It is characterized by live music and a large collection of music memorabilia. Another Austin music institution,
and home to one of the hotest tickets in town, also is one of the longest-run- ning—PBS’ Austin City Limits. A wide range of performers have graced its stage, which now makes its home at the new Moody Theater downtown.
Great Venues But you don’t have to look too hard to
see that the whole state is blessed with great music venues. Den ton has a bur- geoning music scene with many solid
live music venues predominantly found by the courthouse square. New Braunfels’ Gruene Hall is
Texas’ oldest continually operating dance hall (since 1878) and continues to draw big crowds for big-name perform- ers. Arkey Blue’s Silver Dollar Saloon in Bandera has been a hotspot honky tonk since the 1930s. In Helotes, just outside of San Antonio, lies Floore’s Country Store, a historic dance hall. It continues to pack in the crowds, just as it did back in the day when weekly performer Willie Nelson penned the Patsy Cline classic, “Crazy” here.
Nelson also mentions the venue in his song “Shotgun Willie.” Fort Worth goes big with Billy Bob’s
Texas, the world’s largest honky tonk, which features some of the biggest names in country. Other venues with deep musical
roots in Texas include Twin Sisters Hall in Blanco, Camp Street Café in Crocket, Riley’s Tavern in Hunter, Tin Hall Dancehall and Saloon in Cypress, Poor David’s Pub in Dallas, Fitzgerald’s in Houston and Wunsche Bros. Café and Saloon in Spring. Dallas’ Deep Ellum district is a
venue in itself, and it played a role in Texas’ musical history. The former freedmen’s part of town was a thriving scene for jazz and blues artists such as Blind Lemon Jefferson, Sam “Light- nin’” Hopkins and Huddie “Leadbelly” Ledbeter through the ’40s. Progress in Dallas meant a decline for Deep Ellum, but efforts to revive the histor- ical essence of this warehouse district succeeded, and this area just east of downtown is now a thriving hotspot for music lovers, trendy clubbers and savvy shoppers. Texans appreciate classical tunes as
well. Many communities devote space to local and touring symphonies, opera, recitals and more. The community of Round Top and its Festival Institute celebrates international music.
Texas Sound While Texans didn’t invent the
blues, their contributions to the genre cannot be overlooked. When the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in Memphis, TN, was founded in 1980, its inaugu- ral inductees included Texans Blind Lemon Jefferson, T-Bone Walker and Sam “Lightnin’” Hopkins, whose names are synonymous with the blues. Electric blues musician and Texan
WILLIE NELSON STATUE @ ACL LIVE
Like no other place in the world, Austin is a city that celebrates music and the people who make it.
Live. Music.
AustinTexas.org 26
Freddie King was a formidable force behind the music of Eric Clap- ton, Keith Richards and Stevie Ray Vaughan. King’s was the first racially integrated blues band, and he helped bring the genre to a wider audience by touring with big rock acts in the ’70s. Then came a generation of Texas
blues rockers whose guitar slinging made their indelible mark— performers like Stevie Ray Vaughan,
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