Dave Insley
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Dave Insley

Austin, Texas, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2004 | INDIE

Austin, Texas, United States | INDIE
Established on Jan, 2004
Band Americana Singer/Songwriter

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Music

Press


"PUBLICITY, USA:"

5000 OAK BLUFF COURT
ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30350
770-804-9555
MPMEDIA@BELLSOUTH.NET
Click title to see more. - MARK PUCCI MEDIA


"Interview with Dave Insley―STEPHEN RAPID"

To read full interview, click title. - Lonesome Highway May 11, 2016


"WOLFGANG DOEBELING reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"If Marty Robbins had brought out the spiritual aspects and abandoned any attempts at rhyming in his Gunfighter Ballads he might have come up with 'Arizona Territory, 1904.’“ • To read full review, click title. - Rolling Stone Magazine German edition, July 2016


"KEVIN WIERZBICKI reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Having spent significant amounts of time in Arizona and his current home of Austin, Texas, singer/songwriter Dave Insley is more than just someone who’s music is infused with the legends, lore and sounds of the Southwest; he is the Southwest." • To read full review, click title. - Axs.com May 13, 2016


"NICK DALTON reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Texas swing from the man in the big black hat with the big, dark voice" • To read full review, click title. - Maverick magazine, July 2016


"CHRIS SPECTOR reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"This is a dead, solid perfect modern honky tonk record that'll keep the party going out in the parking lot well after last call." • To read full review, click title. - Midwest Record Recap, April 19, 2016


"GREG VICTOR reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Kinda makes me wish I had a Dave Insley lunchbox to help face the world on a daily basis." • To read full review, click title. - Parcbench Live, April 18, 2016


"RUDIE HUMPHREY reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"...refreshingly old fashioned, a blessed relief from the plague of 'bro' country sweeping the genre." • To read full review, click title. - Fatea Magazine, March 30, 2016


"STEPHEN RAPID reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Those who are coming to him for a first time should enjoy this well packaged album which puts a lot of releases on major labels to shame"  • To read full review, click title. - Lonesome Highway, March 25, 2016


"JOHN CONQUEST reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Insley has a great voice, I mean who doesn’t love a full, rich country baritone, but it’s his perfectly understated, never in your face, conversational style that makes him so effortlessly engaging." • To read full review, click title. - 3rd Coast Music, March 22, 2016


"JEFF BURGER reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"God knows, Austin has its share of fine musicians. Even in that crowd, though, Insley ranks as a standout performer." • To read full review, click title. - No Depression • March 18, 2016


"TOM CLARKE reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Dave Insley provides the ideal old American soundtrack." • To read full review, click title. - Elmore Magazine, April 19, 2016


"ALAN HARRISON reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"he comes from the ‘quality over quantity' school of songwriting; as he can really tell an eloquent story in a very simple way; always holding your attention until the very final note" • To read full review, click title. - The Rocking Magpie, April 19, 2016


"JOHN SWENSON reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Just the Way that I Am is perfectly balanced between the sturdy baritone in which Insley sings his songs and straightforward, old-school C&W accompaniment that frames them." • To read full review, click title. - Stereophile Magazine July 2016


"TIM STEGALL reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"Firmest command of traditional Texas country music on the contemporary scene? On fourth LP Just the Way I Am, Dave Insley makes an airtight case for himself" • To read full review, click title. - Austin Chronicle, April 22, 2016


"JOHN KEREIFF reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"As much old fashioned charm as 'Just The Way That I Am' has, there’s an effortless and relentless swing to this disc that’s impossible not to like." • To read full review, click title. - gonzo online! May 1st


"WWW.ROOTSTIME.BELGIUM reviews 'Just the Way That I Am'"

"IT SHOULD BE NO SURPRISE THAT DAVE INSLEY'S ALBUM 'JUST THE WAY THAT I AM' MAY BECOME A STRONG CANDIDATE FOR A 2016 GRAMMY AWARD AS BEST COUNTRY RECORD." • To read full review, click title. - ―www.rootstime.belgium


"Chris Spector reviews Call Me Lonesome"

"At the very least, this guy knows how to genre splice, at best, this guy is so deceptively original that it just blows your mind. Starting off with what seems like a dose of same old same old Americana, a wild honky tonk wind starts blowing through the proceedings and you know you are on to something special. With a mix of players like Rosie Flores, Grievous Angels and other back up aces, Insley pulls together his lessons from 20 years of country punk, newgrass and anti-Nashville and makes the kind of set you have to drop everything and tell your pals about. A new book on Americana is now being written. Hot."
- Midwest Record Recap, Feb 2005


"Bill Frater reviews Call Me Lonesome"

"Out of the ashes of Arizona's Trophy Husbands comes this great solo release from Dave Insley. He jumps right out of the gate with the hard tonkin' “There's Gonna Be A Few Changes” with the line “I'm expanding my vocabulary beyond the words ‘Yes dear'”. I realize this may be the only song I have to hear to love this CD. But there's quite a few more great songs bouncing around a little with some bluegrass, ragtime and even some R&B. He has a deep baritone that reminds me of Jr. Brown, only Insley's voice has more character. It's the honky tonk that carries the show with some able support from sometimes-Guilty Man Rick Shea. This guy's got the goods! "
- Freight Train Boogie, April 2005


"Country Music That Doesn't Glitter, But Is Honky Tonk Gold, by Nat Hentoff"

Years ago, traveling through the South on the Earl Scruggs-Lester Flatt band bus, I was struck -- at an outdoor concert in a small Alabama milltown -- by the intense attentiveness of the working class audience. "Sure," the dobro player said to me, back on the road again. "We know who they are. We tell them about their lives."

This classic conversational sound of country music isn't heard much anymore on the mainstream country radio stations. Exemplifying that commercial culture, the Country Music Association's self-celebrating awards show, which was televised on ABC in July, had no room for Merle Haggard. The often raucous Hank Williams Jr was on hand, but if his legendary father were still here, he would have been venerated during the evening but not have fitted into the clangorous rock-pop-laced commotion of much of the show.

However, coming upon a new self-produced release, "Here With You Tonight" (Amazon.com and Milesofmusic.com) by singer-songwriter Dave Insley, I was again listening to stories one could hear at the tables -- as well as on the bandstands -- of honky-tonks. Indeed, a promotional sheet accompanying the CD suggests: "File under Americana / Honky Tonk."

Mr. Insley, who gives his cellphone number on that sheet, is based in Austin, Texas, but often on the road. His recording immediately held my attention not by showboating, but through naturally flowing rhythms and stories of everyday life and loss told in a warm, unhurried and sometimes wry voice of experience: "Well I cashed in my old life for the one that you see now, it don't mean that I'm a loser, it just means that I know how." Setting a scene that I expect will resonate with many listeners, as it did with me, Mr. Insley sings: "I've seen the look that flickers across your eyes when you tell me things are fine. I can't help but realize, that you and I are living on borrowed time."

Born in Junction City, Kansas in 1961, Mr. Insley was raised on a wheat farm. While his father worked that farm, his mother waited tables at a nearby truck stop. Growing up, he listened to their record collection of Merle Haggard, Buck Owens, Bob Wills and other storytellers; and by the time he was 12, he was playing the guitar, writing and singing songs.

Two years later, the family moved to Arizona, and by the age of 22 Mr. Insley was leading a band, Chaingang -- "Playing traditional country music," he recalls, "for punk rock fans." Puzzling, but critically acclaimed, Chaingang resounded in Phoenixs succeeded by the Flagstaff-based Politics or Pontiacs, which toured Europe for six weeks in 1988. (He still has a European following.)

Back in Phoenix, leading other combos -- in 2000, the Arizona Republic called one of them that city's "Best Roots Band" -- Mr. Insley eventually decided to move on to Austin, "to see how my music holds up to broader audiences. Also, like my spiritual homeland, Arizona, the lifestyle here is very Southwestern, and the cost of living is low."
His two albums so far --"Call Me Lonesome" and "Here With You Tonight"-- have done well on independent stations that report to the Americana (AMA) and Freeform American Roots (FAR) charts. There's still a U.S. audience for country music without the glitter. And although Mr. Insley hasn't toured Europe since 1988, his sets make the Top 10 on the EuroAmericana chart. With pride, he tells me, "we're on about 50 European stations, and I get fan mail & autograph requests from Italy, Germany, England & Spain." "Roots" country music has long had audiences in various parts of the world, Japan among them; and years ago, listening to tapes a musicologist had collected in remote parts of Africa, I heard a yodeling tribute to Jimmie Rodgers ("the singing brakeman") who infused black blues he'd heard riding the rails with country music.

Mr. Insley plays about 150 shows a year, mostly on the road -- in cities where he's been performing for at least six or seven years (from Sacramento to Nashville, as well as festivals in New Jersey & Pennsylvania). He tells me excitedly that Dave Insley & his Careless Smokers (he used to be a forest fire fighter) will perform Thursday at the Rodeo Bar, 375 Third Avenue in New York. (Show starts at 10 pm -- and, as befits a man who produces his own records, gives out his cellphone number and doesn't have an entourage or publicist, he adds that there is no cover charge.)

I asked Mr. Insley where his songs come from. "Sometimes," he said, "I write to rid myself of my demons, and also because the things I create are sometimes my only companions. And I write because it makes me feel better." As for the song about cashing in his old life, he recalls, "I wrote it in a trance 15 years ago. Never knew how true the words would sound to me at a completely different time in my life." Of the other songs he wrote for "Here With You Tonight," Mr. Insley told me: "By the time I had recorded them, the words had all taken on new meanings for me." As his life - Wall Street Journal, October 10th 2006


"David Cantor reviews Call Me Lonesome"

"Dave Insley's 'Call Me Lonesome' should help free country music from its negative stereotype of lacking lyrical depth. Recorded in Phoenix--not Nashville, or even Austin--it opens with a tune more conventional than the rest of the disc turns out to be. Insley’s wit really kicks in with the second song, "I’m Afraid of Dyin’." Adopting personas that trivialize the most profound human questions, he achieves an odd pathos: We wonder what forces could grind down someone’s moral and intellectual life to such a nub, yet leave at the core a smoldering human spirit capable of igniting into expressive flame. The album is an idiosyncratic take on the American male out of touch with his emotions, but with melody, solid arrangements, and wonderful details. "Cowboy Lullaby" is particularly affecting, the above-mentioned pathos cutting through unsentimental images of cigarettes and creosote--if I’ve ever heard that word in a song before, I can’t remember where. Whether or not you’re already a country guy or gal, you won’t regret giving this disc a listen." - Soundstage, July 2005


"Jim Caliguri previews Dave Insley at the Hole in the Wall"

Although The Arizona Republic named him "Best Songwriter 2005," Dave Insley recently relocated to Austin. He’s been gigging incessantly ever since, behind his latest slab of country rock, "Here With You Tonight". Combining the best of the Bakersfield sound & two-steppin’ beats, with his own desert-bent sense of humor, which leads him to a singular place somewhere between Dwight Yoakam and Dave Alvin.
- Austin Chronicle, Aug 24th 2006


"Ken Rosenbaum reviews Call Me Lonesome"

"The baritone voice is rich, resonant and warm, instantly winning favor with listeners. The 10 songs on this disc, all solo creations of Insley, who writes both the words and music, are perfect vehicles for his smooth delivery, and the selection showcases his wide range, from bluegrass to raw honky-tonkers to storytelling ballads. Insley is a veteran of the music scene, honing his talents since the mid-'80s. In recent years, he performed with the newgrass group the Nitpickers and the wilder and eclectic Trophy Husbands. None of them achieved the recognition that Insley is likely to reach on his own, if this release is an indication. Now, he claims that his area of specialization is Americana. Call it country by any other name, but it's fresh and surely original. Highlights on this are the title track, a gorgeous duet with Rosie Flores on "Maricopa Mountains" and the pure fun rave-up, "Roy Boy."
Ken Rosenbaum, Scripps Howard News Service, April 11 2005
- Scripps Howard News Service, April 11 2005


"John Conquest reviews Here With You Tonight"

You can take the boy out of Arizona, but can you take the Arizona out of the boy? Though he doesn't make a big deal of it, in fact there's no mention I can find of where it was made, I deduce from the recording and mixing credits to Alex Otto, bass player with Tempe's legendary Flathead, that Insley brought this album with him when he moved from Phoenix to Austin. Certainly there's nothing about it that would lead anyone to reflexively think 'Texas,' and not just because there's no fiddle in the band and no song with 'Texas' in the title. Well, there is the only cover, Gene Autry's South Of The Border, featuring Rosie Flores, but then Phoenix is closer to Mexico than Austin. No, this one is obviously the work of a singer and songwriter who, psychologically if no longer physically, is from somewhere much closer to Bakersfield than Barton Springs. And I mean the real thing, not 'Buck meets the Beatles' bullshit. Insley, whose odyssey has included a number of Arizona bands, of which the Trophy Husbands lasted long enough to make a couple albums, seems squarely in the tradition and yet, like so many Arizona artists, a breed noted for their eccentricity, there's something just a little off-center and idiosyncratic about his version. The result is that, while the outstanding God Loves The Working Man , with fabulous lead guitar by Dave Gleason, sounds like an old Merle Haggard original, Insley's confident baritone, assured songwriting and command of the nuances of Real Country, plus a dash of Arizona weirdness, mark him out as a modern master of the style. Call Me Lonesome was a splendid debut, this, also featuring Rick Shea on steel, plus a raft of other excellent musicians whose names I probably should be familiar, is even better. - Third Coast Music, August 2006


"Devin Grant reviews Call Me Lonesome"

"It's one thing to sound like the legendary Willie Nelson. There are a few lesser singers out there whose vocal stylings resemble the Red-headed Stranger's. It is another thing entirely though, when your songwriting talent also begins to resemble Nelson's genius. To be fair, Dave Insley hasn't quite written anything as monumental as "Crazy," but one listen to the Arizona singer-songwriter's original compositions on "Call Me Lonesome" shows that Insley is doing pretty well, all things considered. Insley does indeed sound like Nelson when he sings, but there is also a hint of Junior Brown's growl in Insley's vocals. "Call Me Lonesome" is full of genuinely good country songs such as "There's Gonna Be a Few Changes," "Cowboy Lullaby" and "Just Call Me Lonesome." The album's best tune, "Maricopa Mountains," features Insley singing a duet with Rosie Flores, while other songs find members of the Dave Alvin Band, The Refreshments, and Dead Hot Workshop sitting in. Best of all, "Call Me Lonesome" is one of those rare
releases that modern country music fans and diehard old school "alt-country" geeks can listen to together. Keep an eye on Insley as he breaks out of the Southwest. The guy seems to have what it takes to be a star."
- Charleston Post & Courier, Jan 13 2005


"Polyphonia review"

"The long awaited solo debut from Arizona Americana artist Dave Insley shines with talent. Dave's down home voice and oustanding songwriting skills create an album of pure pleasure. The CD captures your attention from the first notes to the last with an outstanding variety of tunes. There is something here for everyone--ballads, honky-tonk, rock and roll and pure country. The title track, "Just Call Me Lonesome" is arguably one of the best country songs ever written. This is a CD you will definitely want to add to your collection! Dave Insley knows how to write a song. His lyrics are clever, quirky, fun to listen to; his melodies are haunting, or toe-tapping, or just plain bouncy; and he can really, really sing them. With a thundering baritone voice that commands attention and yet remains as comfortable and homey as any weekend honky-tonker, Insley sells his own songs with a precision and style that only a very few other singer/songwriters manage. With "Call Me Lonesome," his first solo CD, this former Nitpicker and Trophy Husband demonstrates every one of his formidable skills, which also include producing the disc. Nashville may never take notice of guys like Dave. The mainstream will probably never realize what it's missing. But every time I meet someone who says they like country music, I recommend Dave Insley. Dave certainly puts the western back in country; but he's no retro artist. This disc is sharply modern, even as it embraces ancient folk music themes, such as family stories, lost love, and, of course, death. It swings, rocks a little, and remains wholly country. Americana lovers rejoice. Arizona Country is catching up with Texas Country. Dave Insley leads the pack. Highly Recommended!"
- Polyphonia UK, May 2005


"David Cantor reviews Here With You Tonight"

I keep wondering what makes Dave Insley’s Here With You Tonight so much fun to listen to, since it inhabits entirely familiar musical forms without significant innovation. It must be Insley’s resonant & slightly quirky voice, his interesting lyrics, and the quick tempos & sharp backup musicians that spruce up standard chord progressions-notably the steel guitar of Rick Shea, a talented veteran. In other words, its just plain well done.
At first, the lyrics sound like familiar on-the-road and I-love-Jesus country material. But, working with unusually lengthy lines, Insley gives fresh details, expanding and subverting old formulas. In "Borrowed Time," rather than the got-to-get-back-to-my-good-ol’-mountain-home cliché, he sings,
There’s some things that you don’t understand, and I can’t bring myself to tell you
I’ve been livin’ on the land, but I can’t seem to help that I’m still blue….
Taking on Christianity in "God Loves the Working Man," he is bold and funny without risking a cross-burning. His casually detached singing leaves melodramatic self-indulgence out of the picture. For Insley, life is beautiful and rich more because of pain than despite its disappointments, which we acknowledge and transcend. Zen country music, anyone?
Produced by Insley, and mixed by Insley & Alex Otto, the album has clear sound that showcases Insley’s strong-but-not-bombastic baritone singing and thereby clearly sets forth the fine lyrics. This makes sense, Insley having been named Arizona’s Best Songwriter in 2005 by the state’s major newspaper. But you also hear Shea, the other good players, and guest vocalists Amanda Cunningham and Rosie Flores at just-right levels. A party atmosphere keeps the sophisticated lyrics from making the album a head-scratching affair. - Soundstage, October 2006


"David Cantor reviews Here With You Tonight"

I keep wondering what makes Dave Insley’s Here With You Tonight so much fun to listen to, since it inhabits entirely familiar musical forms without significant innovation. It must be Insley’s resonant & slightly quirky voice, his interesting lyrics, and the quick tempos & sharp backup musicians that spruce up standard chord progressions-notably the steel guitar of Rick Shea, a talented veteran. In other words, its just plain well done.
At first, the lyrics sound like familiar on-the-road and I-love-Jesus country material. But, working with unusually lengthy lines, Insley gives fresh details, expanding and subverting old formulas. In "Borrowed Time," rather than the got-to-get-back-to-my-good-ol’-mountain-home cliché, he sings,
There’s some things that you don’t understand, and I can’t bring myself to tell you
I’ve been livin’ on the land, but I can’t seem to help that I’m still blue….
Taking on Christianity in "God Loves the Working Man," he is bold and funny without risking a cross-burning. His casually detached singing leaves melodramatic self-indulgence out of the picture. For Insley, life is beautiful and rich more because of pain than despite its disappointments, which we acknowledge and transcend. Zen country music, anyone?
Produced by Insley, and mixed by Insley & Alex Otto, the album has clear sound that showcases Insley’s strong-but-not-bombastic baritone singing and thereby clearly sets forth the fine lyrics. This makes sense, Insley having been named Arizona’s Best Songwriter in 2005 by the state’s major newspaper. But you also hear Shea, the other good players, and guest vocalists Amanda Cunningham and Rosie Flores at just-right levels. A party atmosphere keeps the sophisticated lyrics from making the album a head-scratching affair. - Soundstage, October 2006


Discography

Dave Insley "Just the way That I Am" D.I.R., 2016 

Featuring: Kelly Willis, Redd Volkaert, Dale Watson, Rick Shea, Elizabeth McQueen, Danny B. Harve, Billy Brent Malkus,  Hubbard, Beth Chrisman, Daniel Jones, Charlie Irwin, Bobby Snell, Jimmy Shortell, Joey Colarusso

Dave Insley "West Texas Wine" D.I.R., 2008
#2 FAR Chart
#13 Euroamericana Chart

Dave Insley "Here With You Tonight" Redeye, 2006
Featuring Rosie Flores, Amanda Cunningham, Pat Johnson, Dave Gleason, Rick Shea
Debuted # 1 on Freeform American Roots (FAR) chart, remained # 1 for eight weeks
Debuted #11 on Euroamericana chart
Top Ten Local Releases of 2006, Austin American Statesman
2006 Albums of the Year, Third Coast Music
# 3 Male Artist of the Year 2006, Third Coast Music

Dave Insley “Call Me Lonesome” Redeye, 2005
with special guests Rosie Flores, Rick Shea, Diana Lee, the Peacemakers
Debuted # 5 on the FAR chart and reached # 19 on the Americana chart
# 17 on the Valley Tribune Newspaper's Top 25 Albums of All-Time by Arizona artists
Top Ten Debuts of 2005, Third Coast Music
Arizona's Best Songwriter 2005, Arizona Republic newspaper

Josh Davis "Casino" 2005
Dave duets with Texas artist Josh Davis on the Faron Young classic "The Great Chicago Fire" on Davis' 2005 debut

Trophy Husbands “Walk With Evil” Hayden's Ferry Records 2003
Produced by Insley, "Walk With Evil" features Dave on guitar, vocals and songwriting

Live from Studio 2A KXCI Tucson Public Radio Compilation, 2002
Insley's band, Trophy Husbands are featured for one song on this compilation

Trophy Husbands “Dark & Bloody Ground” Rustic Records, 2001
Insley's first album with the Trophy Husbands features Dave on guitar, vocals and songwriting

Nitpickers “Nitpickers” Rustic Records, 2000
Before Trophy Husbands, Dave led a bluegrass band. This self-titled debut was their only release
selected Best Roots Band, 2000 by the Arizona Republic

Tammy Patrick “White Album” Rustic Records, 2000
Dave co-produced this album and is featured on guitar & harmony vocals

Country Pure Compilation, World International Records, 1999
One of Dave's self-produced tracks appears on this compilation

Dave Insley “Halo 4 Satan” 1998
Limited edition CD, self-released & out-of-print

Dave Insley “Big Wheels Must Roll” 1997
Limited edition CD, self-released & out-of-print

Politics or Pontiacs “Ghawazee Steps” 1988
Another early Insley band. out-of-print

Chaingang “Reunion” 1987
Dave's first release, cassette only
Self-released & out-of-print

Photos

Bio

Dave Insley’s fourth solo release, Just The Way That I Am, shows him in peak form—recording with some of Austin’s finest musicians, writing with maturity and confidence, and singing like the church is on fire!  His songs form a carefully crafted story-arc, exploring the outposts of love, remorse, heartbreak, nostalgia and hope, all set before crumbling backdrops of honky-tonks and hotel rooms. The album offers shuffles and ballads, of the style Dave is known for, and the natural flow of his story-songs reflects his broad tastes and skill.  

Dave’s previous album releases are West Texas Wine (2008), Here With You Tonight (2006), and Call Me Lonesome (2005).  He has lived in Austin, Texas for ten years, but also claims Arizona as his lifelong home.  Dave's unique songwriting and deep baritone have earned him a reputation as one of the Southwest's most original artists, and as one of the region’s most authentic country voices.

His new release, Just The Way That I Am, showcases Dave’s most mature writing and nuanced performance to date. Years of playing the Texas dance hall circuit and the Austin club scene have made a dangerous weapon of Dave Insley’s Careless Smokers. In 2013, they began a weekly residency at a new Austin club, the White Horse Saloon.  Unless they’re on tour, they continue to play to a packed house every Saturday at the White Horse from 8 - 10pm.

Dave and his family live in downtown Austin. He is a dedicated husband and father of four beautiful children.

Band Members