Bobacuda Posted February 1, 2018 Report Posted February 1, 2018 In San Marcos, TX. This is the beer joint and live music venue where George Strait got his start (and I killed many brain cells...). Back in the 70's, lots of good "cosmic cowboy-progressive country-Texana-Americana" musicians have played there, as well as a mix of other musical genre. We used to see Strait for $0.50 when he started and $5 when he hit it big. Got to see Townes Van Zandt, Jimmy Dale Gilmore, Rusty Weir, Alvin Crow, Jerry Jeff Walker and others up close - never paid more than $2 to $5. Pitcher of Pearl (Texas beer) was $1 from noon till 6 - best way to get over the stress from math and chemistry exams. 4 Quote
Bobacuda Posted February 1, 2018 Author Report Posted February 1, 2018 One more photo. This is at the back. Bands would open the door and load their equipment here. 5 Quote
Ranger Posted February 1, 2018 Report Posted February 1, 2018 Cool pictures! Nice truck! Great memories! Quote
KindachiShota Posted February 2, 2018 Report Posted February 2, 2018 OMG!!! This is one hot truck you have... I just love it and crazy for it... Quote
Brent B3B Posted February 4, 2018 Report Posted February 4, 2018 that is Awesome Bob! $.50!!! we spent 1000x that to see him in Vegas two years ago. hey, that building remind me where we took our beef to be processed last year Quote
plymouthcranbrook Posted February 5, 2018 Report Posted February 5, 2018 Obviously the band prices were from when you bought the truck new. Quote
Dan Hiebert Posted February 5, 2018 Report Posted February 5, 2018 (edited) Awesome venue and cool photos of your truck by it...but Pearl? When I returned to Texas in '86, I was looking for "good" swilling beer. Pearl didn't make that cut...and that was with low expectations... If I recall correctly (not guaranteed by any means), Pearl went out of production for a while, then someone picked up the recipe and reintroduced it, about the time I went on that quest. Regardless, excellent photos and story, thanks for posting. Edited February 6, 2018 by Dan Hiebert Quote
Bobacuda Posted February 5, 2018 Author Report Posted February 5, 2018 (edited) Plymouthcanbrook's guess on the band prices should have been for the 1975 - 1983 time period. During that time, the legal drinking age in Texas was 18 yrs old, and every college town in Texas had a live music beer joint on just about every other corner - held the prices down, I guess. Most of the acts played for a small amount of the gate and a % of beer sales. BTW, fresh longnecks of Pearl, or draft from a fresh keg (prior to Stroh's purchasing the brewery) were excellent. After they Pearl was sold to Stroh's, it was not the same. I switched over full time to Shiner Bock. Edited February 5, 2018 by Bobacuda Quote
Flatie46 Posted February 6, 2018 Report Posted February 6, 2018 Cool truck Bob, thanks for sharing. Quote
plymouthcranbrook Posted February 11, 2018 Report Posted February 11, 2018 On 2/5/2018 at 1:31 PM, Bobacuda said: Plymouthcanbrook's guess on the band prices should have been for the 1975 - 1983 time period. During that time, the legal drinking age in Texas was 18 yrs old, and every college town in Texas had a live music beer joint on just about every other corner - held the prices down, I guess. Most of the acts played for a small amount of the gate and a % of beer sales. BTW, fresh longnecks of Pearl, or draft from a fresh keg (prior to Stroh's purchasing the brewery) were excellent. After they Pearl was sold to Stroh's, it was not the same. I switched over full time to Shiner Bock. i was being facetious Quote
Bobacuda Posted February 11, 2018 Author Report Posted February 11, 2018 PC - Knew that (and I thought it was funny). I was just providing more info for everyone that did not experience it. Quote
Brent B3B Posted February 12, 2018 Report Posted February 12, 2018 how many vehicles ran into that building over the years? geeze, talk about no set backs Quote
Bobacuda Posted February 13, 2018 Author Report Posted February 13, 2018 Cheatham Street Warehouse was a converted train warehouse and definitely a honky-tonk, country music dive...in other words, a great place. One thing everyone that went there remembers is that they did not discourage bathroom wall graffiti - as long as it had wit and not just profanity. The walls (and ceiling) were covered. Two classics I still remember are: "I would give my right arm to be ambidextrous." "Profanity is the linguistic crutch of the inarticulate motherf-----." I still find myself quoting those on occasion. 1 Quote
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