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Terry Lee Hale (Steel Trap) was born in San Marcos, Texas, has a house in Seattle, but now lives in France. The list of all Terry Lee's accomplishments is longer than a rich man's driveway, but among them are seven CDs on Glitterhouse (Frontier Model, Tornado Alley, Leaving West, Wilderness Years, Old Hand, The Blue Room, and Frozen). He tours about eight months a year, recently with the Walkabouts. Was barbecue master for Hardpan while in Tucson. His hero is Reverend Gary Davis. Don't even look at his cool-ass 1932 Dobro.

 

The Short History of Hardpan by TLH:

I'm pretty sure Hardpan came about from Joseph Parsons. We all knew each other having met at various gigs and on the road (plus Joseph, Todd and Chris are Blue Rose Label mates) over the years. It was Joseph who first mentioned the idea to me of us all recording together and that was a couple of years ago. I expressed an interest in being involved. Later I heard the news that Todd Thibaud was interested and also wanted to be a partner. For some reason nothing ever happened although I would hear from time to time that everyone was still interested. Next thing I knew, Spring of 2001, it was going to happen if we could all get on the same page time wise.

Blue Rose Records was quite interested in supporting such a endeavor and had agreed to fund the project. Cool, and was I still interested? But of course!! All 4 of us have our "solo" careers which means we are all busy as hell so scheduling was going to be a problem. The other major difficulty is that I pretty much live in Europe full time and getting us all on one continent at the same time can be a problem. Fortunatly, at the time our "band" was made official and we started searching for a compatable recording date, I had already purchased a ticket and made plans to visit family and friends in Seattle. My scheduled time to be in the states was from Sept.2-20. As it turned out everybody else was "free" in September and so, with some adjustments and finagling, we all agreed to meet in Tucson, Arizona at Chris Burroughs' spanking brand new studio to make a record. We would all meet there on September 10, 2001.

JUPITER BALLS ?: I guess I get to take the credit for our first band name. I came up with the brilliant (or so I thought) name of "Jupiter Balls". Actually, and to be honest, I considered "Leaky Sparrow" to be ultra cool as well but............. (although I think we get to use Leaky Sparrow as the name of our publishing company!). What does it all mean you ask? Bad night time dreams Terry? Well I was just trying to inject a little bit of edge and humour to this project. I did NOT want to make another CSN&Y record. Actually I was thinking more in the line of Thelonius Monk or an acoustic Sonic Youth. I mean, you can't really write a song like "Hotel California" if your in a band called "Leaky Sparrow". See what I mean? Anyway, although I didn't hear an enormous roar of approval with the name, Jupiter Balls by default became our band name for about 3 months.

When we actually got to Tucson and started to record we all (myself included) began to sense the potential ramifications of being in a band called Jupiter Balls. "Anyone got a better idea", we asked? Well we kicked around lot's of ideas but nothing really grabbed us. Most of the names had a very western kinda feel but sitting in the middle of a very large and very hot desert I guess it's natural. All those margaritas? (Tucson Sunrise's - Tequila & OJ??) didn't hurt either for the creativity and after a few rounds Chris mentioned that he had always liked the name and visual image of hardpanners (which was a nickname for the miners who used that kind of mining a lot during the California gold rush days of 1849). Hardpan itself the dictionary says is "any layer of clay underlying soft soil." Voilà. I believe it was about 03H00 on September 18 that we all shook hands and agreed to be in a band named Hardpan.

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