After the official memorial, the gang will head over to Cheatham Street Warehouse and keep swapping songs all night long. You never know who will show up! “There’s no better way to honor Dad than an entire day and night of songwriters playing their songs for him,” Jenni Finlay says. “He would have been so proud.” Both events are open to the public.
On Sunday, May 10, songwriters spanning the Cheatham Street Warehouse generations – from Marcia Ball and James McMurtry to Kevin and Dustin Welch and Owen Temple – will gather at 6:30 pm at Evans Auditorium at Texas State University in San Marcos for a huge memorial show celebrating the life of Kent Finlay. The public is invited. Finlay passed away on March 2, 2015 – Texas Independence Day.
“Cheatham Street would let me play my songs,” McMurtry says today. “That took balls back then.”
Several music historians acknowledge Finlay and his venue’s indisputable importance in shaping modern Texas music as well. “When the annals of Texas music are finally written, I have no doubt that Cheatham Street Warehouse will be compared to Washington-on-the-Brazos,” said noted biographer Joe Nick Patoski (Willie Nelson: An Epic Life, Stevie Ray Vaughan: Caught in the Crossfire). “A humble little shed by the railroad tracks, it has nurtured, raised and showcased the greatest musicians this state has had to offer for the past [four] decades.” “I’m proud of the great writers that have come out of there,” Finlay told Jenni late last year. “Tom Russell and Doug Sahm played there in the 1970s, right up through Randy Rogers in the 1990s. So many have cut their teeth here.”
Russell fondly framed his tenure. “I recall funky wood floors and cheap sweet wine in Mason jars and great music at Cheatham Street,” the El Paso, Texas, resident said. “Laid back. Down home. For me, the ’70s were the highpoint of great music in Texas and Kent was on the front lines. He knew songs and loved songwriters and he had that old Texas drawl, a warm, big hearted guy. Cheatham Street ranks with [Austin’s] Armadillo World Headquarters and the old Split Rail on Lamar. It had the soul and the vibe: casual and crucial. They don’t make venues like that anymore. You can’t invent it.” Undoubtedly, the infamous railroad tracks behind the venue add atmosphere. “It’s so unique when you’re in the middle of a song and a train comes roaring by,” Strait recalled. “Since Cheatham Street Warehouse sits right beside a railroad track, that’s what you get. You just start playing louder.”
Kent Finlay, born on February 9, 1938, in Fife, Texas, owned the same soul and vibe himself. Proof emerges in his songs. Finlay’s finest narratives – earthy vignettes such as “They Call It the Hill Country,” “I’ve Written Some Life,” “Plastic Girl,” “Reaching for the Stars” and “Comfort’s Just a Rifle Shot Away” – measure proudly against the songwriters he’s consistently championed over his lifetime. Additionally, he co-wrote album cuts with several artists including Slaid Cleaves (“Don’t Tell Me,” “Lost”), William Clark Green (“Hangin’ Around”), the Randy Rogers Band (“You Coulda Left Me”), Todd Snider (“Statistician’s Blues,” “24 Hours a Day”), and Walt Wilkins (“Blanco River Meditation #2”). (Plus, Rogers has recorded both Finlay’s “They Call It the Hill Country” and “Plastic Girl.”) Accordingly, Finlay kicked off songwriter night every Wednesday with his own high watermark “I’ll Sing You a Story, I’ll Tell You a Song.”
In the end, Finlay maintained a singular focus his entire life. He wrote songs. Discovered and mentored promising songwriters. Created art every way possible. Kent Finlay constantly rose his thoughts through clouds. Fittingly, a swift glance across his business card immediately showed the hand held behind his eyes. The words simply read: Kent Finlay, Dreamer.
CLICK HERE for more information regarding the event.
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