Keepin’ it country at Big Nose Kate’s
[caption id="attachment_486" align="alignleft" width="1600"]Rusty Atherton (left), guitarist Buck Rhodes (center) and fiddler Jimmy Craighead[/caption]You see Taylor Swift standing on a stage before a thousand adoring fans, singing an upbeat song about never, ever getting back together with an ex-boyfriend. Here at Big Nose Kate’s Saloon on Allen Street, Rusty Atherton sits on a stool in front of the crowded restaurant singing in a deep baritone voice about how all his exes live in Texas.
The two singers could not be more different from one another, but they’re connected by one significant similarity.
They’re both country. As in country-western music.
In Old West towns like Tombstone, classic country music is a staple and you won’t be hearing much Taylor Swift. Around the country, though, the genre is evolving and in all its forms, is “alive and well,” according to Marsha Short, the executive director of the Western Music Association. She adds, “There is a huge surge of popular western music right now, with the new groups coming up.”