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Max Stalling Downloads
MAX STALLING
10 years…5 cds...respect as a songwriter… top flight band…an expanding and loyal fan base. Not TOO bad of a track record for a guy who never felt he really had any business being in the music business.
“I didn’t even pick up a guitar until graduate school,” notes Max Stalling. After high school in
Then, while listening to
Max Stalling views himself as a songwriter first and as a performer a distant second. This tidbit might come as a surprise to the multitudes of loyal fans that regularly attend his crowded shows.
Stalling composes songs that seem about the here and now yet seem to also have one foot planted in the past. Sporting a vintage LBJ style “open road” hat, which is dangerously close to becoming his trademark, Stalling’s shows are at once intimate and up-close with him chatting up the crowd between songs, and a ‘tour de force’ of sound on the shoulders of his top-shelf band.
With Jeff Howe on drums and percussion, Bryce Clarke on nylon-string guitar, electric guitar and mandolin and Jason Steinsultz swapping between stand-up and electric bass, Stalling brings together a show that blends an old-style country sensibility of danceable ballads with the slightly edgy elements so commonly seen in the “Texas Music” genre. Stalling and troupe seem equally at home on a huge honky-tonk stage in front of 1000 or playing an acoustic set in a tiny 50 seat coffee house.
Even without the benefit of a recent release, Stalling’s attendance numbers have continued to rise. “I chalk it up to the strength of the songs and the strength of my band,” comments Stalling.
Stalling released his 5th cd on June 12, 2007. Titled ‘
Quick math shows this project coming on the heels of a nearly 5 year stretch without a studio-recorded batch of new songs - a near eternity in many circles. “Quite a few things have happened since I put out the ‘One Of The Ways’ disc back in 2002,” muses Stalling. “From a business standpoint, the bankruptcy of the distribution company handling my cds just months after I released ‘One Of The Ways’ really put a damper on my ability to come out with another project…just like it did to lots of other folks in my position. On a personal front, there were a whole slew of things that hit me pretty hard…girl problems, the extended illness and passing away of my father, topped off by an audit by our friendly IRS sure kept me from focusing on songwriting. That was a tough stretch of years.”
Stalling patiently bided his time, gathering a batch of songs that live up to his reputation as a songwriter. “I’m proud of every one of these songs…each for different reasons,” Stalling notes. Indeed, the songs seem to speak to Stalling maturing as a songsmith and vocalist.
With songs in hand, Stalling began to seek out a producer to help shape the overall sound of the project. Max tapped the über-cool “Off-Music Row” insider/outsider R.S. ‘Bobby’ Field to wear the producer’s hat. Field has been at the helm of many-a-hip production job for some of the genre’s most respected singer/songwriters...Todd Snider, Billy Joe Shaver, Allison Moorer, Webb Wilder and Hayes Carll to name but a few. “I talked to quite a ‘who’s-who’ list of people about taking this project on but it wasn’t until I hooked up with R.S. that I realized he was exactly the person I needed for this particular project. R.S. is the whole package… songwriter, gear-head, psychologist, music historian… everything you look for in a producer. Oh, and he’s one of the funniest people I’ve ever met in my life.”
The project was recorded in
In June of 2008 Stalling was awarded a star on the South Texas Music “Walk Of Fame” in
So stands Stalling – poised on the edge of the next chapter in his career: armed with a strong, new cd being enthusiastically received by a loyal and growing fan base, respect from his songwriting peers and a stellar band to back him up.
Not TOO bad for a former snack-food scientist turned songwriter.
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