Joe Ely

Died On This Date (December 15, 2025) Joe Ely / Alt-Country Legend

Photo Credit: Republic Country Club via Wikimedia

Joe Ely, the Texas-born singer, songwriter, and bandleader whose music carried the dust, humor, and hard-earned poetry of the Lone Star State far beyond its borders, has died. He was 78.

Born on February 9, 1947 in Amarillo and raised in Lubbock, Ely came out of a West Texas scene that quietly reshaped American music. Alongside Jimmie Dale Gilmore and Butch Hancock, he co-founded the Flatlanders, a group whose early work planted the seeds for what would later be called progressive country. Though the band’s influence would take decades to fully register, its impact proved lasting and profound.

Ely’s solo career brought that restless West Texas spirit into sharper focus. Beginning with his 1977 self-titled debut, followed by albums like Honky Tonk Masquerade, Down on the Drag, Live Shots, and Letter to Laredo, Ely wrote songs that felt road-tested and lived-in. His music blurred lines between country, rock, folk, and border sounds, delivered with a voice that sounded both conversational and battle-worn. He sang about small towns, long nights, border crossings, and the quiet resolve of people who keep moving forward.

Onstage, Ely earned a reputation as a fearless performer. His shows were physical, loud, and unpredictable, powered by a band that matched his intensity. That same energy caught the attention of the Clash in the late 1970s, leading to shared bills in the UK and a rare cultural exchange that proved Texas songwriting and punk urgency spoke the same language.

Collaboration remained central to Ely’s life in music. He worked with Bruce Springsteen, Linda Ronstadt, Los Lobos, and many others, while repeatedly returning to the Flatlanders for reunions and new recordings that deepened the group’s legacy. Even later in life, albums like Panhandle Rambler, Satisfaction Guaranteed, and Love and Freedom showed an artist still curious, still engaged, and still writing from experience rather than nostalgia.

Joe Ely leaves behind a catalog that reads like a map of American roots music, marked by detours, borderlines, and back roads. His songs remain out there, rolling down the highway, exactly where they belong.

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Died On This Date (May 9, 2009) Stephen Bruton / Austin Music Great

Stephen Bruton
November 7, 1948 – May 9, 2009

Stephen Bruton was a beloved Texas songwriter, guitarist, and producer.   Born in Fort Worth, Bruton’s first big break came at age 22, when he was asked to play in Kris Kristofferson’s band.   Since then, Bruton has been an entertainment jack of all trade.  After many years as a sideman, Bruton stepped out to the front of the stage and became a headliner himself.  As a respected songwriter, he’s written songs for Bonnie Raitt, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Johnny Cash, Jimmy Buffett, Martina McBride and many more.  As a producer, he worked the board for such greats as Joe Ely, Alejandro Escovedo, Hal Ketchum and others.  Bruton also engineered albums by the likes of Ziggy Marley, John Mellencamp and R.E.M. He even had some acting credits, appearing in such films as A Star Is Born, Miss Congeniality, and Heaven’s Gate.  But it was his outstanding guitar work that might end up being his strongest legacy.  Over the years, he’s been heartily invited to play on projects by Elvis Costello, Delbert McClinton, Carly Simon, Kristofferson & Rita Coolidge, and many more.  Bruton was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2007 and succumbed to it in Los Angeles where he was working on the soundtrack to the Jeff Bridges film, Crazy Heart.

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Died On This Date (October 14, 2006) Freddy Fender / Tejano & Country Music Great

Freddy Fender (Born Baldemar Huerta)
June 4, 1937 – October 14, 2006

freddy-fender

Freddy Fender was arguably America’s most popular Tejano star – at least until Selena came along.  Fender is best remembered for his crossover hits of “Wasted Days and Wasted Nights” and “Before the Next Teardrop Falls,” as well as his later work with Los Super Seven and the Texas Tornados.  Born into a traveling circus family, Fender took to entertaining at a very young age.  At 5, he fashioned his first guitar out of a sardine can and screen door wire, and by 10 he was making his first appearances at local radio stations.  In the mid ’50s, after being court martialed and discharged from the Marines, Fender began touring as El Bebop Kid, doing Spanish versions of popular rockabilly and country songs.   In 1959, he recorded “Wasted Days and Wasted Nights,” which quickly became his signature song.  Unfortunately, just as his fame was on the rise, he was arrested for marijuana possession and sent to the notorious Angola prison farm in Louisiana.   He was released three years later and all but retired from music while working as a mechanic.  When Fender made his comeback in 1973, he did so in a big way, with “Before the Next Teardrop Falls” reaching #1 on both the country and pop charts.  Over the next decade Fender charted 21 country hits.  His career experienced yet another comeback when, in the late ‘8os he joined up with Doug Sahm, Flaco Jiminez and Augie Meyers in the Texas Tornados, with whom he won a Grammy for Best Mexican American Performance.  He followed that up with a stint in Los Super Seven, who along with Cesar Rosas, David Hidalgo, Joe Ely, Ruben Ramos and Rick Trevino, won the same Grammy nine years later.  He won his third Grammy in 2001, this time for his own album, La Musica de Baldemar Huerta.  In ailing health in later years, Fender received a kidney transplant from his daughter in 2002, and a liver transplant in 2004.  He died of lung cancer on October 14, 2006 at the age of 69.

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20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Freddy Fender - Freddy Fender