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Spencer Starnes
Spencer Starnes, was a Seguin native who moved to Austin in the 1970s and became a renowned bass player and studio engineer. Born Cameron Spencer Starnes III, he came from a musical family. His father, a World War II veteran who survived the Bataan Death March, had played trumpet for swing-jazz bandleader Tommy Dorsey and ran a music store in Seguin. After stints as a student at Stephen F. Austin University, Texas State and the University of Texas, Starnes began playing music regularly in Austin in the early ‘70s.
Spencer began his career in Austin with Ray Benson’s western swing band, Asleep at the Wheel. He also toured with cosmic cowboy pioneer Michael Murphy and later was the bassist for the avant guarde jazz group known as 47 Times Its Own Weight. Tiring of the endless travel associated with touring with groups, Spencer eventually chose a life that involved more engineering work at the studio he started on property he and fellow Austin musician Mambo John Treanor bought in the hills west of town. “He was a great and imaginative bass player, both on upright and on electric,” Benson was to say. Benson recorded two albums at Spencer’s Bee Creek Recording Studio after Asleep at the Wheel had gone five years without a record. “We sort of made our comeback out of that little mobile home studio he had over at Bee Creek,” Benson fondly remembered. On the road at the hotel before a gig, while other band members were out and about, Spencer would be found practicing scales.
As an engineer or musician, Spencer was part of three recordings that received Grammy Awards: two involving Asleep at the Wheel projects and one involving Buddy Guy’s album, “Slippin’ In,” which was recorded in Austin. Over the decades, Spencer’s Bee Creek Recording Studio became a prominent regional facility with the artists who recorded there ranging from honky tonker Junior Brown, to pop singer Jennifer Warnes, to the local jazz band The Brew with Joe Morales. All the while, Spencer continued to build an extensive resume as a bassist on albums by Willie Nelson, Alejandro Escovedo, Don Walser, Suzy Bogguss, Kimmie Rhodes, Paul Glasse, and many others. “He had a level of sophistication in terms of his musical ability that was top-notch,” Benson said. “This town has always had the guys who were not only great jazz musicians, but were all-around guys. He did commercials, studio work, engineering, bass playing and arranging.”
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Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson
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From: Hank Hehmsoth - PianoBy Spencer Starnes