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  1. www.rtjwebzine.fr › rtjenglish › interviewsJerry Eubanks's interview

    MTB founding member Jerry Eubanks retired from the band after 25 years in 1996. Life on the road had taken it's toll and he decided he wanted to spend time at home with his family. But old habits die hard and he's once again a full-fledged member of a band - this one, like MTB, from Spartanburg, SC.

  2. 23 de ago. de 2022 · Caldwell’s first arrangement of it was fairly primitive, and after the band decided that what it really required was a flute intro they turned to their gifted multi-instrumentalist Jerry Eubanks. The flute isn’t used much in southern rock, but Eubanks’s swooping, summery solo, evocative of a summer skylark, became a signature element of the song.

  3. Jerry Eubanks. Jerry Eubanks was a founding member of The Marshall Tucker Band, contributing flute, saxophone, and keyboards from 1972 until his departure in the 1990s. Eubanks’s woodwind instruments were a distinctive part of the band’s sound, particularly on hits like “Can’t You See.”

  4. 3 de dic. de 2023 · As a result, Take The Highway, the opening track on the band’s debut album, sounded quite unlike anything else around at that point.It’s southern rock, of course, but with strong jazzy hues and the distinctly psychedelic rush of that flute: at points it sounds more like Camel than Skynyrd.. The young band’s early influences, which ranged from their country music heritage to legends from ...

  5. 20 de feb. de 2020 · Eubanks takes the first solo, showing his jazz and soul influences, before giving way to Toy Caldwell, who turns in the first of many Jerry Garcia-meets-Dickey Betts solos that were Toy Caldwell’s hallmark. He was known for playing guitar with his thumb and no pick. This technique created the fat and clear tone that’s his signature sound.

  6. Marshall Tucker Band.. Jerry Eubanks at his bestJerry EubanksToy CaldwellTommy CaldwellDoug GrayGeorge McCorkelPaul Riddle

  7. 22 de dic. de 2007 · The original Marshall Tucker Band broke up in 1984, but Doug Gray and Jerry Eubanks chose to continue on. At first, they hired Nashville session men, but later brought in guys like Rusty Milner, Ace Allen, Tim Lawter and Stuart Swanlund, all road veterans of local bands. When Toy Caldwell died on February 25, 1993, I was devastated.