The Adobe Flash Player is required to view this multimedia interactive. Get it here.

Web Search by YAHOO!

Home > Austin Music Source > Archives > 2009 > October > 02 > Entry

Scene report: Ray Benson helps get ACL started

Walking under cloudy skies amidst temperatures in the low 80s, music fans trickled into Zilker Park this morning to catch the first day of the Austin City Limits Music Festival.

Austin icon and perennial ACL favorite Ray Benson helped kick off the fest with an energetic performance of “Miles and Miles of Texas.”

“Good morning, everybody,” he boomed from the stage. “We’re all a little Asleep at the Wheel, aren’t we?”

In his eighth ACL appearance, Benson said he likes having the early time slot. The nine-time Grammy winner was one of the first artists to appear on the Austin City Limits television program.

“It’s just the best - nobody’s sunburned yet, nobody’s worn out and everybody is still full of excitement,” Benson said. “Once you kick off seven or eight times, you’re kind of a tradition, right?”

Benson said festivals like ACL and SXSW, in which he also appears each spring, are important because they keep the spotlight on Austin, specifically on Austin music. Headed to Snyder, Texas, for a show this evening, Benson will head back to ACL on Sunday to catch some entertainment himself. He said he likes the fact that ACL brings in a hefty number of young musical artists.

“Young folks are the percolation of what’s going to happen to music 20 years down the road,” he said. “It’s important that we all do what we can to make an environment that is going to continue to be conducive to music.”

After Sunday, Benson goes back on tour across the country. His next show in Central Texas will be at Gruene Hall on Oct. 11. And after Thanksgiving, he will begin a tour with friend Willie Nelson to promote their CD, “Willie and the Wheel.”

Benson said he is happy to see many of those young musicians he feels are so important to music turning a keen ear to Asleep at the Wheel and swing music in general.

“I was a 16-year-old kid when I discovered swing,” he said. “I figure there are 16-year-old kids out there now that are interested. I’m not trying to reach the masses with my music; I’m just trying to give people some interesting music— something different.”

Follow Austin Music Source on Facebook and Twitter.

Permalink | |

 

Copyright © Sat May 26 18:52:40 EDT 2012 All rights reserved. By using Austin360.com, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement. Please read it.
Contact Austin360.com | Privacy Policy | AdChoices