Identifier | 6118467 |
Created At | Tue May 23 2023 23:54:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) |
Media Type | cdr |
Media Count | 1 |
Trades Allowed |
Performance
Marshall Tucker Band 1974-05-18 Record Plant, Sausalito, CA | |
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Set 1 | |
Set 2 | |
Set 3 | |
Comment | Marshall Tucker Band
05-18-74 KSAN FM No specific source info available Quality: A 01. 01-Hillbilly Band 02. 02-Another Cruel Love 03. 03-Can't You See 04. 04-24 Hours At A Time > 05. 05-Ramblin' 06. 06-Take The Highway 07. 07-Everyday (I Have The Blues) 56:04 360 mb shn Lou's Notes: Somewhat of an abrupt transition from 24 Hours At A Time to Ramblin' with no intro to Ramblin' - Doug's intro to Ramblin' may have been cut as he introduces most of the other songs. I didn't do much editing other than move the track marker between tracks 4 and 5 to a more proper location. The KSAN Intro and Outro are not present so I'm assuming this was another of the weekly Sunday night broadcasts from the Record Plant in Sausalito. 1974 sounds like the right year but I'm not certain about May 18th - May 19th would have been on a Sunday. This was right around the time of the release of their 2nd all studio album, A New Life (technically their 3rd release), and after the release of their studio/live double album, Where We All Belong. I think I wore through the vinyl on that one! Half of this show's setlist is from their 1973 1st album, the self titled MTB. AMG Notes on the MTB: One of the major Southern rock bands of the '70s, the Marshall Tucker Band was formed in Spartanburg, SC, in 1971 by singer Doug Gray, guitarist Toy Caldwell (born 1948, died February 25, 1993), his brother bassist Tommy Caldwell (born 1950, died April 4, 1980), guitarist George McCorkle, drummer Paul Riddle, and reed player Jerry Eubanks. The group's style combined rock, country, and jazz and featured extended instrumental passages on which lead guitarist Toy Caldwell shone. The band was signed to Capricorn Records and released its debut album, The Marshall Tucker Band, in March 1973. They gained recognition through a tour with the Allman Brothers Band and found significant success during the course of the '70s, with most of their albums going gold. Their peak came with the million-selling album Carolina Dreams and its Top 15 single "Heard It in a Love Song" in 1977. The band was slowed down by the death of Tommy Caldwell in a car accident in 1980 and faded from the album charts after 1982. Toy Caldwell left for a solo career soon after, and the original lineup disbanded in 1983. Later that same year, Doug Gray and Jerry Eubanks hired some Nashville studio musicians and took the band back out onto the road; a little over a year later, the second wave of the Marshall Tucker Band began, as Gray and Eubanks returned home to Spartanburg, SC, and hired guitarist Rusty Milner, bassist Tim Lawter, drummer Ace Allen, and guitarist Stuart Swanlund. During the years since the original band dissolved, the group has had country chart hits, toured constantly, made forays into the blues and adult contemporary, and suffered the loss of founding member Toy Caldwell, who died in 1993. Some bandmembers left, some joined, and some stayed right where they were, but through it all, the Marshall Tucker Band endured. The band continued to record steadily, maintained a loyal fan base, and eventually began to receive their due as Southern rock pioneers. The 1998 Marshall Tucker Band consisted of Gray, Milner, Lawter, Swanlund, David Muse (formerly of Firefall, on sax, flute, and keys), and drummer B.B. Borden (formerly of Mother's Finest). The band took several stylistic detours with 1998's all-blues outing Face Down in the Blues and the 1999 spiritual album Gospel. by William Ruhlmann & Michael B. Smith |