Who Does the Cover Art for the Drive by Truckers

American rock ring

Drive-By Truckers

Drive-By Truckers performing at The Gorge Amphitheatre, Washington, during the Sasquatch! Music Festival in 2010

Drive-By Truckers performing at The Gorge Amphitheatre, Washington, during the Sasquatch! Music Festival in 2010

Groundwork information
Origin Athens, Georgia, U.S.
Genres
  • Southern rock
  • land rock
  • rock and gyre
Years agile 1996–nowadays
Labels
  • ATO
  • MapleMusic
  • New West
  • Lost Highway
  • Play It Again Sam
  • Ghostmeat
  • Soul Dump
Associated acts
  • Adam's House Cat
  • The Screwtopians
  • Jason Isbell
  • Booker T. Jones
  • The Dexateens
Website drivebytruckers.com
Members Patterson Hood
Mike Cooley
Brad Morgan
Jay Gonzalez
Matt Patton
By members Jason Isbell
Spooner Oldham
John Neff
Shonna Tucker
Earl Hicks
Rob Malone
Matt Lane
Adam Howell
Barry Sell

Drive-By Truckers are an American rock band based in Athens, Georgia. Two of five current members (Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley) are originally from The Shoals region of northern Alabama and met equally roommates at the University of Northward Alabama.[1] The group also has roots in Richmond, Virginia.[2]

The band consists of Mike Cooley (atomic number 82 vocals, guitar, banjo), Patterson Hood (atomic number 82 vocals, guitar), Brad Morgan (drums), Jay Gonzalez (keys, guitar, accordion, backing vocals), and Matt Patton (bass guitar, backing vocals).[3] The band'southward constant touring has developed a dedicated post-obit.[4]

Musical style [edit]

Drive-By Truckers' musical style has incorporated elements of rock and roll,[5] Southern rock,[v] country,[6] punk rock,[7] cowpunk,[5] pop punk,[8] dejection,[9] soul,[10] Southern soul[half-dozen] and R&B.[5] Cited influences on the ring include The Clash, Richard Hell and The Voidoids, The Jim Carroll Ring, Grandmaster Flash and the Furious 5, Goodie Mob, OutKast, Loretta Lynn, George Jones, Tammy Wynette, Ferlin Husky, Lefty Frizzell, Hank Snowfall, Hank Williams Sr., Hank Williams Jr., Red Sovine, Cerise Foley, Merle Haggard, Tom T. Hall, Townes Van Zandt,[xi] Neil Young[12] and Lynyrd Skynyrd.[xiii] The band'south music has been classified every bit Southern rock,[fourteen] [15] [xvi] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] country rock,[xiv] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] rock and curlicue,[xiv] [26] [27] [29] [xxx] [31] culling state,[15] [21] [32] R&B,[32] [33] loonshit rock,[26] country,[34] emo country,[35] folk rock,[19] difficult rock,[29] indie stone,[xiv] neo-Southern stone,[36] post-cowpunk,[37] roots rock,[38] Southern Gothic[39] and Southern soul.[32]

Drive-By Truckers' lyrics are noted for expressing the left-fly political views of the band, particularly band fellow member and songwriter Patterson Hood.[40] [41] Jonathan Bernstein, writing for Rolling Stone, described American Band as the group'due south well-nigh politically charged anthology, describing the songs as "blunt, pissed-off Trump-era anthems",[42] nigh half which deal with gun violence.[42] The song "Ramon Casiano" is about the piddling known story of gun rights abet and former NRA leader Harlon Carter, who shot and killed a fifteen-yr-old Hispanic boy in 1931, merely escaped incarceration.[43] Hood wrote "What it Means" in response to the deaths of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown, unarmed black teenagers whose killings sparked the Black Lives Thing motion.[44] "Give up Nether Protestation," "E'er South," and "Guns of Umpqua" examine generations of racial injustice in a country that "shoots first and asks questions later."[44] "Once They Banned Imagine" discusses censorship of art in times of crisis, particularly later on the September xi attacks. Band member and songwriter Mike Cooley recalled that "After the nine/11 attacks, Clear Channel put out that list of songs that their stations shouldn't play. I couldn't get my head effectually the notion that John Lennon'south "Imagine" was on that listing, that information technology was something we didn't need to hear at a time when it was exactly what we needed to hear. The Scarlet Scare, the War on Crime, the War on Terrorism, they're but excuses for groovy downwards on anything the institution finds objectionable."[45] The follow-up anthology, The Unraveling, continues the band's political songwriting, with "Thoughts and Prayers" and "Babies in Cages" discussing the bug of gun violence and the Trump assistants family separation policy straight.[46] The New OK contained songs written in response to the Black Lives Matter protests in Portland, Oregon and the COVID-19 pandemic.[47]

History [edit]

Early on days [edit]

Drive-By Truckers was cofounded past Patterson Hood (son of bassist David Hood of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section) and longtime friend, former roommate, and musical partner Mike Cooley in Athens, Georgia, in 1996. The ii had played in various other bands including Adam's House Cat, which was called equally a meridian-ten All-time Unsigned Ring past a Musician contest in the late 1980s. Adam's House Cat recordings, entitled Town Burned Down were released in September 2018 via ATO Records.[48] After the demise of Adam's House Cat, Cooley and Hood performed equally a duo under the proper noun Virgil Kane. They somewhen started a new band, Horsepussy, with bassist-vocalist Adam Howell (later to bring together DBT) and Aaron Bryant (blood brother of DBT webmaster Jenn Bryant) before splitting for a few years. During this split, Hood moved to Athens and began forming what would become Drive-By Truckers, "with the intent of luring Cooley back into the fold".[49]

The band's original lineup was fluid, just information technology almost ofttimes included Hood, Cooley, and Howell, along with drummer Matt Lane, pedal steel actor John Neff, and mandolin player Barry Sell. They released their commencement anthology Gangstabilly in 1998. With Hood and Cooley sometimes playing mandolin and banjo instead of guitar, and Howell playing double bass. After recording their first album, the band added a third guitarist/vocalist, Rob Malone. By the second album, Pizza Deliverance, released in 1999, Howell had left, Malone switched to bass, and Sell had left the band. Neff was also listed every bit a guest rather than a fellow member, although he plays on much of the album. Hood dominated the songwriting and lead vocals in these early records, but Cooley, Howell, and Malone as well contributed songs, with Cooley'southward songwriting share increasing notably by the second album.

Following their second release, Lane was replaced by drummer Brad Morgan, who had already filled in for Lane during some of the ring'southward shows. Morgan went on to become the band's other constant member along with Hood and Cooley. With Neff also having declined to remain a full-time band correspondent, Hood and Cooley were left every bit the simply original members. The band and then embarked on a nationwide tour as a four-slice band, resulting in a live album entitled Alabama Ass Whuppin' (released in 2000 by Second Heaven Records, re-released in 2002 by Terminus Records and again in 2013 on ATO Records).[50]

Southern Stone Opera [edit]

Afterward three years on the road, a tight-knit group of musicians had emerged. Malone had switched back to guitar, giving the ring a three-member guitar army like Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Earl Hicks, a friend who had previously been involved in the band'south production, took over the bass slot. They and then began piece of work on 2001'southward double album, Southern Stone Opera.

The album weaves the history of Lynyrd Skynyrd into a narrative most a fictitious stone ring chosen Betamax Guillotine, whose story unfolds within the context of the S during the 1970s. Southern Rock Opera was originally released independently on Bulldoze-By Truckers' own Soul Dump Records on September 12, 2001, and garnered praise from fans and critics akin. To meet the new demand brought on past, among other things, a four-star review in Rolling Rock, Southern Rock Opera was reissued by Mercury and Lost Highway Records in July 2002. Soon afterward, Drive-By Truckers were named Band of the Twelvemonth by No Depression.

While Drive-By Truckers were touring in support of Southern Rock Opera, the band ran into a trouble when they were left with simply two guitarists (Cooley and Hood) following the departure of Rob Malone in late 2001. The band added fellow Alabamian guitarist and songwriter Jason Isbell to their line-up as the band's third guitarist. During his five years with Drive-By Truckers, Isbell's compositions became as highly praised as those of Cooley and Hood.[51]

With Jason Isbell [edit]

After signing a new deal with Austin-based record label New Westward, Drive-Past Truckers set about recording the follow-upwardly to Southern Stone Opera. The consequence was 2003'due south Ornamentation Day, which like its predecessor, received much critical praise.[ commendation needed ] It is another concept album, containing characters who are faced with hard decisions well-nigh wedlock, incest, break-ups, revenge, murder, and suicide. The album features an eclectic mix of the band's newer rootsy, difficult-rocking sound with some of their older alt-country sound. Old member John Neff returned equally a guest to play pedal steel on about half the anthology, although he did not tour with the band for the album.

After years of producing and playing with Drive-By Truckers, bassist Earl Hicks left the band on December 22, 2003. Hicks was immediately replaced by studio bassist Shonna Tucker, then-wife of guitarist Jason Isbell. Tucker had previously guested on Decoration Day, playing upright bass on the Cooley-penned rails "Sounds Better in the Vocal".

In 2004, Bulldoze-Past Truckers released withal another concept album entitled The Dingy S, which further explored the mythology of the South, with songs focusing on Sam Phillips and Sunday Records, John Henry, and a three-song suite about Sheriff Buford Pusser. With Cooley and Isbell each contributing 4 songs on the 14-vocal set, it was the band's first anthology for which Hood did not write the majority of songs.

Later touring throughout 2004 and 2005, Bulldoze-By Truckers found their way to the Fidelitorium Recording Studio in Forsyth County, North Carolina, during late 2005. These recording sessions, once over again produced by David Barbe, resulted in the band'south seventh LP, A Blessing and a Curse. Released on April 18, 2006, A Blessing and a Expletive showcased Drive-By Truckers' ability to branch out into new territory, and can be seen as the band's effort at shaking labeling past critics, detractors, fans, and followers, particularly the Southern rock label that has haunted the band since Southern Rock Opera. The album sounds less similar Lynyrd Skynyrd, and more than closely resembles the bare-bones British stone of the early 1970s such equally The Rolling Stones and Faces. Tom Petty, Bluish Öyster Cult, and Neil Young'south influence on the band's sound is more prominent on this album, likewise.[52]

On September 1, 2009, Drive-By Truckers released a drove of B-sides and rarities entitled The Fine Impress: A Collection of Oddities and Rarities which were recorded during the Decoration Solar day and Dingy South sessions. Though released later on he left the band, the album includes 2 tracks written by Jason Isbell.

Changing lineup [edit]

Bulldoze-By Truckers in 2008

In 2006, Drive-Past Truckers reunited, both on-stage and on-tape, with Athens-based, Savannah-born pedal steel guitarist John Neff. Neff had been featured on 1 song on A Blessing and a Expletive. During the next year, Neff began touring with the band equally an unofficial sixth member.

On April five, 2007, Jason Isbell appear that he was no longer a member of the band. The following solar day, Patterson Hood confirmed the break on the official site. In his letter to the fans, Hood described the parting of ways every bit "amicable" and expressed the hope that fans would continue to support Drive-By Truckers, as well as Isbell's solo efforts. In the aforementioned alphabetic character, Hood announced that Neff would become a full-time member, playing both guitar and pedal steel. Six years later Isbell's departure from the ring, he revealed the reported "amicab[ility]" of the split was a charade and that he had been forced out. Because his excessive drinking and drug use had fabricated Isbell unreliable, Hood had asked him to have a pause from the ring; upon Isbell's refusal, Cooley informed Isbell "that isn't going to work for us".[53]

Shortly after Isbell's departure, on Apr 20, 2007, Patterson Hood appear via the ring's website that a longtime friend of the Hood family, Spooner Oldham, would be joining the band playing keyboard for a string of acoustic performances called The Dirt Underneath Tour. This stripped-downwardly tour set the writing mood and manner for the band's side by side release, 2008's Brighter Than Creation's Nighttime, a far more than "swampy" and country record than its predecessor. Brighter Than Creation's Dark went to number 37 on the Billboard 200 album chart and was billed every bit a gothic masterpiece. Spooner Oldham contributed to the recording of the album, and toured with the ring in support of the record. The tape boasted 19 tracks, clocked in at over 75 minutes (and then the tape's vinyl format was released as a double album), and features the showtime song contributions from bassist Shonna Tucker. Keyboardist/bankroll vocalist Jay Gonzalez went on to tour with the ring once Oldham stopped at the finish of Brighter Than Creation'southward Nighttime 'southward Home Front Tour.

On July 7, 2009, New West Records released the band's 2nd official live album and DVD called Live From Austin TX. Material from Brighter Than Creation'southward Night fabricated up the bulk of the by and large acoustic set-list. This was the offset official release featuring Jay Gonzalez every bit the official sixth band member. Hood after recalled this recording every bit "absolutely the best filmed operation our ring has ever had".[54]

Departing New Due west Records [edit]

After being released from New Westward Records, the Drive-By Truckers entered the studio throughout periods of 2009 and emerged with two albums' worth of material. The songs were divided between The Big To Practise (2010) and the Drive-By Truckers "R&B Murder Album" Get-Become Boots (2011). The Big To-Practise further brought media attention to the band, resulting in their highest chart success, appearances on David Letterman and Jimmy Fallon's tardily night shows, and a scheduled bout opening for Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers.[iii] During a operation on the Late Testify with David Letterman in June 2011, the ring played a comprehend of Eddie Hinton's song "Everybody Needs Love" and were asked by Letterman to play an encore. Along with John Hiatt, English band The Heavy and Alabama-based St. Paul and The Broken Bones,[55] they are the only musical act ever asked to play an encore on his show. As the band's contract with New West Records expired afterwards The Fine Print was released, the band signed and released The Big To-Practice and Get-Go Boots on ATO Records.

On April 17, 2010, the band released a single penned by Mike Cooley to commemorate Record Shop Day. "Your Woman Is a Living Matter"/"Merely Maybe" is the simply record the Bulldoze-By Truckers accept released solely in a vinyl format. Digital downloads of the single tin at present be found on the band's website, too as Facebook. Based on the success of the single, the ring decided to release a limited edition (2,500 copies) special x-inch 45 with ii new songs, "The Thanksgiving Filter"/"Used to Be a Cop", on Black Fri of 2010. Both songs also appear on the album Go-Become Boots.

New West Records released Ugly Buildings, Whores, and Politicians: Greatest Hits 1998–2009 on August 2, 2011. The announcement was immediately met with mixed receptions by fans.[56]

2011–2017: More than lineup changes, English Oceans and American Band [edit]

On December v, 2011, Patterson Hood announced via Facebook that bassist Shonna Tucker had left the Drive-By Truckers. He did non cite whatsoever of Tucker's reasons for leaving the band and merely stated, "we all honey and respect her and wish her all of the best in everything she sets out for." David Barbe replaced Tucker for their subsequent shows until Matt Patton of The Dexateens joined the ring for their spring 2012 tour.[57] John Neff also departed on December 27, 2012; no third guitar replacement was announced, and all tours during 2013 consisted of Cooley and Hood on guitar with Gonzalez alternate betwixt keyboard and guitar.[58] Since that time, Gonzalez has continued to play both keyboards and guitar, allowing the ring to duplicate their trademark 3-guitar sound when necessary.

During the Bulldoze-Past Truckers' 2013 New Yr'due south Eve show at the ix:xxx Social club in Washington, D.C., an expanded vinyl release of their kickoff live album, Alabama Donkey Whuppin' was appear to exist released in 2013.

On August iii, 2013, Hood's Instagram account revealed the band had begun recording their side by side album at Hunt Park Transduction in Athens. Released on March four, 2014, English language Oceans showed that Gonzalez had become an official member of the band. Reduced to five members once more, the band showcased a more simple and direct hard-rocking style on the album.[59] The album debuted at number xvi on the Billboard charts, which represented the best charting of their career.

The band released no new studio album in 2015, but instead released a sprawling alive anthology entitled Information technology's Great to Be Alive. The anthology was recorded over a iii-night run at the Fillmore in San Francisco, on November 20, 21 and 22, 2014.

The band released their 11th album, American Ring, on September thirty, 2016. The album featured the same line-up every bit English language Oceans, and featured the most politically oriented lyrics of the ring's career.[1] A 2017 commodity in Australia's Overland literary magazine suggested, with reference to American Music, that "no-one in the modern era is making stronger protest music than this Athens, Georgia band".[60] They announced a tour in support of the record, the Darkened Flags Tour, in June of the same year.[61]

In November 2017, they released the politically charged single "The Perilous Dark", showing a continuation of their increased focus on protest songs.[62]

2018–present: The Unraveling, The New OK and Welcome two Club Thirteen [edit]

On September eleven, 2018, the band shared a photograph via their Instagram folio alluding that they were currently working on their 12th studio album.[63] The anthology, titled The Unraveling, was released on January 31, 2020, making information technology the longest gap between studio albums for the band so far.[1]

On June 17, 2020, NPR published an opinion slice by Patterson Hood, wherein he apologized for the ring'southward proper noun and chosen it "a drunken joke that was never intended to be in rotation and reckoned with two-and-a-half decades later".[64]

On September 30, 2020, just eight months later the release of The Unraveling, the band appear their thirteenth studio anthology, The New OK. It was made bachelor on all streaming platforms the following Friday.[65]

On April 12, 2022, the band appear their fourteenth studio album, Welcome 2 Guild 13. The same day, the championship runway was released as the starting time promotional single. The title derives from the venue where founding members Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley performed at the start of their careers.

Work with others [edit]

In 2007, Bulldoze-Past Truckers backed up Bettye LaVette on her comeback album The Scene of the Crime, which was released on September 25 on Anti Records. Scene of the Criminal offense was mostly recorded at FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. On it, LaVette transforms state and rock songs written by Willie Nelson, Elton John, and Don Henley, amid others, into devastating[ according to whom? ] mini-dramas. Scene of the Crime was nominated for a Grammy Award for "Best Contemporary Blues Album" and landed on numerous "Best of 2007" lists. Bulldoze-By Truckers frontman Patterson Hood produced the album alongside LaVette. The album also features ane song cowritten past LaVette and Hood.

Drive-By Truckers backed upward Booker T. Jones on his instrumental album Potato Pigsty, which was released on April 21, 2009. Neil Young also contributed over-dubbed guitar work to the album; the Bulldoze-By Truckers and he never met in studio. Irish potato Hole features a re-recording of the Cooley penned track "Space City", which originally was released on the album A Blessing And A Expletive. The band performed with Jones as "Booker T and the DBTs" at the Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival on June xiv, 2009. On January 31, 2010, Irish potato Hole won the All-time Pop Instrumental Anthology honor at the 52nd Grammy Awards.

In belatedly 2009, Barr Weissman released a documentary on the Drive-By Truckers entitled The Surreptitious To A Happy Catastrophe. The picture show follows the band over iii specially straining years of their career, and captures their near break upward, equally well as the departure of Jason Isbell from the band.

Online presence [edit]

The ring's online presence was created in 1996 by and is still maintained by long-fourth dimension friend Jenn Bryant.[66] Information technology has been credited with helping the band proceeds momentum.[67] The band too began to employ another long-time friend, Wes Freed, to produce the band's signature visual way with his cover art and posters.[68] Freed continues his collaborative work with DBT to date.[68] In March 2014, the newly debuted English language Oceans album cover was named Album Fine art of the Month by Outcome of Sound editor Dan Caffrey.[68] However, the ring'south constant touring and lauded live shows largely adult their defended following.[iv]

Band members [edit]

Current [edit]

  • Patterson Hood – guitar, vocals, mandolin (1996–present)
  • Mike Cooley – guitar, vocals, banjo, harmonica (1996–present)
  • Brad "EZB" Morgan – drums (1999–nowadays)
  • Jay Gonzalez – keyboards, guitar, accordion, saw, bankroll vocals (2008–present)
  • Matt Patton – bass, bankroll and lead vocals (2012–present)

Too

  • David Barbe – producer, engineer, guitar, bass, keyboards, and vocals (1998–present)

Former [edit]

  • Adam Howell – bass, bankroll vocals (1996–1999)
  • Matt Lane – drums (1996–1999)
  • John Neff – guitar, pedal steel guitar, bankroll vocals (1996–1999, 2003, 2006–2012)
  • Barry Sell – mandolin (1996–1999)
  • Earl Hicks – bass (1999–2003)
  • Rob Malone – guitar, bass, vocals (1999–2001)
  • Jason Isbell – guitar, keyboards, vocals (2001–2007)
  • Shonna Tucker – bass, vocals, guitar, keyboard (2003–2011)
  • Spooner Oldham – electric piano, electric organ (2003, 2007–2008)

Touring/session [edit]

  • Jyl Freed – vocals (2000)
  • Kelly Hogan – vocals (2000)
  • Amy Pike – vocals (2000)
  • Anne Richmond Boston – vocals (2000)
  • Scott Danbom – fiddle (2003)
  • Clay Leverett – harmony (2003)
  • Adam Courson — horns (2013)

Timeline [edit]

Discography [edit]

Studio albums [edit]

Live albums [edit]

  • Alabama Ass Whuppin' (2000, re-released in 2013)
  • Live from Austin, TX (2009)
  • Alive at Third Man (2011) (Limited edition vinyl-only release)
  • It's Great To Be Alive! (2015) No. 111 United states of america
  • Mike Cooley, Patterson Hood and Jason Isbell Live at the Shoals Theatre, June xv, 2014 (2020)
  • Live @ Plan nine (Recorded July xiii, 2006; released 2021)

Collections [edit]

  • The Fine Print: A Collection of Oddities and Rarities (2009)
  • Ugly Buildings, Whores, and Politicians: Greatest Hits 1998–2009 (2011)

Singles and EPs [edit]

  • "Bulldozers and Clay"/"Nine Bullets" (1996)
  • "Never Gonna Change" (2004)
  • "Aftermath USA" (2006)
  • "A Blessing and a Expletive" (2006)
  • "Cocky-Subversive Zones" (2008)
  • "A Ghost to Most" (2008)
  • "The Righteous Path" (2008)
  • "This Fucking Task" (2010, retitled "Working This Job" for radio and music video channels)
  • "Your Woman Is a Livin' Affair"/"Only Perhaps" (2010)
  • "The Thanksgiving Filter"/"Used to Exist a Cop" (2010)
  • "Sometimes Late at Nighttime EP" (2011)
  • "Pauline Hawkins" (2014)
  • "Made Up English Oceans" (2014)
  • "Dragon Pants EP" (2014) (Limited Edition)
  • "What It Ways" (2016)
  • "Armageddon'due south Back in Town" (2019)
  • "The Unraveling"/"Sarah'south Flame" (2020)
  • "The New OK" (2020)
  • "Welcome 2 Club XIII" (2022)

References [edit]

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  2. ^ Toth, James (February 6, 2019). "Heathens However: Bulldoze-By Truckers' Patterson Hood talks about looking dorsum, looking forward and his band's Richmond roots". Style Weekly. pp. 17–18. ...ane of the nation's top Southern rock bands. The Hugger-mugger To A Happy Catastrophe [DVD]. ATO Records
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External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Drive-By Truckers at AllMusic
  • NPR

persaudcrist1978.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive-By_Truckers

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