In an age when country
music is dominated by contest winners, fresh-scrubbed
adolescents, and prepackaged pop (read "new")
country pretenders, Rick Alan Carpenter is the genuine
article. "I've been dead drunk, dead broke,
divorced and damn near dead more than a few times"
he intones, "I've successfully avoided success
for 20 years, my life is a country song!" Carpenter
has played as a sideman in numerous country and
rock bands in Los Angeles as well as Nashville,
where he currently resides. He has opened for everyone
from "Boy Howdy to Van Halen, playing huge
auditoriums, closet sized bars, and every type of
roadhouse and honkytonk in between." Born "in
the east" and raised "out west",
Carpenter started playing the guitar at thirteen.
"My mother played the piano and always entertained
when people came over, so I caught the bug early
on." He started playing bass as well and found
out he could get more work as a bass player, because
"everyone wanted to play the guitar."
After a few years playing bass in several rock bands
(including a stint with legendary LA guitarist Terry
Kilgore), Rick Alan rediscovered the country music
he heard as a kid. "I had a friend who had
thousands of records, Buck and Merle, Wynn Stewart,
Tommy Collins, Joe Maphis, all the great Bakersfield
stuff, I felt reborn." The cowpunk scene in
LA had spawned Dwight Yoakam, The Blasters and Lone
Justice, and the neo-traditional country sound appealed
to Carpenter. "I played the Palomino not long
before it closed, but was getting tired of LA, and
headed for Nashville with my guitars and a suitcase
full of sad songs in 93." Carpenter soon found
out, however, that Nashville wasn't interested in
real, traditional country music. "Perry Howard
(Harlan's son) said I was old school, which I took
as a compliment, though I don't think he intended
it that way." Undaunted, Rick Alan kept writing
and performing in bands and on writer's nights all
over town. "I met Scott McEwen, a great stand
up bass player who has played with Hank III and
Rosie Flores, and he encouraged me to record some
songs at his studio." The resulting sessions
became the new CD "Outside of Nashville"
a 6 song EP that showcases Carpenter's love of REAL
country music. "The production is raw, the
songs cut through, nothing like the slick sound
Nashville currently favors," he says, "Im
very pleased!" Carpenter wrote all the songs
and plays all the guitars, with help from Mark Horn
(Derailers) on drums, Carco Clave (Asleep at the
Wheel) on steel/dobro, Jeremy Garrett on fiddle,
McEwen on bass, Bob Grant on mandolin, and Randy
Finchum singing back up vocals. Stand out songs
include "Same Old Heartache" and "Nothing
Left to Lose (But the Blues)." The struggle
for recognition goes on, but recent shows at the
Bluebird Cafe and the Hall of Fame Lounge in Nashville
are certainly encouraging. "I get the feeling
that real country is coming back strong" Carpenter
states, "audiences are very responsive and,
to me, thats all that matters."
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