New Riders Of The Purple Sage Gypsy Cowboy Rar
Oct 16, 2007. Album: Gypsy Cowboy by New Riders of the Purple Sage, 1972. LINDA DID YOU SEE THE WAY THE SUNLIGHT LIT UPON THE HILLSIDES HERE THIS MORNING DID YOU SEE ME WALKING IN THE MEADOW JUST BEFORE THE DAY WAS DAWNING AH, DID YOU HEAR MY PEBBLES ON YOUR. Gypsy Cowboy Chords by New Riders of The Purple Sage Learn to play guitar by chord and tabs and use our crd diagrams, transpose the key and more.
- New Riders Of The Purple Sage Tour Dates
- Riders Of The Purple Sage Band
- Riders Of The Purple Sage Movie
The rest of the album consists of classic NRPS, from their classic lineup - John Dawson (rhythm guitar/vocals), David Nelson (lead guitar/vocals), Dave Torbert (bass/vocals), Buddy Cage (pedal steel) and Spencer Dryden (drums). Both Dawson and Torbet contributed strong original material, and the other songs also included 'Kick In The Head' by Robert Hunter.
Gypsy Cowboy (1972) < > Home, Home On The Road (1974)
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New Riders of the Purple Sage in 2015. Left to right: Buddy Cage, Michael Falzarano, Johnny Markowski, David Nelson, Ronnie Penque. | |
Background information | |
---|---|
Origin | San Francisco, California |
Genres | Country rock |
Years active | 1969–97, 2005–present |
Labels | Columbia, MCA, A&M, Relix |
Associated acts | Grateful Dead, Peter Rowan, Donna Jean Godchaux, Robert Hunter, David Nelson Band |
Website | thenewriders.com |
Members | David Nelson Buddy Cage Michael Falzarano Ronnie Penque Johnny Markowski |
Past members | John Dawson Jerry Garcia Mickey Hart Phil Lesh Dave Torbert Spencer Dryden Skip Battin Stephen A. Love Patrick Shanahan Allen Kemp Bobby Black Michael White Billy Wolf Val Fuentes Rusty Gauthier Greg Lagardo Gary Vogensen Fred Campbell Evan Morgan Bill Laymon Bob Matthews |
New Riders of the Purple Sage is an American country rock band. The group emerged from the psychedelic rock scene in San Francisco, California, in 1969, and its original lineup included several members of the Grateful Dead.[1] Their best known song is 'Panama Red'. The band is sometimes referred to as the New Riders, or as NRPS.
- 1History
- 2Discography
History[edit]
Origins: early 1960s–69[edit]
The roots of the New Riders can be traced back to the early 1960s Peninsulafolk/beatnik scene centered on Stanford University's now-defunct Perry Lane housing complex in Menlo Park, California, where future Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia often played gigs with like-minded guitarist David Nelson. The young John Dawson (also known as 'Marmaduke') also played some concerts with Garcia, Nelson, and their compatriots while visiting relatives on summer vacation. Enamored of the sounds of Bakersfield-style country music, Dawson would turn his older friends on to the work of Merle Haggard and Buck Owens and provided a vital link between Timothy Leary's International Federation for Internal Freedom in Millbrook, New York (having boarded at the Millbrook School) and the Menlo Park bohemian coterie nurtured by Ken Kesey. Windows xp sp3 iso.
Inspired by American folk music, rock and roll, and blues, Garcia formed the Grateful Dead (initially known as The Warlocks) with blues singer Ron 'Pigpen' McKernan, while Nelson joined the similarly inclined New Delhi River Band (which would eventually come to include bassist Dave Torbert) shortly thereafter. Although they lacked the managerial acumen and cultural cachet of the Grateful Dead and elected to remain in East Palo Alto, California unlike the former group, who soon relocated to the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, the New Delhi River Band were considered to be the house band of The Barn (one of the region's few viable concert venues outside of San Francisco) in Scotts Valley, California by late 1966. The group continued to enjoy a cult following in Santa Clara and Santa Cruz Counties through the Summer of Love until their dissolution in early 1968.
After a period of inactivity, Nelson contributed to the Grateful Dead's Aoxomoxoa (1969) sessions and served as the caretaker of Big Brother and the Holding Company's rehearsal space while guitarist Peter Albin and drummer David Getz undertook a European tour with Country Joe & the Fish following the schismatic departure of Janis Joplin and Sam Andrew from the former band in December 1968. During this period, Nelson and Garcia played intermittently in an early iteration of High Country, a traditional bluegrass ensemble formed by the remnants of the Peninsula folk scene. It is believed that Nelson would have been lead guitarist in the reconstituted lineup of Big Brother that coalesced later in 1969 and thus may have contributed to some of the recordings on Be a Brother (1970) during this transitional period.
Dawson—who dropped out of Occidental College in December 1965 and remained in Los Angeles for several years thereafter, 'hanging out with musicians and weirdos'—had returned to Los Altos Hills by early 1969, allowing him to contribute to the Aoxomoxoa sessions and briefly enroll at Foothill College.[2][3] After a mescaline experience at Pinnacles National Park with Torbert and Matthew Kelly, he began to compose songs on a regular basis.[4] Some (such as 'Glendale Train' and 'I Don't Know You') were traditional country pastiches; a number of others ('Last Lonely Eagle', 'Garden of Eden', and 'Dirty Business') found him working in a 'psychedelic country' fusion milieu redolent of Gram Parsons' nascent Flying Burrito Brothers. 'Henry', a traditional shuffle with contemporary lyrics about marijuana smuggling, also dates from this period.
Dawson's vision was prescient, as 1969 marked the emergence of country rock via Bob Dylan, The Band, The Flying Burrito Brothers, the Dillard & Clark Band, and the Clarence White-era Byrds. Around this time, Garcia was similarly inspired to take up the pedal steel guitar, and an informal line-up including Dawson, Garcia, and Peninsula folk veteran Peter Grant (on banjo) began playing coffeehouse and hofbrau concerts together when the Grateful Dead were not touring. Their repertoire included country standards, traditional bluegrass, Dawson originals, and a few Dylan covers ('Lay Lady Lay', 'You Ain't Goin' Nowhere', 'Mighty Quinn'). By the summer of 1969 it was decided that a full band would be formed and David Nelson was recruited to play lead guitar.
In addition to Nelson, Dawson (on acoustic guitar), and Garcia (continuing to play pedal steel), the original line-up of the band that came to be known as the New Riders of the Purple Sage (a nod to the Zane Grey classic and the western swing combo from the 1940s led by Foy Willing) consisted of Alembic Studios engineer Bob Matthews on electric bass and Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead; bassist Phil Lesh also played sporadically with the ensemble in lieu of Matthews through the end of the year, as documented by the late 1969 demos later included on the Before Time Beganarchival release. Lyricist Robert Hunter briefly rehearsed with the band on bass in early 1970 before the permanent hiring of Torbert in April of that year. The most commercially successful configuration of the New Riders would come to encompass Dawson, Nelson, Torbert, Spencer Dryden, and Buddy Cage.
Vintage NRPS: 1969–82[edit]
After a few warmup gigs throughout the Bay Area in 1969, Dawson, Nelson, and Torbert began to tour in May 1970 as part of a tripartite bill advertised as 'An Evening with the Grateful Dead'. An acoustic Grateful Dead set that often included contributions from Dawson and Nelson would then segue into New Riders and electric Dead sets, obviating the need to hire external opening acts.
By the time the New Riders recorded their first album in late 1970, change was in the air. Due to an incipient opiate addiction that dramatically affected his performance, Hart was temporarily fired by the Grateful Dead in February 1971. Although he contributed to two tracks on the album, former Jefferson Airplane drummer Spencer Dryden replaced Hart in the New Riders prior to his termination by the parent group. Dryden would remain with the group for ten years, ultimately serving as the band's manager.
Their first album, eponymously titled, was released on Columbia Records (under a contract informed by Clive Davis's long-term aspiration to sign the Grateful Dead) in late 1971. It proved to be a moderate success comparable to the Dead's releases of the era, peaking at No. 39 on the Billboard 200 chart.[1] Entirely composed by Dawson (in comparison to the more egalitarian songwriting of later releases), the record was driven by Garcia's pedal-steel playing.
With the New Riders desiring to become more of a self-sufficient group and Garcia needing to focus on his other responsibilities, the musician parted ways with the group in November 1971. Seasoned pedal steel player Buddy Cage was recruited from Ian and Sylvia's Great Speckled Bird to replace Garcia. The band's second album, Powerglide (1972), was the first to feature this line-up. The Powerglide album art included a notable caricature of the band members drawn by Lore Shoberg.
1973's The Adventures of Panama Red included a Nelson-sung cover of Peter Rowan's 'Panama Red' that steadily gained traction as an enduring FM radio staple. The album peaked at No. 55 in Billboard[1] and, albeit as a sleeper hit, marked the band's commercial zenith; in 1979, it was certified gold by RIAA.
In the mid-1970s Radio Caroline adopted the song 'On My Way Back Home' from the Gypsy Cowboy album as the station's theme tune. The song was well-suited to the station's album-oriented format of the time, and included the lyric 'Flying to the sun, sweet Caroline'.
The New Riders of the Purple Sage continued touring and releasing albums throughout the late 1970s and early 1980s to an increasingly fallow reception;[1] none of the albums that followed New Riders(1976) charted on the Billboard 200 in antipodal contrast to the widespread mainstream success of the outlaw country movement (exemplified by Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings) and such second-wave country rock groups as The Eagles, Pure Prairie League, and Firefall. The band continued to open several Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Band shows in 1977 and 1978, including the final concert preceding the closure of the Winterland Ballroom on December 31, 1978.
In 1974, Torbert left NRPS; he and Matthew Kelly had co-founded the band Kingfish (best known for Bob Weir's membership during the Grateful Dead's 1974–1976 touring interregnum) the year before. He was initially replaced by Skip Battin (formerly of Skip & Flip and the early 1970s lineup of The Byrds), who briefly emerged as the dominant creative force in the band due to his longstanding songwriting collaboration with controversial Hollywood impresario Kim Fowley. Stephen A. Love of Rick Nelson's Stone Canyon Band and the Roger McGuinn Band replaced Battin after he left the group to co-found a reconstituted lineup of The Flying Burrito Brothers in 1976. Shortly thereafter, Spencer Dryden relinquished his performance duties to manage the group in 1977. His musical replacement was Patrick Shanahan. Allen Kemp joined on bass in 1978 before emerging as a co-frontman on guitar and vocals, contributing prominently to the songwriting for the band's last major label release, 1981's Feelin' All Right.[5]
In 1982, Nelson and Cage left the band, leaving Dawson as the sole remaining member from the classic lineup.
New New Riders: 1982–97[edit]
From the early 1980s to the late 1990s, Dawson continued as leader of the New Riders of the Purple Sage. He was joined by bluegrass-oriented multi-instrumentalist Rusty Gauthier, who sang and played acoustic guitar, slide guitar, mandolin, banjo, and fiddle.[6] During this fifteen-year period, an evolving lineup of musicians played with Dawson and Gauthier in the New Riders. These included, among others, guitarists Allen Kemp, Gary Vogensen and Evan Morgan, bass players Fred Campbell, Bill Laymon, and Michael White, and drummers Val Fuentes and Greg Lagardo.
Some projects had the current line-up performing new material and others reworked older material. On some albums, such as Midnight Moonlight, the band's sound was less influenced by electric country rock and more by acoustic bluegrass music.
Retirement: 1997–2005[edit]
In 1997, the New Riders of the Purple Sage split up. Dawson retired from music and moved to Mexico to become an English teacher. By this time, Nelson had started his own David Nelson Band. There was a reunion performance in 2001. In 2002, the New Riders accepted a Lifetime Achievement Award from High Times magazine. On hand were a frail Dawson (suffering from emphysema), Nelson, Cage, Dryden and Torbert's widow Patti. The band performed 'Panama Red' and 'Lonesome LA Cowboy' with Peter Rowan as part of the celebration. In the spring of 2004, Cage sat in at several gigs with the David Nelson Band.
NRPS revival: 2005–present[edit]
Shortly after the death of Spencer Dryden, a reconstituted line-up of the New Riders began touring in late 2005. It features David Nelson and Buddy Cage, alongside guitarist Michael Falzarano, bassist Ronnie Penque, and drummer Johnny Markowski.[7][8] They have released a live album, Wanted: Live at Turkey Trot, and two studio albums, Where I Come From and 17 Pine Avenue.
Allen Kemp died on June 25, 2009.[9][10] John 'Marmaduke' Dawson died in Mexico on July 21, 2009, at the age of 64.[11][12]
Discography[edit]
Studio and live albums[edit]
Release date | Title | US Chart[13] | Label |
---|---|---|---|
1971 | New Riders of the Purple Sage | 39 | Columbia |
1972 | Powerglide | 33 | Columbia |
1972 | Gypsy Cowboy | 85 | Columbia |
1973 | The Adventures of Panama Red | 55 | Columbia |
1974 | Home, Home on the Road | 68 | Columbia |
1974 | Brujo | 68 | Columbia |
1975 | Oh, What a Mighty Time | 144 | Columbia |
1976 | New Riders | 145 | MCA |
1977 | Who Are Those Guys? | MCA | |
1977 | Marin County Line | MCA | |
1981 | Feelin' All Right | A&M | |
1986 | Before Time Began | Relix | |
1986 | Vintage NRPS | Relix | |
1989 | Keep On Keepin' On | Mu | |
1992 | Midnight Moonlight | Relix | |
1993 | Live on Stage | Relix | |
1994 | Live in Japan | Relix | |
1995 | Live | Avenue | |
2003 | Worcester, MA, 4/4/73 | Kufala | |
2003 | Boston Music Hall, 12/5/72 | Kufala | |
2004 | Veneta, Oregon, 8/27/72 | Kufala | |
2005 | Armadillo World Headquarters, Austin, TX, 6/13/75 | Kufala | |
2007 | S.U.N.Y., Stonybrook, NY, 3/17/73 | Kufala | |
2007 | Wanted: Live at Turkey Trot | Fa-Ka-Wee | |
2009 | Winterland, San Francisco, CA, 12/31/77 | Kufala | |
2009 | Where I Come From | Woodstock | |
2012 | 17 Pine Avenue | Woodstock | |
2013 | Glendale Train | Smokin' |
Compilation albums[edit]
Release date | Title | Label |
---|---|---|
1976 | The Best of New Riders of the Purple Sage | Columbia |
1987 | Take a Red[14] | MCA |
1991 | L.A. Lady[15] | Sony |
1992 | The Relix Bay Rock Shop, No. 1 | Relix |
1994 | Wasted Tasters | Raven |
1995 | Relix's Best of the Early New Riders of the Purple Sage | Relix |
1997 | Relix's Best of the New New Riders of the Purple Sage | Relix |
2000 | Ridin' with Panama Red | Sony |
2006 | Cactus Juice | Arcadia |
2009 | Very Best of the Relix Years | Retro World |
2011 | Setlist: The Very Best of New Riders of the Purple Sage Live | Legacy |
2011 | Instant Armadillo Blues | Raven |
Singles[edit]
Release Date | Title | US Chart | Label |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | I Don't Need No Doctor | 81 | Columbia |
Timeline of band members[edit]
The membership of the New Riders of the Purple Sage has changed many times. The following table shows a somewhat simplified version of the history of the band's lineups.[16]
1969–1970 |
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1970 |
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1971 |
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1971–1974 |
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1974–1976 |
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1976–1977 |
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1977–1978 |
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1978 |
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1978–1980 |
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1980 |
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1980 |
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1980–1981 |
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1981–1982 |
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1982–1984 |
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1984–1985 |
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1985–1987 |
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1987–1990 |
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1990–1993 |
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1993–1994 |
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1997 |
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2005–present |
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Notes[edit]
New Riders Of The Purple Sage Tour Dates
- ^ abcdStrong, Martin C. (2000). The Great Rock Discography (5th ed.). Edinburgh: Mojo Books. p. 694. ISBN1-84195-017-3.
- ^'the Early Days +-+ NEW RIDERS of the PURPLE SAGE'. nrpsmusic.com. Retrieved January 1, 2017.
- ^'Grateful Dead Family Discography: Aoxomoxoa'. deaddisc.com. Retrieved January 1, 2017.
- ^'the Early Days +-+ NEW RIDERS of the PURPLE SAGE'. nrpsmusic.com. Retrieved January 1, 2017.
- ^Thomson, Gus. 'Auburn’s Allen Kemp Part of Rick Nelson, New Riders of Purple Sage Bands', Auburn Journal, July 9, 2009
- ^Brown, Toni (June 1991). 'New Riders of the Purple Sage Interview', Relix. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
- ^Bonfiglio, Jeremy D. (December 16, 2010) 'More Renaissance than Reunion'[dead link], The Herald-Palladium. Retrieved December 22, 2010'
- ^Benson, John. (December 17, 2010) 'New Riders of the Purple Sage Aren't Dead', The News-Herald. Retrieved December 22, 2010
- ^Thomson, Gus (July 9, 2009). 'Auburn's Allen Kemp Part of Rick Nelson, New Riders of Purple Sage Bands'. Auburn Journal. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
- ^'Allen Kemp Obituary'. Auburn Journal. July 5, 2009. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
- ^Liberatore, Paul (July 22, 2009). 'John Dawson, a Founder of the New Riders of the Purple Sage, Dies at 64'. Marin Independent Journal. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
- ^Vaziri, Aidin (July 25, 2009). 'Country Rock Musician John Dawson Dies'. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
- ^'New Riders of the Purple Sage Chart History'. Billboard. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
- ^Ruhlmann, William. 'Take a Red'. AllMusic. Retrieved November 23, 2017.
- ^'L.A. Lady'. Grateful Dead Family Discography. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
- ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved September 12, 2009.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
References[edit]
- Coffey, Kevin (1998). 'New Riders of the Purple Sage'. In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 377.
- 'New Riders of the Purple Sage', K-HiTS 106.7, ca. November, 2008[dead link]