Soul of South Austin Festival IV Announces 2019 Lineup

Article Contributed by Press Junkie PR | Published on Monday, April 22, 2019

Mark your calendars now for the Soul of South Austin Festival (SOSAFest) at the legendary C-boy's Heart & Soul on Saturday, May 18th! The party will start early at 5pm and go all night with eleven standout bands on two alternating stages - one inside and one outside! Only $15 at the door! Check out the lineup here:

Outside Stage

5-5:40 Carl Weathersby (Chicago Blues Hall of Fame)

6-6:40 SAAS (soul sisters Sonya Jevette, Andrea Dawson, & Ally Means)

7-7:40 Kelly Hafner

8-8:40 Skymomma

9-10 Goldie Pipes

Inside Stage

5:30-6:15 Clusterfunk

7:45-8:30 Steady Legend

9-9:45 Ray Prim

10:15-11 Honey Made

11:30-12:15 Collective Thought

12:45-close Ex Romantika

About C-Boy’s Heart Soul:

Louis Charles “C-Boy” Parks was the manager of the legendary Rome Inn club where The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Paul Ray's Cobras and Stevie Ray Vaughan first began playing in Austin, TX in the late 70s. In addition to managing the club, C-Boy would cook BBQ for the bands, working hard every night so everyone else could have a good time, the only time he’d take a break was when the T-Birds played swamp pop classic “Mathilda,” for which he’d cut up the dance floor.

Billy Gibbons would take a busload of Houston friends to the Rome Inn on Mondays to see the T-Birds, immortalizing it on “Lowdown in the Street” from ZZ Top’s 1979 album Degüello: “So roam on in, it ain’t no sin to get low down in the street.” That same year, the T-Birds paid tribute to the lovable man in the sweat-stained blue T-shirt with slow harp instrumental “C-Boy’s Blues” from their debut LP Girls Go Wild.

Steve Wertheimer, owner of the Continental Club and C-Boy’s Heart & Soul, got his start in the nightclub world working alongside C at the Rome Inn when he was just a student at UT. “If it wasn’t for C-Boy Parks, I wouldn’t be in the music business,” says Wertheimer. “He was a major part of my life for several years,” he says of Parks, who died in 1991 at age 66. “The Rome Inn has always been the standard, in my mind, for how to run a club.”

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