Darryl Lee Rush will make your next event a SMASH hit!
BAND DETAIL: Darryl Lee Rush
DALLAS OBSERVER 03.08.07
Darryl Lee Rush
Saturday, March 10, at Club Dada
By Darryl Smyers
Published: March 8, 2007
East Dallas resident Darryl Lee Rush is the kind of gritty and straightforward
songwriter that gives country music a chance to escape its seemingly endless
fixation with bodacious blondes and mullet-addled super patriots. Instead of the
slick gloss of contemporary Nashville or the big hat/no brains bravado of the
likes of Toby Keith, Darryl Lee Rush thankfully settles for authenticity and
keen observation. Rush's 2005 debut, Llano Avenue, was filled with astute
character sketches and just the right amount of hayseed credibility. Along with
rightly sentimental originals such as the title cut, even Rush's bluegrass
infused cover of "Life in the Fast Lane" carried a healthy amount of respect for
country music's legacy and an equal portion of disdain for the genre's continued
embrace of mundane superficiality. Currently working on his sophomore release,
Darryl Lee Rush is the real deal just begging for a larger following.
DALLAS OBSERVER 10.27.06.
Llano Avenue
Darryl Lee Rush released his debut album just a year shy of his 40th birthday.
How's that for a mid-life crisis?
By Darryl Smyers
Published: October 27, 2005
"With music, you think it's a young man's game," local country crooner Darryl
Lee Rush says. "But at 39, it's like I can finally make some moves." With his
graying beard and receding hairline, Rush looks more like a middle school
teacher than a country up-and-comer, but his dark eyes and deep features reveal
a quiet intensity not often seen in social studies class.
"I try to write simple stuff," Darryl Lee Rush says. Basically, that means no
songs about semiconductors.
Subject(s): Darryl Lee Rush performs at Southern Junction on Friday, October 28,
with Robert Earl Keen. "I've been playing since sixth grade and always ended up
with a lot of crap," Rush deadpans. Things changed last year when Rush won the
Shiner Rising Star Contest and was awarded $15,000 to make a record. Rush's
circuitous journey has taken him from the small Gulf Coast town of Markham to a
stint in an Austin cover band and finally to the Lakewood area of Dallas, where
he has been performing for nearly nine years.
Rush built a local following playing the Balcony Club while amassing an
extensive backlog of forlorn country/folk. With the August release of his candid
debut album, Llano Avenue, things have blossomed quickly. Several tracks from
the disc have been picking up airplay on local roots station 95.3 The Range, and
he and his band have just completed their first extended tour away from Texas,
including a slot at the Americana Music Conference in Nashville in September.
Rush is surprised by the buzz that the CD has generated, particularly since he'd
predicted that the making of the record would be a disaster. Rush was worried
that the choice of producer he earned for his contest victory, the
semi-legendary Gurf Morlix (Lucinda Williams, Robert Earl Keen), would scoff at
the thought of recording with someone so little-known.
"I was just some guy who won some contest," says Rush, adding, "I got the
impression that Gurf was reserved about putting his name on it."
Put his name on it he did--and more. Besides playing on the disc, Morlix also
acted as chief editor. "I just went to his house and played him nearly every
song I had written," Rush says. "He sat there saying, 'OK, that's a good one.'
The ones he liked the most, we put them on the CD."
Morlix's choices were spot-on. The characters within the songs of Llano Avenue
reflect a writer's appreciation of detail and strong narrative. In "Truale,"
Rush sings of the trials of a small-town girl who not only accepts her lot in
life but revels in it. "She drove a T-bird with the top down, a cold beer
between her thighs," Rush sings as Morlix adds a plaintive guitar solo.
The best cut is the title song, a sad elegy to a lost love and a friend who
wandered the States in a van "because we could all use a little windshield time
now and again." The song, which also pays tribute to Rush's life in East Dallas,
is filled with the honest reflection and regret so often missing from hip
Nashville hayseeds more interested in black trench coats, extra-large hats and
sticking boots up asses.
"It's so much like therapy to write a song like 'Llano Avenue,'" Rush says. "I
try to write about the simple stuff. Some young kids try to tackle such
grandiose things, but I write about the people I've known and what they've told
me."
As fine as his originals are, Rush proves his chops with a keen eye for covers.
Whether it's classic Texana (Guy Clark and Terry Allen's "Queenie's Song") or
little-known songsmiths like Hank Riddle (whose "I Believe in the Sun" is one of
the album's highlights), Rush makes choices that mesh seamlessly with his own
clearheaded, rural mindset.
The finest pick might well be Chris Knight's "Miles to Memphis," a song
perfectly suited to Rush's weary baritone. "The song on the radio used to make
me cry," Rush sings, grabbing hold of the song's quiet expression of remembrance
and regret; this simple tale about a long, lonely drive mirrors Rush's own
resolve.
Rush claims his influences include Harry Chapin and Jim Croce, but his muse is
much closer to the late, great Doug Sahm and Guy Clark. While his storyteller's
flair is similar to singer-songwriters of the '70s, his grit and demeanor are
pure Texas.
"With me and my band, if we hit a wrong note, we are gonna hit it loud and we
are gonna hit it fearlessly," he says when discussing the bluegrass version of
the Eagles' "Life in the Fast Lane" included on the new CD. A very unlikely
choice for a cover, the song is nonetheless transformed into a funny and
engaging hillbilly romp.
With his short, national tour now complete and a big opening gig with Robert
Earl Keen in Rockwall coming this weekend, Rush is taking stock of his life and
the possibility of making music a full-time job. Rush sells parts to the
semiconductor industry, and in the past, he has sold cars, stereos and even
tried his hand at real estate. But now, approaching the dreaded four-oh, he has
a chance at a career that has always eluded him.
"Sometimes I think, 'Could this have happened earlier?'" Rush says, pausing,
careful with his words. "Maybe it was meant to be that I get to this point in my
life and have experienced life enough for success to happen."
Rush finishes his beer and sees a handful of missed cell phone calls. Things are
happening: shows to be booked, appearances to be planned. "Musically, this is
the highest point I've ever been," he says, confident but a bit wary. "And
what's really scary is that this is where all the real work really starts."