B I O Pug Johnson, El Cabron
Pug Johnson grew up on the outskirts of Beaumont, Texas, listening to the multicultural soundtrack of a
city flanked by Louisiana, the Big Thicket, and the Gulf Coast. Those influences would resurface years
later on his solo records, coloring Johnson's eclectic version of American roots music, turning him into a
country artist whose songs reach far beyond the genre's borders.
"There's a lot of Cajun music, swamp pop, and New Orleans flair down there," he says of his hometown.
"There's Mexican music, Texas swing, and honky tonk, too. It's a real vibe. Whenever I write songs, I try
to dabble in all those different sounds that have influenced me."
With his second album, El Cabron, Johnson salutes his homeland's traditions while creating his own
musical geography, too. Released on the heels of his acclaimed debut, 2022's Throwed Off and Glad, El
Cabron is an album for roadhouses, dance halls, and the long drive from sin to redemption, anchored by
timeless country twang, humor, and plenty of greased-up groove. Johnson doesn't just nod to his
influences; he reshapes them into something new, finding room for Tejano, barroom boogie-woogie, and
southern soul, too. Tying that diverse sound together is the sharp songwriting of an artist who's built his
audience on the road, playing shows with headliners like Steve Earle, Eli Young Band, Midland, and
Hayes Carl.
El Cabron was recorded between San Antonio and Austin, where Johnson and his wife relocated during
the early 2020s. For a musician who has always taken cues from his surroundings, the Hill Country
proved to be equally influential for Johnson, who found himself leaning into the area's Mexican
influences. "I began working with a group of Austin musicians who could play any style, and we dipped
into some Tex-Mex border music," he says. That inspiration helped fuel tracks like "Last Call (With
Apologies to Terry Allen)," whose mariachi guitars provide the backdrop for a risqué, tongue-in-cheek
narrative about a late-night hookup. Johnson doesn't deliver the song like a smooth-talking ladies' man;
instead, he turns himself into a hapless and humorous narrator, a role he revisits throughout the record.
"Would you like a beer for the road?" he asks as he exits the bar and stumbles toward his truck with a
woman in town. Then, without missing a beat, he adds, "Before we get started, would you be a darlin' and
give my breathalyzer a blow?"
Humor is one of the central characters of El Cabron. Like John Prine and Bobby Bare before him,
Johnson blurs the dividing line between silliness and seriousness, writing songs that deliver punchlines
one minute and earth-shaking truths the next. "I love writing songs where the narrator is a lovable fuck-
up, like a mix between a Hunter S. Thompson-based character and Gus from Lonesome Dove," he
explains. That character — El Cabron himself — reappears often, making appearances on the album's title
track (where he gets drunk on Singapore Slings, runs up a bar tab that he can't pay, and escapes to Mexico
in search of cheaper cervezas) as well as Johnson's fast-and-furious cover of Moon Mullican's "Pipeliner
Blues."
Johnson admits that El Cabron — Spanish slang for "the bastard" — might not be an entirely fictional
character. After falling in love with Waylon Jennings' music at 11 years old, launching his songwriting
career two years later, and building an audience with his first band, Slow Rollin’ Lows, Johnson headed
east to Nashville. His brief time in Tennessee was spent indulging in all the vices available to a young,
20-something songwriter. Throwed Off and Glad chronicled that turbulent era, with Johnson singing
lighthearted songs about addiction, promiscuity, and depression. El Cabron, on the other hand, was
written after he returned home to Texas, met his wife (whom Johnson serenades with "Believer," a soulful
love song punctuated by horns and swirling organ), and began sanding down his rougher edges. Old
habits die hard, though, and El Cabron finds its central character caught halfway between the righteous
path and the highway to hell, writing songs about the haphazard journey toward some improved version
of himself. If it's difficult to tell which parts are fictional and which are autobiographical… well, that's
sort of the point.
Co-produced by Johnson, Ryan Len Johnson, and Paul Walker at Fischer Studios, El Cabron features a
murderer's row of musicians who've played with some of the Lone Star State's biggest names, from
Charley Crockett to Asleep At The Wheel. There's certainly no mistaking the album's Texas roots. Even
so, Pug Johnson's songs tell a more universal story. This is an album about messing up, growing up, and
striving for something better, no matter how distant that goal may seem. It's a story about the American
everyman, set a soundtrack of borderland twang, honky-tonk muscle, and swamp-pop swagger.
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🕮 Boek/Book: Tim Akkerman - Van onhandelbare driftkikker tot muzikant in balans
Country: Pug Johnson - El Cabron
, he grew up on Cajun music, swamp pop, Tex-Mex, and honky tonk— influences that shape his sharp, witty songwriting. A road warrior who’s played with Steve Earle, Midland, and Hayes Carll, Pug’s music blends high spirits, dark humor, and a nod to the American everyman.
Pug Johnson is a Texas-based country artist with a sound that stretches beyond the genre’s borders. Raised outside Beaumont
Labels:
Country,
Mattan Records,
New Album,
Pug Johnson,
Thirty Tigers
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