The Dirty River Boys

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Down by the River 03:23 Tools
Raise Some Hell 02:59 Tools
Desert Wind 04:12 Tools
Carnival Lights 04:12 Tools
She 01:30 Tools
Boomtown 03:42 Tools
Riverbed Wildflowers 04:26 Tools
Dried Up 04:02 Tools
So Long Elaine 03:33 Tools
Lungs 03:26 Tools
Road Song 03:10 Tools
Six Riders 03:23 Tools
My Son 03:09 Tools
Magdalene 03:22 Tools
Union Painter 04:51 Tools
In These Times 03:35 Tools
Train Station 01:30 Tools
Youngblood Blues 04:11 Tools
Draw 03:48 Tools
Lookin' For The Heart 02:17 Tools
Summer Sweet Summer 03:04 Tools
Letter to Whoever 03:04 Tools
Another Night 04:48 Tools
Off the Trail 03:34 Tools
Wild in Our Streets 03:34 Tools
Heart Like That 03:26 Tools
Science Of Flight 03:08 Tools
Medicine Show 02:48 Tools
El Pescador 02:29 Tools
Simplified 02:29 Tools
Thought I'd Let You Know 02:29 Tools
Mesa 02:29 Tools
Sailed Away 02:29 Tools
Scraping the Bottom 02:29 Tools
Highway Love 02:29 Tools
Loser 02:29 Tools
Falcon's Song 02:29 Tools
Didn't Make the Cut 02:29 Tools
Skate and Destroy 02:29 Tools
Teenage Renegade 02:29 Tools
Soldier in Time 02:29 Tools
Life Show Me Love 02:29 Tools
Backside of Uppers 02:29 Tools
Cheyenne 02:29 Tools
Wild of Her Eyes 02:29 Tools
Break 02:29 Tools
F.T.W. 02:29 Tools
Shine 02:29 Tools
Hopeful Loser 02:29 Tools
Western Star 02:29 Tools
I'll Be There 02:29 Tools
Johnny 02:29 Tools
1. Dried Up 04:00 Tools
15. Six Riders 03:08 Tools
2. Road Song 03:08 Tools
3. Lungs 03:08 Tools
6. Raise Some Hell 03:08 Tools
10. Lookin' for the Heart 03:08 Tools
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It happened during an ordinary refueling stop for the Dirty River Boys, the band on its way from Austin to Tulsa to kick off a six-date run. The van pulled up at a gas station and its occupants scattered, with Colton James hopping on his skateboard and heading over to a grocery store for a rotisserie chicken. But the board hit an oil patch and went flying, and the bassist found himself not just down, but possibly out. “I see him at the van and he’s got a bone about to pop out of his shoulder, and our tour manager is on the phone,” recalls drummer Travis Stearns. So the band retreated to Austin, where an ER doc told James he had a shattered collarbone and would need surgery. In the meantime, they outfitted him with a sling. For a moment the band contemplated scratching its upcoming six-date run, because for a stand-up bassist, a collarbone tends to be necessary equipment. “Every time I lifted my arms to play the bass I could just feel the bones crunching on each other,” he says. But he didn’t want to force his bandmates to cancel shows. Why don’t I play the electric bass instead, he wondered, while sitting in a chair? Wouldn’t that work? The band agreed, and they were off again. “That was a long bumpy drive with a broken collarbone,” James wryly recalls. “Didn’t even stop to get any medication on the way—that was a bad idea. “ But that’s the Dirty River Boys ethos. Playing upwards of 200 dates a year, giving heartfelt, unrestrained performances, and winning over a loyal audience show-by-show, it takes a lot more than a few broken bones to stop them. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.