
Even cowgirls get the blues…
by sandi tomlin-sutker
But these girls just “wanna have fu-un!” And while they’re at
it, they want to break a few stereotypes, publicize a few local
issues, remind us all that we don’t have to be perfect to get out
there, and oh, at the same time, play and sing some fantastic
music!
Julie and I, along with our summer intern Emily Perry, met with
these cowgirls (who call themselves the Buckerettes) to find out who
they really are. The Buckerettes (Robin Cape, Deb Criss, and Roberta
Greenspan) played at our Summer’s Eve Celebration while the crowd
danced their toes off. We, and the partygoers, fell in love with these
women and their music, so we looked forward with great expectation to
learning more about the individual women and the group.
First question, of course, was—Where in the world did you get
that name? “There are so many bands in this town,” Robin laughs, “so
you have to find your niche, your branding.” One day they were goofing
around, throwing out names with a cowboy/cowgirl theme: buckaroos,
buckerettes. Later Deb called and said, “you know that name,
Buckerettes, it’s sticking with me.”
Were they worried that the
‘ette’ on the end was a bit sexist? “Look, I don’t have a diminutive
female bone in my body,” Robin warns us, “so we can reclaim that ette!
Plus people really crack up when they hear that name and remember it.”
And then there’s the whole connection with “bucking the system” and
these three women are definitely doing that.
Even though having a good time with the music is important to
them, they are all accomplished musicians. Julie asked when the music
started for each of them. Emily wanted to know their influences.
Having heard them play and sing, we were not surprised at the
answers.
Roberta began with the violin/classical music in elementary
school. “I was really very shy and I liked the instrument and it gave
me a focus. Then it helped bring me out of myself. I liked it well
enough to continue and I made my first close friends in high school in
the orchestra. Later I started jamming with friends and doing some
folk music…our first band was called The Bathroom Door! When I went on
to college I continued with orchestra and quartets, then one day I
heard a guy fiddling around.” What followed was much less orchestra,
and many nights of staying up until 4:00am, recording hours of fiddle
music, skipping her Friday classes! “I got together with two friends
studying agriculture in the late 70’s at the University of Delaware—we
named our band The County Extension Agents.”
Later Roberta (Bert to her bandmates) blended these two
interests of gardening and music when she traveled for 3 1/2 years,
with partner Marilyn, in Canada and as far away as New Zealand and
Hawaii doing gardening for room and board. “That really broadened who
and what I was open to—we’d stay with people in Hawaii, for instance,
and if they wanted to watch three Sci-Fi movies in five days that’s
what we did. That really helped me come back here and juggle all the
things I’m doing.”
Roberta played for about five years in Pittsburg with a square
dance band—Whiskey on Tap. Old-time music is still her favorite style.
Then, around 1990 she met up with Deb, who was traveling at the time.
They played a lot together on the road before each ending up in
Asheville in 1991 playing with Deb’s band Grandmother Time.
Deb’s love of music started at age two when she recalls hearing
a commercial melody on the radio. At age five she started playing the
piano by ear, then picked up the guitar at age ten. She played in high
school groups and on TV talent shows with her brother. “I came up in a
musical family…everybody sang, amidst our dysfunction that was the one
time we were together. In Florida I was in a rock’n’roll band, then
traveled around solo, went to the Virgin Islands…I guess by age 25 I
was seriously performing music. Now I love world music—groups like
Donna the Buffalo.”

Roberta Greenspan, Deb
Criss
Robin interjects: “So that’s why when people ask ‘Do you know…’
I’ve learned to ask ‘Do we?’! She knows so many things, so many songs.
As a bass player I can follow along, for the most part, if I can see
her hands!”
Mutual respect for each other is so evident among these women.
Deb responds to Robin’s comment with: “she can follow along with
anything.” Robin demures, telling us that she didn’t pick up the bass
until just a few years ago. Of course, she began playing the piano at
age seven. “I went to college early through advanced placement as a
piano major. But in my first class my professor looked at me, slammed
her books down and yelled, ‘I am sick and tired of being given
students like you who will never amount to anything except a
third-rate piano teacher because you’ve moved around your whole life…’
and here I was 17! In six months I quit the piano and left school
pretty soon after that. I’d been playing around with a guitar and a
dulcimer so I traveled around playing dulcimer on the streets of
Vancouver for money! At lot of my influences were Jazz and I want to
do more of that in the future.”

Robin Cape
Robin didn’t really pick up an instrument again until age 42.
“Deb and I sang in a few projects and I’d been singing with the Raven
Moon band in Weaverville, thinking how much I like the bass. One day
the bass player came up to me and said, ‘you can’t just stand there
and sing; I play mandolin, guitar, banjo, and I’m stuck playing the
bass.’ I’d had enough music theory that it was easy for me: I learned
on Sunday and every Friday and Saturday for the next two years we had
a gig!
“Learning the bass was really a part of a spiritual realignment
for myself after the event with the piano teacher all those years
before. I decided I’d give myself a Gift: to be non-critical. Music is
all about being in communion and relationship with each other…if you
can laugh it just intensifies the whole energy.
“I wanted to show people you don’t have to be perfect to follow
your bliss. The Buckerettes are about being so happy and real about it
that you [the listener] say, hmmmm, where’s my Bliss?”
Of, course, it can’t all be bliss…three very talented
musicians, strong opinions and egos. How do they keep it all together,
maintain the harmony?
Deb and Robin laugh out loud. “Robin and I
have big stuff between us, early on we could come into a room and if
we weren’t fighting in five minutes, it was amazing!”
“We’ve known each other 20 years,” Robin tells us. “One time,
playing a gig together, I looked at Deb and thought ‘Wow, she looks
just like my grandmother did when she was young…’ and my husband Ivo
told me how much she sounded like my grandmother…it’s funny, Deb, that
your band was called Grandmother Time!”
“Along the way, Robin and I discovered that we sang beautifully
together, so we just had to continue working on it. You know, you can
count on your hands how many times that happens. It took us a while!”
One day we went into the woods to do a ritual…we realized we wanted to
play together…we realized, here we are.”
Robin finishes, “We sat by the river and vowed to let go of
what we used to share with each other, we said ‘Let’s make a turning
point.’ We made agreements about how to move into the music
together.”
“And knowing that it might not be easy, we laid out some things
that would be easier for us, like communication.
We still trip up sometimes, but we do remarkably well. And
we’ve both grown…god, we met each other 20 years ago! I think the
beautiful thing is that we each could recognize each other's growth
and not have to carry that old baggage forward.”
Roberta laughs that she didn’t know anything about all this
earlier! She and Deb also went through some stuff early on and are
just now putting together that they each come from similar family
dynamics: two other siblings and with father dynamics that are
similar. “You know, the ‘females are stupid’ mentality. Deb’s father
is the mirror image of my father!”
Robin explains her view: “Until women deal with themselves,
their own issues, there’s a lot of competition that comes up: even if
there’s not sexual competition there’s competition for power. Women
have been pitted against each other for thousands of years, so, until
you’re conscious, you’re caught up in it!"
Deb: “When we met, I was going through some changes myself,
having to realign my purpose with my music and my soul."
“This band,” Roberta says, “has been a real bringing together.
I am more vocal on stage than ever. I grew up singing backup and
harmony…Deb has encouraged me to sing the lead more. Even though we’re
doing this mostly for fun, I’m being challenged musically. Sometimes,
I’ll think I’m tired, and then I’ll end up practicing for 2 ½
hours.”
Robin agrees. “We are crafting our songs more. I arrange more
in this band than ever. It’s amazing, the risks we take, what we try
to do with our songs, creating our own flavor.”
All three of them clamor to tell us: “We have this new song Zen
Cowgirl…we all started writing it on our way home from our world
tour…yeah, the world of Tryon Barbeque Fest and a gig at the Durham
Triangle Folk Society. We’re wanting to write more songs with cowgirl
themes…yeah we got a gig from our ad in WNC Woman to play at a
birthday party with a cowboy theme…If folks come to our CD release
party they’ll get to hear this song…yeah, we have to get it
ready!”
It’s almost time for Roberta to go to her day job. “What is
that by the way?” Julie asks. “I work for Ancient Sun Nutrition, we
sell blue-green algae products. It’s a very flexible job so I can do
my music too, along with reclaiming a fallen-down house, riding my
bike, and gardening.
“I don’t want to be on tour all the time, but I want music to
be a real part of my life—to make music and have fun and make some
money at it”
We want to know what the other two women do when they aren’t
playing music. Deb responds: “I’ve always been in the healing
arts—massage, nurse, counselor. Now my partner Mary Anne and I have a
couple of vacation rental cabins. My favorite thing, other than music,
is nurturing people in that sanctuary space.”
Robin: “My husband and I had a business, Preservation Hall,
first in Asheville, then in Weaverville. We did that for nine years.
Recently we decided if we sold that business, lived really simply, we
could make it on our rentals and music…so we did that.”
The flexibility of this lifestyle enables Robin to participate
in her other passion: local government. “A few years ago I got
involved with the Woodfin water board to save the watershed from
logging—we were successful.” Now she is running for an Asheville City
council position in the upcoming election.
Finally,
before we wrap up (and head to any day jobs we might have), intern
Emily Perry (also an accomplished musician in her home state of New
Hampshire) has a couple of questions for the group. “I’m wondering if
you’re taken more seriously at your ages? Is it easier to get a gig as
an adult group?”
Deb: “I
think because we’re really not trying too hard...we’re having fun, and
it seems easier to get gigs!”
Robin:
“Once people see and hear us, they want us…but really there’s more
ageism toward our age group. Women singers are supposed to be sexy,
young and beautiful.”
Roberta:
“I think it’s the novelty too. We tend to get more gigs like your
fundraiser, the Sierra Club, Mountain Conservancy Land Trust. I think
our age and wisdom are being reflected in the kinds of gigs we’re
getting. And we can also get fun gigs like the Paddlers’
Pub!”
Robin: “I
think I also have absorbed the society’s ideas about age. Like if you
haven’t made it by the time you’re thirty you’re a has-been. But I
think since we’ve chosen not to go the route of the good lookin’ sex
queens…we’re just women who are who they are...and I think we have a
“market share” of people who are moving right along with us in age,
we’re in a lucky niche.”
Deb: “And
when you start out as a younger musician, we all have egos, and we
have to get past that, grow past it. It’s a lot more fun now, with
that part not being there.”
Roberta:
“For me this band is one of the most fun, best experiences I’ve had. I
appreciate the talent and hearts of these two musicians…everyone has
the highest good and each other’s interest at heart.”
They all
agree that they’re pretty much “just living here in the mountains,
enjoying life, playing music". Sure they sing the Blues. “We all
experience the blues from time to time, but we don’t focus on despair.
We really do want to have fun with this!”
To reach
The Buckerettes: TheBuckerettes@hotmail.com
or 828-216-4009
Upcoming
Buckerette Gigs:
Aug 6
Paddlers' Pub, Hot Springs 7:30-10:30
Aug 7 CD release—Wild West
Extravaganza PartyGrey Eagle Asheville 8-11:00
Sunday Sept 4 Main
Stage—LAFF festival, downtown Asheville
Friday Sept 9,
Malaprops—Downtown Asheville (time to be announced)Sat Sept 10
Paddlers' Pub, Hot Springs 7:30-10:30
Sat Sept 17th Conservation
Network Benefit, Dupont Forest
Sat Sept 23 Flat Rock Music
Festival, Main Stage,