Don Richmond Home Page

Hi there, thanks for stopping by. This is the place to keep up on the activities of Don
Richmond, The Rifters, Hired Hands, Howlin Dog Records and Recording, and music in general in
Southern Colorado and Northern New Mexico. You can order recordings from Don, Hired Hands,
Dons old group Tumbleweed, or lots of other people through the Howlin' Dog Records link. You can also
order a copy of Dons book
Getting Your Music Past the Fear
(to order, click
this link)
or look at some excerpts. Check it
out, and let us know what you think!

About Don Richmond -
Don is a multi-instrumental musician and singer-songwriter,
performing on guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle, pedal steel guitar, dobro, harmonica, and
trumpet. He has been making his living playing music in the Colorado - New Mexico area
since about 1970. For 17 years he was a member of the Colorado band Tumbleweed, which
achieved a strong and devoted following around the region for their varied
country-rock-whatever-they-wanted-to-play sort of show. He made the move toward more
acoustic-folk-bluegrass music with Rock Bottom Band, and later Taos-based Hired Hands, and
thus began performing more in New Mexico in the Taos and Santa Fe music scenes. Don has
released five solo recording projects as well as four with Tumbleweed and three with Hired
Hands. Don also owns and runs Howlin' Dog Recording and has
recorded and often played on numerous recording
projects (and live shows) by area artists such as Chipper Thompson, Burning Joan, and The
Days. His instrumental compositions were featured in the public television documentary
Roy Bedichek's Vanishing Frontier that aired in
the spring and summer of 2003. Don
has also been Artist in Residence and Aesthetic
Institute Instructor with the Colorado Council on the Arts and has authored a book on the
psychology of creativity and performance titled Getting Your Music Past the Fear,
available through
Booksurge Books.
There is also a website devoted specifically to the new book -
www.gymptf.com .
What's New?
As of December 22, 2004 -
The big news for me in the last couple
months has been the publication of my book Getting Your Music Past the Fear
which has been selling briskly in this little corner of the world. I'm going to
be working at getting it out on a wider basis after the first of the year, which
will certainly be a new adventure. My recording studio work has been cranking,
with projects ranging from the excellent punk band "Poor Substitute" from Pueblo
to an upcoming singer-songwriter from California by the name of Jared Mell to a
new CD by the classic Spanish Rock band Indian Nickel to a new Cowboy sort of
project by Will Dudley. Lots of great music in lots of different shapes and
styles. It keeps me flexible. For more info on the studio go to
www.howlindogrecords.com and
follow the link to the studio.
Otherwise, as it said in my latest email
blast -
Hello there friends and
neighbors, and Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Superb Solstice, and Happy New
Year!
I hope everyone is doing
well and enjoying the big inward breath of the dark and cold of winter. Of
course, in the Holiday frenzy, it may be more of a panting gasp, but I still
think of this time as a time of reflection about things, planning the new year,
making ridiculous lists of New Year’s resolutions, and things like that. And of
course, also a time of gathering and reconnecting among friends. Amidst all the
craziness, I still love the holidays. I hope they treat you well, and that both
your giving and receiving are blessed.
Meanwhile, making music in
this beautiful part of planet earth has been going great. The Rifters are
cranking, sales of our new CD have been great, and we’ve got some dates to share
with you for 2005. One special event I want to mention is our New Years Eve
celebration at the Sagebrush Convention Center. Our good friend Gordon Burt,
fiddler extraordinaire, will be joining the Rifters for that performance, and
we’ll be cranking up our own brand of fireworks for the evening. Anyone who is
familiar with Gordon’s playing (or who has seen him in numerous appearances with
Hired Hands) won’t want to miss this gathering. The Sagebrush has priced this
very reasonably – I believe it is $17 per person – and I believe that includes
some complimentary champagne and posole (not mixed together or anything). You
can call the Sagebrush at 505-758-2254 for more information or to make
reservations. Please join us if you can – it will be loads of fun.
I also want to use this
e-mail to spread the news about a new event in my professional life, namely the
publication of my book “Getting Your Music Past the Fear”, published by
Booksurge Books. It is a self-help sort of thing targeted to musicians, focusing
in on the inner processes of putting out the music and of clearing the path by
which the music comes out. In many ways, it is a record of me teaching myself
these same lessons over the course of my life spent playing music. I’ve been
plugging away at the book for a dozen years or so, and it feels very good for it
to finally see the light of day. Anyone who is interested in ordering a copy can
just send me an email with their physical address and I’ll get one out to them
with an invoice (the price is $18). The book can also be ordered direct from the
publisher at
Booksurge books,
or from Amazon, or at any bookstore.
Also, if anyone wants any
last minute CDs of the Rifters, Hired Hands, or Don Richmond for Christmas
gifts, just send me an email and I’ll do my best to get them to you, or straight
to a gift recipient, right away. I’ll also do my best to keep performance
schedules updated on the Rifters website (www.rifters.net)
and my website (www.donrichmond.com).
So be most well, dear
friends and neighbors, stay warm, come out and dance when you can, and keep in
touch. We’ll keep you posted with developments from this end.
Best wishes to all,
Don Richmond
As of August 26, 2004 -
My websites have been languishing because I
have replaced the computer that I use to work on them and it took forever to get
all the software re-installed and re-configured so that it would communicate
with the web servers again. Well, not exactly forever - just longer than I ever
seemed to have to dedicate to the project. But here we are.
Life is good. As I write this, The Rifters
(see www.rifters.net as soon as I get a
site up there) are having a CD release performance at the Sagebrush Inn in Taos
tomorrow night to celebrate the release of our first CD together as a band, and
I think it's a good one. The comparisons to the Hired Hands CDs are inevitable,
but I think it holds its own with any of them. We're excited. If you want to
order one, you can go the Rifters website,
the Howlin' Dog Records website,
or just send me an email at
DonRichmond@worldnet.att.net with your mailing info and we'll get one out to
you with a statement, and you can send us a check.
The biggest news for me is that my book,
Getting Your Music Past the Fear, is done! Glory, Hallelujah! I've been working
on it for only a dozen years or so, completely wrote it once in a different
form, threw that out and started over, rewrote that version more or less
completely about 5 or 6 times, edited, revised ad infinitum, but now it's time
to put it out and let it do what it needs to do. I'm keeping some
excerpts and info on this site, but follow this link
to
Booksurge Books
to order a copy, or go to www.gymptf.com for
more stuff.
Another exciting project for me has been
doing the music for a new documentary film called We Did It All Ourselves, which
is about an amazing series of events in the struggle for black civil rights in
southern Tennessee and northern Mississippi during the 1950's, where hundreds of
black families were evicted from their homes and refused service at stores and
businesses just because they were attempting to register to vote. The people
ended up living in tent cities for months on a compassionate black farmer's
land. It's an incredibly powerful story of things that on one hand make you
ashamed to be a human being and on the other to be proud to be one. I'm going to
put up a page on this website about it and also some links to follow for more
info.
My recording studio (Howlin' Dog Recording)
has been cranking and keeping me busy as usual. This year I've been privileged
to be part of some great projects with people like Bill Hearne, Rick Fowler,
Eileen Kalinowski, Leigh Ann Phillips, Justin Cowan, Lori Kester and others. I
am always honored to be part of people's music and immensely grateful for their
trust in putting their music in my hands. Follow the Howlin' Dog Records link to
see more on some of these projects and/or to order CDs.
My Latest CD No
Man's Land has been moving very nicely and has gotten great response. I've
been wanting to get back to writing for the next one, but that's something that
all too often gets pushed off to the side in all the craziness. But that's my
problem, and I will indeed make room for the Muse. She needs space and
emptiness, in my experience.
So I'm going to get these pages up before
it's another 6 months before I do, and move on. More updates coming and thanks
for reading!
As of July 28, 2003 -
Okay, so I haven't been doing
any better at keeping my websites up to date. Ah well, today is a new day. The
world of being a musician and recording engineer and producer in Southern
Colorado/Northern New Mexico continues to be full, fascinating, challenging, and
most of the time a lot of fun. It's been a good summer gig-wise so far. Hired
Hands has been active playing some concerts and festivals, I've had some
wonderful and fulfilling solo performances, and The Rifters is a new and
growing band entity that we're excited about. The Rifters consists of Rod
Taylor, Steve Garry, Jim Bradley, and me. As I said below, we play "that
great unique blend of country-folk-old-hippie music with some who-knows-what and
originals thrown in (all two-steppable of course) that seems to be well rooted
in northern New Mexico". The live gigs (see calendar) have
been going great, and we're all excited about the potential and possibilities
for this group. We've set aside some time this fall to start work on a recording
together. I'll keep you posted.
I've been
doing lots of other live gigs with lots of different folks - the band Drive,
filling in with South by Southwest, a gig or two with Taosamosa,
and accompanying artists like Mike Laughlin of Taos and Kay Singleton of Pueblo.
The PBS
documentary Roy Bedichek's Vanishing Frontier that I did the music for
was aired in April and May of this year around the country. That was exciting
and very cool. I got to go down to Dallas and play at the debut reception put on
by KERA-TV, the station that sponsored the
production of the show. The show's producer was Rob Tranchin of KERA, and the
videographer was Ginny Martin. Rob and Ginny have both won Emmy awards for some
of their previous work together. Another highlight of that trip was getting to
play with my big brother Diamond Jim Richmond who lives in the Dallas - Ft.
Worth area and was kind enough to help me do the performance, first with
equipment and then with actually playing the tunes together. It was fun.
I got to
play with my brother Jim a few weeks later when I accompanied South By Southwest
on their trip to Larry Joe Taylor's Texas music festival in Stephenville, Texas
in late April. The gig was a treat - the audience was delightful, we put on an
excellent show, I got to pick with my brother, and we got to hear a bunch of
great music too. It was way fun.
The studio
has been cranking. Right now it's booked until November. There's so much talent
and great music around, and I am so fortunate to get to participate in so much
of it. You can check out more about the studio at the
Howlin' Dog Records website, as
well as more about some of the artists I've been working with.
So all in
all, life is full and good. The garden is growing great (along with the weeds),
my wife Teri and I got to go to the mountains last weekend, my grandkids are
coming to see me next week, and I've got as much or more work than I can handle
doing things I love. How could I ask for more. Love and all good things to one
and all, and thanks for stopping by! Be well - Don
As of January 2003 -
Time does fly. I've been quite remiss in keeping this website updated, but
I'm going to do better with that, and the same goes for the
Hired Hands and
Howlin' Dog Records websites.
Always more to do than there is time to do it in, but I'm think I'm coming to
peace with that. The holiday season was great and insane as usual. My wife Teri
and I spent a week in Mexico (a little south of Cancun) just after the first of
the year, which was wonderful. It was like being in that Corona beer commercial
where they just show this white sand beach with the turquoise water and the beer
sitting on the table. What a treat. It was so amazing coming back to high and
dry and fairly cold Colorado that those two realities could be coexisting at the
same time on the same planet, along with lots of other ones, of course.
I've been fortunate to have
been playing lot's of very cool gigs with lots of different people, as well as
some wonderful solo and solo-with-friends gigs doing my own music.
I got to accompany Tish
Hinojosa for a couple concert appearances in her annual holiday season pass
through the area. I've also done some fun gigs with Michael Hearne, being a
South by Southwest fill-in member since their steel player and multi
instrumentalist Carmen Acciaioli is living in Amarillo. I got to do a holiday TV
show up in Pueblo, CO, shown on local cable access, with my friend and superb
guitarist-vocalist Tom Munch at the very cool Fairmount Museum, along with
another wonderful artist Kay Singleton. Very cool. I had helped Tom record and
put out a Christmas CD in 2001, so we did some tunes off of that. I've also been
playing with my good friends in the Lucky Larue Band whenever I can - some fun
holiday gigs and benefits around Alamosa, and the LLR boys will be making their
Taos area debut on Feb 28th at the Alley Cantina. I've helped them record their
2 CDs full of excellent and mostly original music, and it's always lots of fun
to gig with them. Taos area folks definitely want to catch them and pick up
their CDs - it's roots music that has sprung right from the very ground we stand
on in this area. Listen to it and you'll know what I mean.
Hired Hands is still alive and
kicking, and we did a gig over the holidays and have a concert/dance scheduled
in March in conjunction with the Monte Vista (CO) annual Crane Festival and then
some more scattered around the summer, including the excellent Pueblo Bluegrass
on the River festival and performances in Northglenn and the Denver area. (See
the Calendar page.)
Jim Bradley (from Hired
Hands) and I are going to be doing some regular gigs
with Rod Taylor and Steve Garry of Rod Taylor and the Rounders, doing that great
unique blend of country-folk-old-hippie music with some who-knows-what and
originals thrown in (all two-steppable of course) that seems to be well rooted
in northern New Mexico. We're even going to come up with a
new name for the group, as soon as we can figure out what it is.
Taosamosa
is a jazz-grass oriented group I’ve been playing with.
Aaron Lewis is the founding force behind this group and plays saxophones
and flute, and is as superb a musician as you are going to hear just about
anywhere. We manage to concoct a wonderfully fascinating blend of jazz,
bluegrass, folk, rock, blues and swing influences. It’s way fun and stretches my
musical wings in shapes that they’ve never been in before.
And of
course I continue to do solo gigs of various kinds in bars, churches, coffeshops,
and any place else that seems right to play. I'm still promoting my latest
release No Man's Land and having a great response
to it. There's a wonderful and generous review from the Taos entertainment and
art newspaper Horsefly about No Man's Land here.
Next, I'm going to try to put out some energy in a wider sphere to get that
music out a bit more. We'll see what happens.
I'm also
extremely fortunate to be involved with such a wide variety of excellent music
in my studio, which continues to be fully booked. Such talent and creativity
everywhere. Check out the Howlin' Dog
Records website for more info on that.
So while
you're here, check out the dates on the calendar, look at some of the CD stuff,
and see what you think. Keep in touch, come see me/us, be most well, and enjoy
your life as much as you possibly can, this day and all others. Much love to all
- Don
What's a
little less new?
(from previous editions)
From Don -
Well, I'm
replacing my previous rant from March, but it's still crazy, and there's still a
lot going on! (That's what I said last time, you see - in case you don't
remember.) No Man's Land is out into the world - hallelujah! The shows in
Pueblo, Del Norte, Alamosa, and Salida all went great, and I managed to get a
few copies of the CD out there. The response has been very positive, and I
certainly do appreciate the encouragement and support. I'll be doing some more
solo shows around and booking a few more things also, so I'll try to keep a
current calendar going here. Hired Hands is also starting up to do some gigs
this summer, with Billy Band, Jr., Jim Bradley, and yours truly being the
line-up. I'll put the HH dates on the calendar also. I've been doing some other
band things with a few different ensembles, and having lots of fun in the
process. I've been doing some jazz-grass music with Aaron Lewis, the excellent
saxophone player from Taos, NM, and a couple other players - Arlen Johnson
(guitar) and Dave (bass) under the name Taosamosa (a combination of Taos,
Santa Fe, and Alamosa). We've done a few gigs at Eske's Brew Pub
in Taos, and may be branching out a bit from there. It's pretty wild stuff, and
stretches my musical brain a bit, I can tell you for sure. I'm still playing
with Burning Joan every chance I get - in fact we're at Rising Sun in Del Norte
May 18th - be there! Jim Bradley and I are also doing some gigs with Rod Taylor
and Steve Garry, who have been performing for years as Rod Taylor and the
Rounders. We're not exactly sure who we are - Round Hands, maybe? I'm also
sitting in with the Lucky LaRue band when I can, and having lots of fun. The
studio (Howlin' Dog Recording) is
cranking - lot's of amazing music coming through.
What's a
little more less new?
(from previous editions)
Another recent exciting event has been a
commission that came my way to create the music for a PBS (Public Television) documentary
recently filmed down in Texas under the auspices of KERA-TV, the well known public
television station in Dallas. The show is called Travels With Bedichek and is about
the life and influence of the Texas author and naturalist Bedichek. The show was produced
and directed by Rob Tranchin of KERA and the videographer on the project was Ginny Martin,
who has won two Emmy awards for her previous documentaries. It was filmed in
high-definition TV format and will air sometime in the summer or fall of 2002.
Another relatively new event was an honor I
received last summer. The City of Alamosa dedicated their new portable performance stage
to me and put my name on it. Of course I felt like I should be dead to receive such an
honor, but I'm still here. It was a total surprise (thanks to my wife Teri McCartney) and
a great honor. I want to thank my friends Michael Hackett (Alamosa City Manager) and his
wife Terry Uyecki for having a hand in cooking this up. There is an article on the Press and Reviews page about the event, which took place at
the Alamosa 4th of July celebration in 2001.
Contact Info:
DonRichmond@worldnet.att.net
Don Richmond, Hired Hands, Howlin' Dog Records, Howlin' Dog Recording
218 Alamosa Ave
P.O. Box 825
Alamosa CO 81101
800-689-7786
Hired Hands website - www.hired-hands.com
Howlin' Dog Records website - www.howlindogrecords.com