HomeHOWHow Did Glover Gill Lose His Leg

How Did Glover Gill Lose His Leg

Glover Gill doesn’t look like a tango lover. His forearms are heavily tattooed in green, red and purple; his hair is slicked back in a John Doe-like coif; and a metal prosthetic leg has replaced the one he lost years ago in a motorcycle wreck. Even the name isn’t right – it’s a much better fit on the leader of a honky-tonk band than on a master of tango piano.

But while his look may be early-1980s L.A. punk, and his name is as Texas as mesquite-smoked brisket, the sounds he makes are puro Argentino. Early every Monday evening, just before the El Orbits’ bingo party begins, he wheels his piano on a customized dolly right to the foot of the Continental Club’s stage and sits down with his back to the audience. The dancing begins as he massages the first luxurious, romantic notes. Four or five couples don’t stop their violently sensual moves until Gill wheels the piano back out again an hour or so later.

It’s obvious from Gill’s appearance – if not the wonderful sounds he coaxes from the keys – that he hasn’t been doing this all his life. How did the one-time punk become a tango fiend? “It’s an illness,” Gill says instantly. We’re in the back bar, but we can hear David Beebe leading the El Orbits through Stevie Wonder’s “You Are The Sunshine of My Life.” It’s almost cheesily apt: Gill feels the same way about tango. “I always say it’s a disease for which there is no cure. If you get bitten by the bug, you’re fucked. I’ve spoken with avid dancers, and they’re goners like me. I love the music so much that I’ll probably starve to death.”

Don’t go sending him any care packages; Gill has had a pretty fair run of success in his 23 years in the music business. It all began when he dropped out of St. John’s in 1979 and hitchhiked to Austin. There his Houston band One Hand Clapping broke up, and he helped form the punk group D-Day. Since then, he’s played with Charlie Sexton, Bruce Robison, Alejandro Escovedo, Herschel Berry and Arthur “I am the god of hellfire” Brown. (“He has this hat that he fills with gas and used to set on fire,” Gill says. “I almost got burned a couple of times. He’s a hilarious and smart guy.”) He even backed Luciano Pavarotti on the accordion with the Austin Lyric Opera.

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He’s also written and arranged strings for Ian Moore and Double Trouble, and was until recently a member of Austin Latin swing band 8 1/2 Souvenirs. That was when he contracted the tango virus. It was an accident, Gill remembers. “I was with the Souvenirs and I wrote a tango-like rumba that’s on our second record,” he says, pausing to sip his martini. “Then Eric Pellegrini, a chef in Austin and a friend of mine, gave me a tango record about eight or nine years ago, and it changed my life forever.”

The record was tango king Astor Piazzolla’s La Historia del Tango, Volume One. “It has a bunch of old tangos with more modern arrangements,” Gill says. “I must have worn that CD out I listened to it so much. I’m not sure what I heard in it, but it spoke to me.”

Gill spoke back. “I started writing these tangos and I presented one to the Souvenirs,” he says. “We always did everything by rote since I was the only [music] reader in the group, which made it really hard to communicate. They loved the first tango and it got on the record, but this one they were like, ‘Glover, this is too hard.’ Our singer Juliana Sheffield said, ‘Glover, what you need is five of you.’ And I just went, ‘Ding!’ ”

Gill went Sheffield two better. He recruited seven more-or-less like-minded University of Texas Music School grads and formed Tosca, an eight-piece tango orchestra that has since released four albums.

At one point in our conversation, Gill mentions that he is “horrible at self-promotion,” the truth of which was revealed to Racket days later when he discovered that Gill failed to mention he had scored Richard Linklater’s innovative 2001 animated film Waking Life. “Yeah, I did that,” Gill allows when contacted later. “What was cool about that project was that since it was filmed very quickly with hand-held digital cameras and animated after the fact – there were about a dozen or twenty animators working for a year on it. Since that took so long, there was no hurry to get the soundtrack plugged in. Normally the film composer waits around for the shooting to finish and then he’s got just a few weeks to come up with the music and it’s very, very stressful. This was just very relaxed.”

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But Hollywood can’t hold a candle to Buenos Aires. When Gill and Tosca took their first trip to Argentina, he was intimidated, even though he says it was a “dream come true.” Argentines take their tango just as seriously as they do their soccer – maybe even a little more so. After all, Piazzolla had to go into exile because tango purists in his native land saw in his revolutionary approach to the form ample excuse to kill him. “My stuff occasionally is even more modern than that, and so I thought they could really hate us,” Gill says. “We opened the show in this 2,000-seat hall, this beautiful 100-year-old hall, and I was like they could kill us. But thank goodness, they liked us, and I was just in heaven. You know, this was where the tango was born, and they liked my original music. We also did a couple of Piazzolla covers and we have two singers from down there, a man and wife who sing like birds. We got great reviews in the local papers. I thought I’d died and gone to heaven.”

And as this column goes to press, Gill will be unpacking his bags in tango heaven again. He’s spending the bulk of October in Buenos Aires, and when he returns November 4 to his part-time home at the Continental Club (like Lil’ Joe Washington, Gill lives where he gigs, at least some of the time), he’ll have a new solo tango album out.

He’s calling it Glover Gill Solo Piano. Racket, in his infinite dorkiness, was ready to supply a new title. How about Glover Gill – El Romántico?

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“Nah,” Gill says. “El Lunático, maybe.”

Scuttlebutt Caboose

At the close of nearly every show on his ongoing world tour, Elvis Costello has been playing local bluesman Jimmy “T-99” Nelson’s “I’m Gonna Miss Show Business.” So author and Press contributor Roger Wood thought it would be cool if Nelson and Costello could meet while he was in town, and the summit was arranged. The two hit it off famously – they talked for about half an hour and even sang an impromptu duet backstage at the Verizon. Costello is an ardent fan of Houston blues; he’s called Bobby “Blue” Bland’s Two Steps From the Blues the greatest album of all time, and gushed about it last year in the hoity-toity pages of Vanity Fair….Benefits, benefits, benefits. Pick a crime-related cause and we’ve got your concert. The Dollar-A-Band Benefit at the Axiom on October 19 features The Neckbreakers, Luxurata, The Cottonmouth Cathouse Boogie Band, JW Americana, Irene, The John Sparrow and Poor Dumb Bastards. Maybe the folks at the Axiom flunked first grade math, because the cover is actually only $6 for the seven-band lineup. All proceeds go to help replace sound equipment swiped from the Axiom in a burglary last summer. Out in Sharpstown that same day, the Charismatics, the Filthy Skanks, Ale, Siding With No One and New Automatic will take the Cardi’s stage in support of the October 22nd Coalition, a national group whose bulky slogan is “Stop Police Brutality, Repression, and the Criminalization of a Generation.” Having nothing to do with the police blotter is the “Rock the Atomic Age” benefit on October 18 at Mary Jane’s. Instead, it’s sort of a garage sale/showcase wherein vendors can rent tables for $20 and sell whatever they want, and bands like the Hates, Mr. Hinkus, Dojo Payload, Crash 81, Blueshift Progress, Walk Through Walls and Graffiti Jones can strut their stuff….2001 HP Best Bassist Jessica Buchheit has joined forces with multiple Press Music Awards winner the Tony Vega Band, replacing Brock Proctor.

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