Garage Rock
Everybody knows
Fred’s Texas Café has great food, but live music? Believe
it.
By CAROLINE
COLLIER
Jennifer
Chandler and Lee Allen have worked hard to add
good live music to the scene at Fred’s.
|
Fredfest
Sat w/Poo Live Crew, Addnerim, Merkin, The Fellow
Americans, Darth Vato, and Confusatron at 915 Currie
St, FW. 817-332-0083. |
About a year ago, when
Terry Chandler and his wife, Jennifer, bought Fred’s Texas
Café from Terry’s parents, the gourmet greasy spoon was
known simply as a great, interesting place to get a
home-cooked or fusion meal. Fred’s is still that place, but
over the past couple of months, the 28-year-old West Seventh
Street-area institution is also becoming great for something
else: live music.
Fred’s has always had some sort of tuneage going on. In
addition to the annual Fredfest charity event, now in its
sixth year, bluesman James Hinkle, country-western
singer-songwriter Hank Hankshaw, and others have played the
joint. Up until recently, however, the music seemed an
afterthought. You went to Fred’s for the come-as-you-are
ambiance or the enormous Fredburger or one of Terry’s rustic
delicacies. Only hardcore fans went to see the bands.
Not that people will stop going to Fred’s just to hang
out and chow down, but in the future you may see more new
faces, folks lounging at one of the picnic tables out back,
there just to see live music. Recent local performers have
come from all over the stylistic map and include fiery
bluegrassers The Electric Mountain Rotten Apple Gang,
southern-fried rockers Jasper Stone, creative Afro-jazz
cover band Barber Mack, indie-metal-heads Sally Majestic,
and others, bands that can hold their own at any live music
venue in town.
Credit for the change is shared by Jennifer, a music
lover and former attorney, along with Lee Allen, a manager
at Fred’s and a musician who hosts the Wednesday night
invitation jams at The Wreck Room and, with drummer Dave
Karnes, runs Rock Camp USA-Fort Worth. Allen also serves as
booking agent. “Terry and Jen are very generous,” he said.
“They love music.” There’s rarely a cover charge, he said,
and bands are normally guaranteed payment, “plus beer and a
Fredburger.”
Allen, a lifelong musician and instructor, knows the
music biz from all sides. When the need for a booking agent
at Fred’s came up, Allen said, “I was already there three
nights a week, so it was a natural choice.” Weather problems
aside, he and the Chandlers have managed to offer solid
line-ups almost every weekend and draw decent crowds.
“Business on the patio has definitely picked up,” Allen
said. The fan reaction to a recent performance by local
country band Eleven Hundred Springs was “incredible — it was
our biggest single night ever.”
The past year hasn’t been easy. Fred’s was burglarized,
then months later almost destroyed by a fire. Also,
entertainment options in the restaurant’s neighborhood have
increased greatly over the past year and a half. “The music
helped me enjoy life during that stressful time,” Jennifer
said.
Fred’s has not only survived but is thriving, a trusty
old friend amid the new clubs and faces around. Staff at
nearby venues appreciate the extra business Fred’s is
bringing to the area. A bartender who goes by the nickname
Jesus from nearby 7th Haven couldn’t ask for more. Fred’s
has “awesome fries and better people,” he said. “We hope
this area will be the new hot spot, and we’re all in it
together.”
To some bands, either tired of playing to the same ol’
crowds at the same ol’ haunts or whose music is hard to
categorize, Fred’s is a perfect fit. “I love playing
Fred’s,” said Confusatron drummer Lucas White. “You get a
wider audience of people — young people, old people,
Democrats, Republicans, independents — everyone.”
To accommodate the bands and the fans who now consider
Fred’s a legitimate venue, Allen and Jennifer turned October
into one long Fredfest, with themed bills on every Saturday
through the end of the month. The first Saturday saw EMRAG,
Jasper Stone, and Kansas bluegrass band The Dewayn Brothers.
The next weekend rocked a little harder, with Stooges cover
band Stoogeaphilia and Austin trio Honky. Last Saturday
featured Jennifer’s favorite jam bands, Catfish Whiskey and
Peach Truck Republic. The finale this weekend will offer a
bill of hard-rocking locals: Poo Live Crew, Addnerim, Merkin,
The Fellow Americans, Darth Vato, and Confusatron.
Earlier this month, San Francisco’s Eric McFadden Trio
played to the usual crowd of cowboys, hippies, and hipsters
that Confusatron drummer White referred to. George Clinton’s
former mandolin player put on a loud, aggressive show; the
wooden stage and wooden surroundings acted as a natural
amplification system. Though in the middle of a
coast-to-coast tour, McFadden and company enjoyed their
Fred’s gig so much that when Jennifer asked them to play an
encore performance the following evening, they jumped at the
chance. McFadden typically never attempts a double-header,
especially on the road. “There’s something special here,” he
said. “Everyone seems so genuine.”