When John Fullbright moved from Okemah to Tulsa three years ago, he wasn’t sure if he’d stay. He relocated mostly for the airport, but stayed for the thriving music community.: “Tulsa’s really the first city I’ve lived in my entire life,” laughs the acclaimed, Grammy-nominated songwriter. “It’s very small and very affordable, but there’s a history. There’s a camaraderie and everyone is helping each other out. It’s caring and friendship.: “The charm of it to me is that literally we’re all using the same bass player and drummer, and that’s just because that’s what happens naturally,” Fullbright continues. “So it just made sense that we would take it on the road a little bit.”: Although Tulsa remains home to the Woody Guthrie Center and the Bob Dylan Archive, as well as the bluesy, jamming Tulsa sound pioneered by Leon Russell and J.J. Cale, Fullbright aims to help emphasize the thriving and eclectic music happening there today and still evolving. The Tulsa Revue gathers top talent from the Northeast Oklahoma hotbed for a package tour. Paul Benjaman lays down slinking, grinding guitar grooves, with Jesse Aycock from Hard Working Americans working wicked steel and Jacob Tovar leaning into hard-driven classic country behind his low, wavering croon.: Fullbright caps the showcase with hot roots and sharp ballads, convening the full group at close to highlight the typical Tulsa experience.: “We have an undeniable thing going on up here right now, but nobody knows about it,” offers Fullbright. “So there’s all this great talent and music, but unfortunately it doesn’t travel much, and it’s hard to make a living just in Oklahoma. So why not have a pipeline from Tulsa, and what better place to frequent than Austin?”