Oklahoma Magazine April 2017

Page 26

The State

INSIDER

From Country to Crooning

I

t’s been 27 years since I first wrote about Oklahoma’s Tim Rushlow, who was then the lead singer for a spirited young group called Little Texas. Little Texas had come to what was then the biggest country-music venue in town, Tulsa City Limits, as the opening act for the hit band Shenandoah. I concluded my June 30, 1990, Tulsa World review of the show by saying, re: Little Texas, “Watch these guys. They should make it, and big.” I certainly wasn’t always right with my predictions, but I was on the money with that one. A year later, the group’s members were watching their first single, “Some Guys Have All the Love,” soar into the Top 10 of the national country charts, beginning a near-decade run that took Little Texas from opening in clubs to headlining in arenas. As the band’s primary vocalist as well as a guitarist and mandolinist, Rushlow was right there in the middle of it all, and after the group disbanded, he continued to record hits like the Top 10 country ballad “She Misses Him,” an affecting story of the emotional toll of Alzheimer’s disease. Even then, however, there were indications that Rushlow might eventually find his way down a different musical path. “I remember a comment my wife made to me 25 years ago,” he says. “She said, ‘You know, I’m really happy you’re a country star, but I see you in a suit, singing in front of a big-band orchestra.’ That was just a vision she had.”

24

OKLAHOMA MAGAZINE | APRIL 2017

As it turns out, that vision would ultimately become reality. These days, Rushlow is making waves as a big-band vocalist in the Rat Pack and Great American Songbook tradition, recording and touring with a 20-piece orchestra – and having a swell time doing it. “I’m very proud of what I accomplished in country music,” he says. “I’m very proud of Little Texas and I’m proud of my solo hits as Tim Rushlow. But I’ve evolved as an artist to a place where I think there’s more for me somewhere else right now. And it’s the big-band world, the jazz world, singing classics, being a curator of the Great American Songbook, and getting to bring that to a new generation of fans who don’t even know they know it.

“You know, I could take the big band to Japan and do a show, and those people would know every word to every song.” “I’ve watched 25-year-olds at my shows singing every word, and after the show I’ll do an autograph thing and they’ll come by and say, ‘I don’t know how I know all of these songs.’ And my answer always is, ‘Well, you saw the Lincoln commercial with Matthew McConaughey with “Ain’t That a Kick in the Head” playing in the background. And you heard “I Get A Kick Out of You” behind the Toyota commercial.’ And you can just go

on down the road. These songs are making a serious comeback.” While Rushlow discusses the classic tunes with all the zeal of a recent convert, his affinity for the likes of Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Bobby Darin goes back to his childhood and his dad’s record collection. Tim was born at Tinker Air Force Base, where his father, Tom Rushlow, was stationed. Tom worked as an aircraft mechanic, but he made himself known to baby boomers throughout Oklahoma and surrounding states as the lead vocalist for Moby Dick and the Whalers, a hugely popular regional rock ’n’ roll band of the ’60s that ended up appearing nationally on Dick Clark’s Happening ’68 television show. “Both my parents sang, so I was in a singing family,” Rushlow says. “We just sang all the time. I got asked the other day, ‘How does it feel to be singing these songs for the first time?’ And I said, ‘Well, I’ve been singing them in my pajamas, with a toothbrush in front of the bathroom mirror, since I was 10.’” On the DVD of his new two-disc concert release, Tim Rushlow & His Big Band – LIVE (ROW Entertainment), Rushlow mentions his reluctance to continue chasing “the country dream” as a factor in his new direction. But there’s a lot more to it than that. For instance, about a decade ago, he became the final artist to record with famed Nashville producer Buddy Killen, who was then doing what would turn out to be his last recording project. Killen asked Rushlow to come in and

PHOTO COURTESY TIM RUSHLOW

Tim Rushlow’s performing the Great American Songbook was foreshadowed decades ago.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.