Roots-rocking follow-up to 2016’s acclaimed SoulSlide finds the Ohio-born, Texas-based artist expanding his musical playing field with help from friends Ray Wylie Hubbard,
Patty Griffin, and co-producer “Scrappy” Jud Newcomb
Album receiving early press accolades
AUSTIN, Texas — When Jeff Plankenhorn, arguably one of the busiest and most highly regarded guitar players on the Austin music scene, tells you that he “hardly ever takes sideman gigs anymore,” take it with a grain of salt.
Yes, it’s true he’s made a concerted effort to carve out more time for his own solo career ever sinceissuing his breakout second studio set, 2016’s SoulSlide — and he aims to find even more of that “me time” come the May 4, 2018 release of his new album, Sleeping Dogs on Spike Steel Records.
Already the album has received world-class accolades:
Commenting on “Tooth & Nail” (song): “(Ray Wylie) Hubbard’s deadpan and Plankenhorn’s crackling guitar go together like thunder and lightning, a combination consistent with the song’s onimous energy.”
—ROLLING STONE COUNTRY
Commenting on “Tooth & Nail” (video): “An ode to the struggles of the songwriter, with Hubbard contributing the song’s hard-driving hook and (of course) his iconic drawl.” —THE BOOT
Commenting on “Love is Love” (song): “An unhurried reminder of the good and pure. There’s a touch of soul in Plankenhorn’s delivery that nudges that easy-going melody along with a satisfying bounce.”
—WIDE OPEN COUNTRY
Commenting on “Love Is Love” (video): “The ray of love this video, and the song, will inevitably shine down on you.” —AMERICANA HIGHWAYS
“Over the course of the last two decades, Jeff Plankenhorn has worked tirelessly to earn his rep as one of the most reliably can-do, right-dude-for-the-job musicians in Austin, Texas. As an exceptionally talented acoustic, electric, slide, and lap-steel guitarist with a keen understanding of the importance of playing to and for a song rather than all over it, he’s been called on countless times to back a veritable who’s who of Texas and Americana music’s finest singers and songwriters, including Ray Wylie Hubbard, Joe Ely, Eliza Gilkyson, Ruthie Foster, and the late Jimmy LaFave.” —LONE STAR MUSIC
“Jeff Plankenhorn has become something of an Austin institution, sought after by many artists to lend his musical talents to their albums and performances. Calling him a guitarist doesn’t quite do him justice, though. Sure, he’s designed his very own guitar – a custom lap steel guitar called, perhaps not surprisingly, “The Plank”. Give him just about any stringed instrument, however, and he’ll no doubt get it singing… The songs have a wonderful lived-in wanderlust to them, filled with catchy Americana melodies that are served up with airy and freewheeling arrangements. Stylistically, the songs range from the rugged and bluesy ‘Never Again’ to the pop-oriented ‘I Don’t Know Anything’ to the gentle acoustic ballad ‘Further to Fall’.” —TWANGVILLE
But as far as scaling back on the whole sideman thing goes … bear in mind that there’s a big difference between “hardly ever” and never. Namely, the former still leaves the guy just enough wiggle room to happily say “yes” when legends (and friends) on the level of Ray Wylie Hubbard or the Flatlanders need a can-do guitar man for a sold-out theater engagement. Or, say, when fellow A-list Austin sideman “Scrappy” Jud Newcomb — the MVP co-producer of Sleeping Dogs — finds out he can’t make it to a very special Johnny Nicholas gig in Hawaii, and asks “Plank” if he’d be up for subbing for him. Who in their right mind is going to say no to that?
Plankenhorn still selectively takes those kinds of calls not because he gets them, but because he’s earned them. For the better part of the last 17 years, ever since he first moved to Texas with nothing to his name but a Geo Prism, $100, seven guitars and the generous hospitality of Ray and Judy Hubbard, the gifted multi-instrumentalist from Columbus, Ohio has busted ass to prove himself not just able and willing, but above all worthy of playing with the best of the best. And the reason so many song poets like Hubbard and Joe Ely like having Plank at their side is not just because of his prodigious chops on all things stringed (especially those played with a slide), but because of his intuitive knack for knowing when to hold back, always allowing the singer room to land a lyric and go for the proverbial kill. “That’s just part of the skill set I learned very early on: ‘When in doubt, lay out,’” Plankenhorn explains with a chuckle. “That joke about knowing when not to play? It’s true.”
Not surprisingly, that particular skill — along with myriad other lessons in the finer points of songcraft that he’s picked up from sharing stages with the masters — has come to greatly inform Plankenhorn’s own music over the years. But it’s never been more apparent than it is on Sleeping Dogs. Make no mistake: Plank plays a lot of guitar on the album, along with pedal steel, piano, upright bass and seemingly anything else he could lay his hands on during the sessions at the Zone recording studio just outside of Austin. But in stark contrast to SoulSlide, which by his own admission was by design a showcase for his custom-designed lap slide guitar, a patented “Frankenstein” beauty he calls “the Plank,” Sleeping Dogs is first and foremost all about the songs.
“The Plank guitar came from me wanting to mix together the two worlds of bluegrass dobro and the sacred steel tradition, and my whole last album was dedicated to that one instrument — to get it outthere,” he says. “SoulSlide also really helped put me on the map as a solo artist, which is why I’ve moved on to focusing more on doing my own thing and only doing a side gig once in a while when I really want to, with people that I really respect. But now, with Sleeping Dogs, I wanted to take a bigger look at how the whole world of music is available to me; it’s not about just one guitar or sound, but rather about using all of the instruments I play and bringing all of my influences together — and about really wanting to bring my songwriting to the forefront.”
To that end, there are no covers on the new album, but half of the songs were born out of co-writing sessions with a handful of his longtime friends including his co-producer (and bandmate in Austin’s the Resentments) Newcomb, Gabriel Rhodes, Miles Zuniga, Jon Dee Graham, and of course Hubbard — the “Wylie Llama” of Americana/Texas music, who Plankenhorn still credits as his personal gateway to the whole scene. “Pretty much everyone I’ve ever played with is like, one degree of separation away from Ray,” he marvels with a laugh. It was also Hubbard who set Plankenhorn straight years ago when he doubted his own merits as a songwriter.
“I had just started out playing some of my own songs at these little acoustic gigs, but I remember telling him, ‘Ray, I don’t think I should be doing this — I’m just a side guy.’ And he said, ‘Where’s your proof? Are people coming to your shows? Are people listening to your songs? Yes? Well, there’s your proof.’”
Naturally, the song Plankenhorn and Hubbard cooked up together, a satisfyingly greasy howler called “Tooth and Nail,” just happens to be all about the not-for-the-timid troubadour path and the discipline of songwriting, without so much as a grain of sugar to sweeten the pot. “We had already written a good portion of the song when he came back to me and said, ‘It’s like an old cat having kittens / You just crawl under the porch and do it,’ which is a very Ray line,” Plankenhorn says. “But what’s cool is there were other lines where his wife, Judy, was like, ‘Ray must have written that,’ and I was like, ‘Ha, no, that was me!’”
“When I wrote (the title track) ‘Sleeping Dogs,’ I got this image of sleeping dogs lying, and how I need to let shit go,” he explains. “I literally took a lot of things that I’m really bad at or think I’m really bad at, and told myself, ‘If I sing this for a year or two on tour, it may make me better at these things; maybe I won’t take stuff personally, won’t let things get me down.’ And I thought, ‘Maybe somebody else will hear this song and maybe it will help them, too.’ And I really like that idea: I like the idea of writing songs that have a little moral imperative to them.”
Some would call that a sense of purpose. Or, as Hubbard put it best to Plankenhorn way back at the start of his journey, “There’s your proof.”
Tour dates:
Sat., May 5, 8:00 p.m. AUSTIN, TX One 2 One
Wed., May 9, 7:15 p.m. FORTH WORTH, TX The Yard (open for Dirty River Boys)
Thurs., May 10, 8:00 p.m. OKLAHOMA CITY The Blue Door
Sat., May 12, 9:30 p.m. HOUSTON, TX McGonigel’s Mucky Duck
Thurs., May 17, 9:30 p.m. SAN ANTONIO, TX Sam’s Burger Joint (Tom Gillam & The Kosmic)
Fri., May 18, 8:00 p.m. DALLAS, TX All Good Café
Sat., May 19, 1:00 p.m. NEW BRAUNFELS, TX Gruene Hall
Sun., May 20, (showtime TBA) NEW BRAUNFELS, TX Gruene Hall
Fri., May 25, 10:00 p.m. CORPUS CHRISTI, TX House of Rock
Sat., May 26, 8:00 p.m. EDEN, TX Green Apple Arts Center
Fri., June 1, 6:00 p.m. NEW BRAUNFELS, TX The River House
Sat., June 2, 8:00 p.m. LA GRANGE, TX The Bugle Boy
Thurs., June 7, 8:00 p.m. RICHARDSON, TX Six Springs Tavern
Fri., June 8, 9:00 p.m. AUSTIN, TX The Saxon Pub
Sat., June 9, (Time TBA), HOUSTON, TX Gulf Coast Blues Festival
Wed., June 13, 8:00 p.m. DENVER, CO The Soiled Dove (open for Ray Wylie Hubbard)
Thurs., June 14, 8:00 p.m. COLORADO SPRINGS, CO Stargazers (open for Ray Wylie Hubbard)
Fri., June 15, 5:30 p.m. TELLURIDE, CO Reflections Plaza @ Music on the Green
Tues., June 19, 9:30 p.m. AUSTIN, TX Hotel Van Zandt
Thurs., June 21, 8:00 p.m. ATLANTA, TX City Winery (open for Ray Wylie Hubbard)
Fri., June 22, 8:30 p.m. MEMPHIS, TN The Railgarten
Sat., June 23, 7:30 p.m. MARYVILLE, TN The Shed (open for Ray Wylie Hubbard)
Sun., June 24, 7:00 p.m. NASHVILLE, TN The Local
Mon., June 25, 7:30 p.m. LIBERTY, TX Liberty Arts Center
Wed., June 27, 7:30 p.m. UPELO, MS Blue Canoe
Thurs., June 28, 7:30 p.m. BATON ROUGE, LA Dyson House
Fri., June 29, 9:30 p.m. GALVESTON, TX Old Quarter Acoustic Café
Thurs., July 5, 7:00 p.m. SAN MARCOS, TX San Marcos Plaza, Summer in the Park
Fri., July 6, 6:30 p.m. AUSTIN, TX Oskar Blues Brewery
Sat., July 7, (time TBA) MIDLAND, TX Tall City Blues Festival, The Reserve Lounge
Sun., July 8, 10:00 p.m. LUBBOCK, TX The Blue Light
Fri., July 13, 8:00 p.m RICHARDSON, TX Six Springs Tavern
Sat., July 14, 5:15 p.m., FORT WORTH, TX Rockin the River Music @ Panther Island
Thurs., July 19, (time TBA) RED LODGE, MT Roman Theater
Fri., July 20, (time TBA) LIVINGSTON, MT The Attic at Whiskey
Sat., July 21, (time TBA) WIBAUX, MT Beaver Creek Brewery