Event Details

Whitey Johnson at Poodies Hilltop Roadhouse in Spicewood, Texas

Whitey Johnson at Poodies Hilltop Roadhouse in Spicewood, Texas

DATE:
Friday, October 11, 2024
TIME:
Doors | 7:00 PM
Showtime 8:00 PM
LOCATION:
Poodies Hilltop Roadhouse
22308 Highway 71 West
Spicewood, Texas 78669
About this Event:

Whitey Johnson

October 11th - Doors at 7:00pm / Music Starts at 8:00pm

  • $15 - General Admission
  • $25 - Reserved Seating (tables are first come first served)

Parking is limited - please carpool or ride share

PLEASE NOTE: UNLESS REFUND PROTECTION IS PURCHASED, This event is Rain-or-Shine. With the exception of complete event cancellation, no refunds will be issued. Refunds due to personal unforeseen circumstances may be covered if the request meets limited conditions and Refund Protection was purchased. Please select Refund Protection at checkout. Refund Protection Fees are NON-Refundable. See OuthouseTickets Refund FAQ Page for more details.

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Price: $15.00 - $25.00
Ticket Type Price Quantity
General Admission $15.00
Reserved Seating $25.00
Whitey Johnson was the first guitar player I ever saw that amazed me, and I always go back to that parking lot in Garland, Texas when someone asks what made me want to play. It was Labor Day 1963 with the new asphalt oozing a black goo that would rob your flip flops if you didn’t keep moving. My baseball buddies and me were hot footin’ all around the shopping center carnival, rocking the Tilt-a-Whirl and the bumper cars and ruling the Fun House. Leon Phelps was my ride to the fair. His dad played mandolin in a bluegrass band called The Breakdown Boys, they were all mechanics, that played before the Valiants, who mostly covered Elvis and Jerry Lee, Little Richard and Fats Domino. The Valiants had the perfect look for a combo of their day, powder blue shirts, white dickies, tight black slacks, pointed toe white loafers, and razor-cut pompadours standing tall. Their outfits were complimented with matching white Fender Telecaster, Stratocaster, and Precision Bass with beige Fender amps. They were smoking and laughing at each other’s dirty jokes the whole time The Breakdown Boys played their set of crippled up Flatt and Scruggs and Bill Monroe stuff. Leon and I tried to look cool and act like rockers, like we didn’t like his dad’s band, even lighting up behind the flat-bed truck that was the stage while his dad was busy workin’ the mandolin and couldn’t see us.