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home > artist profiles > the notorious cherry bombs |
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| The
Notorious Cherry Bombs The Notorious Cherry Bombs (2004) Vince Gill, Tony Brown and Rodney Crowell. You know them well as hitmakers and architects of contemporary country music. But back in the ‘70s, back in the day, they were the Cherry Bombs. Along with guitar ace Richard Bennett, steel wizard Hank Devito, and the rock-solid rhythm section of Emory Gordy and Larrie Londin, they were Crowell’s backup band as he struggled to get his career off the ground. In short, the Cherry Bombs were the coolest, ass-kickingest country outfit in the land. Then they were gone, each splintering off to find their own kind of (considerable) success in music. ![]() Despite that success (or maybe because of it) the band – rechristened The Notorious Cherry Bombs – sounded lean, mean, even downright hungry when they reunited to honor Crowell at the 2003 ASCAP Country Awards dinner. From the second they hit the stage, the players knew this was no one-off performance. With The Notorious Cherry Bombs, their long-awaited debut release, they are set to restore your faith in great, timeless country music and the exhilarating power of a worldclass band. Aided and abetted by keyboardist John Hobbs and a revised rhythm section – session ace Eddie Bayers fills in for the late Larry Londin and Nashville bassist extraordinaire Michael Rhodes sits in for the now-retired Emory Gordy – the Notorious Cherry Bombs took over 20 years to bring you this incredible debut. From start to finish, it was well worth the wait. Profile courtesy of Universal-South. |
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