11 October 2019

Terry Klein, Chuck Hawthorne & Libby Koch

Texas Troubadours in the House

The me&thee welcomes three Texas-based singer/songwriters to the stage on Friday, October 11 at 8 pm. Terry Klein is a former Boston lawyer who moved to Austin to live the singer-songwriter life, Chuck Hawthorne is a former Marine who served in Iraq who has many stories and songs to share about his life in the military and living in the Lone Star State, and Libby Koch is a lifelong Texan with very deep country roots. They will represent the sweet and soulful musical tradition of their home state with original songs and Texas-inspired covers.

Concert starts at 8:00 pm

Texas Troubadours

Fans of Americana, country music and Texas folk-rock will have lots to celebrate when the Texas Troubadours take over the house at the me&thee.

Terry Klein has been compared to Bruce Springsteen, Steve Earle, and Townes Van Zandt. His songs are cinematic and run the gamut from bitterness to optimism with a focus on love, work, family, getting old, and getting in trouble. Rodney Crowell describes him as a songwriter with ‘a poet’s heart.’ Mary Gauthier says his songs ‘make the crossing from one heart to another with ease.’ Terry’s 2017 debut album, Great Northern, and his 2019 follow-up, Tex, draw inspiration from his musical heroes John Prine and Bruce Springsteen and also from literature, film, and painting, covering physical and emotional ground from West Texas to Central Asia, from anger and depression to hope and near-exultation. Terry describes himself as a repentant lawyer and he lives with his family in Austin, Texas.

Chuck Hawthorne sings about bikers and soldiers, lovers and fighters in a gritty voice one critic heard as a cross between Eddie Vedder and Gordon Lightfoot. His own back story as a combat soldier informs the lyrics of what Chuck calls songs about ‘survival, transition, and moving on — crucible songs in the mode of his heroes Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt.’ Chuck’s music on his critically acclaimed albums is steeped in Texas’s sharp, honest and doleful songwriting tradition. He puts his personal spin on that tradition, bringing it up to the minute. The songwriting has been compared to Nebraska-era Springsteen and to James McMurtry.

Texas Americana singer-songwriter Libby Koch (pronounced ‘coke’) is a country meets soulful (Free Press Houston), feisty Texas songbird (Country Music People) who sings her story with a little twang, some slide guitar, and a lot of heart (Texas Monthly). Libby is developing the follow up album to her 2016 LP Just Move On, drawing on legends from Patsy Cline and Loretta Lynn to Dolly Parton and Emmylou Harris, among others, to craft true ‘cryin and leavin’ country songs. Libby fills her songs with intimacy and honesty. Like the most timeless country classics, they’re the kind that make you feel good about feelin’ bad.

  • Terry Klein has the poet’s heart and it’s very much in evidence on his brand new collection of songs. 
Rodney Crowell
  • Terry Klein’s songs bring me into his world, they make the crossing from one heart to another with ease. “Better Luck Next Time” could have been written by Springsteen, Van Zandt, or Earle. But, no, this amazing song came from the guitar of a wonderful new voice in songwriting — Terry Klein. Close your eyes, give a listen, and let his songs take you on a ride. It’s a beautiful journey. Mary Gauthier
  • . . .
  • Chuck Hawthorne’s voice is a hybrid of Eddie Vedder’s and Gordon Lightfoot’s, his instrumentation spare like Townes Van Zandt, and his songs…are deliberate workaday tales reminiscent of Nebraska era Springsteen or James McMurty. Mike Seely, No Depression
  • Chuck Hawthorne has a story, and his history is enough to get attention. As huge as the back story may be, the presence of the man takes a back seat to what a lifetime of experience has offered to three-minute songs. Danny McCloskey, The Alternate Root Magazine
  • . . .
  • Libby Koch
  • . . . she sings her story with a little twang, some slide guitar, and a lot of heart. texas monthly (dan solomon)
  • . . . an emerging artist that could easily become the next queen of Americana free press houston
  • Everything about this album reminds me that country music isn’t dead, but up until now, has been buried in the heart of Texas. . . . If ever there is a song that brings true ‘country’ back to country radio, “You Don’t Live Here Anymore” will do just that. If you want to be a part of putting ‘country’ back on the radio, request airplay at your local station. kelly’s country

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