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All Music Guide:
Formed by vastly talented Butthole Sufer expatriate Jeff Pinkus (vocals, bass), Lance Farley (vocals, drums), and Houston tattoo artist Carson Vester (vocals, guitar), Honky began rehearsing and playing live around their hometown of Austin, TX, in 1996. Fortunately for the band, Austin has long been famous for its well-established and boisterous rock & roll audience. Flexing their blend of Texas boogie via ZZ Top and Southern twang via Blackfoot and Black Oak Arkansas, Honky also adds a dash of Butthole Surfers LSD into the punchbowl, as well as a generous portion of hammer-down rock riffs. With all three band members handling vocal duties, the band developed as an immediate personality act, an equilateral triangle of Texas gentlemen in ten-gallon hats plowing through a set of rump-shaking punk rock boogie. 1997 saw the release of Honky's debut recording, a vinyl-only EP for Frank Kozik's Man's Ruin label. Later that year, those four tracks found themselves remastered and included on Honky's self-titled debut album. In 1999, touring had taken its toll on guitarist Carson Vester, whose Joe Walsh-like chicken-scratch playing had helped define the band and he left on good terms. His replacement, interim guitarist Gable Barber, lasted a few tours and the live album Attacked By Lesbians, before the band secured the exceptional picking services of Bobby Landgraf, the perfect compliment to Pinkus' gifted, tasteful, and well-tested bass playing. With that lineup firmly established, the band recorded its sophomore effort, House of Good Tires, in 2000.
Wikipedia:
Honky (also spelled honkie or sometimes honkey) is a racial slur for white people, predominantly heard in the United States. The first recorded use of honky in this context possibly dates to 1946 (although the use of Honky Tonk appeared in films well before that time), yet the exact origins of the word are generally unknown.
Honky may be a variant of hunky, which was a variant of Bohunk, a slur for Bohemian-Hungarian immigrants in the early 1900s. Honky may also derive from the term "xonq nopp" which, in the West African language Wolof means, literally, "red-eared person" or "white person". The term may have originated with Wolof-speaking slaves brought to the US.
Another documented theory and possible explanation for the origins of the word is that it was a nickname African-American people gave white men (called "johns" or "curb crawlers") who would honk their car horns for prostitutes to come outside in urban areas such as Harlem and red-light districts in the early 1910s.
Honky was adopted as a pejorative in 1967 by black militants within Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) seeking a rebuttal for the term nigger. National Chairman of the SNCC, H. Rap Brown, on June 24, 1967, told an audience of blacks in Cambridge, "You should burn that school down and then go take over the honky's school." Brown went on to say: "If America don't come round, we got to burn it down. You better get some guns, brotha. The only thing the honky respects is a gun. You give me a gun and tell me to shoot my enemy, I might shoot Ladybird."
Honky has occasionally (if intentionally ironically) been used even for whites supportive of African-Americans, as seen in the 1968 trial of Black Panther Party member Huey Newton, when fellow Panther Eldridge Cleaver created pins for Newton's white supporters stating "Honkies for Huey."
In music and entertainment
The word honky-tonk may refer to a particular type of country music or entertainment, most commonly provided at bars for its patrons. The band Wild Cherry 1976 Disco/Funk hit "Play That Funky Music". The long version of the song near the end the singer mentioned the slur "Honky".
Country musicians such as David Allen Coe and other successful artists have used the words honky and honky-tonk in popular songs such as: "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" (Kitty Wells), "Honky Tonk Women" (The Rolling Stones), "Honky Cat" (Elton John), "Honky Tonk Blues" (Hank Williams), "Chasin' That Neon Rainbow" (Alan Jackson) and "Honky Tonk Man" (Johnny Horton).
Honky Tonk Man has also been used for popular culture purposes including The Honky Tonk Man (a ring name and persona for professional wrestler Roy Wayne Farris) and Honky Tonk Man (an album by innovating country rock musician Steve Young).
Other uses of honky in music may refer to Honky (an album by Melvins), The Chicago Honky (a style of polka music), MC Honky (DJ stage persona), Honky Château (an album by Elton John), Talkin' Honky Blues (an album by Buck 65) and Honky (an album by Keith Emerson).
Television and film
In a popular sketch on Saturday Night Live, Chevy Chase and Richard Pryor used both nigger (Chase) and honky (Pryor) in reference to one another during a "racist word association interview". SNL, during this period, also aired (musical guest and stand-up regular) Steve Martin's rendition of "King Tut," which contained in its lyrics the word honky. Even though it was intended as light hearted humor, it questions the Afro/Arabic ethnicity of Tutankhamun-disputed amongst Egyptologists to this day.
On the TV series The Jeffersons, George Jefferson regularly referred to a white person as a honky (or whitey) as did Redd Foxx on Sanford and Son. This word would later be popularized in episodes of Mork & Mindy by Robin Williams and Jonathan Winters.
The black neighbor on the TV show Love Thy Neighbour, played by Rudolph Walker would often refer to his bigoted white neighbor (Jack Smethurst) as 'honky'.
The Canadian TV show Jamaican For Honkeys, starring comedians Kevin Jackal Johnston and Trixx, uses the term in the show title.
These and other shows, as exemplified by the controversial All in the Family, attempted to expose racism/prejudice as an issue in society using the subversive weapon of humor. However, the effect that this theme had on television created both negative and positive criticism.
Honky is a 1971 movie based on an interracial relationship (starring Brenda Sykes as Sheila Smith and John Neilson as Wayne "Honky" Devine).
There were some movies using honky without any derogatory connotation. Honky Tonk is a 1929 American musical film starring Sophie Tucker. And Honky Tonk is also a 1941 black-and-white Western film starring Clark Gable and Lana Turner.
Honky Tonk is also a 1974 Western film starring Richard Crenna and Margot Kidder. Additionally, Honkytonk Man is a 1982 drama film set in the Great Depression. Clint Eastwood, who produced and directed the film, stars in the film with his son Kyle Eastwood.
In an episode of Family Guy, Peter Griffin uses the word to try to get out of jury duty.
Other meanings and uses
In Australia and Singapore, the term is used in a casual nature to refer to people originating from Hong Kong.
Honky is also a familiar short form for "honcarenko" (pronounced "honk-a-ren-ko") which is the Slavic word for "Ukrainian".




