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by Jason Ankeny
One of any number of garage bands to operate under the Outcasts name, this particular psych-punk unit formed in San Antonio in 1964 — keyboardist/harpist Buddy Carson, guitarist Denny Turner, and drummer Rickey Wright comprised the founding lineup, with second guitarist Jim Carsten and bassist Jim Ryan signing on as the year drew to a close. In 1965, the Outcasts entered Texas Sound Studios to cut their debut single, the self-released ballad Nothing Comes Easy — the record is perhaps most notable because it was written and produced by Mike Post, the future composer of hit TV themes including Hill Street Blues, Magnum P.I., and The A-Team. Post, then in basic training at nearby Lackland Air Force Base, also hired the Outcasts to serve as the backing band in a military musical production he was producing. The group signed to the Askel label to issue its followup single, 1966s Carsten-penned Im in Pittsburgh (And Its Raining) — the Outcasts biggest local hit, it remains a garage classic thanks in no small part to Carstens galvanizing harmonica and Wrights propulsive drumming. The band released two more singles for Askel, Ill Set You Free and Route 66, but neither charted locally; guitarist Galen Niles replaced Turner in time for the Outcasts swan song, the 1967 Gallant label single 1523 Blair. So titled after the street address of the studio owned by producer Leland Rogers (the brother of country superstar Kenny Rogers), 1523 Blair is Texas psychedelia at its finest, but like its predecessors, it failed to make a commercial impact on its initial release. Drug and alcohol problems also contributed to the Outcasts calling it quits in 1968.