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Thomas Richard 'Tommy' Bolin (August 1, 1951, Sioux City, Iowa - December 4, 1976) was an American-born guitarist best known for his work with Zephyr (from 1969 to 1971), The James Gang (from 1973 through 1974), Deep Purple (from 1975 to 1976) and his solo work. Image File history File links TommyBolin2. ...
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Sioux City (IPA: ) is a city located in northwest Iowa in the United States. ...
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1976 (MCMLXXVI) was a leap year starting on Thursday. ...
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Miami redirects here. ...
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Look up fusion in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
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Rock is a form of popular music with a prominent vocal melody accompanied by guitar and drums. ...
Zephyr was a blues-based hard rock band formed in 1968 in Denver, Colorado by guitarist Tommy Bolin, keyboardist John Faris, David Givens on bass guitar, Robbie Chamberlain on drums and Candy Givens on vocals. ...
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The Fender Stratocaster, often referred to as Strat, is a model of electric guitar designed by Leo Fender in the early 1950s, and manufactured continuously to the present. ...
Year 1969 (MCMLXIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday (the link is to a full 1969 calendar). ...
1976 (MCMLXXVI) was a leap year starting on Thursday. ...
August 1 is the 213th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (214th in leap years), with 152 days remaining. ...
1951 (MCMLI) was a common year starting on Monday; see its calendar. ...
Sioux City (IPA: ) is a city located in northwest Iowa in the United States. ...
December 4th redirects here. ...
1976 (MCMLXXVI) was a leap year starting on Thursday. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Parts of the guitar. ...
Zephyr was a blues-based hard rock band formed in 1968 in Denver, Colorado by guitarist Tommy Bolin, keyboardist John Faris, David Givens on bass guitar, Robbie Chamberlain on drums and Candy Givens on vocals. ...
Year 1969 (MCMLXIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday (the link is to a full 1969 calendar). ...
1971 (MCMLXXI) was a common year starting on Friday (the link is to a full 1971 calendar). ...
The James Gang was a rock band formed in Cleveland, Ohio in 1966. ...
1973 (MCMLXXIII) was a common year starting on Monday. ...
1974 (MCMLXXIV) was a common year starting on Tuesday. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
1975 (MCMLXXV) was a common year starting on Wednesday. ...
1976 (MCMLXXVI) was a leap year starting on Thursday. ...
Musical career
Tommy Bolin began playing in bands around Sioux City as a youth before moving to Boulder Colorado in his late teens. He had played in a band called American Standard before joining Ethereal Zephyr, a band named after a train that ran between Denver and Chicago. When record companies became interested, the name was shortened to Zephyr. This band included Bolin on guitar, David Givens on bass, and Givens' wife Candice on vocals. The band had begun to do larger venues, opening for more established acts such as Led Zeppelin. Their second album, entitled Going Back to Colorado, featured a new drummer, Bobby Berge, who would pop up from time to time in musician credits in album liner notes from Bolin's later projects. Look up zephyr in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
For the bands 1969 self-titled debut album, see Led Zeppelin (album). ...
After this record, he decided to move on to more progressive projects. In 1972 Bolin, at the age of 20, formed the fusion jazz-rock-blues band Energy. While the band never released an album during Bolin's lifetime, several posthumous releases have demonstrated the band's power and Bolin's artistic vision. He also played on Billy Cobham's Spectrum album, which included Bolin on Guitar, Billy Cobham of Mahavishnu Orchestra on drums, Leland Sklar on bass and Jan Hammer (also of Mahavishnu Orchestra) on keyboards and synthesizers. This was a fusion-powerhouse line up that resulted in a most impressive album that showcased Bolin's playing at his creative peak. Billy Cobham in 1973. ...
The original lineup in 1972, featuring Billy Cobham, John McLaughlin, Jerry Goodman, Jan Hammer and Rick Laird. ...
Leland Bruce Sklar (born May 28, 1947, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is an American bass player, singer and composer. ...
Jan Hammer on the cover of Berklee Today Magazine Jan Hammer (pronounced yaan hah-mur) (born 17 April 1948, in Prague, Czechoslovakia) is a composer and musician. ...
The original lineup in 1972, featuring Billy Cobham, John McLaughlin, Jerry Goodman, Jan Hammer and Rick Laird. ...
1973 found him as Domenic Troiano's replacement, who had replaced Joe Walsh, in the James Gang. He had two records with this band: Bang! in 1973 and Miami in 1974. Domenic Troiano (January 17, 1946-May 25, 2005) was a Canadian rock guitarist. ...
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Bang is the sixth studio album by James Gang, released in 1973. ...
Miami is the seventh album by James Gang, released in 1974. ...
After the Miami tour, Bolin wanted out of the James Gang. He went on to do session work for numerous rock bands and also with a number of Jazz artists. Bolin is featured, for example, on Alphonse Mouzon's (of Weather Report) album Mind Transplant. Weather Report was a influential jazz fusion band of the 1970s and 1980s, pitting jazz with R&B, funk, and rock elements while still retaining an extremely high level of compositional and improvisational skills. ...
Bolin signed with Nemperor records to record a solo album. His main idea was to bring in a vast array of musicians drawn from all the session players he had known. With the encouragement of the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson, Bolin decided to do his own vocals on this album as well. Session players on this record included David Sanborn, Jan Hammer, Stanley Sheldon, Phil Collins (of Genesis) and Glenn Hughes (of Deep Purple), to name a few. During the recording of this album, he was contacted to replace Ritchie Blackmore in Deep Purple. This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Brian Douglas Wilson (born June 20, 1942 in Hawthorne, California), is an American pop musician, best known as the lead songwriter, bassist, and lead singer of the American rock band The Beach Boys. ...
David Sanborn in concert in San Francisco. ...
Jan Hammer on the cover of Berklee Today Magazine Jan Hammer (pronounced yaan hah-mur) (born 17 April 1948, in Prague, Czechoslovakia) is a composer and musician. ...
Philip David Charles Collins (born January 30, 1951 in Chiswick, London) is an English rock and pop musician. ...
Genesis is a Grammy Award-winning English progressive rock band who formed in 1967. ...
Glenn Hughes Born in Cannock, England on August 21, 1952, Glenn Hughes, also known as The Voice of Rock, is a bassist and vocalist who fronted Finders Keepers in the 1960s and the British funk rock band, Trapeze, in the early 1970s before moving on in 1973 to join forces...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Richard Hugh Blackmore, (born 14 April 1945) is an English guitarist. ...
In the start of 1975 Bolin contributed some studio guitar assistance to Canadian band Moxy during the recording of their debut album, with the original vinyl Lp for Moxy I being especially sought-after by die-hard Bolin fans.Tommy Bolin Archives Then later in 1975 saw the release of Bolin's first and highly anticipated solo record, Teaser (on the Nemperor label), and Deep Purple's Come Taste the Band (on the Purple label). The Deep Purple world tour that followed allowed Tommy to showcase one song per night from Teaser. During this period, it had become apparent that he had a heroin addiction. This addiction led to a rumor that Deep Purple's concerts in Japan were marred by Bolin being unable to play due to a paralyzed left arm, the result of a bad injection.[citation needed] In truth, the recordings first released of those concerts on Last Concert in Japan were improperly mixed, leaving the guitar parts out for the most part.[citation needed] The subsequent release of This Time Around: Live in Tokyo 1975 had a much improved mix, including Bolin's playing. Many critics agree Bolin was in good form for the concerts:[citation needed] certainly, he did not suffer from paralysis at the concerts. Nevertheless, the live character for Deep Purple's shows began to vary with this lineup. Moxy is a Canadian hard rock band, formed in Toronto, Canada in 1974, from previous members of Leigh Ashford â including singer Buzz Shearman, drummer Bill Wade, Terry Juric on bass, and Earl Johnson as lead guitarist. ...
Moxy, also informally known as The Black Album or Moxy I, is the self titled album by the Canadian Hard rock band Moxy, The debut album was originally released in 1975 by Polydor in Canada, then under Mercury Records label was reissued in 1976. ...
Teaser is the debut album from American guitarist Tommy Bolin. ...
Come Taste the Band is an album by the hard rock band, Deep Purple, recorded between August 3 and September, 1975, it was released in October 1975. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Teaser is the debut album from American guitarist Tommy Bolin. ...
Heroin, also known as diamorphine (BAN) or diacetylmorphine (INN), is a semi-synthetic opioid. ...
Bolin was back on the road with his solo band and planning a second solo record. The band had a rotating cast of players which included Norma Jean Bell (formerly of Frank Zappa's band) on saxophone and eventually Tommy's younger brother Johnny Bolin on drums. After top brass from Nemperor witnessed Bolin (while highly intoxicated) falling off the stage during a performance, he was summarily dropped from that label. Frank Vincent Zappa[1] (December 21, 1940 â December 4, 1993) was an American composer, guitarist, singer, film director, and satirist. ...
This proved to be something of a blessing in disguise when CBS signed him shortly afterwards. In 1976 he began to record Private Eyes, his second solo record. This album was to be a double album, but financial woes cut down on this project and a single album was released. The album is a decent effort, considering the level of his difficulties with substance abuse when he made it. A detective is an officer of the police who performs criminal or administrative investigations, in some police departments, the lowest rank among such investigators (above the lowest rank of officers and below sergeants), a civilian licensed to investigate information not readily available in public records (a private investigator, also called...
Bolin's tour for Private Eyes proved to be his last. The cost of keeping a band on the road and his heavy drug addiction forced him into being a supporting act. In his last concert dates, he opened for Peter Frampton and Jeff Beck. His last tour was marred with technical problems and unreliable performances. However, his legendary final show, in which he opened for Jeff Beck on December 3, 1976, encored with a barnburning rendition of "Post Toastee". He posed for a photo with Jeff Beck after the show. In one account of his last hours, Bolin was found unconscious shortly following the show. The management, who by some reports did not want any more negative publicity about the tour, had him taken to his room with his girlfriend to look after him. (In other accounts, his death followed a night of hard partying that had involved beer, champagne, cocaine and finally, heroin.) By morning, Bolin's health had become worse. His girlfriend feared for his life and called for an ambulance. When paramedics arrived, Tommy Bolin was pronounced dead. He was 25 years old. Peter Kenneth Frampton (born April 22, 1950 in Beckenham, Kent) is an English musician, best known today for his solo work in the mid-1970s as an arena rocker. // By the age of ten, he played in a band called the Little Ravens. ...
Geoffrey Arnold (Jeff) Beck (born June 24, 1944 in Wallington, Greater London, England) is a guitarist and songwriter. ...
In 1999, Glenn Hughes (of Trapeze and Deep Purple) did a 4-5 city tribute tour in Texas, with Tommy's brother Johnny (of Black Oak Arkansas) on drums, playing Tommy's songs. Trapeze were an English rock band formed in March 1969. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Black Oak Arkansas, 1972 Black Oak Arkansas is an American Southern rock band named after the bands hometown of Black Oak, Arkansas. ...
Discography (With Others) Zephyr: - Zephyr (1969)
- Going Back to Colorado (1971)
- Live at Art's Bar and Grill (1996)
James Gang: Billy Cobham: Bang is the sixth album by the band The James Gang, released in 1973. ...
Miami is the seventh album by James Gang, released in 1974. ...
Alphonse Mouzon: Spectrum is the debut album of fusion drummer, Billy Cobham. ...
The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter. ...
- Mind Transplant (1975)
- Tommy Bolin & Alphonse Mouzon Fusion Jam (Rehearsals 1974) (1999)
Moxy Deep Purple: Moxy, also informally known as The Black Album or Moxy I, is the self titled album by the Canadian Hard rock band Moxy, The debut album was originally released in 1975 by Polydor in Canada, then under Mercury Records label was reissued in 1976. ...
- Come Taste the Band (1975)
- Last Concert in Japan (1977/1978)
- King Biscuit Flower Hour Presents: Deep Purple in Concert (1995)
- On the Wings of a Russian Foxbat - Live in California '76 (1995)
- Days May Come and Days May Go (The California Reheearsals Volume 1) (2000)
- 1420 Beachwood Drive (The California Rehearsals Volume 2) (2000)
- This Time Around: Live in Tokyo (2001)
Come Taste the Band is an album by the hard rock band, Deep Purple, recorded between August 3 and September, 1975, it was released in October 1975. ...
Last Concert in Japan is an album by Deep Purple released in March 1977. ...
Days May Come and Days May Go: The 1975 California Rehearsals is a compilation album by the fourth mark of Deep Purple, released in 2000 (see 2000 in music). ...
Solo Discography LPs: - Teaser (1975)
- Private Eyes (1976)
- From the Archives, Vol. 1 (1996)
- The Bottom Shelf (1996)
- From the Archives, Vol. 2 (1997)
- Energy (1999)
- Snapshot (1999)
- Naked (2000)
- Naked (2002)
- After Hours: The Glen Holly Jams - Volume 1 (2004)
- Whips and Roses (2006)
Live: Teaser is the debut album from American guitarist Tommy Bolin. ...
Private Eyes is the second solo album by guitarist Tommy Bolin. ...
Whips and Roses is a collection of previously unreleased material from the 1975 rock album Teaser by Tommy Bolin. ...
- Live at Ebbets Field 1974 (1996)
- Live at Ebbets Field 1976 (1996)
- Live at Northern Lights Recording Studio (1996)
- The Energy Radio Broadcasts (1998)
- First Time Live (2000)
- Live 9/19/76 (2001)
- Live in Miami at Jai Alai: The Final Show (2002)
- Alive on Long Island (2003)
- Tommy Bolin and Energy Live (2003)
- Albany 9/20/76 (2004)
- Live at the Jet Bar (2004)
Compilations: First Time Live is an album by American country music artist George Jones. ...
- The Ultimate: The Best of Tommy Bolin (1989)
- Come Taste the Man (1999)
References - Iowa Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction.
External links - The Official Tommy Bolin Archives - maintained by Bolin's family and a source of references to further sites
- MusicChain - Tommy Bolin History
- Billboard.com article by Greg Prato
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