Warm Country Heart Theatre in downtown Glen Rose really rocks on the
weekends. The band takes popular standards and belts them out as jazzy,
foot-tapping numbers. No matter what category the music is pigeonholed
into, it is always a pleasure to listen to a group as tight as this
one. Their enjoyment of the music is infectious from the first note.
"If
you say 'jazz' then it turns some people off," says Jack Greubel,
the 70-year-old drummer in the group. "We play a combination
of a lot things classic country, Dixieland, Western swing,
slow ballads we do a little bit of everything."
The
Warm Country Heart Theatre is a jewel among the boarded-up buildings
and strip malls of the Paluxy River Valley. Open since the fall of
2004, the theatre turned the upstairs storage room on the historic
square of the Somervell County seat into a place where residents and
visitors can enjoy an evening of professional entertainment.
For
two hours on weekend evenings the band plays the songs they have practiced
over long careers. John Walker, most often the frontman, and the youngest
member, plays a Floyd Cramer style of piano that combines gospel and
New Orleans jazz. D.C. Barlow has blown the sax for nearly three decades
from Nashville to Austin to Branson with stops in between. Cecil White
plays a smooth Chet Atkins style of guitar that soars with the best.
The clown prince of the band, Michael Grace, lays down a solid, Western
swing bassline and entertaining banter with the other band members.
"The
drummer's job is to be the glue that holds everybody together,"
Greubel says. The 70-year-old Evanston, Ind., native has played the
drums since he was 12. For 17 years he worked as a session drummer
at Monument Records, where he worked with Roy Orbison, Roger Miller,
Ray Stevens, Jim Reeves, and many others. His tenure in Nashville
was the result of a friendship and professional relationship with
"Yackety Sax" Boots Randolph.
For
many years he toured with Randolph and worked in his nightclub in
Nashville. When Randolph joined Chet Atkins and Floyd Cramer to form
the Master's Festival of Music, Greubel was hired to keep the beat.
Two critically acclaimed albums came out of the collaboration.
"Music
is a really hard way to go" if you're trying to make a living
from it, Greubel says. "You don't get off at five o'clock like
everybody else. It got to the point where it wasn't as stable as I
wanted my life to be." He eventually returned to Indiana and
worked in a music store until he and his wife retired a few years
ago to Granbury to be near his daughter in Dallas. An avid fisherman,
Greubel enjoys the North Texas lakes.
Greubel
really wasn't looking to get back into playing professionally
although he does still give private lessons when a friend invited
him to fill in for a drummer at the Stephenville Opry. Greubel met
Walker at the show. "He called a month later to ask me to play
a concert with him. The next thing you know I was back into it,"
Greubel says with a laugh.
While
in college in Chicago, Greubel had studied under Roy Knapp, the same
teacher who taught Buddy Rich. "Whatever I do, I want to do the
best I can," he says. "But I had to get back into condition
to play." Greubel practices two hours a day, exercises regularly,
and maintains a healthy glow that hides his age.
When
the band gets in a groove, the music can be as smooth as the buttermilk
pie at Two Grannies Cafe down the street from the theatre. "We
felt like we had a good combination, so we gave [the band] a try,"
Greubel says. "Everybody enjoys it and works together. There
are no stars in the band; everybody takes a turn."
Warm
Country Heart Theatre is at the northeast corner of the Glen Rose
town square on Barnard Street (FM 144). The music begins at 7:30pm,
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday and also at 1pm on Saturday. Admission
is $18 for adults, $16 for seniors, and $14 for students ages 11 through
18. For information, call 866/240-3053 or go to www.warmcountryhearttheatre.com.
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Austinchronicle.com
Gerald E. Mcleod
April 1,2005
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