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  1. Harvey Dalton Arnold first gained the music world’s attention in a huge, arena-sized way: He was a member of The Outlaws, one of the giant wave of 1970s Southern rock bands that came in the wake of the Allman Brothers and wound up charting big hits and filling giant venues all over the nation.

  2. Harvey Dalton Arnold – bass, vocals (1976–1980) Freddie Salem – guitars, vocals (1977–1983) Rick Cua – bass, vocals (1980–1983) Mike Duke – keyboards, vocals (1980–1981) Bob Jenkins – guitar, vocals (1983) Steve Grisham – guitars, vocals (1983–1986, 2013–2021) Chuck Glass – bass, keyboards, vocals (1983–1987)

  3. 27 de ago. de 2020 · It saw the Outlaws, now with new bass player Harvey Dalton Arnold, add a more emphatic country twist to their sound, with Thomasson layering pedal steel guitar on to So Afraid. And yet despite the quality of Heavenly Blues, Holiday, Cold And Lonesome and the title song, the album didn’t even make the Top 50, stalling just outside.

  4. Harvey Dalton Arnold, vocalist and guitar player, hit the big time with the Southern Rock legends "The Outlaws," playing with the band from 1976-1980.

  5. Harvey Dalton Arnold bassist for southern rock group Outlaws Interviewed by Jason Saulnier September 23, 2010The Outlaws are a southern rock band formed in T...

  6. 6 de sept. de 2020 · Harvey Dalton Arnold will probably always be best remembered for his time with The Outlaws at the end of the Seventies, with whom he recorded three incredibly important albums (‘Hurry Sundown’, ‘Playin’ To Win’, ‘In The Eye of the Storm’) providing bass and vocals.

  7. For the guitar cowboy who quit high school and left his home in rural Eastern North Carolina to hit the road playing rock and roll at 17, Stories to Live Up To is a retrospective album, examining the emotions and choices that have defined Arnolds life.