The Hacienda Brothers, led by cult heroes Chris Gaffney and Dave Gonzalez, introduced their wood-smoked blend of stone country and old-school R&B on their self-titled 2004 debut album, helmed by legendary writer/producer Dan Penn. The record was made in Tucson, where both of the principals, who now reside in Southern California, have roots, so people took to describing the group’s sound as “western soul.” The term not only stuck, it proved to be inspirational when the Haciendas and Penn reconvened in the picturesque Arizona city for the follow-up effort, What’s Wrong With Right (Proper American Records), because the album vividly captures the new/old genre brought about by the pairing of Gaffney, Gonzalez and Penn.

The drop-dead gorgeous title song — one of the record’s several instant classics—marks the second time Gonzalez and Penn have written together, following the first album’s soulful “Looking for Loneliness.” Dave has known Penn since 1998, when they met at a European festival between sets by and Penn and partner Spooner Oldham and Gonzalez’s Paladins. They share a love of everything automotive, but the guitarist remains in awe of Penn as a songwriter. Before their first collaboration, Gonzalez recalls that Penn told him, “I got three rules: I don’t do nothin’ over the phone, I don’t do nothin’ over the mail and I don’t do nothin’ over the Internet. I’m into hangin’ out.” It turned out that Penn was particularly into hangin’ out in Tucson, which was one of the attractions of working with the Haciendas. The meeting of the minds amid mountains and desert proved to be fruitful for all concerned.

Western soul couldn’t be defined any more clearly than it is on the timeless opener, “Midnight Dream,” with David Berzansky’s sighing pedal steel Gonzalez’s crisply stroked Telecaster cruising along over a simmering Stax/Volt groove laid down by drummer Dale Daniel and bassist Hank Maninger, and a Gaffney vocal that sounds like it was cut late at night in the back seat of Hank Williams’ Cadillac. The song was a three-way collaboration between Gonzalez, Gaffney and Jeb Schoonover, the guy who brought them together and now manages the band. The impression deepens with each successive song. While “What’s Wrong With Right” would seem to bring out the Alabama-born producer’s inner hillbilly, it isn’t hard to imagine this country heartbreak ballad becoming its R&B equivalent if Penn were to hand it to a soul man like Bobby Purify. Gonzalez then shows that he’s no slouch as a soul singer himself as he takes the lead vocal on “Keep It Together,” another gem from the Gonzalez-Gaffney-Schoonover partnership.

From there, five more originals, including the Gonzalez-penned honky-tonk tunes “The Last Time” and “The Warning,” and Gaffney’s elegiac “If Daddy Don’t Sing Danny Boy,” are interspersed with an equal number of inventive takes on some of Gaffney and Gonzalez’s favorite oldies — the Penn-Spooner Oldham classics “Cry Like a Baby” and “It Tears Me Up,” Charlie Rich’s “Rebound” and “Life’s Little Ups and Downs,” and Gamble & Huff’s “Cowboys to Girls.” It doesn’t get any tastier, or more heartfelt, than this stuff, which reveals a couple of utter pros at their most committed.

Gaffney split his time between Dave Alvin’s Guilty Men and his own band the Cold Hard Facts before becoming a Hacienda Brother. The veteran musician, who cut his teeth on the eclectic fare spun by Wolfman Jack on XERB before getting his start backing the likes of Webb Pierce and Ferlin Husky in a Toronto bar, explains that, “I was always a big R&B fan, and I also like steel guitar, so I couldn’t see why the combination wouldn’t work.” Gaffney is a colorful character who throws out one-liners the way he once threw left jabs as the 1967 Los Angeles Golden Gloves champ. Talking about his partner’s prolific output, for example, he quips, “Dave will write songs about his toenails if you give him a chance.” Discussing Gonzalez and Penn’s mutual passion for working on cars, Gaffney offers, “They’re both greasers. They’ll spot some ol’ pile of shit in the middle of a field and act like they’ve seen a girl for the first time.” Although he plays the accordion and acoustic guitar, Gaffney is a closet hard rocker. “Our drummer,” he notes, “has a bunch of songs on one of those Pod things that he’s labeled ‘Gaffney’s Choices’—AC/DC, UFO and the Pogues.” But when this inveterate wise-ass steps up to the mic and opens his mouth, he can break your heart in the first four bars.

Gonzalez is the yang to Gaffney’s yin. The longtime Paladins bandleader and studio rat practically vibrates with sincerity and good vibes. “I knew Gaff for a long time and really admired him,” Dave explains. “He was one of the best singers I’d heard in the Southern California area, and pretty much in the whole roots scene. He also wrote some good songs and put out a couple real nice records. At first we didn’t really plan on havin’ a band—we just dug hangin’ out with each other and had a mutual respect for a lot of the same music. But every time we got together, somethin’ good would come out of it — we’d write a song or play a good gig — and we’d have a ball just hangin’ out. Then Dan Penn heard the demo of our song ‘I’m So Proud,’ and he dug it. He got involved because we weren’t signed to a big label and we were doin’ it on our own terms. It was a refreshing sound to him, and it was a refreshing thing for Gaff and me, too, to just have new blood and new ideas. It still feels that way. We played 300 gigs in the last two years, and that really got our sound together. We also took a big step with our songwriting. We’re really proud of our new record.”

The Hacienda Brothers took shape in the most natural way imaginable. While working as a roots music promoter, Tucson resident Schoonover formed a friendship with Gonzalez, whose guitar playing he’d long admired, and the two got together whenever Gonzalez was in Tucson to spin obscure platters they’d picked up in thrift shops and talk about music. “On one such night of nonstop record listening,” Schoonover recalls, “we started off with the saddest of sad honky-tonkers, only to end up at about 2 a.m. listening to a string of down-and-out soul singers. Dave and I looked at each other and said, ‘Man if only a band could play what we’ve been listening to tonight, and how cool would that be?’ Of course, the next question was ‘Who would be the singer?’ In unison we answered, ‘Chris Gaffney.’”

The dream became reality at Schoonover’s 40th birthday party, which both Gonzalez and Gaffney attended. “Little did I know it was Gaffney’s birthday on the same day,” Gonzalez says with a laugh. Both eventually stepped up for the inevitable jam session, and the spontaneous experience made them want to work together. “They were immediately joined at the hip musically,” Jeb remembers. “It’s probably because they are total opposites that they fit together so perfectly. But once they got together in Tucson to write songs and record them at my house, it was all so natural. It was if all of their years of performing had led them back to this place. Chris had gone to junior high and part of high school in Tucson, and Dave’s family on his father’s side was from Tucson, so in a sense, both of them came home to form the Hacienda Brothers.”

Who would’ve thought that Country Road and Soul Boulevard would intersect out in the Arizona desert? You won’t find this crossroads on any map, but it’s right here in the grooves of What’s Wrong With Right.

OFFICIAL ARTIST WEB SITE

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Hear the interview on NPR's Fresh Air with Terri Gross here.

AmericanaRoots.com - Feature, January 2007

Metroland, Albany, NY - Best of 2006
#5. Hacienda Brothers, What's Wrong With Right.
"The Hacienda Brothers play deep, burnished country-soul, fulfilling the Cosmic-American-Music promise that Gram Parsons made to the world but only hinted at occasionally before becoming a smacked-out hippie-generation casualty. Country and soul are comfortable bedfellows here: Ray Price, Merle Haggard, Quiet Storm, and Muscle Shoals. The last time I saw guitarist Dave Gonzalez, he was pinned to the back corner of the Ale House like some feral cat—Brylcreemed hair in his face and slashing out mongrel roots & roll with the Paladins. This is different than that."

Jim Musser’s top 20 albums of the year- 2006
10. Hacienda Brothers - What’s Wrong With Right" - Proper American "The brothers — goosebump-inducing singer/squeezebox champ Chris Gaffney and The Paladins’ Dave Gonzalez — broached the concept of Western Soul on their Dan Penn-produced, eponymous debut, but this gnarly beast (again with Penn at the knobs plus tunesmithing) slam-dunks the dream...." - Iowa Press Citizen, December 2006

"...You may wonder how I can call parts of What’s Wrong with Right soul, when there are no horns to speak of (one trumpet on “It Tears Me Up”), admittedly not enough backup vocalizing, and all that countrified instrumentation. Can a steel guitar or accordion break really fill the shoes of Memphis horns? It is a strange anomaly, maybe a little bit of genius on the part of the Hacienda Brothers band; much credit goes to the songwriting and song selection, the arrangements and playing, but give hefty acknowledgement to Chris Gaffney’s soulful singing. Dave Gonzalez more than holds his own on his three tracks (he just kills “Rebound,” a perfect Paladins number), but Gaffney is really in his element wringing soulful intent, with a craggy voice that may seem somewhat strained and imprecise but, upon closer listening, is hitting every damn note right where it lives...." - AVRev.com, October, 2006.

Stereophile, Sept. 2006, read it here.

"...Think George Jones fronting the Flying Burrito Brothers; add a windswept spaghetti Western ("Son of Saguaro") and a rousing Gamble-Huff cover ("Cowboys to Girls") and you've got cosmic American music for the millenium." - ****, Hal Horowitz, American Songwriter, Sept. 2006

"...Alex Chilton’s rock soulsters the Box Tops, and eternal soulster Charlie Rich with Tex-Mex, spaghetti western and Irish ale. Somehow it all ends up in the right place." - Chuck Eddy, HARP MAGAZINE

"Terrific musicians, dripping with inventiveness and integrity; I can’t think of another newish band I like so much. I just love their “Cowboys to Girls,” I couldn’t get over how screwed up the world was that I was sitting there with about seventy people who paid, I think, twenty bucks, while a bit uptown, 20,000 people were jumping up and down to Madonna for $375 a ticket. Anyway, once again, trust me on the Hacienda Brothers' new CD, here " - Eric Alterman, MSNBC.com

They've knocked around the business for a while, and their hard-won experience is evident in Chris Gaffney's pleading vocals and Dave Gonzalez' Western-tinged guitar work. A production boost from soul songwriting hero Dan Penn, a stellar steel guitarist and a sturdy rhythm section really make these nuggets sparkle. - CMT.com

"...Fans of old-school soul and rough-hewn honky-tonk need look no further than this terrific merger of those two American music styles. - Michael Berick, No Depression

Hollywood Reporter, Live Show Review

Blogcritics Review - read it here.

Take Country Back Review - read it here.

Stylus Magazine - read it here.



 

 

 

 

 

The Hacienda Brothers - What's Wrong With Right

 



ALL TOUR DATES CANCELLED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE.

For further information on the Hacienda Brothers, please contact Jeb Schoonover.

 

Copyright Proper Records, LLC 2005-2006