The Soda Crackers Revive Bakersfield Sound with Texas Dance Hall Tour and Debut Album
November 21st, 2025 2:00 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff
The Soda Crackers band is reconnecting the Bakersfield Sound with its Texas roots through dance hall performances and a new album, highlighting the cultural importance of preserving historic music venues and musical heritage.
The Building Texas Show has released a new episode featuring Zane Adamo, frontman and fiddle player for The Soda Crackers, a Bakersfield, California band reviving the storied Bakersfield Sound and reconnecting it with its Texas roots. The episode, now live on YouTube at https://youtu.be/rT__5w36DYU, highlights the band's recent Texas-Oklahoma tour, their musical heritage, and their much-anticipated debut album launching December 1, 2025. In the conversation filmed shortly after the band's performance at Albert Dancehall in Albert, Texas, host Justin McKenzie explores how The Soda Crackers have embraced Texas dance hall culture—an environment where the Bakersfield Sound naturally belongs.
Albert Dancehall, a restored 1920s venue located between Stonewall and Blanco, served as a perfect backdrop for the interview. Its weathered wood stage, family-friendly atmosphere, and loyal community of dancers mirror the spaces where Western Swing and early honky-tonk music once thrived. Zane recalls the night at Albert as a powerful reminder of why these halls still matter: multi-generational families dancing together, young children twirling between boot-stomping regulars, and a crowd that truly understands the roots of the music. "The music we play is meant for dancing," Adamo says in the episode. "It came from people who worked hard, lived through the Dust Bowl, and wanted a great time on a Friday night."
Though known as "California country," the Bakersfield Sound was shaped heavily by Texans and Oklahomans who migrated west during the Dust Bowl. Buck Owens, originally from Sherman, Texas, and Tommy Collins, born in Oklahoma City, helped define a style of music that blended honky-tonk grit, country swing, and dance hall energy. Zane and The Soda Crackers are committed to reviving that lineage. Their Texas-Oklahoma tour included stops at iconic venues such as the Broken Spoke in Austin, historic dance halls, and even a pilgrimage to Turkey, Texas—home of Bob Wills and the annual Bob Wills Day celebration.
The Soda Crackers' upcoming self-titled album, releasing December 1, 2025, will feature 10 tracks including 6 original songs written by current and former band members and 4 classic covers honoring the Bakersfield Sound. The album will be available on all major streaming platforms with a limited-edition vinyl pressing including a special color variant for collectors available at thesodacrackers.bigcartel.com. "Capturing the classic spirit is incredibly important to us," Adamo noted. "From instrumentals to dance-hall-driven arrangements, we want this album to feel like it belongs on a stage in Texas."
McKenzie and Adamo close the episode by highlighting the urgent need to support historic dance halls across Texas—many of which are disappearing in places like Bakersfield. Venues such as Albert Dancehall stand as living reminders of the state's cultural heritage, where community, music, and history come together on a wooden floor. "This band is helping rebuild that bridge between Texas and Bakersfield," McKenzie said. "Dance halls like Albert are where that story comes alive." The preservation of these cultural spaces and the musical traditions they support represents an important effort to maintain regional identity and historical continuity in American music culture.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by Newsworthy.ai. You can read the source press release here,
