BAND
BIOGRAPHY
The
Weary Boys roots trace back to Humboldt County California where
Darren Hoff, Brian Salvi and Cary Ozanian got their start. In
the beginning Darren, Brian and former lead guitar player Mario
Matteoli left Northern California for Austin, Texas to make a
living playing music. In a place like Austin, of course, aspiring
musicians arrive everyday. Something about The Weary Boys, was
different.
Initially, they toiled in the trenches of a notoriously
competitive music scene. Their first jobs were on street corners
where one of their first tips came from ace Austin bassist Darren
Sluyter, weeks later he was in the band. Two years later the boys
talked Cary into dropping out of collage to replace their first
drummer Cade C. Callahan. Almost immediately, word of the young
California vagabonds began to crisscross the circuits of Austin’s
music scene. With their huge cowboy hats, tattered jeans, and
the infectiously manic combination of telecaster, propulsive rhythm
guitar, demented fiddle and close harmony singing, the young trio
snapped Austin music lovers awake.
In many ways, The Weary Boys seemed to have stepped
out of Austin’s musical past, reminding people of the reasons
Austin first gained fame as the home of outlaw country music in
the 1970s. In rapid succession, street corner gave way to happy
hour, happy hour to opening slot, opening slot to headlining slot,
headlining slot to festival stage.
By the summer of 2001 and the release of their first
album, The Weary Boys had dramatically ascended to the top of
the Austin music scene. Building on their popularity and critical
acclaim in Austin, the boys ventured into neighboring states,
establishing enclaves of support in cities throughout the South
and Southwest, particularly in towns with vibrant interest in
roots music. In the process, they have also opened shows for the
likes of Merle Haggard and Willie Nelson, Leon Russell, The Drive-By
Truckers, Southern Culture on the Skids and many others. They
have played in backyards, front yards, notorious dives, not-so
notorious dives, festival stages and the Angola State Penitentiary
(twice).
In the independent tradition of Austin musicians,
The Weary Boys have maintained control over their music, releasing
a self-produced album every year, and managing themselves. When
banjo phenom Matt Downing joined the band in January 2007 loose
rehearsals turned into loose recording sessions. Those recording
sessions turned in to their sixth release Coalinga, an energetic
mix of new arrangements of traditional and bluegrass tunes along
with two originals.
Texas has been good to the boys and they have returned
the favor. A band of outlaws in an outlaw town in a state that
does things its own way, The Weary Boys continue to remind us
what country music is all about.
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