I think the further you get away from something the more you’re able to appreciate it. We didn’t know if the brotherhood would be there or if the band would sound like it did – but it’s the very same band. The original idea was that a promoter gave us an offer for a summer tour and Raul thought it’d be disingenuous just to go out there and do the old songs – he had some songs and we ended up making a record, and here we are. We’re going into the studio to make the next record and we’ll be moving on from there. Paul Deakin: I think so – it’s looking like 20 dates may turn into 20 years. Recently, drummer Paul Deakin talked from his Nashville home about the Mavericks’ second coming and his off-stage life as a carpenter.Īrts Fuse: Is this reunion continuing indefinitely? (Their 2013 Indian Ranch show topped this critic’s year-end list.) Now they’re continuing their second incarnation with a 25th anniversary tour which comes to the Wilbur Theater in Boston on Sunday and Indian Ranch in Webster on August 9. The result was a tour with an expanded lineup that featured a horn section and the LP In Time. Two years ago they reunited after a 7-year hiatus. “It was all wrong, and somehow it worked,” says Paul Deakin, co-founder and drummer of the Mavericks.Īlong with lead singer Raul Malo, bassist Robert Reynolds and a cast of newer members, the Mavericks have somehow managed to maintain a large audience despite playing a meld of Tex-Mex, lounge jazz, and honky tonk which couldn’t be further away from the modern Nashville country-pop sound. In December 1989, a country band with a Cuban-American lead singer took the stage at a punk rock club in Miami’s Little Haiti neighborhood. Mavericks drummer Paul Deakin on his band’s resurrection and 25th anniversary Meet the Mavericks: (L-R:) Eddie Perez, Paul Deakin, Raul Malo, Robert Reynolds, Jerry Dale McFadden.
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