Farewell to Texas Troubadour Steven Fromholz

Texas songwriter and wordsmith Steven Fromholz died in a hunting accident this past Sunday, Jan. 19, at age 68, when a rifle he was handling on a feral hog hunt near Eldorado, south of San Angelo, fell and discharged. According tolegacy.com, Fromholz’ funeral will be held at 2 p.m. this Friday at the Ft. McKavett Cemetery near San Angelo.
Born in Temple and educated at the University of North Texas in Denton, Fromholz became one of the founding fathers of Texas folk and country, performing everywhere from Houston’s Anderson Fair to Terlingua’s Starlight Theater in Big Bend, where he periodically worked as a raft guide on the Rio Grande. His long-out-of-print debutFrom Here to There,with Dan McCrimmon, laid the groundwork for a sound that would be built on by a subsequent generation of Texas songwriters including Lyle Lovett, who covered Fromholz’ “Bears” and “Texas Trilogy”—a three-part ode to the tiny town of Kopperl, Texas, in Bosque County, comprising “Daybreak,” “Train Ride” and “Bosque County Romance”—on 1998’sStep Inside This Housealbum. Willie Nelson, John Denver, Hoyt Axton and Jerry Jeff Walker have also covered Fromholz’ songs.
“Texas Trilogy” was also the inspiration for a book,Texas Trilogy: Life in a Small Texas Town, by writer Craig D. Hillis and photographer Bruce F. Jordan, published by University of Texas Press in 2002 andexcerpted in theObserver.
The songs alone are legacy enough to install him in the Texas canon, but Fromholz was an accomplished storyteller in multiple modes. He was named Texas’ Poet Laureate in 2007, the same year TCU Press published hisNew and Selected Poems.
Remembrance and notice has come from all quarters, including these from theHouston Chronicle, theHouston Press, theAustin American-Statesman, theAustin Chronicle, and theBig Bend Sentinel.
TheDallas Morning News published this photo essay of late-career Fromholz.
But perhaps the best way to remember him is just to listen.
Share:
- Share to Facebook
- Share to Twitter
- Share via Email
- Copy permalink to clipboard Copied to clipboard
- Republish
Republish this article for free
All of theTexas Observer’s articles are available for free syndication for news sources under the following conditions:
- Articles must link back to the original article and contain the following attribution at the top of the story: “This article was originally published by theTexas Observer, a nonprofit investigative news outlet and magazine. Sign up for theirweekly newsletter, or follow them onFacebook andX.”
- Articles preferably includeTexas Observer alongside author byline (first name last name/Texas Observer).
- Articles cannot be rewritten, edited, or changed beyond alignments with house style books.
- Photos, illustrations, and other art may be available for syndication but must be confirmed. (AP images are not available.) Email[email protected] with questions.
- Please tag theTexas Observerin social media posts promoting the republished story.
- Please notify us by email that the article will be republished at[email protected].
BECOME A MEMBER OF THE TEXAS OBSERVER
You can chip in for as little as $3 a month.
You May Also Like


Trump’s DOGE Cuts Are a Texas-Sized Disaster
Reckless agency layoffs and the dismantling of federal relief programs could leave the Lone Star State in peril.

How Republicans Are Willfully Endangering Immigrant Kids
GOP lawmakers often claim they want to protect children, but their policy decisions tell a different story.
[8]ページ先頭