Kinky Friedman wsg/Brian Molnar

Sat. Oct 17, 2015 at 9:00pm EDT
21 and Over
Price: $30.00
21 and Over
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Event Stats
Price: $30.00
21 and Over
Event Description
Kinky Friedman wsg/Brian Molnar

Sportsmen's Tavern


 

326 Amherst St.

Buffalo NY 14207


 

Sat. October 17, 2015

Kinky Friedman

wsg


 Brian Molnar

9pm
$30 adv. $35 dos


www.kinkyfriedman.com


Kinky Friedman Brings Texas Half-Truths and Plenty of Laughs to Toronto (August 15, 2014) 




by DavidMcPherson
August 21, 2014




Kinky Friedman
Hugh's Room
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Friday, August 15, 2014




Tequila, tall tales, and a stogie thick enough to last the night, that's what Texan troubadour Kinky Friedman brought to Hogtown. 


Pacing the sidewalk outside Hugh's Room, a couple of hours before the show, the songwriter (dressed ten-gallon hat to heel in black) looked like a cowboy in search of his horse. Speaking to him at the bar found a tired soul in need of a rest or maybe just some liquid energy.


After settling his nerves with a couple tequila shots, on the last night of his fortnight Victory Tour, Friedman, 69, gave Toronto fans a sweet treat better than honey on Texas Toast. Most knew the one-liners the Texas legend dropped during his two-hour set, but everyone still laughed - showing Friedmans' songs - and his sometimes sordid, off-colored stories - never grow old.  


Stories of Nelson Mandela listening to Friedman's tunes in prison were interspersed with memories of Nashville writing sessions and anecdotes from his failed bid for Texas Governor. The evening even included a reading from one of his books. The sexagenarian Friedman showed four decades on, he's still relevant and his songs still resonate. 


Classics penned decades ago all drew applause, guffaws and admiration, including: "Proud to be an Asshole from El Paso," "Ol' Ben Lucas," "Ride Em Jewboy," and "They Ain't Makin' Jews Like Jesus Anymore." For those not in the know, while these titles sound offensive, the lyrics are laced with candid social and political commentary about The Holocaust. One of the night's highlights was the self-titled song from his 1973 debut: Sold American.  


Like any Friedman show, the serious was mixed with the silly: case in point the funny, sing-a-long, "Waitret, Please, Waitret." that he dedicated to Bill Clinton.


After his set, the "Kinkster" posed for pictures and signed CDs for the faithful fans who remained, many of whom have followed his weird, merry, and always entertaining, 40-year musical journey. Long may this jolly "Jew boy" ramble on.

Link to the article:  http://bit.ly/1mwJkcA




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Venue Details
Map of Venue Location.
Sportsmens Tavern 326 Amherst Street
Buffalo, NY 14207