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  1. In 1989, Brumley retired from touring to rejoin Al Jr. in Branson, MO, where together they appeared at the 76 Music Hall headlining the Brumley Family Music Show, which also included two of Tom's children. In 1990, Brumley briefly returned to the road as a member of Chris Hillman's retro-style country group the Desert Rose Band.

  2. History. Don Rich, Doyle Holly, Tom Brumley and Willie Cantu were the original members of the Buckaroos during the 1960s. The 1970s version included Don Rich, Jerry Wiggins, Jerry Brightman, Doyle Curtsinger, and Jim Shaw.Various sidemen throughout the years included JayDee Maness, Wayne "Moose" Stone, Jay McDonald, Ken Presley, and very early on, Merle Haggard.

  3. From the Tom Brumley cassette album "Tom Cattin'" - (NOT from a Buck Owens and The Buckaroos iTunes/Amazon album!) Tom's version of the Bud Isaacs penned "Bu...

  4. Tom Brumley & Together Again

  5. 4 de feb. de 2009 · Tom Brumley. Legendary steel guitar player and longtime Branson performer Tom Brumley died Wednesday in San Antonio, Texas, following a brief illness. He was 73. The son of legendary gospel songwriter Albert E. Brumley, Tom Brumley carried on the family tradition, earning numerous awards for his mastery of the steel guitar, including the ACM ...

  6. Tom Brumley’s playing on this song has become iconic in the pedal steel community, and the style of play he uses here is sometimes described as having a “crying” sound. As Eileen Sisk puts it in her Buck Owens biography, “One can almost hear tears sliding off the strings as Tom deftly glides his steel slide over them” ( 2010 , 93).

  7. 15 de oct. de 2018 · Alongside fellow Buckaroos, Don Rich, Doyle Holly and Willie Cantu, steel guitar ace Tom Brumley was a core part of Buck Owens’ “Bakersfield Sound.” Brumley first connected with Owens as a studio musician at Capitol in the early ‘60s, and joined the Buckaroos in 1963.