Drive-By Truckers
Information
Members:
Patterson Hood
Mike Cooley
Shonna Tucker
Brad Morgan
John Neff
Jay Gonzalez
Genre:
Rock
Hometown:
Athens GA
Record Label:
ATO Records
 
Luke Russell

Luke Russell ATO records has got so many great artists they have signed lately i cant wait till DBT starts blastin out great albums!!!

Yesterday at 1:19am · Report
Brandon Miller

Brandon Miller Happy Holidays Truckers...

Mon at 8:08pm · Report
Ed

Ed Drive-by Truckers + caffeine + 6:30am = a good start

Mon at 3:34am · Report
Jason Llanas

Jason Llanas Hey! When are guys coming back to Milwaukee?

Sun at 1:53pm · Report
Sammy Jones

Sammy Jones Got my tickets to all three 40 watt shows next month, can't wait for the party

Sun at 8:00am · Report
Craig Stuart Brownrigg

Craig Stuart Brownrigg much love you guys from albuquerque
"...gonna find a use for every last one"

Sun at 12:05am · Report
Janet

Janet i love you dbt! can't wait for january at the 40 watt!

December 12 at 9:38pm · Report
Barry Lamb

Barry Lamb Please make a stop in Springfield Illinois! We need some DBT and you would sell it out here!

December 12 at 5:38am · Report
Juli

Juli I know you were just here for VooDoo, but c'mon y'all - i need to sing along with something that makes me feel good!!!!

December 11 at 4:09pm · Report
Jim

Jim St. Paul-Minneaoplis needs a DBT Tour Date.

December 11 at 2:42pm · Report
Tomer Cooper

Tomer Cooper Can't wait for "The Big To-Do" and also waiting to hear about the 2010 tour to backing it up. Crossing my fingers for some visits in europe (somewhere in London + The Paradiso in Amsterdam will make me a happy man...).

December 11 at 11:05am · Report
Drive-By Truckers

Drive-By Truckers The Big To-Do

Drive-By Truckers

Drive-By Truckers Patterson will be performing solo for the UNHRC - "Share the Warmth" Benefit in NYC on 12/16. Check out the Discussion board on Patterson's Facebook page for details (look under the 'Boxes' tab).

I moved to Athens, GA on Aprils Fools Day, 1994. Perhaps I thought I was kidding myself, just stopping in on my way to the bigger city an hour to the Southwest. I moved into a little house on Ruth St. with my new friend, Brandon. We had panhandlers in our driveway and h...ad a crack head that frequently banged on our door at four thirty in the morning. I had a shitty job and only knew two other people in town. I was alive with the fresh opportunities posed by moving to a town with an actual music scene and clubs to conquer. I wrote an album's worth of songs and called it Murdering Oscar (and other love songs). Unfortunately, I didn't have any money for studio time, much less financing or support to actually release it. I also didn't have a band and didn't know any of the hundreds of musicians residing in my new hometown. Instead, I recorded all of the songs on a boom box in Brandon's bedroom (it had better acoustics than my room) and began dubbing cassette copies to give to anyone I met. I probably gave away about 500 of those suckers that year. Those were crazy times for me. The news told stories of Kurt Cobain's suicide, River Phoenix' overdose, and OJ Simpson's bloody glove. I was still reeling from a divorce, the breakup of my beloved old band, and moving away from my family. My songs of this period reflected this turmoil, and I was fiercely proud of them. Then, I moved on. The next year, I began writing what became Southern Rock Opera. Also around that time, Cooley and I reunited and began working on forming what became Drive-By Truckers and writing the songs that became our first two albums. I got busy and left those older songs behind, occasionally pulling one or two out for a solo show or two, otherwise concentrating on other projects. Ten years later, in late 2004, as the band was approaching some much needed time off and I approached the birth of my daughter, Ava Ruth, I began to think again about that old album and wondered how I would feel about those songs now. I began playing through some of the old cassettes from '94 and constructing potential lists of songs. I also started writing a bunch of new songs. When I started compiling the songs, old and new, together, I was surprised to see that the songs not only seemed to fit together, but they also seemed to work as a sort of point / counterpoint, as they almost seemed to stand in opposite points of view. In January of 2005, a couple of weeks before Ava's arrival, I went into David Barbe's Chase Park Transduction Studios and recorded the majority of this album. I was fortunate to have some guests help in its creation. David Barbe and Brad Morgan both partnered this entire project. Most of my other DBT band mates appear, as did John Neff (who was at that time not playing in DBT) and Don Chambers. Neff and Don were both frequently playing with me at my solo shows. My friends Will Johnson and Scott Danbom from my favorite band, Centro-matic, happened into town and were drafted for a couple of days of recording. Another reason for me wanting to do this album was to record with my Dad. David Hood has been a professional musician all of my life. His credits include playing bass on The Staple Singers' immortal "I'll Take You There" and trombone on James and Bobby Purify's "I'm Your Puppet". His bass playing has graced records by Aretha Franklin, Percy Sledge, Wilson Pickett, Willie Nelson, Jimmy Cliff, Levon Helm, Bob Seger, Paul Simon, Rod Stewart, and Etta James, among hundreds of others as a member of the Muscle Shoals Sound Rhythm Section. Ironically, other than a quick Christmas song for a benefit album once, this is the first time we ever get to record together. He came to town a few days before my daughter's birth, and we recorded three songs together and had a total blast. My original plan was to put the album out later that year and, perhaps, even do a short tour to promote it, but fate and business concerns intervened, and I ended up having to shelve the near-finished project for four years. During that time, I was encouraged and supported by David Barbe, who had fronted me the studio time and graciously agreed to keep the tab running until we could eventually bring this project to a close. I cringe to think what would have happened to this album without his help and support. Every year or so I would go in and work a little on it, recording three more songs and, occasionally, re-doing a part or two, but overall keeping the album true to it's original vision. Patterson Hood (in my office, Athens GA. Feb. 16, 2009)
Musician:3,347 fans
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Jack Pier
Jack Pier
Very cool story. Thanks for sharing!
December 11 at 11:29am
Scott
Scott
Tanks for taking the time to share. Love it!
December 11 at 2:29pm
Clayton Maza

Clayton Maza bring on THE BIG TO DO

December 10 at 8:30pm · Report
Douglas Reinking

Douglas Reinking The Big To-Do!

December 10 at 6:42pm · Report