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Tag Archives: Gene Clark

The Ghost Rockets

When Pal Woodward and underground pop luminary Gary Pig Silver were introduced to one another in Greenwich Community in 1990 simply by Gold’s Dave Rave Conspiracy bandmate (and former Washington Square) Lauren Agnelli, the seed products of 1 of the best possible, albeit decidedly away of mainstream earshot, country-pop rings …

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The Beefeaters

The Beefeaters made only one in 1964, and were actually an early on version from the Byrds. When the nucleus from the Byrds had been attempting to define their audio (and even pioneer the folk-rock genre) in 1964, they known as themselves the Plane Set. Their supervisor, Jim Dickson, organized …

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Bradley Colerick

Vocalist/songwriter Brad Colerick was created and raised in Nebraska. His family members was not especially musical, although one of is own grandfathers performed a violin that he provided Colerick. Colerick restored the device, but he was in fact interested in the guitar. Seriously influenced by Adam Taylor, he performed night …

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The Jet Set

When Roger (after that Jim) McGuinn, Gene Clark, and David Crosby met in LA in 1964 and made a decision to form an organization, they originally called themselves the Aircraft Collection. As the Aircraft Set they hardly if performed in public areas, but they do record quite prolifically, as supervisor …

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Michael Huey

Drummer Michael Huey began his professional profession in Georgia in 1969, hired to try out with Tommy Roe. By the first ’70s, he had not been just drumming for Classics IV, but offered as the home drummer for the Lowery Group, playing on periods by Joe South, Johnny Nash, Clarence …

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Phil Everly

Best known as you half from the Everly Brothers, Phil Everly also had a mildly successful single profession. The Everly Brothers (Phil and Don) had been probably one of the most well-known and influential rock and roll acts from the 1950s. Tunes like “AWAKEN Small Susie” and “Have a Message …

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Vern Gosdin

As nation music swung back again toward traditional designs in the 1980s, an inheritor from the soulful honky tonk design of Lefty Frizzell and Merle Haggard rose to the very best of the business enterprise and notched strike after barroom strike. Occasionally he was known just as “the Tone of …

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Dillard & Clark

Dillard & Clark, a duo featuring ex – Byrd Gene Clark and Doug Dillard from the Dillards, was among the first country-rock groupings to create in the later ’60s. The group produced in 1968 and became among pioneers of country-rock, launching two albums before dissolving after launching just two albums. …

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Doug Dillard

Doug Dillard was among the preeminent ambassadors of bluegrass banjo through the ’60s and ’70s, incorporating pop, folk, and country-rock materials into his repertoire and helping a multitude of performers with those sensibilities. Blessed in Salem, Missouri, in 1937, Dillard began playing bluegrass in early stages, eventually teaming along with …

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Don Everly

Subjected to music young, Don Everly teamed up along with his brother, Phil Everly, to create the favorite ’50s and ’60s rock and roll duo the Everly Brothers. Their initial record, Bye Bye Appreciate, gained them worldwide recognition and popularity. Blessed in Brownie, KY, Don Everly was the kid of …

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