Howdy Buckaroos! We’re saddlin’ up for a whiskey-fueled hootenanny through the lawless landscape of outlaw country. Your trail guide? The one and only John Wesley Karson!

On this episode we’re featuring two songs from each artist we play, it’s a Twin Spin Weekend!

So, hold onto your hats as we celebrate the renegade heroes and the downright crazy creativity that put outlaw country on the map. It’s time to raise a ruckus and get chummy with the musical outlaws who shook things up something fierce. Let’s wrangle these wild tunes and get this outlaw shindig started!

Original Air Date August 24, 2024

Playlist

HOUR ONE

  • Commander Cody – I Been to Georgia on a Fast Train – 1975
  • Commander Cody – Family Bible – 1971
  • Gary P. Nunn – It’s a Texas Thing – 2000
  • Gary P. Nunn – London Homesick Blues – 1993 Live on Austin City Limits
  • Ozark Mountain Daredevils – Country Girl – 1972
  • Ozark Mountain Daredevils – If You Wanna Get to Heaven – 1973
  • Jessi Colter – You Mean to Say – 1976
  • Jessi Colter – For the First Time – 1975
  • Steve Earle – Hillbilly Highway –1986
  • Steve Earle – Copperhead Road – 1988
  • Terry Allan – Amarillo Highway – 1979
  • Terry Allan – Texas Tears –1980
  • Billy Mize – Make it Rain – 1969
  • Billy Mize – Time Makes a Memory – 2006

HOUR TWO

  • David Allan Coe – Truck Drivin’ Man – 1996
  • David Allan Coe – You Never Even Called Me By My Name – 1975
  • Dale Watson – South Of Round Rock, Texas – 1995
  • Dale Watson – A Real Country Song – 1996
  • Guy Clark – Texas Cookin’ – 1977
  • Guy Clark – Desperados Waiting For a Train (LIVE) – 1981
  • Jerry Jeff Walker – LA Freeway – 1972
  • Jerry Jeff Walker – Little Bird – 1973
  • The Highwaymen – The Highwaymen – 1985
  • The Highwaymen – Live Forever – 1995
  • Blaze Foley – Big Cheeseburger & Good French Fries – 1984
  • Blaze Foley – If I Could Only Fly – 1988

By John Wesley Karson

John Wesley Karson grew up in Texas in the 1960’s and 70’s and was a fan of the country music scene thriving in Austin and Houston. He first began working in radio as a teenager at KPFT in Houston, a listener supported radio station which featured many of the outlaw country artists of that time. He worked on a volunteer basis at first, cleaning up around the station, emptying trash and taking every opportunity afforded him to learn the technical aspects of running the stations equipment. Eventually he was asked to operate the control board for Jerry Jeff Walker one night when he was guest hosting a radio show. It was at that point John was hooked and he knew his future would be in broadcasting. After 45 years in the broadcasting business, working as a commercial radio disc jockey and talk show host, John Wesley Karson retired in Bakersfield in 2020. When his friend Danny Hill bought KVLI radio in Lake Isabella, California in 2021 and launched Outlaw Country Radio 103.7FM, he asked John if he would like to host a weekend show. He gave John Wesley complete creative control over the shows content and John created “The Icons of Outlaw Country”. “It’s a complete labor of love,” John said, “This is the music I grew up listening to in Texas and I just want to share it with people as a way of honoring the contributions these great artist’s made to the world.” “It’s a celebration of the individual, over the collective and the rights as free and sovereign men and women to create what first and foremost pleased them, not some record company executive occupying space in an office building in lower Manhattan or West Los Angeles. “The right of the artist to demand control of their own destiny and their own intellectual property is a sacred right and only when the artist is able to achieve this is the artist truly free to create. Music is practically the only art form where the rights of the artist are superseded by some corporate weasel in a suit and tie sipping decaf lattes from the back of a limo. “As Ayn Rand put it, a 'Right'…means freedom from compulsion, coercion or interference by other men and that applies to record companies and producers as well as governments.” John Wesley Karson had a front row seat long before the term “Outlaw Country” was even used to describe what was known at that time as the “Cosmic Cowboy” revolution. John’s radio career spanned over four decades and each week he shares music and insight into these icons of country music, taking his listeners on a two hour sonic journey through the past and into the present state of the world of country music from his studios in Bakersfield, California.