For Texas music fans, itโ€™s hard to imagine two artists who represent what makes Texas music special in the first place more than the Reverend Horton Heat and Dale Watson. Beyond their perfectly styled pompadours and musical chops for days, both men share an abiding love for their home state that transcends everything else save perhaps their guitars and Lone Star beer. Thatโ€™s not all they have in common, either: Both men have been making records since the early โ€™90s, many of them quite good. While their peers can be wildly hit-and-miss from one release to the next, the Reverend (a.k.a. Jim Heath) and Watson pretty much hit their marks every time.

In an idea whose time has come, but could have come a lot sooner, this summer the two men have decided to join forces for a joint tour dubbed โ€œThe Real Deal: An Intimate Evening of Tall Tales and Short Songs.โ€ Houston fans get a special treat, because two of the tourโ€™s nine dates are in our area: Tomballโ€™s Main Street Crossing this Friday and, for all you Inner Loopers, the Mucky Duck on Saturday. With that in mind, the Houston Press recently scrutinized each manโ€™s catalog for ammunition in this looming showdown โ€“ a true โ€œDuel at the Two Oโ€™Clock Bell,” to quote one Horton Heat instrumental โ€“ according to a number of themes common to each man’s catalog. Hold onto your longnecks!

CARS AND TRUCKS
For two men who spend as much time on tour as Watson and Heath, it’s not too surprising their albums can be counted on to burn some gasoline every now and again. The Reverendโ€™s memorable rides in โ€œThe Devilโ€™s Chasinโ€™ Meโ€ and โ€œFive-o Fordโ€ (a.k.a. โ€œFucked-Up Fordโ€) were a prelude to 2002 album Lucky 7, which packed โ€œReverend Horton Heatโ€™s Big Blue Car,โ€ โ€œGalaxie 500โ€ and โ€œSuicide Doorsโ€ all under its hood. (Note: โ€œLove Whip,โ€ from much earlier, is not about a car.) Watson, on the other hand, has recorded and released three volumes in his The Truckinโ€™ Sessions series, which is loaded with 10-4 tunes like โ€œGood Luck Nโ€™ Good Truckinโ€™ Tonightโ€ and โ€œTruck Stop In La Grange.” Advantage: Even

CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
Where to begin here? Best not light a match near either Watson or Heathโ€™s repertoire, but their frequent elbow-bending is equally awash in consequences. Watson could fill a whole recycling bin with the empties left in the wake of โ€œHey Brown Bottle,โ€ โ€œWine Donโ€™t Lie,โ€ โ€œI Lie When I Drinkโ€ and โ€œThanks to Tequila,โ€ plus, well, โ€œDrink Drink Drink.โ€ Heath, for his part, once notched an unusual (but useful) public-service announcement in โ€œPlease Donโ€™t Take the Baby to the Liquor Store.โ€ Neither is either one hurtinโ€™ for songs about the morning after, either, Watson on โ€œHair of the Dogโ€ and Heath with โ€œSue Jack Daniels,โ€ โ€œYou Gotta Hand It to Meโ€ and โ€œCallinโ€™ In Twisted.โ€ On 2004โ€™s Revival, Heath took that a step further and darkened his tone considerably on the angry anti-heroin tune โ€œIndigo Friends,โ€ a far cry from the celebratory โ€œMarijuanaโ€ on 1990โ€™s Smoke โ€˜Em If You Got โ€˜Em, or the manic โ€œBales of Cocaineโ€ on โ€˜93โ€™s Full-Custom Gospel Sounds. Advantage: Heath

LOVE & THE LADIES
Country cheating songs donโ€™t come any more classic than Watsonโ€™s โ€œCaught.โ€ But both he and Heath have exceptional range when it comes to relaying a vast range of human romantic entanglements. Watsonโ€™s latest album, last yearโ€™s Call Me Insane, stands as Exhibit A, veering from the giddy โ€œHot Dangโ€ to โ€œBurden of the Cross,โ€ Watsonโ€™s wrenching account of the roadside memorial he erected after his lady love was killed in a motorcycle accident. The Reverend, as a rule, is not nearly as mellow as Watson can be on โ€œI Owe It All to You,โ€ although every so often Heath releases a lovely olive branch like โ€œThe Bedroom Again.โ€ But just like Watson, the man can turn a phrase, whether heโ€™s pissed off (โ€œGo With Your Friendsโ€), tongue in cheek (โ€œJust Let Me Hold My Paycheckโ€) or just unbelievably horny (โ€œWiggle Stick,โ€ โ€œLet Me Teach You How to Eatโ€ and quite a few others). Advantage: Even

MUSIC AND MUSICIANS
Decades before founding the โ€œAmeripolitanโ€ movement, Watson was an outspoken critic of commercial country music, memorably singing โ€œIโ€™m too country now for country/ just like Johnny Cashโ€ on 1995โ€™s โ€œNashville Rash.โ€ More recently, heโ€™s stuck up for the Don Williamses and Merle Haggards of the world on 2010โ€™s tender โ€œHello, Iโ€™m an Old Country Songโ€ and, onย Call Me Insane, saluted a fallen country hero in โ€œJonesinโ€™ For Jones.โ€ For his part, Heath has affirmed his faith in rock and roll in โ€œIf It Ainโ€™t Got Rhythmโ€ and โ€œNever Gonna Stop It,โ€ but also taken a remarkably unsentimental look at the drudgery of touring life on โ€œScenery Going By.โ€ But even asserting his rockabilly pride in the highly humorous โ€œDeath Metal Guysโ€ isnโ€™t enough to tip this category Heathโ€™s way in the face of Watsonโ€™s brilliant โ€œI Hate These Songs.โ€ Advantage: Watson

TEXAS
It seems only fair that our last category be songs about Texas itself. Neither Watson nor Heath has written a lot, but several of the ones they have rank among the more memorable Texas songs in recent memory. Those include Watsonโ€™s ode to the spiny critters that all too often end up as roadkill (โ€œTexas Armadilloโ€) and the Reverendโ€™s oh-so-helpful warning to Hollywood types disguised as a Tex-Mex polka, โ€œAinโ€™t No Saguaro in Texas,โ€ but those are still in the also-ran column. If the legislature ever gets around to giving Texas a new state song, either Watsonโ€™s โ€œWay Down Texas Wayโ€ and โ€œThatโ€™s What I Like About Texasโ€ or Heathโ€™s โ€œThereโ€™s a Little Bit of Everything in Texasโ€ would represent the Lone Star State, the best state, with wit, charm and swing, the way God intended.ย Advantage: Watson (barely)

WINNER: The fansโ€ฆobviously

Dale Watson and the Reverend Horton Heat perform 8 p.m. Friday, July 15 at Main Street Crossing, 111 West Main in Tomball, and 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday, July 16 at McGonigel’s Mucky Duck, 2425 Norfolk in Houston.

Chris Gray is the former Music Editor for the Houston Press.