Some 50 years ago, Ray Benson formed Asleep at the Wheel in order to play western swing music at a time when the genre had lost much of its earlier popularity. A half century later, the Texas-based band is still keeping that sound alive. The eight-piece band does it by staying constantly on the road and bringing this joyous music to live audiences.
Western swing may seem like a narrow subgenre of country
music, but it can encompass a lot. At City Winery, Asleep at the Wheel covered
a range from Bob Wills' fiddle tune "Take Me Back to Tulsa," Louis
Jordan's big-band "Choo Choo Ch'Boogie," and novelty songs like Charlie
Ryan's "Hot Rod Lincoln." Many original songs, including "Miles
and Miles of Texas," expanded and refreshed the scope beyond the music's
golden era. This was accomplished by having multiple switchable leads on each
song. Benson and Katie Shore provided strong lead vocals, Shore and Eli Bishop
headed the front line on many songs with their fiddles, and pedal steel player Cindy
Cashdollar, pianist Connor Forsyth and saxophonist Joey Colarusso injected
leads, all with the support of bassist Josh Hoag, and drummer Jason Baczynski.
Granted, it did not look like Asleep at the Wheel was reaching a new audience. Most of the audience at City Winery looked like they had been following the band for all of its 50 years. The fans were familiar with the closing song, "Happy Trails," which Roy Rogers sang at the end of his weekly television show more than five decades ago. While western swing is not breaking new ground in the music scene, Asleep at the Wheel demonstrated that for dad-rock revelers, this music is solid and timeless.
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The Manhattan Beat covers New York City's live music developments as they happen. All photographs are by Everynight Charley Crespo, except when noted otherwise. For a list of Manhattan venues that are presenting live music regularly, swing the desktop cursor to the right and click on the pop-up tab "Where to Find Live Music." For a listing of upcoming concerts for live audiences, visit The Manhattan Beat's July 2021 calendar.

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