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  1. 22. Sept. 2023 · “I’m calling [the exhibit] “¡Viva Terlingua!: The Big Bang of Texas Music” because when you think about the songwriters represented in that album: Guy Clark, Gary P. Nunn, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Michael Martin Murphey, Jerry Jeff. … I think it’s just the quintessential Texas record. All these years later, it holds up. How Jerry Jeff Walker, this unlikely New York-born folk singer ...

  2. The Wittliff's new exhibition – “¡Viva Terlingua! The Big Bang of Texas Music!” – for the first time, puts you inside the room with Jerry Jeff and the Gonzos to hear songs left off the original album, rehearsals, outtakes and the high times and camaraderie surrounding the sessions. Press coverage for "¡Viva Terlingua: The Big Bang of ...

  3. The album, Viva Terlingua at 50 and what it meant. And the fans, the people who will join us to remind themselves of who they were fifty years ago…..or as soon as anyone heard that album, on a radio, a party at somebody’s house, or in my case….I heard the music when I saw my best friend’s smile.”

  4. No credit card needed. Listen to Viva Terlingua on Spotify. Jerry Jeff Walker · Album · 1973 · 9 songs.

  5. 18. Aug. 1973 · Viva Terlingua, recorded live in Luckenbach, TX, on a hot August night in 1973, is among the most legendary of "live" singer/songwriter albums ever released. It's the Live at the Fillmore East of redneck Texas folk-rock. Essentially, it's Jerry Jeff fronting the Lost Gonzo Band at the beginning of their long run together playing, living it up ...

  6. 1. März 2012 · Features Vol 5 Issue 2. “I was there!”. The making of Jerry Jeff Walker's "Viva Terlingua". Bob Livingston — March 1, 2012. By Bob Livingston. (March/April 2012/vol. 5 – Issue 2) We were a band with no name. Not that we hadn’t tried: the Unborn Calves, Ro-de-o-dee Riff Raff, the Bluebonnet Plague, the Hoodlums of Love.

  7. 30. Jan. 2019 · There are others who think the name comes from an old Native American word, the meaning of which has been lost, and that feels somehow right. We left cleansed and fascinated, and moved and welcomed, by the beautiful town of Terlingua, with its living and with its dead. There are stickers about, and I echo them: Viva Terlingua.