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For me the story comes first, the musical setting follows and
an acoustic guitar seems like a good place to start, but
sometimes you do need to plug in the Telecaster and put a
little grit on things. I’ve always liked the analogy that your
songs are kind of like your children and for me I guess that
means a few of mine may need to go to reform school. 60 miles
east of Los Angeles where the urban sprawl starts to thin out
and the desert starts to take over sits the old railroad town of
San Bernardino. In 1978 when Rick Shea was growing up there,
dozens of honky-tonks and truck stop bars still lined the
outskirts, tough places where the remnants of California’s
golden age of country music still drifted through like the hot
winds.
“I started playing folk and coffeehouse gigs after high school
and sort of fell into the country music scene...as a sideman
and a singer I worked 6 - 7 nights a week. It was rough
sometimes but a good education, that’s where I first heard
a lot of those old songs - Merle Haggard, Lefty Frizzell and
Buck Owens - every night.” Shea has managed to parlay that
tough but real education into a successful career as a solo
artist, with five critically acclaimed albums and appearances
at the Strawberry Festival, the Tucson Folk Festival, the
Canmore Folk Festival, the Freight and Salvage, McCabe’s and
many of the other folk, rock and acoustic venues in California
and the West.


“Staunchly independent...represents the best of California
music,” Jonny Whiteside/LA Weekly


Shea’s voice is smooth and bittersweet and his guitar playing
goes from subtle on the ballads to blazing through the rockers.
His songs are almost cinematic in their scope and embrace
everything from norteño and border rock to the more traditional
folk and country music of California that he grew up with.


“He has a storyteller’s sense of detail and more, a sense for
which details to leave out,” Jim Washburn/OC Weekly


As a sideman, Shea has worked with everyone from roots rock
kingpin Dave Alvin to folk chanteuse Katy Moffatt to indie rock
legends R.E.M. As a member of Dave Alvin’s band, ‘The Guilty
Men’, Rick toured the U.S. and Europe for 6 years as an opener
and multi-instrumental sideman, playing everywhere from
Hollywood to Austin to Madison Square Garden and played on
all of Dave’s albums during that time including the Grammy
winning Public Domain.
With the re-mixed, re-mastered Sawbones wrapped and
shipped, re-titled Bound for Trouble with 3 new tracks, Shea
has plans for a new solo album next year and more solo
appearances along with shows with his longtime backing band
The Losin' End. After three solo albums and two collaborations,
Trouble and Me (2002) with fiddler/singer Brantley Kearns which
Dirty Linen called "stunningly good" and an album of hard
country duets with Patty Booker, Our Shangri LA (2004), called
"nothing short of a masterpiece" by Shaun Dale in Cosmic
Debris , Shea says he's enjoying playing again as a solo artist.
“I feel very fortunate to be able to do what I do, music to me
is a very direct and pure form of expression that can reach
across time and place. The songs I go back to are the old
ones, the ones where you feel the connection 70-80 years
later like you were in the same room, that’s what gives me
goose bumps.”



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