Micky & The Motorcars
Date & Time
Sunday, August 17, 2025
8:00 PM
Location
Fox Theatre
1135 13th Street
Price
Free
About This Event
For a handful of summers about 30 years ago, tourists who wandered into a large dancehall in Stanley, Idaho, witnessed a family tradition finding new life. Young and old sat shoulder-to-shoulder, taking a break from the townâs mountain hikes and river campgrounds to take in Muzzie Braun and the Boysââa local family band whoâd made it to the Grand Ole Opry, effortlessly spouted cowboy poetry and Western swing at gatherings around the country, and featured Muzzieâs four young sonsââprecocious boys with rock-and-roll futures. âThere were kids running around, people dancing,â says Micky Braun, the youngest brother who first climbed on stage to join the family when he was about five years-old. âGary and Iâd get up and play a couple of songs, then weâd get off and the older brothers would stay up and play a couple more. Itâs pretty funny, looking back on it.â He laughs a little, then adds, still smiling, âThatâs how we got started playing.â The Braun brothers never stopped. Big brothers Cody and Willy started Reckless Kelly, and Micky and Gary left Idaho for Austin and started Micky and the Motorcars, a road-dogging favorite whose nonstop tour for the last 17 years has defined not just the lives of the brothers, but also shaped Austinâs roots-rock resurgence that has played out over the last two decades. With their anticipated new album Long Time Cominâ, the Motorcars cement their place as elder statesmen of that alt-country scene who have managed to master that ever-elusive blend of artistic familiarity and surprise. âI hope people take the time to hear the album as a whole, and I hope they like it,â Gary says from his home in Austin. âI think this one is a little bit better.â He pauses and laughs as he drawls, âSo I hope they like it a little more.â For the Motorcars, the question is never really whether to tour but where to play next. Garyââwho handles guitar, mandolin, harmonica, harmonies, and occasionally lead vocalsââand Micky, lead vocalist and acoustic guitarist, are joined in the Motorcars by Andy Carrell on bass, Bobby Paugh on drums and percussion, and new bandmate Pablo Trujillo on guitar. The combination of familiar and fresh players has reinvigorated the Motorcarsâ live show, which buzzes through a low-key rock-and-roll rapture built on grooves and the Braunsâ signature harmonies. A mix of new and old also shaped the Long Time Cominâ recording process. Produced by Keith Gattis, the 11-song album relied in part on Gattisâ go-to Nashville studio playersââa first for the Motorcars. âIt still sounds like Micky and the Motorcars, but it was fun working with different guys who weâd never worked with before,â Micky says. âTheyâve been Keithâs band for 15 years. He can say, âGive me a shuffle with a boom-chuck,â and they know what heâs talking about.â The band isnât the only change on Long Time Cominâ. Gary, who has always contributed a song or two to Motorcar records, wrote or co-wrote six of the albumâs tracks and sings every tune he penned. âI donât think I decided to really write moreââI think I just got better at it and worked a little harder at it the past couple of years,â Gary says. âIn the past, I just let Micky do it because he was good at it. It was easy for me not to do it.â Micky loves the shift. âItâs almost a split album between the two of us on lead vocalââvery different from our normal,â he says. âI think our fans will enjoy it. They always love the songs Gary sings live. They always want him to sing more.â The album kicks off with the ambling âRoad to You.â Written by Micky and Courtney Patton, the rollicking singalong is classic Motorcars and an ideal welcome mat for the collection. Sauntering âRodeo Girlâ swings and punches up the pace, before âAlone Again Tonightâââa Gary track written with Gattisââwatches loneliness with empathetic ache. Several tracks take note of the universal search for comfortââeven when itâs not the stuff of fairytales or even particularly dignified. Over crunchy guitars, âStranger Tonightâ captures an eveningâs quest for no-strings companionship. âIt was an idea I had just watching people at barsââthat lonely girl I saw time and time again but with a different set of glasses, over and over,â Gary says. âIt seems like everybody can relate to thatââout looking for something new that doesnât have to be love.â Sweet and sad, âBreak My Heart,â another track penned by Gary with Jeff Crosby, looks back after the end of a relationship. âYouâre not mad anymore but youâre thankful of the good times,â Gary says. âItâs also about finding yourself again. Itâs a moving-on song.â Quiet and sparse, the Gary-penned âRun into Youâ details a longing to cross paths with an ex-lover whoâs moved on with heartbreaking clarity. Anchored by crying B-3 organ, âHold This Town Togetherâ explores the struggle to enjoy what once was easy after the loss of someone whoâll never come back. After years of trying, Micky wrote the song for Mark, a friend and the Motorcarsâ first bassist, who passed away. âHold This Town,â written by Micky and Jeff Crosby, muses over the hometown faces and places that never change. âThere are the same people at the same bars, the same people working at the grocery stores,â Micky says, then adds with a laugh, âItâs kind of a depressing party song.â Another Jeff Crosby-Micky collaboration, âThank My Motherâs Godâ pays beautiful tribute to moms and their devotion to their black sheep, running wild. Two album standouts stand tall: âLions of Kandahar,â written by Gary alone, and the title track, which Micky penned with master songwriter Bruce Robison. Over instrumentation that evokes the tense hum of Middle Eastern military activity, âLions of Kandaharâ follows a deployment from a first-person perspective. The result is jarring, compelling, and deeply humanââa breathtaking piece of songwriting that took five years to complete. Winsome âLong Time Cominââ is an ode to the satisfaction of patience and perseverance rewarded in different formsââa stunning tapestry that also reflects the road to the album itself. Guitars and songs at the ready, Micky and Gary hope most of all that their sprawling cross-continental fanbase connect with Long Time Cominâ, a collection four years in the making. âIf you can put your heart on your sleeve and say it, itâs the best medicine for people,â Micky says, reflecting on the album. âThey can lock into it and enjoy the ride.â