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You can find more than just country music in a Texas honky-tonk on a Saturday night. There’s also beer, boots, belt buckles, and, of course, you’ve gotta have that Big Hair. When Debbie Watson was a member of Houston’s Sugar Creek, a trio of honky-tonk angels, she saw a lot of big-haired honeys boot-scootin’ across the hardwood dance floor. And she also saw big hair when she looked in the mirror. “The girls in Sugar Creek used to go to the ladies’ room at the gigs, and we’d put on our makeup and tease our hair,” Debbie says. “It was completely natural for us. We used to say the higher the hair, the closer to God!” One night she told fellow band member Monique Grezlik that she should write a song about big hair. Monique indeed wrote the song, and it eventually ended up as the title cut of Debbie Watson’s new CD, Big Hair Down In Texas. Debbie says she’s always worn her hair big, that it’s just who she is, the girl from Texas with big hair. The girl from Texas now calls Music City her home. Back in 2000, Watson pulled into Nashville, Tennessee with her best girlfriend in the passenger seat, her cat and three dogs in the back, a trailer in tow, and her sister and nephew in a following car. She had no connections there, no plan, nothing but a desire to make her mark at the epicenter of country music. “I felt like I was really moving into a new chapter in my life,” she says. “I had a feeling of excitement and a sense of fulfilling a very, very, very old and familiar dream.” Born in tiny Idabel, Oklahoma, Debbie says her fascination with music began early. “One of the earliest memories I have is, at the age of 5 or 6, sneaking into the next-door neighbor’s house and ‘playing’ their piano. I’d get a couple of minutes in before I got caught!” After her parents relented and bought Debbie her own piano, she got serious about music and songwriting, and has since learned to play guitar, mandolin, and fiddle. Her family moved to Houston when she was 8, and growing up, she was exposed to their music. Her grandmother Pearl played fiddle, Uncle Willie played guitar and banjo—as well as playing and building fiddles – and her mother, aunt, and several cousins sing and play music too. |
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Copyright Debbie Watson © 2005
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