Although she doesn't tour or record anywhere near as much as she probably could, Austin Texas-based singer
Lou Ann Barton is among the finest purveyors of raw, emotional roadhouse blues, jump blues, and R&B one is likely to encounter. She can belt out a lyric with so much power and authority that she can be heard over a two-guitar band with horns and drums. Over the course of four decades, she has worked with a who's-who of American bluesmen and women including
Marcia Ball,
W.C. Clark,
Angela Strehli,
Stevie Ray and
Jimmie Vaughan,
Sue Foley,
Omar Kent Dykes,
Roomful of Blues, and many more. While she has only a few albums to her credit, all are acclaimed by blues enthusiasts. Some of the earliest dates, including 1982's Old Enough and 1986's Forbidden Tones, are bona fide collectors' items.
Barton's last recorded appearance was as a billed, featured guest on
Jimmie Vaughan's Plays More Blues, Ballads & Favorites in 2011, though she remains extremely active on the Texas club scene.
Born February 17, 1954 in Fort Worth,
Barton has played literally thousands of dancehall and nightclub gigs all over Texas and the United States. She moved to Austin in the mid-'70s and joined
Stevie Ray Vaughan and
W.C. Clark in the band Triple Threat Revue. After
Clark left in 1978,
Vaughan renamed the band
Double Trouble;
Barton remained until November 1979. There is an unofficial recording from this period at the Austin Festival, of her singing with
Vaughan. In 1980 she left Texas for a short time for Rhode Island, where she'd secured a spot as a vocalist with
Roomful of Blues alongside singer and sax player
Greg Piccolo and guitarist
Ronnie Earle, though she never recorded with them. She won her own recording contract with David Geffen's Asylum Records, releasing Old Enough in 1982. The set, produced by
Jerry Wexler and
Glenn Frey, featured a who's-who of session greats including the
Muscle Shoals Horns,
Barry Beckett,
Jimmie Vaughan, and many more. Soon afterward she performed somewhat regularly with
Vaughan in
the Fabulous Thunderbirds. While Old Enough was received warmly by critics, it was a commercial flop due to a lack of promotion by the label. Though she continued to perform as a headliner and with other artists, she didn't record again until she issued Forbidden Tones for Spindletop in 1986. She produced the set herself and cut it live in studio. It's a rough, rowdy, passionate affair that included an all-star cast including drummer
Jerry Marotta, and guitarists
Jimmie Vaughan,
David Grissom,
David Mansfield,
Dean Parks, and
Richie Zito.
Barton promoted it on the blues club circuit across the country. In 1989 she was back in the recording studio. She appeared on
Marcia Ball's
Gatorhythms for Rounder, and released her own
Read My Lips for Austin's newly established Antone's label. It was another star-studded affair with saxophonist
David "Fathead" Newman, pianist Mel Brown, guitarist
Derek O'Brien, and organist
Reese Wynans among her sidemen. Reviews were universally positive for
Barton's iconic interpretations of R&B, jump blues, and early rock and roll songs by
Little Richard, Naomi Neville,
Hank Ballard, and others. The following year she teamed with
Ball and
Angela Strehli for the universally acclaimed Dreams Come True for Antone's, and performed "Don't Slander Me" on the Sire-issued, various-artists compilation,
Where the Pyramid Meets the Eye: A Tribute to Roky Erickson. Other contributors included
Julian Cope,
Richard Lloyd,
Doug Sahm, and
T-Bone Burnett.
Barton toured the country and Europe with
Strehli and
Ball to sold-out houses and rave reviews.
In 1992, she guested on
Alejandro Escovedo's debut solo album
Gravity, and had Old Enough reissued by Antone's. A year later, she participated in the recording sessions for
Stephen Bruton's debut solo offering What It Is. In 1994, she sang on
Jimmie Vaughan's Epic debut
Strange Pleasure, and a year later recorded with
Roky Erickson on his
All That May Do My Rhyme. The session work and live gigs kept
Barton busy. She sang on
Nuno Mindelis' Texas Bound (alongside
Double Trouble's rhythm section, bassist
Tommy Shannon and drummer
Chris Layton), and
Vaughan's Do You Get the Blues? in 2001. Other than a couple of guest spots on a
Jimmy Reed tribute,
Barton was absent from the recording scene until 2007 when she sang on
Vaughan's and
Dykes'
On the Jimmy Reed Highway in 2007. It was the beginning of renewed recording activity for the singer. She did more work with
Dykes in the studio and on the road, and sang on
Vaughan's Plays Blues, Ballads & Favorites and
Johnny Moeller's BlooGaLoo! in 2010. She was co-billed on
Vaughan's Plays More Blues, Ballads & Favorites in 2011 -- despite the fact she only sang on two tracks -- the sessions also included her old
Roomful of Blues bandmate
Piccolo on saxophone.
Barton works only when she wants to. She has to be seen live to be fully appreciated. Her confident stage swagger is balanced by a presence that embodies not only energy but grace and poise. She is a globally recognized member of the female blues singing lineage -- so much so, that if she wanted, she could work all the time; there are numerous artists around the world who would jump at the chance to record or play on-stage with her. ~ Richard Skelly