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Barefoot Jerry is an American progressive country rock band from Nashville, Tennessee. They have been described as a seminal southern rock band.[3] The band was most active from 1971 to 1977. It was composed of area studio musicians under the tutelage of Wayne Moss and Mac Gayden. Barefoot Jerry was named after a country fiddle player who performed inside a store next to Gayden's home in the Smoky Mountains.[citation needed]
Barefoot Jerry | |
---|---|
Origin | Nashville, Tennessee, United States |
Genres | |
Years active | 1971–1977 and occasional reunions to the present |
Labels | Capitol Records Warner Bros. Records Monument Records |
Past members | Terry Dearmore, Kenny Buttrey, Jim Colvard, Dave Doran, Si Edwards, Mac Gayden, John Harris, Warren Hartman, Russ Hicks, Kenny Malone, Charlie McCoy, Wayne Moss, Fred Newell, Barry Chance |
Website | http://www.barefootjerry.com/ |
Both Moss and Gayden had been lead guitarists for Area Code 615 and also for other 615 alumni.
This name is also used to refer to Moss and his sidemen in current reunions and other projects. Moss founded Cinderella Recording Studios and has operated it since 1960.
Moss had previously played in many sessions, including Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde, and played the guitar riff on Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman". In addition to Moss and Gayden, band members included Terry Dearmore, Kenny Buttrey, Jim Colvard, Dave Doran, Si Edwards, John Harris, Warren Hartman, Russ Hicks, Kenny Malone, Charlie McCoy, and Fred Newell.
Career
editBarefoot Jerry's first lineup consisted of:
- Wayne Moss, guitar, keyboards, vocals, bass
- Mac Gayden, lead guitar, vocals, slide guitar
- Kenneth A. Buttrey, drums
- John Harris, keyboards
Moss, Buttrey and Gayden originally played together on many of Mike Nesmith's Nashville sessions and had been in Area Code 615. Gayden wrote the number one UK hit single by the Love Affair, "Everlasting Love". He also played the first slide wah wah guitar, on JJ Cale's "Crazy Mama."
This lineup of Barefoot Jerry recorded Southern Delight before Gayden left in 1972 to form his own band, Skyboat; Buttrey joined Neil Young's band. Moss and Harris were soon joined by Russ Hicks (guitar, steel guitar, horn, vocals) and Kenny Malone (drums) on the album Barefoot Jerry, released by Warner Bros. Records in 1972. This lineup later expanded to include Buddy Skipper (keyboards), Fred Newell (banjo, harmonica, vocals), Dave Doran (guitar, bass, vocals), Si Edwards (percussion), and (Area Code's) Bobby Thompson (bass, guitar, vocals) for Barefoot Jerry and the 1974 follow-up Watchin' TV.
The lineup of Moss, Hicks, Doran, Edwards, Skipper and Newell were recorded in a live performance in 1973, released in 2007 as Barefoot Jerry Live. Moss was the last original member of the band. Retaining Hicks and Edwards, they added Terry Dearmore (vocals, guitar, bass), Jim Colvard (guitar, bass) and Warren Hartman (keyboards). In 1975 they recorded You Can't Get Off With Your Shoes On.
With the departure of Hartman, Barry Chance (guitar) and Steve Davis (keyboards, guitar, vocals) joined the band for Keys to the Country in 1976. Davis and Dearmore departed, and Charlie McCoy (keyboards, harmonica, flutes, Jew's harp) and Mike McBride (bass, guitar, percussion, mandolin) joined for Barefootin' in 1977. The band split up in that year.
Wayne Moss appears as "Barefoot Jerry" along with Charlie Daniels, Guy Clark and David Allan Coe in the 1981 music documentary Heartworn Highways.
Barefoot Jerry were mentioned in Charlie Daniels's song "The South's Gonna Do It Again."
Discography
editAlbums
edit- 1971: Southern Delight (Capitol Records)
- 1972: Barefoot Jerry (Warner Bros. Records)
- 1974: Watchin' TV (Monument Records)
- 1975: You Can't Get Off with Your Shoes On (Monument Records)
- 1976: Grocery (double-LP reissue of the first two albums; Monument Records)
- 1976: Keys to the Country (Monument Records)
- 1977: Barefootin' (Monument Records)
- 1997: Southern Delight/Barefoot Jerry (2-on-1 CD reissue on See For Miles)
- 1997: Watchin' TV/You Can't Get Off with Your Shoes On (2-on-1 CD reissue on See for Miles)
- 1997: Keys To The Country/Barefootin' (2-on-1 CD reissue on See For Miles)
- 2006: Keys To The Country/Barefootin' (CD reissue; Hux Records)
- 2007: Barefoot Jerry Live (recorded at the Exit/In in 1973 - available only from the official website)
Singles
editYear | Single | Chart Positions | Album |
---|---|---|---|
US [4] | |||
1975 | "You Can't Get Off with Your Shoes On" | 109 | You Can't Get Off with Your Shoes On |
Guest singles
editYear | Single | Artist | Chart Positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
US Country | CAN Country | ||||
1974 | "Boogie Woogie" | Charlie McCoy | 22 | 24 | The Nashville Hit Man |
1977 | "Summit Ridge Drive" | 98 | — | Play It Again Charlie |
References
edit- ^ Carlin, Richard (February 25, 2014). Country Music: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. p. 9. ISBN 9781135361044 – via Google Books.
formed Barefoot Jerry to continue the progressive country-rock style of Area Code 615
- ^ Hill, Jack W. (August 16, 2012). "In coal country, Knight discovered gold on vinyl". The Democrat-Gazette. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
He got a lot of progressive country kind of artists, such as Dan Fogelberg, Jackson Browne, Jonathan Edwards, J.J. Cale, the Charlie Daniels Band and Barefoot Jerry
- ^ a b Sanders, Daryl (October 2, 2018). That Thin, Wild Mercury Sound: Dylan, Nashville, and the Making of Blonde on Blonde. Chicago Review Press. ISBN 9781613735503 – via Google Books.
- ^ Whitburn, Joel (2011). Top Pop Singles 1955–2010. Record Research, Inc. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-89820-188-8.
- The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock & Roll. Random House, 1980. "Southern Rock" entry by Joe Nick Patoski. ISBN 0-394-73938-8.
- Kemp, Mark. Dixie Lullaby: A Story of Music, Race, & New Beginnings in a New South. New York, New York: Free Press/Simon & Schuster, 2004, p. 17. ISBN 0-7432-3794-3
- Charlie Daniels Band, "The South's Gonna Do It Again." In the second verse "And all the good people down in Tennessee are diggin' Barefoot Jerry and CDB."