Buddy (magazine)
Buddy is a free monthly music magazine serving the North Texas and Northeast Texas regions. It was first published in Austin, Texas, in October 1972 as a free bi-monthly. Stoney Burns and Rob Edleson were the founders. The magazine's name is a tribute to Buddy Holly, who Burns said "changed my life". Buddy is described as a rock music magazine but, from its beginning, has included news and feature articles about performing artists and events of other genres, namely Texas progressive country, blues, jazz, folk, punk, and garage band music.
History
Stoney Burns, before co-founding Buddy, published and edited Dallas Notes from 1967 to 1970, an underground bi-weekly newspaper. Christopher Gray of the Austin Chronicle, in 2000, likened Buddy as "the North Texas equivalent of Crawdaddy. Gray later wrote that writers for Buddy magazine who covered the blues scene in the Dallas-Fort Worth area helped resurrect the career of Zuzu Bollin and introduced mainstream music fans to notable regional blues artists, including jazz guitarist Roger Boykin and blues singer R.L. Griffin and the late pianist Boston Smith, brother of Buster Smith. At its peak, Buddy published editions in Dallas, Houston, and Austin/San Antonio and had a staff of almost two dozen.Early notable issues included "The Bob Dylan Story", "Plus Kinky Friedman All Star Issue", January 1974. Buddy chronicled many performing artists before the emergence of their first albums, including, in 1975, Ray Wylie Hubbard, who was already popular as a Texas progressive country artist. That same year, KAFM radio host Chuck Dunaway reported that Buddy, with a circulation of 40,000, was helping spread the positive aspects of progressive country. In 1977, 1978, Buddy was affiliated with KZEW-FM. By 1979, KTXQ took over Buddy, which had a circulation of 100,000. In 1982, Buddy was the official magazine of the Texxas Jam, a rock festival held at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. Beginning around 1982, Buddy was issued in tabloid size and format.
Selected personnel
Writers
- Chuck Flores has been a photojournalist and music journalist since 1975. He is also a musician. Flores has been assistant editor with Buddy since 1989.
- Ian Saint
- Andrew Daly
- Elaine MacAfee Bender
- Tom Geddie
- Shawn D. Henderson
- George Bond
- Rick Koster wrote his first article, professionally, for Buddy in 1978. It was about Sammy Hagar. In 1998, St. Martin's Press published his book, Texas Music. As of 1997, Koster has been writing for The Day in New London, Connecticut.
- Tim Schuller
- Kirby Warnock ; editor from 1976 to 1982
- Jan Sikes
- Jackie Don Loe
- Rob Garner
- Mary Jane Farmer , reporter for Buddy from February 2013 to present
- Lisa Rollins contributed to a feature, "Spotlight on Performers"
- Kathleen Hudson, PhD won an award in 1989 from the Texas Press Women's Communication for her story, "You're Gonna Make It After All: Sonny Curtis". An academic in higher education and freelance writer, Hudson was the founding executive director in 1987 of the Texas Heritage Music Foundation in Kerrville, and served in that position until 2001
- Joe Nick Patoski , who, on November 16, 1980, in Austin, married Kris Cummings, keyboardist with Joe Carrasco. Kris was a 1981 inductee of Buddy Magazine's Texas Tornado List.
Selected writers who started with ''Buddy'' in 1973
- Stoney Burns
- Rob Edleson
- Steve Brooks
- Ronald McKeown
- Jesus D. Carrillo , photojournalist
Selected videography
- : 64 minute documentary – interviews, photos, and commentary from the people who were there and lived through the heyday of the Dallas rock n roll music scene – during the 1970s and 1980s. Produced by Kirby Warnock, former Buddy magazine editor. Warnock narrates.
Texas Tornado List
''Buddy's'' Music Hall of Fame
''Buddy's'' Texas Music Awards
Buddy's Texas Music Awards is an annual readers poll survey that debuted 1973. The awards were presented at a black-tie event. The new act categories are chosen by music journalists.Disambiguation
- Not to be confused with the South Korean LGBT magazine, Buddy, published in Seoul ;
- Not to be confused with the Buddy Potápění, a bi-monthly published in Prague, founded July 2007 ;
Secondary sources