Wilory Farm

Wilory Farm
Studio album by
Terri hendrix
ReleasedJune 1998
GenreCountry
LabelWilory Records

Wilory Farm is the 1998 album by Terri Hendrix.

Band Information

  • Terri Hendrix - acoustic guitar and vocals
  • Ric Ramirez - upright and electric bass, backing vocals
  • John Inmon - acoustic, sitar and electric guitar
  • Ron Welch - acoustic guitar
  • Lloyd Maines - acoustic, steel and electric guitar, mandolin, dobro, banjo and backing vocals
  • Paul Pearcy - drums, percussion
  • Mark Patterson - drums on "Hole in My Pocket"
  • Mark "Suitcase" Stedman - harmonica
  • Gene Elders - fiddle
  • Riley Osbourn - keyboards, organ, piano
  • Joel Guzman - accordion on "Lluvia de Estrellas"
  • Ponty Bone - accordion
  • Bukka Allen - accordion on "Hole in My Pocket"
  • Stan Smith - clarinet
  • Freddy Mendoza - trombone
  • Pat Murray - trumpet

Producer: Lloyd Maines

Album Tidbits

From her official site:

Terri named her second album after a special place in Stonewall, Texas called Wilory Farm which was owned by her longtime friend and mentor Marion Williamson who died in the Spring of 1997 due to cancer. Terri took care of the animals on the farm and did book keeping. In return, Marion gave Terri extensive music and guitar lessons. Marion was a very talented musician and composer who taught Terri not only about music, but also about spirituality and strength of character. Throughout her lifetime Marion anonymously funded several music grants and programs for musical instruction and equipment in the Texas hill country area. Terri's time on Wilory Farm and her friendship with Marion helped inspire this record. This album was recorded at Fire Station studios in San Marcos, Tx. It was produced by Lloyd Maines and engineered in part by Bobby Arnold and Fred Remmert. Released June, 1998.

Track listing

  1. Flowers
  2. Walk on Me
  3. Wallet
  4. Sister’s Apartment
  5. Love Like This
  6. Hole In My Pocket
  7. Gravity
  8. The Know How
  9. LLuvia de Estrellas
  10. Albert The Perfect Friend
  11. Wind Me Up
  12. The Last Song
  13. “Sister’s Song”-Bonus Track
gollark: It's not really a useful theory though. It makes no testable predictions.
gollark: Wouldn't you need unreasonably large amounts of trees/person to make that work?
gollark: I mean, yes, you *could* get a better one, but they could also be terrible and you couldn't do anything.
gollark: I don't see why you would expect monarchs, who have basically no checks on power, to do better than politicians, who at least are required to look good to some subset of the population.
gollark: (but doesn't lead directly to much faster computers because Dennard scaling is dead)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.