As the first batch of regulars arrived in the sun-brightened White Squirrel Bar last week, Trevor McSpadden pointed out the most glaring difference between Texas audiences and the crowds he's played to since moving to Minnesota three years ago.
"I hear a lot of them say, 'I don't really like country music, but I like what you do,'" he said.
With the same delicate slice as her guitar solos, Mary Cutrufello interjected, "I've been hearing that same thing for 30 years."
Both ex-Texans, McSpadden and Cutrufello moved to Minnesota decades apart but wound up meeting at just the right time: during the COVID-19 pandemic. Their first gig was on the front porch of McSpadden's house in St. Paul.
Three years after that introduction and two years since the opening of their "home base," St. Paul's White Squirrel Bar — celebrating its second anniversary next week — the two Texas exes have settled into the coolest happy-hour gig in the Twin Cities.
The Tuesday night affairs at the White Squirrel are modeled after the Saturday night sets the two musicians used to play at or attend in dance halls around Texas.
They toss around vintage country covers, from Waylon and Willie to Moe Bandy and lesser-known songwriters that even the Current's Bill DeVille might have to look up. Some fine original tunes are sprinkled into the mix, too, as are bad jokes and cool guitar jams.
Once a buzzed-about alt-twanger and Americana rocker who recorded for Mercury Records and played "The Tonight Show" in the late-'90s, Cutrufello moved to St. Paul from Texas in 2001 after losing her record deal to mass corporate cuts.