From punk to country: the evolution of Jon Langford.

AuthorGilbertson, Jon M.

At a time when the most public face of country music can politely be called "conservative," Mekon's frontman and alternative-country voyager, Jon Langford, unearths the older, more weather-beaten face that gazes sympathetically on the problems and celebrations of working class people. The expatriate Welshman and punk rocker admits he once had trouble seeing that face as a younger man.

"I thought country was rightwing, cornball shtick," Langford says during an interview between stops on a tour. "I ended up getting a tape called Honky-Tonk Classics. It was fantastic. I thought Johnny Cash was like Elvis, this presence and superhero. Suddenly, there was this world that opened up."

Not content to explore this world just within the context of the Mekons--the unorthodox punk rock group he helped to establish in 1977--Langford gradually organized the Waco Brothers and the Pine Valley Cosmonauts. Begun as larks after Langford moved from Leeds, England, to Chicago in 1991, these two loose collectives now form a distinct part of his back catalog and his current efforts.

The Waco Brothers started as, and largely remain, a band meant to enliven a night of drinking and dancing at the corner tavern, though over the course of six albums--from 1995's To the Last Dead Cowboy to 2002's New Deal--they've developed a style that gleefully pairs the attitude of Joe Strummer with the sturdiness of George Jones.

With the Cosmonauts, Langford has found a way not only to pay tribute to his heroes--with Misery Loves Company: Songs of Johnny Cash in 1995 and Salute the Majesty of Bob Wills in 1998--but also to engage in a fight against the death penalty. Through Tony Fitzpatrick, a Chicago-based artist best known for his Steve Earle album covers, Langford encountered members of the Illinois Death Penalty Moratorium Project and was inspired by their largely thankless work.

"I had met a lot of posturing lefties with a lot of romantic notions, and these anti-death penalty people seemed infinitely more heroic," Langford says. "They were just fucking bashing away behind the scenes to save lives and get innocent people off death row. I like the idea that social change comes from people not doing it for some kind of pie-in-the-sky glory. I thought the role of the musician would be to get some money together and give it to people who needed it."

Langford called upon a network of friends and associates within the burgeoning alternative-country scene in Chicago, who in turn...

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