| Howdy. This
is the new Jon Wayne website. Hope you like it. We don't
care if you don't. Be sure to check out all the links
on the left and buy an album
while you're here. Oh yea, in case you're wondering...
we ain't John Wayne the dead actor, we' re Jon
Wayne the band!
Hey, check out the new Jon Wayne T-shirts, babydoll
shirts, and tanktops on the albums page.
Jon Wayne "Mr. Egyptian" Reissue
(click here
to buy it)
The year was 1984. Ronald Reagan was running for reelection
on a platform of peace, prosperity and "a new morning
in America." That old lady on the Wendy's ad (who's
gotta be pushing up daisies somewhere by now) was asking
all summer, "Where's the beef?" Yuppies were
to be found everywhere, wearing jogging suits at the
mall and getting coked up at fraternity parties hosted
by Rodney Dangerfield Even blacks had been turned into
cute little yuppies like everybody else—remember
the the Cosby kids and Urkel? And Michael Jackson had
gotten his first nose-job.
It was altogether a much simpler time.
There was no Waco, no Oklahoma City, no 9-11. Sure the
Iranians were chanting "Death to the Great Satan"
but nobody took the towelheads seriously back then.
The biggest threat to the world order was the debacle
of "New Coke."
The music was simpler too.
Tipper Gore got her panties in a wad over Twisted Sister
so Big Al's woman got to match wits with Dee Snider
and Frank Zappa on national TV. Springsteen was into
lifting weights. Rap music was Run-DMC.
There was no Death Row Records, no Shug Knight, no Puff
Daddy (or even P-Diddy). There was no internet, no mp3s,
no vocal tuners, no cross-eyed banjo-picking girl groups
like dixie chicks spouting anti-american drivel for
a fawning european audience.
There was, as Ronnie reminded us, a bright sun like
a giant smiley-face rising across the fat blandness
of the American landscape. Only if you looked twice
there was blot. A tiny blot, but still a blot. And if
you zoomed up close enough--ignoring the sun's blinding
radiance--you could make out a form, a human form, part-troglodyte,
maybe even a man. One thing was sure: he was a Texan.
You could tell because he was wearing cowboy boots and
a cowboy hat and a homemade-looking t-shirt that said
"Take this Job and Shove it" even though it
was obvious to all who looked that he had no job to
shove. And he had on a pair of jeans that looked like
they'd been washed in chickenshit, and he was mumbling
to himself, something like "No go diggie dye."
The figure, of course, was Jon Wayne. And he too had
a dream. He wanted to make a record, a vinyl record,
the thing you play on a turntable. A vinyl record for
the ages--one that people would be listening to for
hundreds of years. And into the grooves of this vinyl
record he would distill the chaos of his world, this
Texas, a vast phantasmagoria of mules, horses, trucks,
funerals, cyclones, jailcells, cheap wine and cheaper
whiskey. And he found bandmates Jimbo, Ernest Bovine,
and Timmy Turlock (to replace the institutionalized
Billy Bob) willing to share in his journey.
And he stuck to his dream and he did make his record.
And strangely enough, he found a record label willing
to press it and distribute it. Of course there were
compromises--the kind that come between the artist and
his art. The suits at the label were full of suggestions:
"Turn the goddamned drums down."
"Is he speaking English?"
"Do you guys know what a key is?"
"There’s a hooker in the control room—says
one of you bast*&ds stole her teet."
"I'm not recording anything else until that crazy
motherfucker puts the gun down!"
Suffice it to say, the sessions which produced Texas
Funeral (Cargo Records, 1984) were legendary. And though
much of the magic of those sessions made it onto vinyl,
much did not. It was too much reality for one disk.
It was too much reality for 1984.
Fast forward to 2000. Like Brian Wilson who dreamed
of making Pet Sounds the perfect album, Jon Wayne still
hearkens to revisit his masterpiece. He spends three
years in a variety of tiny studios strung along California's
Central Valley, honing, refining, turning the drums
up. But in the meantime legal situations arise--creating
obstacles to the realization of his "beautiful
dream." A simple drunk and disorderly charge in
Modesto turns into an 11 month 29 day stretch in Chino
when coupled with outstanding warrants for indecent
exposure, animal cruelty and bastardy. And then there's
that fourteen year old Guatemalan girl who claimed she
was sixteen when she was actually twelve. Luckily the
INS took care of that one.
But better not to dwell on the artist's life, the turmoil
out of which he creates his art. It is the art itself
which survives. By the Spring of 2003, "Mr. Egyptian,"
the centerpiece of the breakthrough Texas Funeral, has
been remixed. Jon has finally been able to realize his
vision fully--to get the disturbing sounds from his
head, full of feedback, maniacal two-beat and paranoid
schizophrenic monkeychatter, onto record. It is his
magnum opus. It is ready for public release. But is
the public finally ready for it?
As Jon puts it, "I don't give a good goddamn ,
all I know's everybody's made their fucking two cents
off this shit but me!"
He wanders off mumbling something about his gums hurting
and needing to score some crank. He is an American Master--like
Louis Armstrong, Frank Lloyd Wright, T.S. Eliot. And
like the greatest artists, he has left his mark on the
civilization, he has added to the language itself, giving
us an insight into ourselves as a people and a nation.
But why should I have the last word when it by right
belongs to him? In the immortal words of Mr. Egyptian,
No Go Diggie Di!
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Here's a short bio. Click here for the real story.
"Two Graduated Jiggers" is the 2nd full length
album from JON WAYNE, an outlaw psycho-country band
. Against a background of turbo-charged mayhem, singer
Jon Wayne ruminates about whiskey, trucks, chickens,
donkeys, death, indiansand the great state of
Texas. A cult band based in Southern California, JON
WAYNE has been inflicting itself on listeners since
1983. Fans include filmmaker Quentin Tarantino, who
featured the bands first release "Texas Funeral"
in his film From Dusk Till Dawn (1996).
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