210-649-3730 - Action Magazine
Transcription
210-649-3730 - Action Magazine
www.Brookspub.biz Live Music in August 8/5 FRI Texas Two Lane 8/7 SUN Allen Torrans and Misty Blue 8/12 FRI Braydon Zink 8/14 SUN Madelyn Victoria 8/19 FRI Dennis Barnes and Chicken Shit Bingo Every Sunday 4-8 Fish Fry August 4 Steak Night August 18 Every Friday Food Truck Tasty Fusions August ENTERTAINMENT FRI 5th Dark City Fri 12th Nash Tag Fri 19th Collateral Damage Fri 26th Madison’s Lyric Beat the Heat @Brooks Pub with a COLD drink & say hello to Cindy, Clarissa, Justin & Felicia — Our wonderful staff! An end to an era for the Southeast side with the retirement of Frank Mueller (my mentor) and the closing of The Trap. Wishing him the best and enjoyment for years to come. Linda, Rob, Cindy & Brooks Pub the 2x4’s 8/21 SUN Country Tradition 8/26 FRI Zac McCabe 8/27 SAT Dallas Moore 8/28 SUN Panderosa Aces Daily Drink Specials Everyday! Ask one of our beautiful bartenders for details. Under New Ownership Open 2 p.m. thru 2 a.m. 7 days a week 13477 Wetmore Rd. (210)490-3038 Mondays Tuesdays Wednesdays Thursdays Fridays Saturdays Sundays Blue Collar Mondays Tap Beer Tuesdays Dazed and infused Wednesdays Jammin Thursdays (Open mic with Jake Castillo) Live music $3.50 Fireball Live music $3.50 Deep Eddy Flavors Happy Hour all day Live Bands in August Fri Sat Fri Sat 5 6 12 13 Tin and the Cocinos Hashtag The Derringer Band Spitfire Fri Sat Fri Sat 19 20 26 27 Texas Alley Katz Dark City Knotty Grove The White Tapes Check out our HUGE PATIO Pool, darts, Golden Tee, flat screen TVs • 2 • Action Magazine, August 2016 advertising is worthless if you have nothing worth advertising Put your money where the music is. . . Advertise in Action Magazine • DEPARTMENTS • Sam Kindrick ..........................................6 Scatter Shots ........................................11 Editor & Publisher ................Sam Kindrick Advertising Sales ..............Amy Heller Reif ....................Action Staff Photography.............................Action Staff Distribution............................Ronnie Reed Composition..........................Elise Taquino Volume 41 • Number 8 • FEATURE • Bret Mullins .............................................4 Action 41st ..............................................7 Harvey Rompel........................................8 Action Magazine, August 2016 • 3 • Late starter Mullins a line dancer’s delight The dream has materialized for Bret Mullins. He was 40 years old when he sang his first country song on a public stage nine years ago. Now he has one of the hottest country dance bands in this part of Texas with more and bigger doors opening all the time. “Sometimes I have trouble even believing it,” says Mullins, a 6-foot-3inch native of Grand Prairie who now owns an electric sign company in San Antonio. “I’m living my dream, and I wouldn’t be where I am today without the support I have had from my loving wife Marlo and a whole bunch of friends.” Bret Mullins is knee-deep in country music fans 651-4541 4810 FM 1518 N. 1/4 MILE EAST OFF IH35 HOURS: 7 DAYS A WEEK • 4 • Action Magazine, August 2016 Mullins has a strong and distinctive vocal delivery that is a country line dancer’s delight, and the two cds he has released so far are indicative of some strong credentials. He sings a Whisky River duet with Johnny Bush on his second and recent release, an album titled Long Live a Country Song, and Mullins has conjunto Tex-Mex icon Flaco Jimenez playing on both of his recordings. The first one is titled A Good Place To Be From. “The first cd is more classic country than anything else,” Mullins said. “The second, I guess, is more commercial. Singing with Johnny Bush was a highlight of my life, an incredible experience. Bush wanted to do a rocking version of his great tune Whiskey River, and that’s how we did it.” Working with Bush and Jimenez, hobnobbing with the likes of recording great John Anderson, and recording with the highly acclaimed Bobby Flores and the super talented Morales brothers at Studio M in San Antonio, all speaks volumes for Bret Mullins and his Bret Mullins Band. And the Mullins credentials underwent a recent burnishing upgrade when Bret signed with Bobby Flores’s management company, R.D. Music Productions. Anyone who knows anything about country music knows that Bobby Flores is a genius instrumentalist, a live wire pro- moter, a mover and a shaker and a teacher with few peers. He is a visionary who worked for years with country legend Ray Price, and his Bulverde Academy of Music is one of a kind. “Bobby approached me about a management contract,” Mullins said. “I feel really honored.” Bret’s band was named the best country band in the 2015 San Antonio Music Awards competition. His sidemen bring quality and experience to the mix. They are Don Sowersby on steel, Steven James on lead guitar, Bruce Hudson on bass, and Kevin Cooley on drums. Sowersby has worked with both Johnny Bush and Johnny Rodriguez. The Bret Mullins Band recently returned from a country music festival in Pontivy, France where Mullins said the crowds were unbelievable. “They found us online, and they put us all up for a week,” Mullins said. “They line dance to everything over er there. They treated us like rock stars. They were playing our music in all of the local restaurants.” Bret says Bobby Flores will facilitate a move from small bar gigs to larger venues, including festivals and fairs. The bigger clubs which now host the Bret Mullins Band on a fairly regular basis include the Thirsty Horse and Cooter Brown’s, both in San Antonio, and the 11th Street Cowboy Bar in Bandera. They play 11th Street on August 13 and September 2. Mullins has opened for John Anderson and T.G. Sheppard. He will open for Little Big Town in October at the Cattle Baron’s Gala near Boerne, and in December, the Bret Mullins Band will open for Reba McEntire at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington. Mullins has had some breaks, and his obvious singing talent has been a magnate for a quality supporting cast. And for those who might wonder why Bret waited until age 40 to break out his wares on a public stage, let him tell you. “I guess I had other priorities in the past,” he said. “It didn’t start happening for me until I quit drinking alcohol. My life started turning around, and I am now able to realize my dream career. I thank God for it all. It didn’t happen until I sobered up. Let us cater your holiday party or bring your party to Texas Pride. 210-649-3730 210-649-3730 www.texaspridebbq.net Action Magazine, August 2016 • 5 • Warning! Especially for ladies, women, girls, and any old snuff queen who may (or may not) find the content of this column to be objectionable, disturbing, or contrary to publishing decency and what some refer to as “good taste.” We are getting ready to talk about the lower extremities of the male anatomy...and not just any old male’s anatomy. This piece is about my own personal plumbing equipment and the working order of certain parts and passage ways that have been recently restored through a revolutionary new urology break through known as the Rezüm procedure. I warned you in advance, girls, so now is the time for you to run for the hills. If some female word jockey came at me with a column on pap smear technique or fallopian tube rearrangement, I would no doubt bolt like a scalded cat. So brace yourselves, ladies, if any of you are still hanging in. We are fixing to get graphic and technical here with words like benign pro- Dr. Chris Cantrill • 6 • Action Magazine, August 2016 static hyperplasia, or BPH, the urinary curse which befalls about half of all men between the ages of 50 and 60. I started noticing BPH symptoms when in my late 30s, and the frequency of urination symptom associated with the condition gave early meaning to the quote by American folklorist and newspaper columnist J. Frank Dobie who said: “It seems that I now spend half of my time trying to remember my friends names and the other half of my time pissing.” The BPH (enlarged prostate) sufferer will readily recognize the symptoms that dogged me with increasing intensity for years: frequent and incomplete urination, having to get up 3, 4, 5 and even 6 times a night to use the urinal, weak streams and a dribbling and inconsistent pee pattern that necessitated me charting trips from my Bulverde home to San Antonio with strategic restroom stops marked on my mental map. Then came the great revelation, and you had best pay attention to me if you are a BPH sufferer. I found the total solution in Dr. Chris Cantrill, a member of Urology San Antonio, and the first doctor in the United States to be approved by the Federal Drug Administration to perform the Rezüm procedure. And he performed the first non-invasive Rezüm treatment in 2015, just one year ago. The Rezüm procedure is not surgery. It is done in a one-time out-patient office visit that entails water vapor therapy. The enlarged prostate is pinching the urethra and inhibiting the normal flow of urine from the bladder. The bladder is never able to completely empty. Water vapor therapy uses sterile steam to send a controlled burst of thermal energy directly into the prostate tissues. The steam changes to water as it rushes around the overgrown cells in the prostate. Heat is released that causes the cell walls to break down. The cell stops functioning. The tissue shrinks and the prostate obstruction is relieved. An enlarged prostate shrinks down within a couple of months to the size of a normal prostate, and the patient is able to resume the bathroom functions of a normal human being, giving special meaning to the technical handle Rezüm. It works, boys, and in the vernacular of a Junction, Texas cedar chopper, let me say now, without reservation or amendment, that I am now pissing like a young race horse, and sleeping the nights through with one and sometimes no nocturnal bathroom sleep interruptions. I get up with new-found energy from the restful sleep, and speed walk three miles almost every day be- fore the sun gets too high in the sky. At this point, let me say that I am now a double winner with Urology San Antonio, the big urology treatment company here that boasts 32 providers across the city. Dr. Lewis Russell, a Urology San Antonio member who was my urologist even before he joined the network, is the doctor who got rid of the bladder cancer that first hit me more than 26 years ago. Hospital stay followed hospital stay as Russell went through my urethra with the tools necessary to scrape away the reoccurring tumors. The bladder tumors were reappearing every three or four months, and I had accepted the very real possibility that this form of cancer would kill me. Then it happened. Dr. Russell elected to administer a relatively new (at that time) form of bladder cancer treatment called Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG), an immunotherapy vaccine originally used to prevent tuberculosis. In layman’s language, TB germs were poured into my bladder through a catheter over a period of several weeks, effectively pissing off my immune system to the point where it would allow entry of no more cancer cells. “It turned your cancer off like a water hydrant,” Dr. Russell said. And so it did. The BCG treatment started February 4, 2010, and I haven’t had a cancer since. Doc Russell is the old pro, while Cantrill is the younger version of a caring physician who knows what he is doing and has the confidence to pull it off. The Rezüm procedure only lasts about three minutes after the sonograms and other prep work is done. Cantrill goes into the prostate area with a needle he uses to send bursts of steam into various parts of the organ. “You’re doing great,” he says with each injection. It hurts. No big deal. “You’re doing fine.” For someone who has been roto-rootered countless times with bladder scopes, scraping tools, laser guns, and other penile intrusions, the Rezüm procedure was like a walk in Brackenridge Park. No pain no gain, and what manner of pussy with BPH would let three minutes of discomfort keep him from receiving a medical gift like Rezüm? If you are one of these people, call Urology San Antonio at (210) 614-4544, and ask for Dr. Cantrill’s extension. It will vastly improve your life. Cranking up the engine for Action’s big 41st Augie Meyers will play and emcee By Sam Kindrick George Chambers and the Country Gentlemen will open Action Magazine’s 41st Anniversary and Music Extravaganza October 2 at Texas Pride Barbecue. George gave us all a heart scare in June, but all is now well and a really big show is shaping up. We have a blockbuster lineup, including Johnny Rodriguez, Johnny Bush, Darrell McCall, Augie Meyers, Billy Mata and counting. Chambers opened last year’s 40th at Texas Pride, but a quadruple heart bypass operation in June had put a second opening performance in question. No doubt about it now. Chambers has made a complete recovery, and here is the forecast in his own words: “I will open the second Action Magazine anniversary show and you can bet on it. I wouldn’t miss it SATURDAY MORNINGS 9:OOAM - 10:00AM George Chambers will open the show for anything. Last year’s was a huge success, and I’m predicting that the upcoming show will be even bigger and better.” Chambers opened the 40th and Johnny Rodriguez closed it. It was a wonderful, delightful congregation of super talents from San Antonio and this part of Texas who came together for a show of the ages. The energy is building for a second Action Magazine anniversary show--an event I wasn’t sure about following our 40th anniversary blockbuster at the covered hippodrome near Adkins which is Texas Pride. Then I started hearing the voices. The first voice I heard was that of Dub Robinson, leader of the famed Drug Guardians of the Children 10th Annual Fundraiser/Rally Helotes Fairgrounds, Helotes, TX Roy Holley Host 830.426.9228 royholly@icloud.com August 27, 2016 from 10am-8pm Music, Vendors, Refreshments, Raffle 1st Prize 2016 HD Dyna Low Rider Special Raffle Tickets $10.00 each Store Cowboys band. “Let’s do it again,” said Dub. “I’m ready,” said Claude Morgan. “Of course,” said Augie Meyers. “Wouldn’t miss it for the world,” said Johnny Bush. “I was out of town and Continued on pg. 13 “The Great Texas Experience” Catering Party Room Rental Pavilion Rental Fundraiser Hosting Oilfield Crew Catering 210-649-3730 210-263-3805 www.texaspridebbq.net Action Magazine, August 2016 • 7 • Old bar room brawler sitting on a mountain of barn yard antiques Harvey Rompel sits in the middle of a 10-acre antique trove on San Antonio’s North Side that defies description. For the better part of eight decades, Rompel has collected everything from mule-drawn road graders to Shirley Temple dolls, and he has never sold any of it. “Felix Stehling offered me $5-million cash for the property and my thousands of antiques,” Rompel said. “I had to turn him down. ‘Hell, Felix, I wouldn’t know what to do or where to go if I sold the place,’ I told him. And that’s a mortal fact if there ever was one.” The late Felix Stehling was the Taco Cabana founder and nightclub tycoon who left his native Fredericksburg in the 1950s to open restaurants and nightclubs in San Antonio, one of his first ventures being the Cross Winds Nightclub near the airport. Rompel said he first met Stehling when he was flipping hamburgers on Austin Highway, even before Felix moved on to the airport area. The Rompel family dairy was in the airport area, and Stehling and Rompel were friends for years, although Rompel recalls Felix barring him from the Cross Winds for fighting at one point in time. “I did a lot of drinking and fighting back in those days,” said Rompel, who will turn 84 in October. “I have breathing problems now, and one of my knees has about played out, but I did my share of barroom brawling. And it was after I Mule-drawn road grader among hundreds of Rompel antiques • 8 • Action Magazine, August 2016 beat the shit out of some guy in the Cross Winds that Felix asked me not to come back.” Rompel said his banishment lasted for about two months before Stehling invited him back. “Felix was a businessman,” Harvey laughs. “He realized how much beer I was buying, and how little money my enemies were spending. He told me to come on back.” Rompel also worked construction and owned a few ice houses and drinking establishments of his own. He said he had a bar called Rompelstiltskin’s. Stehling was intrigued by the unbelievable collection of ancient farm equipment and other implements that both surround and crowd the exterior and interior of Rompel’s 125-year-old family home. There are grown children around, and grandchildren are all over the place. “My grandfather was August Rompel,” Harvey said. “He built the house. My father’s name was Bruno. Our family business was Fairfield Dairy on Nacogdoches Road. Before we started bottling and processing milk and other dairy products, we took it all to Knowlton Creamery.” Rompel said Felix Stehling wanted to build a private club on the homestead, keeping all of the antiques and buildings intact. “Felix had the $5-million and plenty more behind that, but I could never sell the place,” Rompel said. “Now a fourth generation of us is growing up here.” Harvey’s wife Juanita is every bit the antique nut that her husband is. “It has been our life hobby,” Juanita said. “We Harvey Rompel displays ancient hooks for picking up piles of nails. have traveled everywhere buying antiques.” She proudly points to an 1883 vinage electric refrigerator that belonged to Harvey’s mother. Her col- lection of Shirley Temple dolls is priceless. And the memorabilia that covers the walls, floors, and even the ceilings of her home is mind-blowing. The barbed wire collection stretches across the ceilings, while there are match box collections along with an ancient dish and vegetable washer. This is an ancient hay baler Action Magazine, August 2016 • 9 • BEXAR BAIL License BONDS #145 102 S. COMAL #2, SATX 78207 25% OFF Most Bonds 210-224-9915 1126 W. Commerce Street ● South of jail parking lot (under the over pass) Victoria Embrey, Manager HANGIN’ TREE SALOON The Fun Place to Relax. A Real Authentic Texas Saloon OPEN 10AM DAILY • NOON SUNDAY 18424 2nd Street • BRACKEN, TX • 210.651.5812 Please don’t forget to book your parties now. Graduation is right around the corner. AUGUST BAND SCHEDULE FRI 5 INTEXICATED 8 - MIDNIGHT FRI 12 RIMSHOT 8 - MIDNIGHT SAT 13 BENEFIT FOR J.C. WITH RAY REED FRI 19 FRI 26 2 - 6PM BIMBO & BORDERLINE 8 - MIDNIGHT MISTY BLUE 8 - MIDNIGHT Now that you’ve found Luckenbach, where the heck is Bracken? We take credit cards COLD DRINKS AND A WARM ATMOSPHERE IN SOUTH SAN ANTONIO. Fridays & Saturdays Pool • Darts • Televised Sporting Events • 10 • Action Magazine, August 2016 8/2 8/3 8/4 Happy Hour Tues-Fri 2pm-7pm Patio Playground PingPong Table 606 W Cypress 227-2683 8/5 8/6 8/7 8/9 8/10 8/11 8/12 8/13 8/14 8/16 8/17 Open mic w/Cody Coggins 7:30 p.m. Prime Time Jazz 8 p.m. Blue Note Ringos 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. The Fly'n A's (Greenhouse series) Andres Laven and Friends 6:30 p.m. Smokehouse Guitar Army 9 p.m. After Midnight Blues Band 6:30 p.m. 9 p.m. The Mo-Dels Women's song swap 7:30 p.m. Open mic with Lesti Huff 7:30 p.m. Prime Time Jazz 8 p.m. Anthony Wright 7:30 p.m. The Lavens 6:30 p.m. 9 p.m. Ruben V Pam and Gary acoustic 6:30 p.m. 9 p.m. Los #3 Dinners Midwest Armadillo 4 p.m. Stephen Ward and Todd Fulmer 7 p.m. Open mic w/Nico Laven 7:30 p.m. Prime Time Jazz 8 p.m. 8/18 8/19 8/20 8/21 8/23 8/24 8/25 8/26 8/27 8/28 Wine tasting 7:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Pete's Best The Lavens 6:30 p.m. 9 p.m. Bad Funky Bones Lesti Huff Band 6:30 p.m. Marks Brothers 4 p.m. Lovato 7 p.m. Open mic w/Jeff Reinsfelder 7:30 p.m. Prime Time Jazz 8 p.m. Beer tasting 7:;30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Ramble Cats The Lavens 6:30 p.m. Michael Martin and the Infidels 9 p.m. Howard & Skye 6:30 p.m. Roberta Morales 9 p.m. Billy Kiesel 4 p.m. Jazzion 7 p.m. Open mic w/Nico Laven 7:30 p.m. Prime Time Jazz www.thecove.us 8/30 8/31 MAKE MY DAY LOUNGE Corner of Perrin-Beitel & Thousand Oaks Across from HEB We are always open at 7:00 a.m. for our night shift patrons Thank You Discounts We open Sundays at 12:00 ◆ (210) 655-6367 FREE POPCORN, POOL AND WI-FI ALL STAR JAM ✸ 26TH YEAR Hosted by Mike Ellis and Fabulous Funtones Every Sunday at 9:30pm Hwy. 181 S • 210-633-3400 Karaoke August BAND SCHEDULE Voted Best Live Music KARAOKE WITH LARRY & MADONNA Every Friday and Saturday at 9:30pm KARAOKE WITH JOHN & KATHRYN Frank Mumme’s Every Thursday at 8:00pm r e h t O The n Wo m a Karaoke nge Cocktail Lou on Fridays & Saturdays South San Antonio’s friendly gathering place 5 minutes from Downtown San Antoinio. Pool • Darts • Televised Sporting Events 1123 Fair Ave. (210) 534-7399 Open Monday - Sunday 12 Noon - 2 a.m. Goodbye Trap Frank Mueller has closed his storied Trap Lounge on San Antonio’s South Side, and Action Magazine has lost its oldest and longest running advertiser. Frank Mueller “My health is the reason,” Mueller said. “I just can’t continue on with everything that is wrong with me. I have a bad diabetic condition that has worsened over the years. I have a heart problem that is approaching the critical stage, and I have fourth stage prostate cancer that certainly isn’t helping my situation. They tell me I need more surgery, then they tell me the surgery would probably kill me. I can’t run the bar anymore, and I know I did the only thing left. I’m just worn out. I shut it down.” The late John Cootey and Larry Findley, two former San Antonio cops, opened the Trap Lounge at Southcross and Pecan Valley Drive in 1974 with Frank Mueller acting as their manager. A year later, in 1975, Mueller bought Cootey and Findley out, and that was the year that Action Magazine was born with Harry Jersig’s Lone Star Brewing Company occupying our back cover. Frank Mueller became one of our very first advertisers, and The Trap Lounge quarter-page ad has been an Action Magazine monthly staple for the past 41 years. Mueller’s Trap ads have always featured a monthly band schedule, but his sometimes hair-raising Frankly Speaking commentaries that followed the bands have been cause for a rabid Mueller fan base that can never be replaced. Frank Mueller is the most non-politically correct writer to ever put pen to paper. He is ribald, outrageous, sometimes Xrated, keenly insightful, and just self-deprecating enough to keep the lynch mobs away. He has consistently been one of the major reader draws in Action Magazine. A Houston ad agency once offered Mueller a writing job on the strength of his Action Magazine literary gems. He turned them down, electing to stay with the Trap and his loyal clientele. Mueller just happens to be one of the most talented writers we have ever known. He is also one of the best friends Ac- tion Magazine has ever had. Frank is honest, upright, generous, loyal, and kind. And he has always had the balls to say what he means and mean what he says, and that usually means fuck all of them who don’t like it. We will miss Frank Mueller and his Trap Lounge. He is one of a kind. Brenda’s memorial Friends, family, and former nightclub customers said a final goodbye last month to Brenda Pamela Boswell. Benda Boswell Cancer claimed Brenda in June, and her final memorial service was held last month at New Way Bible Fellowship on W.W. White Road. Brenda was a benevolent nightclub owner and soul singer who loved and booked local musicians at clubs that included Country On The Rocks and The Pour House in Kirby. It wasn’t planned as such, but New Way Bible Fellowship was a fitting final earthly stop for Brenda. The church is housed in the old building which was once the legendary Farmer’s Daughter, a San Antonio showcase for the greatest country musicians who ever lived. Some of us could feel the spirit vibes of Bob Wills, Loretta Lynn, Hank Williams, Lefty Frizzell, Dolly Parton, George Jones, Willie Nelson, Johnny Bush, and the many other greats who were fixtures at Bobby Barker’s Farmer’s Daughter. The building has been divided by separating walls since the Farmer’s Daughter days of the 1960s and 1970s, but the church stage provided ample room for musicians who came to honor Brenda. Brenda’s service was presided over by Pastor Ben Alexander, who donated his church at no charge when approached by Luke Burr Boswell, Brenda’s son. Food was donated by friends, family, and fans. Tribute music was provided by Mike Clancey, Danny Zertouche, Diana and Bob Boykin, Robert (Rebel) Pourchot, and Liz Jackson. The Boykin couple are divorced, and Bob is soon to marry Liz Jackson, a condition that had no bearing on the moving service. Diana Boykin sang Over The Rainbow. And the other musicians joined in on classic spirituals such as Will The Circle Be Unbroken, and Brenda’s favorite, Peace In The Valley, which she sang on her death bed. And on the San Antonio scene, Susan Dinn has announced on Facebook that she has taken on Robert Demel as a management associate in her Sir Winston’s Pub on Nacogdoches Road. Help the kids The 10th annual fund raising rally by Guardians of the Children will be August 27 from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. at Helotes Fairgrounds in Helotes. The Guardians of the Children organization is a 501 (c)3 organization that helps abused children referred from Child Safe. This year’s fund raiser will include music, vendors, refreshments, and a raffle, first prize being a 2016 HD Dyna Low Rider Special. Raffle tickets are $10 each. Club notes Kim Magar is in the process of selling her popular Shade Tree Saloon in Spring Branch. We hear the buyers are from the Uvalde area, but that’s about all we know at this stage of the game. The Shade Tree is a popular biker hangout and live music venue that has always served good food. Magar is famous for booking only the tops in live music, and Shade Tree denizens are hoping the new people will keep the live music program. Robert Demel Demel is a working musician with a good local following, and he brings management experience to the Winston’s operation. With his Band of Buds, Demel has been working recently at The Hangin’ Tree Saloon in Bracken, and before that, he was employed by Wayne Harper to sing at the Martini club before Harper sold the place. At one time, Demel was partnered with Dalia Demoore in the Crazy D’s operation on Nacogdoches, and after that he and businessman Rick Rice teamed up to open the RAD Bar on Stone Oak Parkway. Crazy D’s later closed after Demel and Demoore parted company, and the RAD Club shut down after a mutual decision by Rice and Demel. Action Magazine, August 2016 • 11 • “Dos Amigos” 16x20 Color Reproduction The world famous painting “Dos Amigos” created in the mid 70’s by renowned western artist Clinton Baermann is available once again. 16x20” $100.00, 16x20 matted $150, 12x16 $20.00, 12x16 matted $50 + shipping and handling if applicable. $FFHQW3XEOLVKLQJ,RWD'ULYH6DQ$QWRQLR7H[DV ZZZDFFHQWGHVLJQSULQWFRP • 12 • Action Magazine, August 2016 Actions 41st continued from pg 7 unable to play the first one,” said ReBeca. “I’ll be there for this one.” “Well, old Sam, how could we turn it down,” said Darrell McCall. ReBeca makes her first Action anniversary appearance this year. She was out of the city for the 40th. Country music fans will recall her female lead with the San Antonio Rose Live series in the Aztec Theatre. She will be backed by guitar master Kenny Penny, who once worked in Jerry Reid’s band. And wife Mona said “yes.” The 40th (and very first) anniversary show was held in April 2015, and it was a smashing success despite torrential morning rains that many thought would wash us out. Texas Pride’s outdoor dance area and elevated Continued on pg. 14 Another great addition to this year’s anniversary show is western swing band leader Billy Mata, a member of the Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame, and recipient this year of the top western swing band award by the Ameripolitan Music Awards. Mata was cited for his dogged adherence to the western swing style of Bob Wills and Tommy Duncan. Herb’s Hat Shop The late He rb and Pat Carroll The Legacy Lives We are now a Yeti dealer 4922 Rigsby 648-9242 9 a.m. til 6 p.m. Tuesday thru Friday Saturday 9 a.m. til 4 p.m. Great Barbecue... Great Texas Music... Come Join The Fun... Thursday Bike Night Live Classic Rock & Blues Friday Fish Fry and Dance Live Country Band Saturday Concert and Dance Classic Car and Hotrod Cruise Every Sunday 1:30pm to 6:30pm 210-649-3730 210-263-3805 www.texaspridebbq.net Action Magazine, August 2016 • 13 • Actions 41st continued from pg 13 stage are completely covered by a permanent roof, but the flashing morning lightning, crashing thunder, and heavy morning downpours probably cut last year’s attendance by half. And still we had a thousand or more through the gates before the last nighttime performance was capped by another round of turbulent weather. Hopefully, we will have drier and calmer weather on Sunday, October 2, and if that be the case, all indications are we will have a monster crowd. “We had never had a crowd like the one last year,” said Texas Pride owner Tony Talanco. “We will be prepared to handle an even bigger turnout this year.” Before Johnny Rodriguez closed down the show last year, Texas Pride’s bar was out of beer. “That won’t happen again,” laughed Talanco. “We will know what to look for this year.” Last year’s concert went to benefit Kinky Friedman’s animal rescue ranch near Utopia with the non-profit receiving a check for just over $10,000. This year’s show will be a benefit designed to restore the 1948 Texas Top Hands Flexible tour bus with an ultimate goal of establishing and promoting a benevolent fund for San Antonio musicians. The bus has enormous historical significance, and an IRS exemption has been granted to what will be known as the Texas Top Hands Band Historical Preservation Corporation. Three members currently on the corporation board are Texas Pride owner Tony Talanco, KKYX Radio personality Roy Holley, and Texas Top Hands Band leader Ray Sczepanik, the last band leader and current holder of title to the bus. When the bus is restored to running condition, it will be on public display at fairs, rodeos, and other outdoor events across Texas. “The bus will be our visible promotional tour for a musicians benevolent fund which will be used to provide medical expenses for needy musicians, and also for burial expenses when the need is great,” said Talanco. “We want the old bus to promote this benevolent fund where ever it is seen. The bus has an incredible history, and Ray Sczepanik is making it available for restoration and public display. Roy Holley and I will see to it that all donations we can raise with the bus will go into the fund for indigent musicians.” For a fairly comprehensive list of musicians to play the show, see our full page ad in this issue of Action. Plans call for a noon opening with a $15 gate admission. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist mentality to know that print advertising, coupled with full internet coverage, is the best deal in town. So what are you waiting for? Put your business out there where people can see it Advertise in Action Magazine Since 1975, the most respected and best-read entertainment journal in South Texas To advertise call (830) 980-7861 www.actionmagsa.com Where to find Action Magazine Northeast Adrenalin Tattoos Boozehounds Bracken Saloon Century Music Charlie Brown’s Cooper’s Lounge Cootey’s Country Nights Crazy D’s Cross-Eyed Seagull Dazzles Easy Street Eisenhauer Flea Mkt. Evil Olive Fiasco Finnegan’s Fitzgerald’s 502 Bar Guitar Center Halftime Lounge Hangin’ Tree Jack’s Jack-N-Arund Jeff Ryder Drums Krystal’s Cocktails Lefty’s Draft House Lone Star Bar & Grill Locoe’s Sports Bar • 14 • Action Magazine, August 2016 Main Street Bar & Grill Make My Day Martinis Marty’s Me and CA Midnight Rodeo Minds Eye Tattoo Our Glass Cocktails Perfect 10 Phantasy Tattoo Planet K Rebar Recovery Room Rick’s Cabaret Rod Dog’s Saloon Rolling Oaks Rookies Too Schooner’s Sherlock’s Snoops Spanky’s Sunset Club (2 locations) The Crazy Ape The Falls Thirsty Turtle Turning Point Winston’s Zona Northwest Alamo Music Baker Street Pub Big Bob’s Burgers Bend Sports Bar Bone Headz Burn House Coco Beach Cooter Brown’s Element Tattoo Fatso’s Honest Charlie’s Tattoo Highlander Hills and Dales Ice House Bar Joe’s Ice Kennedy’s Knuckleheads Mitchell’s Pick’s Planet K Stacy’s Sports Bar Thirsty Horse Wetmore City Limits Whiskey’s Who’s Who Central & Downtown Alamo Music Armadillo Amp Room Augies BBQ Big Bob’s Burgers Bombay Bicycle Club Casbeers Cove Goodtime Charlies Joe Blues Joey’s Limelight Luther’s cafe The Mix Olmos Bharmacy Pigstand Planet K Sam’s Burger Joint Tycoon Flats Planet K Shady Lady Spurr 122 Texas Pride BBQ The Other Woman The Steer The Trap Converse Sportsman’s Bar Helotes Bobby J’s Floore Store Bandera Leon Springs 11th Street Cowboy Bar Bulverde area Antler’s Restaurant Choke Canyon BBQ Daddy O’s Max’s Roadhouse Rusty Spur Shade Tree Saloon Specht’s Store Taqueria Aguascalientes Tetco, 46 & 281 Angry Elephant Longhorn Restaurant Silver Fox Live Oak South Paw Tattoos Selma Bluebonnet Palace Deer Crossing Southside Universal City Big T’s Brooks Pub Flipside Record Parlor Herb’s Hat Shop Leon’s Mustang Sally’s China Grove China Grove Trading Post Longbranch Billy D’s Planet K The Pawn Pub Anhalt Hall 2390 Anhalt Rd., Spring Branch, TX 78070 830-438-2873 September 17th — Jody Nix — 8pm Oktoberfest — October 15th Ennis Czech Boys Polka — 2pm Justin Trevino — 7pm November 19th — Jake Hooker — 8pm December 17th — Alex Dormont & Hot Texas Swing Band — 8pm From San Antonio: Take Hwy 281 N to Hwy 46, Turn Left, 4 miles to Anhalt Rd. & See Signs For more info go to 13247 BANDERA RD, HELOTES, TX 78237 210-695-4941 NOW FEATURING LIVE MUSIC! AUGUST BAND SCHEDULE FRI SAT SUN FRI SAT SUN FRI SAT SUN FRI SAT SUN 5 6 7 12 13 14 19 20 21 26 27 28 BONNIE LANG KATY MCKENZIE Join Us HOSTED BY ADRIAN RODRIGUEZ Every Wednesday STEVEN CURD MEYER/ANDERSON Songwriters Night hosted by Amy Hermes HOSTED BY ADRIAN RODRIGUEZ BRYAN BROS Every Sunday CCCRIDER HOSTED BY ADRIAN RODRIGUEZ Songwriters Night hosted by BRAYDON ZINK Adrian Rodriguez JORDON GIBBONS HOSTED BY ADRIAN RODRIGUEZ ANHALTHALL.COM The best of Sam Kindrick The secret life and hard times of a cedar chopper A true Texas treasure and 21st Century antique Now back on the market through special offer! (Book printed in 1973) CLUB OWNERS MAKE MORE MONEY $$$ Reduce Credit Card Expenses For 41 consecutive years, this book by Action Magazine editor-publisher Sam Kindrick has narrowly escaped the New York Times best seller list To receive a copy of The best of Sam Kindrick, send an $8 check or money order to Action Magazine, 4825 Elm Creek Drive, Bulverde, Texas 78163. We do not do plastic. Handling and postage included. GET A MINI BANK (ATM) IN YOUR CLUB AT NO EXPENSE TO YOU! We provide ATM’s for festivals and other events • INTERNET JUKE BOXES • VALLEY POOL TABLES • ELECTRONIC DARTS • VIDEO GAMES BROADWAY AMUSEMENTS BROADWAY JOE GONZALES 210-344-9672 www.broadwayamusements.com Action Magazine, August 2016 • 15 •