
TOY CALDWELL OF THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND JAMMING IN THE WOODS. PHOTO-ART BY BEN UPHAM.
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“STOMPIN’ ROOM ONLY”
UNRELEASED 1976 LIVE ALBUM
RELEASED ON CD IN 2003
A BUNCH OF REVIEWS
FINALLY! THANK YOU MUSIC GODS!, December 2, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Stompin’ Room Only (Unreleased Live Recording) (Audio CD)
This CD is a must have for Tucker Boys fans or “southern rock” fans in general. To me the highlight is “Blue Ridge Mountain Sky”, which includes a 3-minute plus solo by thumb-picking master Toy Caldwell. Long-time fans will really appreciate that song plus outstanding versions of “This Ol’ Cowboy”, “Searchin’ For A Rainbow” and “Hillbilly Band”.
On a down note, I am not quite sure why they had to include two songs already released from a July ’74 show in Milwaukee. But…what the hell.
One thing you can definitely feel is the driving force of Tommy Caldwell in most of the songs. You can feel his bass, plus on many songs he enthusiastically sings harmony with Doug Gray in the chorus. Now, Tommy (along with Toy) was not the BEST singer, but he sure seemed to enjoy what he was doing.
I am not sure if the reviewer who gave this 1 star actually has heard this CD, but please do not let him/her dissuade you. I am a fan of the original (and only) MTB, and I have no axe to grind. To me the band ended with Tommy’s untimely passing in 1980. Nonetheless, this is a treasure. Enjoy!
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Live Fire!, December 30, 2003
By
Lance Farley (Austin, TX United States) – See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
This review is from: Stompin’ Room Only (Unreleased Live Recording) (Audio CD)
It’s a great thing to see all the early Marshall Tucker Band albums being remastered and re-released. Apparently, this CD is an unreleased live album with a few added tracks. The main album was recorded on two nights in England in late 1976. The added tracks are the ten-minute-plus “The Thrill Is Gone” from the 1975 Volunteer Jam (featuring guests Dickey Betts, Chuck Leavell and Charlie Daniels), and “Ramblin’” and “24 Hours At A Time” from 1974 (and previously released on “Where We All Belong”). Sound quality varies on the tracks, but most of the performances are amazing. You can hear why this band was such a hot live commodity. I wish the editing between tracks was better; that would give more of a semblance of a real live show. Still it’s great, just having this stuff……….
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FINALLY!!, November 10, 2003
By
Thomas Clark (Makawao, Hi. USA) – See all my reviews
This review is from: Stompin’ Room Only (Unreleased Live Recording) (Audio CD)
Been waiting for this…forever…the original line up…live…tearing it up. Nobody played like Toy Caldwell. One of the best live bands I ever had the good fortune to see. Recorded mainly on their one and only European Tour in 76…this CD grabs you by the throat and doesn’t let go. Ramblin’ and 24 Hours are the same from the Where We All Belong album but no matter…this one is a keeper….advice? Play it LOUD!
You can have fun I’m telling you can…when you stomp your feet to a hillbilly band!
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Real Southern Rock !!, January 25, 2004
By
“clems97″ (Laurens, SC United States) – See all my reviews
This review is from: Stompin’ Room Only (Unreleased Live Recording) (Audio CD)
Marshall Tucker Band – Stompin’ Room Only (Ramblin’ Records, 2003)
CD Review by: Joe (Skydog) Clem of Skydog Music
1. Long Hard Ride
2. This Ol Cowboy
3. Fire on the Mountain
4. Searchin’ For a Rainbow
5. Take the Highway
6. Can’t You See
7. Blue Ridge Mountain Sky
8. The Thrill Is Gone (Jimmy Hall & Guests)
9. Ramblin’
10. 24 Hours (Charlie Daniels on fiddle)
11. Hillbilly Band
Deja vu …All of a sudden I’m back in the South of 1976. The ol’ Skydog was a Senior in high school. Back in those days, and I guess it still is today, everybody had their little cliques. Some were the “disco ducks”… you know, polyester pants and the whole bit. Listened to the mindless dance music that was beginning to take over; drum machines and synthesizers were replacing musical talent and feeling. Then there were the “Metal Heads”, the ones with the Led Zep shirts and the dark attitudes. Over in another corner were the “good ol’ boys”…we’d discovered a new type music (or so we thought) coming from of a bunch of bands from right around us. No English accents, no weird clothes or even weirder haircuts. Folks just like us. Jeans and cowboy hats and boots…and we could actually understand what they were saying ! It all just felt right…Southern pride was on the rise…Charlie Daniels said the “South’s Gonna Do It Again” and , by God, we believed him !!
Spartanburg, and the whole state of South Carolina for that matter, had a treasure called the Marshall Tucker Band…everybody tried to figure out which one of them was Marshall Tucker, but we sure did dig the music ! Absolutely killer guitar lines and a singer who really had a southern accent. This was “our music.” Find a convenience store that wouldn’t card you, buy up a few six-packs, find a hay field way out in the country…and it was party time !
When I put “Stompin’ Room Only ” into the CD player…see, even us good ol’ boys have joined the modern age, it was `76 all over again. It’s hard to believe the tapes have sat somewhere all these years…ought to be a crime, in my humble opinion. Probably a Yankee conspiracy !
All the classic MTB songs are here. Mostly recorded during a European tour in the mid-70′s, SRO catches the Tucker boys in their prime, before the tragic loss of both Tommy and Toy Caldwell. “Can’t You See” brings back the sweet guitar lines of lost loved ones like Toy and Tommy. “Take The Highway” and “24 Hours At A Time”, just to name a couple, have that fire and drive that is so lacking in today’s music. And Doug Gray still makes you hurt when he hits the high notes on “The Thrill Is Gone”(from the 1975 Volunteer Jam)…damn, that musta’ stung…probably scarred him for life !
This is not the Marshall Tucker Band of today, except for vocalist Doug Gray. These songs were recorded when Southern Rock was at it’s zenith…new and fresh and strong. Each and every one should stand as a benchmark for any band who wants to call themselves “Southern” rock. You can almost see Toy and Tommy grinnin’ at each other across the stage.
In summary, GET THIS CD…if you ever jammed on the radio to the MTB, ever fortunate enough to see them live, or just don’t feel the fire when you listen to the latest media favorite…this is your salvation !
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“Wow” is an appropriate response., March 27, 2004
By
Virgil “Virgil” (Chapel Hill, NC) – See all my reviews
This review is from: Stompin’ Room Only (Unreleased Live Recording) (Audio CD)
What a find this new release of old material from the mid-70s is. There was something about that era that produced live albums for the ages; from the Allman Brothers “Live at the Fillmore East” to Hendrix “Band Of Gypsys”, Deep Purple “Live in Japan”, Rory Gallagher “Live in Europe” and of course “Frampton Comes Alive”. The 70s were a “sweet spot” in a sense. Arena rock was not yet corporate [though by the mid-late 70s it became bombastic], and in a pre-MTV world bands still toured for “face time” with their fans.
Add to these Marshall Tucker’s “Stompin’ Room Only”. The sad part is that it’s been under wraps for the last twenty five years, not available to influence a new generation of musicians or to just plain entertain the rest of us. From first to last song there is strong musicianship- always so important to Southern bands- and enthusiasm from the players. An infectious mix of southern rock, jazz, country and just plain jammin’. What a gem and what a find this music is. Highly recommended.
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Long Lost Album Finally Comes To Life!, November 19, 2003
By
Craig Cumberland (Turlock, CA United States) – See all my reviews
This review is from: Stompin’ Room Only (Unreleased Live Recording) (Audio CD)
Finally! It’s here! After over two decades of waiting, Tuckerheads are able to hear the long awaited, much anticipated, long rumored to be lost forever “Stomping Room Only”! But it was worth the wait! And the good news is that, because the original never saw the light of day on LP, it was expanded (thanks to the CD format) to include bonus cuts like the rare “The Thrill Is Gone” (from the very first Volunteer Jam album that has yet to be released on CD). It is perhaps Doug Gray’s best vocal performance ever! Other standouts are Blue Ridge Mountain Sky and This Ol Cowboy, which were sung by Toy Caldwell on the studio versions but sang live by Doug. So now we have both versions to appreciate, thanks to this new release! Tucker was one of the pioneers of the southern rock and jam band genres – and SRO exemplifies why. The folks at the Shout Factory did a great job re-mastering the music and it sounds like it was recorded yesterday. Tucker fans are sure to love this as should fans of jam music or southern rock.
Craig Cumberland
www.tuckerhead.com
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MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY:
1973 The Marshall Tucker Band
1974 A New Life
1974 Where we All Belong
1975 Searchin’ For A Rainbow
1976 Long Hard Ride
1977 Carolina Dreams
1978 Together Forever
1979 Runnin’ Like The Wind
1980 Tenth
1981 Dedicated
1982 Tuckerized
1983 Just Us
1983 Greetings From South Carolina
2003 Stompin’ Room Only (1976 Live)
2006 Live on Long Island 4-18-80
2008 Carolina Dreams Tour 1977
TOY CALDWELL DISCOGRAPHY:
1992 Toy Caldwell
1998 Can’t You See (Live)
2000 Son of the South
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- December 5th, 2011
- Posted in BlogJams
- Tagged Ben Upham photographer, BEN UPHAM PHOTOS, BLUES, CAN'T YOU SEE, Classic Rock, CLASSIC ROCK PHOTOS, doug gray, george mccorkle, Guitars, jerry eubanks, Magical Moment Photos, marshall tucker band, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND LIVE, Marshall Tucker Band Photos, Marshall Tucker Band Pictures, MUSICIANS, paul riddle, Rock Art, SEARCHIN' FOR A RAINBOW, Southern Rock, tommy caldwell, toy caldwell, Toy Caldwell Photos, Toy Caldwell Pictures, Winterland, WINTERLAND PHOTOS, WINTERLAND PICTURES
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TOY CALDWELL OF THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND HITTING THE NOTES IN CHENEY, WA. ON 5-26-77. PHOTO ART BY BEN UPHAM.
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“EMERGING FROM THE ALLMAN BROTHERS SHADOW”
BY BRENT BROWER
THE ANDERSON HERALD,
ANDERSON, INDIANS
JULY 27, 1975
There aren’t enough good things to say about the Marshall Tucker Band. Not only are they great musicians, they’re great people! The band played at the Indianapolis Convention Center recently to a very enthusiastic crowd, which called for two encores.
The Marshall Tucker Band consists of Toy Caldwell, Tommy Caldwell, Jerry Eubanks, Paul Riddle, Doug Gray and George McCorkle. The group derived its name from an old man in their home town Spartanburg, S.C. He was a blind piano tuner and during the 1930s had a record shop in the hall they rehearsed in. They added an extra L to the name and become Marshall Tucker. However, they got billed as Marshall Tucker and his band and the Marshall Tucker Band frequently enough they changed the name to its present form.
At last the band seems to be emerging from the shadow of the Allman Brothers and is becoming well known in its own right. George McCorkle said, “You can’t be associated with a better band. “I’ve never been in competition with the Allman Brothers Band. We’ve played many a date with them. All I know is if we go out there and cook, they better cook,” he continued. The association apparently has been good for both of them. It’s interesting how they got their big break. They went to Capricorn one day and said, “Man, we want to play.” They had their demo tapes with them which George says were “pretty bad.” Anyway, Capricorn had them play for a few nights in Grants Lounge in Macon, Georgia and the executives came to see them the second night. The band played two sets. After the second set somebody broke out a bottle of champagne and they were told to be in the office Monday morning. Monday morning they were standing at the front door waiting for them to open. When they went in, the contracts were already drawn up. They’ve been with Capricorn ever since.
The MTB plays a little bit of everything. If you tried lo label it you
would have to come up with something like country, funky, blues, rock and roll soul and go on from there. The band occasionally has been known to draw a somewhat rowdy crowd. George said he read somewhere the Dead draws acid freaks, The Who draws teeny bops and The Marshall Tucker Band draws drunks and wino’s. Even though they tour a lot, the band seems to find time to do numerous benefits. They’ve done a lot of work for the American Indian Foundation and the Pediatric Care Center in Miami.
They’ve even played for the prisoners at the Atlanta Federal Prison where the show was broadcast live over radio in Atlanta. They were well received and were asked back. They plan to go back again, soon. MTB never does a benefit for something they don’t believe in completely.
The bulk of this interview was done with George McCorkle who plays banjo, acoustic guitar and electric guitar. A nicer guy you could never hope to meet. To quote directly from George, “I don’t really feel like I have an enemy in the world. I dig people. I don’t care if they paint themselves up and wear a bumble bee suit, it don’t make a damn to me. If they enjoy doin’ it and that’s what they’re into, hell I’ll buy em’ a bumble bee suit. “I saw a guy wearing a bumble bee suit once. I laughed to his face too and I told him he looked pretty weird. But if that’s what he wants to do I mean I’m a country boy, man. The first time I ever saw anything like that it flipped me out. “The first group we ever played with like that, I guess, was Slade and they sorta freaked me out. I thought something was wrong with ‘em. I said well, if that’s what he wants to play. I don’t see how he got to his guitar, them big old tentacles sticking out of his head.”
Times have not always been so good for MTB. They learned their craft by playing a lot of bars, a lot of it soul music and a lot of it their own
material. George wished he had a quarter for every time he’s played
“Hold On I’m Comin.” They’ve also been thrown out of a lot of bars for
playing their own material instead of what the crowd wanted to hear, In fact, George remembers a time when the band played for a week and netted the huge sum of one penny.
The band members are all close friends. It’s not just a professional
relationship. They haven’t changed members since the beginning. George feels if one member left, the band would probably break up. He wouldn’t want to tour with anyone else as the MTB, but he wouldn’t mind doing a guest appearance with another band.
The group presently has three albums out. On the early albums they played slide and dual harmony leads but they do not play these styles on stage anymore. If you play slide, “you almost have to play a lick at one time or another that Duane (Allman) played, ’cause Duane played every damn lick there was made to play on a slide guitar,” commented McCorkle.
“In four years he played every lick possible, so if you play slide, people automatically say you’re rippin’ off Duane’s licks.”
Speaking of licks, George takes a lot of pride in his musical knowledge. Basically he taught himself to play the guitar. “I know every lick B.B. King ever thought about playing and some he’s still thinking about,” he boasted.
“There is nobody better in their own right, than B. B. King.”
MTB has just completed a new album which should be released around Aug. 5. After that there will be a major coast-to-coast tour with Charlie Daniels Band. This is one show I wouldn’t want to miss. If you enjoy good, honest, “feelin” music, you couldn’t ask for better than the Marshall Tucker Band.
MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY:
1973 The Marshall Tucker Band
1974 A New Life
1974 Where we All Belong
1975 Searchin’ For A Rainbow
1976 Long Hard Ride
1977 Carolina Dreams
1978 Together Forever
1979 Runnin’ Like The Wind
1980 Tenth
1981 Dedicated
1982 Tuckerized
1983 Just Us
1983 Greetings From South Carolina
2003 Stompin’ Room Only (1976 Live)
2006 Live on Long Island 4-18-80
2008 Carolina Dreams Tour 1977
TOY CALDWELL DISCOGRAPHY:
1992 Toy Caldwell
1998 Can’t You See (Live)
2000 Son of the South
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- October 14th, 2011
- Posted in BlogJams
- Tagged Ben Upham, BEN UPHAM PHOTOS, BLUES, Classic Rock, CLASSIC ROCK PHOTOS, doug gray, DOUG GRAY PHOTOS, DOUG GRAY PICTURES, DUANE ALLMAN, george mccorkle, GEORGE MCCORKLE PHOTOS, Guitars, jerry eubanks, JERRY EUBANKS PHOTOS, Magical Moment Photos, marshall tucker band, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND IN CONCERT, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND LIVE, Marshall Tucker Band Photos, Marshall Tucker Band Pictures, MUSICIANS, ORIGINAL MARSHALL TUCKER BAND, paul riddle, PAUL RIDDLE PHOTOS, PHOTOS OF THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND, PICTURES OF THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND, PICTURES OF TOMMY CALDWELL, Rock Art, Southern Rock, THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND, THE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND, tommy caldwell, TOMMY CALDWELL PHOTOS, TOMMY CALDWELL PICTURES, toy caldwell, TOY CALDWELL IN CONCERT, TOY CALDWELL LIVE, Toy Caldwell Photos, Toy Caldwell Pictures, Winterland
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TOY CALDWELL PLAYING GUITAR WITH MARSHALL TUCKER BAND IN CHENEY, WA. ON MAY 26, 1977. PHOTO BY BEN UPHAM.
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TOY CALDWELL
“REVIVES AFTER TUCKER DAYS”
ASSOCIATED PRESS
GALVESTON DAILY NEWS
GALVESTON, TEXAS
NOVEMBER 20, 1992
Toy Caldwell got “Marshal Tuckered out.” But he’s gotten over it.
The veteran singer-musician, who founded the Marshall Tucker Band and played guitar and sang in the group for 15 years until 1985, tired of 250 days on the road each year, so he quit. He retreated to his farm near Spartanburg, S.C., where he fished, read Stephen King novels and spent time with his wife and two daughters.
Recently, the stage beckoned to him. Once again, he was in Nashville in a dressing room where acquaintances assembled to shake hands and chat, often about his glory days. Then he took the stage, strapped a guitar around his stocky, Marine-carved frame and began singing.
Earlier, he explained what brought him to this stage: “It’s time to learn new music and get better at it.” He revitalized his creativity during his hiatus by practicing with his guitar and songwriting, he said. As a result, he’s back with recharged verve, his own full throttle band and a solo debut album, “Toy Caldwell.” It’s a mix of rock ‘n’ roll, country, blues and pop with a lyrical thread of romantic entanglements.
Before his recent performance, he sipped iced tea in a hotel restaurant and discussed his years as the driving dynamo with the Marshall Tucker Band and his new venture with his own four-piece group. His drawing power is his reputation from his Marshall Tucker Band days. The band had seven gold and two platinum albums, peaking in the mid-1970s with such songs as “Heard It in a Love Song,” “Can’t You See” and “This Ol’ Cowboy.”
Marshall Tucker headlined or shared stages with the Allman Brothers, the Doobie Brothers, Deep Purple and ZZ Top, among others. The band is still around, with two of its six members going back to Caldwell’s days.
“My name will always be associated with the Marshall Tucker Band and I’m proud it is,” he said as he adjusted a University of Miami Hurricanes cap. “They are good memories. It was a good band and sold a lot of records and I thought we did some good music. “We were the closest thing at the time between rock ‘n’ roll and country music. I think we bridged that gap. But I got tired of doing the same thing for 15 years. I’m Marshall Tuckered out.”
On his new album, he had plenty of top talent helping him. Willie Nelson sings on Caldwell’s version of “Night Life” —a song Nelson co-wrote — and Gregg Allman lends a hand on “Midnight Promises.” Charlie Daniels will appear on the video of “I Hear the South Calling Me.” Another of his musical comrades is blues great B.B. King. They toured together in the late 1970s, and Caldwell says it was his biggest thrill on stage. “I’d play on his set and he’d play on ours,” he recalled. “Those were fun days.”
Caldwell has long been respected for his guitar artistry. He’s played on albums by country stars Hank Williams Jr., Waylon Jennings, Barbara Mandrell and Conway Twitty. Among his songwriting credits is the anthem “Can’t You See,” which he sang at this year’s FarmAid concert.
Reading King’s books during his hiatus even inspired the song “Love Turns Mean” on the LP. The tune is about a woman changing personality after she gets married. “Love just took a page right out of Stephen King. That’s what happens when love turns mean,” Caldwell sings. “It seemed to fit pretty good,” he said.
MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY:
1973 The Marshall Tucker Band
1974 A New Life
1974 Where we All Belong
1975 Searchin’ For A Rainbow
1976 Long Hard Ride
1977 Carolina Dreams
1978 Together Forever
1979 Runnin’ Like The Wind
1980 Tenth
1981 Dedicated
1982 Tuckerized
1983 Just Us
1983 Greetings From South Carolina
2003 Stompin’ Room Only (1976 Live)
2006 Live on Long Island 4-18-80
2008 Carolina Dreams Tour 1977
TOY CALDWELL DISCOGRAPHY:
1992 Toy Caldwell
1998 Can’t You See (Live)
2000 Son of the South
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- September 28th, 2011
- Posted in BlogJams
- Tagged B.B. King, Ben Upham, BEN UPHAM PHOTOS, BLUES, CAN'T YOU SEE, Classic Rock, CLASSIC ROCK PHOTOS, doug gray, george mccorkle, GREG ALLMAN, HEARD IT IN A LOVE SONG, Magical Moment Photos, marshall tucker band, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND CONCERT PHOTOS, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND IN CONCERT, Marshall Tucker Band Photos, Marshall tucker Pictures, MUSICIANS, Rock Art, Rock Images, Southern Rock, tommy caldwell, toy caldwell, TOY CALDWELL CONCERT PHOTOS, Toy Caldwell Discography, TOY CALDWELL IN CONCERT, Toy Caldwell Photos, Willie Nelson, Winterland
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Marshall Tucker Band performing at Winterland in San Francisco on April 17, 1976. Photo by Ben Upham
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“MARSHALL TUCKER BAND IS PROGRESSIVE”
by MARTHA HUME
SPARTANBURG, South Carolina (KFS)
The Record-Eagle, Traverse City, Michigan
Friday, July 22, 1977
“Jaimoe” Johanny Johanson, drummer for Sea Level and formerly for the Allman Brothers Band, wore a modified killer-bee outfit to the recent Marshall Tucker Band homecoming. Oddly enough, Jaimoe’s black-and-yellow striped B.V.D.’s, black tights, one yellow sock, one green sock and tasseled loafers didn’t look out of place.
It’s hard to compete with a backstage crowd consisting of: Potentates of the Hejaz Shrine Temple, 80-year-old grandmothers dressed in their Sunday best, South Carolina State troopers, Dolly Parton blondes in dangerously low-cut dresses, and two stray professional wrestlers in skimpy briefs. Even Jaimoe’s name couldn’t compete —?’ the wrestlers were Tiger Conway and Pino Bravo.
The New South was out in all its kinky glory, and somehow the Shriners, the wrestlers, the musicians, the grannies, “and the troopers fit right in. They’d all come to hear Spartanburg’s very own
claim to fame (next to peaches and textiles), the Marshall Tucker Band. As far as Spartanburg is concerned, the six member MTB, none of whom is named Marshall Tucker, has conquered the world.
Their boys play “southern music?”, and although the music itself is much more complicated, the phrase is a rallying cry that seems to have united the South’s social classes and age groups, just as “outlaw music” brought rednecks and hippies together in Texas.
The Marshall Tucker Band — Toy and Tommy Caldwell, Jerry Eubanks, Doug Gray, George McCorkle and Paul Riddle — is among the must successful of the new southern bands. MTB has had four gold albums since Capricorn Records signed them in 1972. “Heard It
In A Love Song,” the single from the “Carolina Dreams” album, is now Top Ten. Still, the band hasn’t had the kind of critical acceptance they’d like, perhaps because they’ve been saddled with the “southern music” label.
“This ‘southern music” thing is kindly gettin’ just a little out of hand,” says Toy Caldwell, the band’s lead guitarist, “We’re all from the South and we all play music, but I don’t know what “southern music” is. The Allman Brothers played it, if there ever was such a thing, but there’ll never be nobody like that any more. We came up behind ‘em, our music is country influenced and everything, but we’re not playin’ anything new. So I guess to me ‘southern music’ is just a band from the South playin’music”…
If anything unites Southern bands it is their common debt to the Allman Brothers. Nonetheless, Marshall Tucker’s music is quite different from the Allmans’, whose music is based in southern blues; MTB’s music begins in country music and takes off from there..
“We play progressive country music,” says Tommy Caldwell, Toy’s brother and the band’s bassist. “It’s just a three-chord country song that’s played different every night. But you can’t stretch out in a three-chord country song, so we take it and set it up to where we can.”
“If you listen to it, you can hear a lot of different sounds,” says rhythm
guitarist George McCorkle. “Paul (Riddle, drummer) is really jazz influenced. Jerry (Eubanks, flute & sax , he’s rhythm & blues. I got a lot of blues influence, and Toy and Tommy was raised playin’ country. It all comes together in that country feel that everybody has.”
“Capricorn to me has always been a family,” says McCorkle. “You could tell it ’cause we all go onstage together. If Jimmy Hall (of Wet Wilie) was ever around, he would be onstage before the night was up. Same thing with Chuck Leavell or Jaimoe. You don’t have to be asked. We’re just friends.”
When the Marshall Tucker Band took the stage in Spartanburg to benefit the Greenville Unit of the Shriners’ Crippled Children’s Hospital, Jaimoe was there playing congas and Charlie Daniels played fiddle. Marshall Tucker plays hard, and the audience knows it. The Spartanburg crowd brought the band back for five encores. Of course, much of the audience seemed to be family — a look at the Spartanburg County telephone directory shows 86 Caldwells, 68 Grays, 36 Eubanks, 35 Riddles, 2 McCorkles..
MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY:
1973 The Marshall Tucker Band
1974 A New Life
1974 Where we All Belong
1975 Searchin’ For A Rainbow
1976 Long Hard Ride
1977 Carolina Dreams
1978 Together Forever
1979 Runnin’ Like The Wind
1980 Tenth
1981 Dedicated
1982 Tuckerized
1983 Just Us
1983 Greetings From South Carolina
2003 Stompin’ Room Only (1976 Live)
2006 Live on Long Island 4-18-80
2008 Carolina Dreams Tour 1977
CLICK LINKS BELOW TO SEE MARSHALL TUCKER BAND PHOTOS
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- August 31st, 2011
- Posted in BlogJams
- Tagged BEN UPHAM PHOTOS, doug gray, george mccorkle, Guitars, jerry eubanks, Magical Moment Photos, marshall tucker, marshall tucker band, MARSHALL TUCKER BAND DISCOGRAPHY, Marshall Tucker Band Photos, Marshall Tucker Band Pictures, Marshall Tucker Concert Photos, Marshall Tucker Photos, mtb, MUSICIANS, paul riddle, Rock Art, Rock Photos, SEARCHIN' FOR A RAINBOW, south carolina, Southern Rock, spartenburg, tommy caldwell, toy caldwell, Toy Caldwell Photos, Toy Caldwell Pictures, toy factory
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