists Chris Duarte and Jon Dee Graham (True Believers), Chris Layton and Tommy Shannon of Stevie Ray Vaughan’s Double Trouble, George Rains (Sir Douglas Quintet and house drummer on scores of Antone’s label releases) and his frequent running-mates Terry Bozzio (Missing Persons, Jeff Beck, Frank Zappa) and Malcolm “Papa Mali” Welbourne. About the recording process, Omar says, “I played out for seven and a half months, with only a few days off, and I’d spend those cutting in the studio. I would have liked to take the time off to relax, but it was a lot of satisfaction writing and recording with my friends too. This was an album I’ve wanted to do for a long, long time.” As for future plans, Omar says he’ll be back on the road soon. “I still do 150-160 shows a year, and with travel days that adds up to a lot of time away from home. It always seems like we’re on a plane headed somewhere.” Omar is touring currently with bassist Barry Bihm and drummer Jon Hahn. Or as he sums things up in “That’s Just My Life”: It’s a long way from Pittsburgh down to Knoxville, Tenn., But I’m in it for the long haul, and that’s all right with me. Night-time keeps me in the roadhouse, daylight’s burning up the miles, The blacktop goes forever, I was born a highway child. Credit http://www.omarandthehowlers.com/home.html and Copyright to the parties where in the weblink-Bermont/follower of the Howlers See Also: http://www.last.fm/music/+noredirect/Omar+and+The+Howlers Read more on Last.fm. 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