Showing posts with label Gurf Morlix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gurf Morlix. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Watch Gurf Morlix perform "50 Years" off his Eatin' At Me album

Check out Gurf's performance of "50 Years" along with a couple of great tunes off his latest album Bristlecone. 

Writes Gurf about his song "50 Years"...

"Here's a live performance of a song I wrote about my time in school. I remember it all. I can't say I enjoyed the experience.  I hope you had a better time. The song is called 50 Years. It's from the album EATIN' AT ME. A lot of it still is eatin' at me."

Get a copy of Gurf Morlix's 2015 album Eatin' At Me via Bandcamp right here. Also, check out "Glimmer Of Hope" and "Suspended In Alcohol" off his latest release Bristlecone available here






Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Early Blaze Foley recordings resurface on "Sittin' By The Road" vinyl comp

Blaze Foley's excellent archival collection "Sittin' By The Road" is coming out on vinyl November 7th – grab it quick!


Here's the scoop from Lost Art Records...

Now available for the first time on vinyl, "Sittin' By The Road" – out November 7th via Austin's Lost Art Records – captures legendary singer/songwriter Blaze Foley on his earliest known recordings. Simple, straightforward and strong, the album contains a dozen tracks recorded during Blaze's 'treehouse' days in Georgia. Recorded in the mid-1970s on a home reel-to-reel machine, these songs showcase Blaze's talent in early form. Includes many of Foley's classic tunes plus three songs that did not appear on previous albums. Mastered by Fred Remmert, Cedar Creek Recording, Austin, TX. Special thanks to Lew Gazaway and Gurf Morlix. 

Pre-order a limited-run vinyl copy of Blaze Foley's "Sittin' By The Road" compilation directly from Lost Art Records right here. Listen to "Big Cheeseburgers and Good French Fries" "Sittin' By The Road" and "If I Could Only Fly" below. 





Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Gurf Morlix shares "Ashes" from his new album A Taste Of Ashes

Gurf's new album "A Taste Of Ashes" is out April 1st!. Listen to the title track here... and a version of "Angel Eyes" below.  



Monday, October 7, 2024

Gurf Morlix is releasing In Love At Zero Degrees on Tuesday

Gurf Morlix's much anticipated new album In Love At Zero Degrees is available directly from Gurf right here







Tuesday, January 9, 2024

Gurf Morlix releases new album Melt Into You

Singer/songwriter Gurf Morlix just issued his self-produced Melt Into You album. Hear "Nothin' Burns Like The Cold" below. 

Writes Gurf...
"MELT INTO YOU. New album release is today! Gotta think of something clever to say about it. Hmmm... Best album I've ever made? Well yeah, but not special enough. Everyone sez that. Um... This album will change you life for the better?? Well, it could, but results aren't guaranteed. Let's see... I gotta think more. 

In the meanwhile, it is now out there. Details for ordering from me (always the best option) are on www.gurfmorlix.com. It should be available on all the streaming and download services. Spotify, Apple Music, Bandcamp, etc. What else??? It'll heal what ails you?? I'll think on it. Or maybe YOU can help."

Listen to "Nothin' Burns Like The Cold" right here
 



Saturday, October 28, 2023

Austin songwriter/guitarist Gurf Morlix chats with Otis Gibbs

Gurf shares a few stories about Townes Van Zandt, Blaze Foley, Bob Dylan and John Prine. Get Gurf's latest album below.  



Get a copy of Gurf's latest album I Challenge The Beast directly from his site right here: http://www.gurfmorlix.com

Monday, June 26, 2023

Singer/songwriter Gurf Morlix rings in strawberry season in Ontario

Austin's Gurf Morlix, who summers in Muskoka, enjoys the local harvest. Check out Gurf's great new album I Challenge The Beast. 

Here's the scoop on Gurf's new album...

This should've been the sleeve for I Challenge The Beast
I Challenge the Beast is a collection of 9 songs that could only have come from Gurf Morlix. He has been called ‘the Edgar Allan Poe of Americana music’ (Alan Cackett) and though you won’t find any ghosts in these musical stories, there is plenty of the dark, brooding poetry that characterizes both writers. And yet – we still listen. 

Because the lyrics are not only captivating but relevant, the voice is mesmerizing, the instrumentation both innovative and provocative. His inspiration may be found in the lyrics “It’s passion and hunger that feeds my soul” (Beautiful Crazy World) and “I’m colder than steel, but my heart is true,” (The Beast.)

Morlix has a way of writing songs that are both personal and universal. The opening track, "Heart," explores varied manifestations of the heart, from the one broken by a lover to a “heart on the spit over the coals” to the heart in the ICU. 

The title track, "The Beast," speaks of a battle, perhaps with addiction, but this song also telescopes out to encompass any inner struggle a person might face. Perhaps the album's most beautiful song is "Beautiful Crazy World," (listen below) a bittersweet ballad that feels like a lullaby- “Livin’ till you die, is all part of this beautiful crazy world…” 

"Coil of Barbed Wire" is the comic relief of the album with the refrain “Love is as delicate as a coil of barbed wire.” We get a history lesson in the true story of "Miss Nellie’s Place," (listen below) which starts out as an upbeat dance tune, but ends in tragedy. "World on Fire" expresses what so many feel today, as literal flames of wildfire, war, and climate change, and intangible ones of socio-political conflict threaten “everything that matters….” 

Throughout the album are beautiful vocal harmonies, and they are all Gurf. Indeed, the album is all Gurf. No need for credits, as he performed every instrument and vocal. He also engineered, mixed and mastered every song at his own Rootball Studio in Austin. 

Get a copy of Gurf's new album "I Challenge The Beast" via Bandcamp right here

Check out a few songs followed by Gurf's recent chat with host Seth Walker for South Austin Music which, despite the preparatory research, is a bit rough going. 





Monday, December 12, 2022

Gurf Morlix shares "1959" from new album Caveman

Singer/songwriter Gurf Morlix is back with a new album, Caveman which you can get via Bandcamp right now. 

Here's the scoop...

This is a truly unique release from the prolific and poetic Gurf Morlix, producer of iconic records by Ray Wylie Hubbard, Lucinda Williams, Mary Gauthier, Slaid Cleaves, Robert Earl Keen and more, as well as his own catalog of chart-topping Americana albums. Caveman resonates a different tone than the usual Gurf Morlix fare. A question that often comes up with the release of a Morlix CD is, “what’s the body-count on this one, Gurf?” 

He is known for songs containing a dark backdrop, a narrative that has the feel of going down a dark and unfamiliar road… but Caveman is different…No doubt the title song is inspired by the isolation of the pandemic lockdown, and Morlix uses it to reflect a humorous view of what it's like to be left to oneself. With titles like I Dig Your Crazy Brain, Mud Bugs, and Make Me Your Monkey, we certainly see a different, though not surprising side of this Austin TX troubadour. The collection could even be called light---and one might even laugh out loud! (Well, except for the ominous and eerie Where the Lost Are Found). 

No worries though - this album is different, but what fans love about Morlix remains the same - creative and skillful instrumentation, the best of session musicians, and songwriting that weaves tales that are irresistible. 

Get a copy of Gurf's new Caveman album via Bandcamp right here. Listen to Gurf's salute to a favourite year, "1959," a cajun stomp "Mud Bugs" and the title track below. 




Sunday, April 10, 2022

Blaze Foley tribute album cut by pal Gurf Morlix now available on Bandcamp

Who better to pay homage to singer/songwriter Blaze Foley than his longtime Austin sidekick, guitarist Gurf Morlix. 


Here's the scoop...

On this disc Gurf Morlix takes the songs of his friend and compadre, Blaze Foley, that often celebrate the underprivileged, and presents them for the entire world to hear. Some of the songs when you hear them will jar memories of hits by other artists; Merle Haggard, Lyle Lovett and John Prine, not a bad tribute in itself, covered Foley's songs. The songs range from love songs to political commentary. Foley never had an album released while he was alive. The story behind the three he recorded and what happened to them is both too long and too bizarre to explain here. Suffice it to say he was considered a genius and revered by his friends and fellow artists, and once you hear these songs so lovingly performed by Gurf Morlix in his inimitable way you'll know why. This is one of the most poignant discs to cross this desk this year, and it is about time this artist got his due. You might also understand why Townes Van Zandt said of his friend, "He's only gone crazy once. Decided to stay." – Bob Gottlieb, Folk & Acoustic Music Exchange

Get a copy of Gurf Morlix's tribute album - Blaze Foley's 113th Wet Dream right here. Check out Gurf's story about Blaze Foley meeting Townes Van Zandt, a couple of Gurf's performances and his studio version of "Clay Pigeons" below. 






Friday, December 3, 2021

One For The Weekend: Gurf Morlix

Here's Gurf performing his song "Food, Water, Shelter and Love" (off Diamonds To Dust) in Winnsboro, TX back in 2009. 


Grab a copy of Gurf's new album The Tightening Of The Screws from his site right here

Writes Gurf...
"The second word of my new album is bullshit. That’s right. It’s bullshit. By that I don’t mean to say the second word of my new album is meaningless nonsense. By no means is it deceptive drivel. It says what it means. It means what it says.

"The album is called THE TIGHTENING OF THE SCREWS, and the first song is titled Touch You Inside. It’s a plea for deeper communication. The first line is “No bullshit, no lies, no guile, no disguise… I just wanna know what you’re seein’, through those beautiful eyes”. Nothing seditious in that. It’s a call for honesty. Yet this song is deemed not fit for public airwaves, because a group of American Puritans likes to monitor public radio, hoping to get left of the dial stations shut down for broadcasting dangerous words such as this. It’s bullshit!

"8 year olds use that word every day. Presidents use that word in public. Puritans use that word!  My friends in other countries tell me “You Americans think you’re so free. You can’t even show nudity on tv. Or say bullshit on the radio!” It’s bullshit!

"The last song on THE TIGHTENING OF THE SCREWS is titled Comin’ Back To Haunt Me. One line in it says “I can’t let her see, how she scares the shit outa me”. Another example of a word used properly to describe a particular situation. It’s a euphemism, and it’s as common as bullshit. Yet the self-righteous prudes are on guard, lest a word like that be heard in public.

"Two out of ten of the songs on my new album can’t be played on the radio, and in my publicity release I felt I should mention these songs. With a warning label. I strongly wanted not to, but finally realized that the repercussions could be heavy, for the people playing my music on the air. Thus the “profanity” warning. C’mon, America. It’s the 21st century. Wake up and smell the bullshit." 

Monday, November 29, 2021

Blaze Foley & The Beaver Valley Boys play a Little Ol' Show

Check out Bruce W. Bryant's Little Ol' Show with Blaze Foley, Gurf Morlix and crew onstage for 26 minutes.   


Sunday, October 4, 2020

Watch the Blaze Foley documentary Duct Tape Messiah

Check out Kevin Triplett's excellent Blaze Foley doc Duct Tape Messiah from 2011 while you can. 




Saturday, August 1, 2020

Gurf Morlix releases Kiss Of The Diamondback

Singer/songwriter Gurf Morlix just finished his new album, he'll tell you about it below.

Here's the scoop from Gurf...
OK, here’s the deal – My new album is out. It’s called KISS OF THE DIAMONDBACK. Copies are here, and will be ready to ship soon. For the time being, email me at crangleman@gmail.com and I will give you all the info you need. It has a bunch of really good songs, I think, and a pretty unique lookin’ album cover. In my opinion, anyways. Let me know what you think about that.

These are unique times, for sure. All the rules have been upended. All the fences are down. Or maybe they’re bigger than ever. I have no plans to tour until it’s safe, and there is no way of knowing when that’ll be. No way of knowing anything, at this point, except for the fact that all the income of touring musicians has been taken away. Whatever I make from the sales of these albums will likely be my only income for 2020. I’m not complaining. I’m extremely lucky to be able to do what I love, in the safety of my home.  Many others are not so fortunate.

I am the chief strategist, here at Rootball Records. I’m the only strategist. I’m the label. I’m the distributor. I’m the manager. I’m the one that sweeps up. I’m in charge. Of all of it. This is a one man operation.

If you’d like to buy a copy of KISS OF THE DIAMONDBACK, or any of my albums, it’s easy. You can get one now. Signed. Cuz you’re special.

That’s my DNA on the copies I mail out to anyone who orders them. Those are my fingerprint smudges next to where I personalized the copy especially for you. Whatever it was you asked me to write. Well, pretty much. Within reason.

I do all this because I care. I care about the songs, which are my babies. I care so much about the sound. I obsess over the recording process more than you will ever know. Every note that was played has been considered extensively, from every possible angle. I try to find the exact placement for every part. From side to side, in the listener’s head. From top to bottom. From front to back. This is all extremely important to me. I once spent an entire afternoon at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, staring at the 5 or so paintings I thought were the ones that transcended time and space, thinking about how the mixes of my songs, and the sound of the albums I produce, could somehow represent the depth I found in those works of art. I’m not sure I have approached this level of art, but I’m trying as hard as i can. This is how much I think about all of this.

I put as much attention into the songs. I used to just get ’em to the point where they pretty much rhymed, and didn’t sound stupid, and then I called ’em done. I have learned a lot from all the amazing songwriters I have worked with, over the years. I think the most important thing I learned is to understand when a song is finished, or not. Ready to be played in public. Or not. I’ve learned that if the creative spark is right, it’s worth however much time it takes to hammer the song into whatever shape it takes. Some of these songs I have been working on for 5 years or more. They are not ready until they are as good as I can possibly make ’em.

I put as much thought into the album cover art, and I am fairly well proud of all my covers. A couple were done with a time restriction, and weren’t quite as good as they might have been, because of that. That will never happen again. The main lesson I have learned in all my years in the music business is that there are no deadlines. The powers that will be impose them upon you, but they never really mean anything. Years of experience have taught me that as hard as anyone pushes for a deadline, the date always falls away, and ultimately means nothing. Every time. I love the sound that deadlines make, as they whoosh past my ears.

Most of all, I really do care about you, the listener. Seriously. I don’t do this for me. Well, maybe a little, but mostly I do this for you. I’m nothing without you. Sounds trite, but it’s true. I have been out there, on the road, for the past 8 or 10 years, trying to connect with people who like my music. It keeps getting better. That’s all I need to carry on.

OK – here’s the deal. Again. There are  no touring plans, for the foreseeable future. And of course, nothing is certain at this point in time. All bets are off. But if and when I play shows again, when it’s safe to gather, please make the effort to come see me. You’ll laugh, and you’ll cry. You’ll get a good show. You’ll be glad you came. If you know a place you think I should play, let me know. If you wanna have me play a house concert, or know someone that might want to host one, let me know. I want to play anywhere anyone wants to listen. If you like any of the albums I’ve produced for other artists, please help support them. We all need all the help we can get. Let’s talk.

For more info about Gurf Morlix and his recordings, visit his site right here
Watch Gurf perform "Voice of Midnight" off his Last Exit To Happyland album from 2009. 


Saturday, March 14, 2020

Whitney Rose's new album We Still Go To Rodeos ready to go

The new Whitney Rose album We Still Go To Rodeos is now available for pre-order with a chance to win one of six test pressings. 
Sez Whitney Rose...
"Thanks to all of the folks who have pre-ordered their signed copies of the new album on CD & VINYL. Each individual who placed an order on my website and all future orders will be included in the chance to WIN A SIGNED TEST PRESSING (1 of 6). Winner will be randomly selected on April 20th. Test pressing will ship with the winning order on or before April 22, 2020.
Pre-order on my website: whitneyrosemusic.com/pre-order"

Listen to "Just Circumstance" featuring Gurf Morlix and Nichol Robertson on guitars followed by "Believe Me, Angela" and a house-concert duet with The Mavericks' Raul Malo on "Something Stupid" from way back in 2014.





Sunday, December 18, 2016

Happy Birthday Blaze Foley!

Remembering Austin icon Blaze Foley on his day with Kevin Triplett's fab 2011 documentary Duct Tape Messiah. 

Duct Tape Messiah: Blaze Foleyby Kevin Triplett

Monday, August 17, 2015

Gurf Morlix presents Eatin' At Me @ Cadillac Lounge, Thursday

Lackawanna-born singer/songwriter Gurf Morlix remembers Buffalo on his new album Eatin' At Me





Sunday, May 22, 2011

Help finish the documentary Troubadour Blues

For the last 10 years, Pittsburgh-based indie filmmaker Tom Weber has been working on a documentary called Troubadour Blues about contemporary singer/songwriters including Peter Case, Mary Gauthier, Dave Alvin, Chris Smither, Gurf Morlix, Anne McCue, Slaid Cleaves, R.B. Morris and others who've spent their lives playing music in small clubs, living rooms and street corners.
Having seen some of the raw performance footage of Peter Case, Troubadour Blues is certain to be an extraordinary study of a dying breed of road-warriors with something relevant to say who are willing to travel long distances alone, sometimes for whatever comes back in a passed hat. But Weber, who teaches video production at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, needs a little help with production costs to finish up and get it out this summer on DVD. That's where Kickstarter and roots music fans come in.

Here's Tom Weber's pitch:

When I set out to make a documentary about traveling singer-songwriters, I simply thought that it was a story that needed to be heard. Nearly 10 years later, my primary goal remains the same: to ensure that this compelling story reaches as wide an audience as possible.

 Music has been a central part of my life since childhood. Although I grew up in a classically oriented household, the music that spoke to my heart was more rough-hewn: Marty Robbins, Johnny Cash, Hank Williams. Later, I was blown away by the Beatles, learned the blues from the Rolling Stones, traced their roots back to black American blues and soul. Later, I immersed myself in folk and bluegrass, had a long romance with reggae, then gravitated back to rock & roll.

In the tradition of music films like Don't Look Back and Heartworn Highways, I took a fly-on-the-wall approach to filming Troubadour Blues. Peter Case, Chris Smither, Mary Gauthier, and the other artists in the film are gifted storytellers, and the best thing a filmmaker can do is to try to stay out of their way. I shot by available light, captured performances from an ordinary audience seat, and conducted interviews in comfortable settings. The troubadours tell their own stories, without narration.

I want the audience to engage with these artists as I did, seeing them on a stage and then gradually getting to know them. As Francis Coppola has observed, technology has taken the professionalism out of movie making, freeing filmmakers to tell smaller and more personal stories. Troubadour Blues is one of those stories.


ABOUT THE FILM

On a highway not far from where you live, a solitary musician with a guitar and a box of CDs is driving to another gig. No tour bus, no band, no road manager, no crew: just a need to make music and a bag full of songs based on hard-lived experience. That night, in a bar or coffeehouse or church basement or living room, the troubadour will create magic, sharing those songs with a room full of people. For awhile, time will stand still. Then a round of goodbyes, a night in a spare bedroom or a cheap motel, and it's time for another drive to another town and another room.

Troubadour Blues is the story of these modern-day wandering minstrels who ply their trade outside the media spotlight and far from the glitzy world of pop stardom. They are modern-day equivalents of the medieval troubadours who brought the news from village to village, the broadside balladeers who sang about epic battles and public hangings, the itinerant bluesmen and folksingers who hopped freight trains and hitched rides across Depression-era America.

Today, this way of life is threatened. Live music venues are closing, or turning to dance music, karaoke or cover bands. People don't go out as much; they get their entertainment delivered to them by Internet and cable. When they do go out, they don't spend as much money. And they certainly aren't spending their money on records; CD sales are at their lowest point since the '70s. Many troubadours worry out loud about the future of their craft; they are running harder and faster just to stand still.

Troubadour Blues is intended to expose these great musicians to a larger audience, and to make up for the lack of attention paid to independent artists by mainstream media. With your support, I can complete the film and take it out on the road for a series of intimate screenings all over the country -- building an audience the way that troubadours do, one town at a time.    
Tom Weber


As of today, there are just 9 days remaining in Tom Weber's funding drive for which 86 backers have already pledged $7,841 towards his set goal of $12,000. Those interested in contributing to Weber's project can check out the Troubadour Blues page on Kickstarter right here for more information.

An update: With only five more days to go, 116 backers have now pledged a total of $10,127 which means Tom still needs another $1,873 to reach his goal. Here's hoping!

There's four days left and 127 backers have brought the total pledged to $11,052 leaving Tom just $948 short of his target. It looks like it's gonna come down to the wire.
 
Three days to go and 141 backers have now pledged a total of $11,672 which is only $328 bucks shy of the target. We're on the homestretch now and the finish line is in sight. Tell a friend.

PROJECT FUNDED! As of May 28, 146 backers pledged a total of $12,176 to surpass Tom Weber's $12.000 target to complete Troubadour Blues! Great news for everyone who supports roots music.