EPK

Contact

Management:

377 Management info@377mgmt.com

36D Management info@36dmanagement.com

Booking:

Scott Galloway, APA Nashville: 615-297-0100, APA, Inc

Press Contact:

Heather Bohn
HBPR
heather_bohn@bellsouth.net
615-298-4056

Press

“This ferociously rocking band is one of the better-kept secrets around…As usual, their best stuff is so good you wonder why more people aren’t noticing…” - USA Today

Mission California…is more of that snarling, red-dirt-smeared sound that grabs you on disc and absolutely kills in concert.” - Ft. Worth Star-Telegram

“Cody Canada…is an engaging frontman, adventurous guitarist and smooth, powerful country rock singer…” - Austin American-Statesman

“CCR has given fans what they want…” - Ft. Worth Weekly

Mission California finds the quartet pumping out more top-shelf Southern rock set to country lyrics.” – San Antonio Express-News

Mission California is a searing mix of lyrics, soul, and kickin’ rock’n’roll that come together to make the record…by far the band’s best effort yet…The result is an amazing fourteen tracks that will blow even the most seasoned Ragweed fan away.” – Texas Music Times

Arizona Daily Star Article PDF | Text

Austin 360 Article PDF | Text

Billboard Article PDF | Text

CMT.com Article PDF | Text

Guitar One Article PDF | Text

New York Times Article PDF | Text

Press Quotes PDF | Text

USA Today Article PDF | Text

 

Photos

Bio

PDF | Text

Let’s get this straight right off the bat, though it should be obvious to any and all who have been listening over the last decade or so: Cross Canadian Ragweed are a rock’n’roll band. “They may be the last great Southern rock band still stomping the boards,” says All Music Guide, while USA Today proclaims that “this ferociously rocking band is one of the better-kept secrets around.” But not a secret for much longer, as their seventh studio album, Happiness and All The Other Things, amply proves.

And, yes, being from a small town in Oklahoma and two of them now residing in the Lone Star State (where they are kings of the thriving Red Dirt/Texas music scene), Cross Canadian Ragweed also qualify as country, and have even played The Grand Ole Opry. It’s only natural, part of the musical heritage that the members of the band grew up on.

Ragweed’s utterly natural Southwestern rock style abounds on Happiness and All The Other Things. The 12-track opus opens with a one/two punch/kiss combo that sets the band’s wide parameters: The fiercely rocking road tale “51 Pieces” followed by a sweet taste of the Texas Hill Country springtime on “Blue Bonnets,” whose sparse and lovely arrangement features harmonium by Joe Hardy (the star recording engineer who mixed the album) and dobro by noted musician and producer Lloyd Maines (also the father of Dixie Chick Natalie Maines). And then it only gets better.

Produced by the band’s longtime compatriot and artist in his own right Mike McClure, the album also features harmony vocals and piano by Stephanie Briggs, who co-wrote many of the songs with Canada. “We wanted to make something that sounds different than anything else we’ve done,” explains singer, songwriter and lead guitarist Cody Canada. And to wit, the disc ranges from rockers that soar (“Burn Like The Sun”), sear (“Drag” and “Overtable”) and groove (“To Find My Love,” sung by bassist Jeremy Plato) to such mid-tempo gems as “Kick In The Head” (with a 1970s California country-rock feel lit by sparkling steel guitar from Maines), “Pretty Lady,” “Tomorrow” and “Confident” (with its echoes of Tom Petty), all of it finally capped by the spectral Beatlesque ballad “My Chances” (and then followed by a bonus track of Warren Zevon’s “Carmelita”). And within the album’s many modes and moods, the proud legacy of American rock’n’roll gets renewed and reinvigorated for the modern age.

It follows on the heels of Mission California, which hit #6 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart and #30 on the Top 100 week of release, all without the benefit of major radio airplay. Texas Music magazine hailed the album as “a disc that’s bad-ass and nationwide with a swagger that finds them playing their way firmly into the pantheon of great American rock’n’roll bands, Southern division, right up there with rebel generals like the Allmans, Skynyrd, Georgia Satellites and Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers.”

ll of that is no secret to Cross Canadian Ragweed’s legion of fans across the nation, especially those in the Texas/Oklahoma area who have supported the band from the start. It’s a rare bond of mutual loyalty between a group and its listeners that was grown the good ole grassroots way — organically if you will — through years of dedicated road work and delivering the nutritious rock goods that keep the fans coming back for more. Thanks to such fervent support, Ragweed hosts three annual festivals: their Music & Mayhem concert every Memorial Day back home in Oklahoma, which just celebrated its third year; the band’s Red Dirt Roundup in Texas, every Labor Day, now in its third year packing the Fort Worth Stockyards with 20,000 plus revelers — this festival was featured in a 2007 New York Times article on Cross Canadian Ragweed as the leading lights of the Red Dirt scene; and their Family Jam held every year at the Zoo Amphitheatre in Oklahoma City to benefit Mandi’s Ministries, a charity founded by drummer Randy Ragsdale dedicated to his sister who passed away in a car accident in 2001.

It all began in Yukon, Oklahoma, where Canada, Plato, guitarist Grady Cross and drummer Randy Ragsdale all grew up together. “We’ve known each other forever,” Canada says. And in a small town with nothing much going on, what could the four boys do 14 years ago but start a rock’n’roll band?

“We’re country boys that rock’n’roll,” Canada explains, crediting their propulsive and rocking roots style to “the kind of stuff we grew up on. My sister had nothing but Creedence, Skynyrd and Marshall Tucker just blasting out of her room. Then you’d go to the poolroom and my dad would be listening to Merle Haggard, Willie, Johnny Paycheck and George Strait. At Grady’s house it was the same thing: His older brother would be listening to Skynyrd, his dad would be listening to Merle. And Randy’s dad, he played with Merle and Bob Wills and all those guys.”

The foursome eventually moved to Stillwater, OK, the college town that has been the state’s musical breeding ground, and also started winning over Texas with a weekly gig in the Lone Star musical mecca of Austin. After releasing two studio albums and two live discs on their own label that generated handsome indie sales and becoming a top live attraction in both states, the group’s crackling regional buzz caught the ear of music business legend Tony Brown, who signed Cross Canadian Ragweed to Universal Records South. Over their four previous major label albums — Cross Canadian Ragweed (aka “the purple album”), Soul Gravy, Garage and Mission California — Ragweed has reaped a slew of rave reviews and began cracking the country Top 10 and pop Top 40 charts while expanding its fervent Southwestern following nationwide with dedicated touring throughout every year.

To get prepped to hit the studio for Happiness and All The Other Things, the band were joined by McClure and Briggs onstage for a road trip from Chicago to Southern California, where they all ensconced themselves together in a house and nearby studio to lay down the album. As with their previous releases, a unifying thread emerged by sheer fortuity from the songs as they were recorded. “It seems like every record we make there’s always a theme, but it’s never really on purpose,” notes Canada. “It just kind of happens.”

This time out, “We call it Happiness and All The Other Things because it’s also sad,” Canada explains. “I write a lot from watching other people’s relationships, and there were a lot crumbling down around me. I just watched everyone else’s life unravel and also looked at mine, and it can be either happy or sad.”

At the heart of Cross Canadian Ragweed is a spirit and sound that the Arizona Daily Star hails as “simple, driving rock — common-man’s poetry set to music.” And it works marvelously for the group, two of whom now live in and around the burgeoning musical center of New Braunfels, Texas in between Austin and San Antonio, while Cross and Ragsdale hold down the home front back in Oklahoma. But any physical distance between them has no effect on their dedication to going the distance as a band. “We were all friends first, so that is a big factor in it,” Cross explains. “We’ve been through the van days; we were in a van with a trailer for seven years, so you learn everyone’s buttons real quick. So once you get past all that, I think you’ve got it made. We’ve always been pretty tight. I think the music really keeps us together.”

And as is evident from the musical unity and passion that brims throughout Happiness and All The Other Things, “We love doing what we do,” concludes Canada. "If you love doing what you do and you can feed your family, keep doing it”

Discography

Back to Tulsa-Live and Loud at Cain's Ballroom | 2006

  1. Dimebag
  2. Number
  3. Lonely Girl
  4. Late Last Night
  5. Final Curtain
  6. Little Sister
  7. Constantly
  8. Don't Need You
  9. Fightin' For
  10. When it All Goes Down
  11. Anywhere But Here
  12. Daddy's at Home
  13. The Needle and the Damage Done
  14. When Will it End
  15. Back Around
  16. Brooklyn Kid
  17. Cold Hearted Woman
  18. Jimmy and Annie
  19. Wanna Rock and Roll
  20. 17
  21. Hammer Down
  22. Alabama
  23. Blues for You
  24. Lonely Feeling

Garage | 2005

  1. Fightin' For
  2. After All
  3. Dimebag
  4. Breakdown
  5. Sister
  6. When it All Goes Down
  7. Final Curtain
  8. Late Last Night
  9. Blues for You
  10. SS #10
  11. Lighthouse Keeper
  12. This Time Around
  13. Who Do You Love
  14. Bad Habit

Soul Gravy | 2004

  1. Number
  2. Again
  3. Lonely Girl
  4. Cold Hearted Woman
  5. Sick and Tired
  6. Hammer Down
  7. Flowers
  8. Leave Me Alone
  9. Down
  10. Wanna Rock and Roll
  11. Alabama(New Version)
  12. Pay
  13. Too Far Gone

Purple | 2002

  1. Anywhere But Here
  2. 17
  3. Brooklyn Kid
  4. Don't Need You
  5. Walls of Huntsville
  6. Broken
  7. Constantly
  8. Suicide Blues
  9. Other Side
  10. On a Cloud
  11. Carry You Home
  12. Freedom

Live and Loud at Billy Bob's | 2002

  1. Long Way Home
  2. 42 Miles
  3. Hey Hey
  4. On Your Own
  5. Run to Me
  6. Look at Me
  7. Time to Move On
  8. Crazy Eddie's Last Hurrah
  9. Mexican Sky
  10. If I Were President
  11. Alright
  12. Johnny's Song
  13. Bang My Head
  14. Carney Man
  15. Boys From Oklahoma

Highway 377 | 2001

  1. Look at Me
  2. 42 Miles
  3. One of These Days
  4. Back Around
  5. Bang My Head
  6. Jimmy and Annie
  7. Highway 377
  8. Time to Move On
  9. Long Way Home
  10. Run to Me
  11. Alabama
  12. Johnny's Song
  13. Daddy's at Home

Live and Loud at the Wormy Dog | 1999

  1. Amos Moses
  2. Bang My Head
  3. The President Song
  4. Headed South
  5. Workin' on OK
  6. Hey, Hey, My, My
  7. Down at the Harbor
  8. Much Better Now
  9. Boys From Oklahoma
  10. Rainy Day Women #12 and 35
  11. Nowhere, TX

Carney | 1998

  1. Carney Man
  2. Hey Hey
  3. Help Me (Get Over This Mountain)
  4. Jenny
  5. Alright
  6. Headed South
  7. Leave Your Leaving
  8. April's Girlfriend
  9. Sweet Teresa
  10. Go On and Lie
  11. On Your Own

Video

17

Fightin For

I Believe You

Constantly

Don't Need You

Gear

Jeremy

  • Fender TB 1200 bass head
  • Fender Pro series 6x10 cabinet (pedal Board) pro co Rat distortion
  • mxr micro amp
  • DOD fx 55 supra distortion
  • Boss bass Chorus
  • 2 Carvin XB 76 Fretted and Fretless 6 string Basses
  • Fender American vintage 62 jazz bass
  • 85 Gibson explorer

Grady

  • Divide by 13 Guitar RSA 23 Watt head and a 2x12 cabinet
  • 2 Roland 2x8 Acu amp
  • Paul Reed Smith Mira
  • Gibson Firebird
  • Larevee' Acoustic
  • Keely Compressor
  • Keeley Blues Driver
  • Boss Digital Delay
  • Line 6 Tremelo

Cody

  • Orange AD 50
  • 91 Vox AC30
  • 01 Vox AC30
  • Paul Reed Smith Original Sewell
  • SWR Blonde Acoustic amp
  • Silver Paul Reed Smith #1
  • Paul Reed Smith #3
  • Gibson Gold Top 1960 Reissue

Randy

  • 06 Ludwig Kit
  • 2-20x24 Kik Drums
  • 14x14 Rack Tom
  • 16x16 and 18x18 Floor Toms
  • Sabian Cymbals HHX