Session Men: Nashville's A Team (Director Gil Baker)

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  • Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
  • CLICK "SUBSCRIBE" FOR MORE FROM THIS CHANNEL Bob Moore, Buddy Harman, Grady Martin, Ray Edenton, Pig Robbins, Charlie McCoy, Fred Carter Jr, Vince Gill, Brenda Lee, Tony Brown. Cinematography Matt Coale, Rob Lindsay. Sound Matt Andrews. Produced, directed and edited by Gil Baker.
    THE SESSION MEN STORY
    1965. At Western Studios in LA, a group of musicians (later known as The Wrecking Crew) are working on a song called Help Me Rhonda. They include Glen Campbell, Hal Blaine, Larry Knechtel, Don Randi and Ms. Carol Kaye on bass. When Rhonda shoots to Number One, the Beach Boys are heralded for their brilliant musicianship. But their live shows don't sound like their records. And no wonder.
    The Wrecking Crew performed on all of the big Beach Boys hits. Brian Wilson requested these players after hearing the magic they created for Phil Spector on productions like Be My Baby, Da Do Ron Ron and He's a Rebel. It's not widely known that Capitol's contract with The Beach Boys, who were signed by Nick Venet, stipulated that they hire studio musicians.
    Wrecking Crew players also tracked hits for The Byrds (Mr Tambourine Man, Turn Turn Turn) Association (Never My Love, Cherish) Mamas & Papas (California Dreamin', Monday Monday) Grass Roots (Midnight Confessions, Sooner or Later) Carpenter's (Close To You, We've Only Just Begun) Fifth Dimension (Wedding Bell Blues, Marry Me Bill) Monkees (Mary Mary) Paul Revere's Raiders (Kicks, Steppin' Stone) Jay's American's (Cara Mia, Come a Little Bit Closer) Sonny & Cher (I Got You Babe, The Beat Goes On) Herb Alpert (Lonely Bull, This Guy) America (Ventura Highway, Horse with No Name) Frank (Strangers in The Night) and Nancy (Boots) to name just a few.
    Crew member Larry Knechtel, who won a Grammy for his piano and arrangement of Bridge Over Troubled Water, is responsible for the organ on Never My Love, the bass on Mr Tambourine Man and that electric six-string solo on Bread's classic, The Guitar Man.
    Through the 1950's, studio musicians were expected to show up on time and read the parts an arranger had written for them. But with folk and rock dominating radio in the 1960's, sheet music went out the window. Great records in these genres demanded session players who could figure out their own parts, and come up with an arrangement themselves. Recording acts, composers, producers, publishers all received royalties. But the session men were paid what amounted to an hourly wage for their invaluable contributions on huge hits. This inequity eventually lead the session men in LA to threaten a strike. But the Musician's Union settled for an increased hourly wage and some added benefits. Still no royalty of any kind for the session men. Not even a single percentage point to split between them.
    The Wrecking Crew's counterpart in Alabama was the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Roger Hawkins, David Hood, Jimmy Johnson, Pete Carr, Spooner Oldham and Barry Beckett were kids when they began cutting classics like Mustang Sally, When A Man Loves a Woman, I'm Your Puppet, Kodachrome, My Little Town, Tonight's the Night, Old Time Rock & Roll and Aretha's signature, Respect. They also cut hits with The Osmond Brothers, Dr Hook and other major label acts.
    As members of Nashville's A Team, Grady Martin, Bob Moore, Buddy Harman, Ray Edenton and Pig Robbins played on well over 15,000 sessions between 1957 and 1987, including the biggest country and crossover hits of all time. These legendary studio musicians created the instrumental magic behind Elvis, Patsy, Conway Twitty, Brenda Lee, Jerry Lee Lewis, Marty Robbins, Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, Johnny Cash, George Jones, Tom T Hall, Crystal Gayle and literally hundreds of other stars.
    The American Studios Band ruled in Memphis, where Reggie Young, Gene Chrisman, Bobby Wood, Bobby Emmon, Mike Leech and Tommy Cogbill pasted the groove on classics like Sweet Caroline, Drift Away, Son of A Preacher Man, Angel of The Morning, Hooked on A Feeling, You Were Always on My Mind, Good Time Charlie’s Got The Blues, Suspicious Minds, In The Ghetto, Kentucky Rain, Funky Broadway, singles by The Box Tops (Cry Like A Baby, The Letter) and dozens of other hits.
    After helping to invent The Sound of Philadelphia heard on hits like Love Train, Me & Mrs Jones, If You Don't Know Me By Now, Backstabbers and Elton's Philadelphia Freedom, the MFSB Rhythm Section players, led by Bobby Eli, Earl Young and Vince Montana, created a new 70's genre with dance tracks like Disco Inferno.
    NYC studio greats Will Lee, Chuck Rainey, Paul Griffin, Vinny Bell, Herbie Lovelle, Hugh McCracken and David Spinozza discuss their careers and perform - with John Sebastian, (who played on dozens of sessions for other artists) providing commentary.
    Along with profiles on the key players at Motown, Stax, Criteria and the studio scenes in Chicago and London - Session Men explodes some long standing myths, and celebrates these unsung heroes of popular music.
    Gil Baker

Комментарии • 207

  • @rogeralleyne9257
    @rogeralleyne9257 4 года назад +8

    Vince Gill said it best! I aspire to be more like those session players than anyone else!!!🙏🙏🙏

  • @MarkYeary
    @MarkYeary 9 лет назад +14

    1st time I was in the studio in Nashville, Pig was there, a great man, mentor, boy was I glad he was there. I wouldn't have made it thru the session without his help!

    • @ginnywhite333
      @ginnywhite333 9 лет назад +1

      Mark Yeary did you get to play and meet eh late Floyd Cramer loved that man loved Charlie Rich and Johnny Horton too + Johnny Gimble

  • @javi__...
    @javi__... 3 года назад +3

    Grady Martin speaking on camera? This is rarer than rare. Hell any interview of Martin is rare.

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi 4 года назад +2

    Creators of masterpieces that still stand tall and always will.

    • @clarkewi
      @clarkewi 4 года назад

      Should have monuments erected to them.

  • @chartchick
    @chartchick 6 лет назад +5

    Missing from the Nashville A Team video-Harold Bradley..love all of these guys!! They are all awesome!

  • @imannonymous7707
    @imannonymous7707 3 года назад +1

    Im in awe to think of just how many lives these good ol boys touched. So much talent So much history

  • @sxsweet1
    @sxsweet1 6 лет назад +17

    If you love this music like I do, then you've got to appreciate these behind the scenes looks at how our favorites were made, right?!

  • @drawwing
    @drawwing 9 лет назад +6

    Just went to the CM hall of fame and saw a little exhibit on these guys.. so glad you uploaded this video. I will defiantly be sharing this.

  • @ArkRed1
    @ArkRed1 6 лет назад +9

    The groove from 6:56 out is just tooooooo much. That's music, and they knew how to make the place rock or cry.

    • @micksypickxen2386
      @micksypickxen2386 3 года назад +1

      That's the Memphis Boys, Gene Chrisman (drums), Mike Leech (bass), Reggie Young (guitar), Bobby Emmons (keys) and Bobby Wood (keys). Look them up... tons of hits and yes, laid down some of the tightest and sweetest grooves in the studio OR live. They were the default band in Chips Moman's American Sound Studios.

    • @millerezra8
      @millerezra8 2 года назад

      Immediately just cookin!

    • @sirwinston2368
      @sirwinston2368 2 года назад

      @@micksypickxen2386 And the LA crew with Glen Campbell, Joe Osborn, Hal Blaine, Don Randi. And the boys in Muscle Shoals - Jimmy Johnson, Barry Beckett, Roger Hawkins, Pete Carr. And Earl Palmer, Carol Kaye, and others I have missed. And Nashville, of course. The cream of the crop all the way around.

    • @christiangasior4244
      @christiangasior4244 2 года назад

      Mind they’re strictly rhythm, don’t wanna make it cry or sing.

    • @christiangasior4244
      @christiangasior4244 2 года назад

      Oh also muscle shoals rhythm section. Roger Hawkins especially. You’ve got Booker T and MG’s on Stax Records. I would say Al Jackson, Jr and Donald “Duck” Dunn may be the best rhythm section ever if it weren’t for Motown Records Funk bros who had Benny Benjamin and James Jamerson, two geniuses who both happened to have basically the same first and last names. But yeah Buddy Harman is amazing. Also back before you had session musicians as we now know it, there was SP Leary , Sam Lay, and other blues players whose names currently escape me. I think the best way to learn music is to learn from the session musicians. Even in Jazz, don’t get me started on that, lol.

  • @PaulAshley
    @PaulAshley 5 лет назад +13

    Loved it! And these guys don't get royalties? That''s a crime!

    • @silkee59
      @silkee59 3 года назад

      If you did not write it or have any publishing you only got paid for the session

  • @Ozmulki
    @Ozmulki 4 года назад +1

    The sound behind the singers. This is what gave it the rise along with The Jordanaires and Anita Kerr Singers it was a whole sound. Brilliant!

  • @sandratremiti356
    @sandratremiti356 3 года назад +2

    Rest in peace Bobby Moore.

  • @A.S.EnglishLessons
    @A.S.EnglishLessons 6 лет назад +2

    True musicians. Lots of respect.

  • @JackTheSkunk
    @JackTheSkunk Год назад

    Love that funky little instrumental at the end of this video.

  • @ronnorman1367
    @ronnorman1367 Год назад

    I can totally appreciate what these men have contributed I only hope the future generations will keep it going music is a lot like I don't know I just know how I feel

  • @jennifursun3303
    @jennifursun3303 7 лет назад +4

    loved Buddy Harmon their old time drummer., and the late Floyd Crammer

  • @pauldasilva3530
    @pauldasilva3530 6 лет назад +1

    Some of my musical heroes!

  • @nielskjr5432
    @nielskjr5432 2 года назад

    Thank you very much! Legendary musicians. Even Bob Dylan came here to record. Although he's from a very different place. He did many songs with Johnny Cash. But only one reached the final album. Girl from the north country.

  • @MrMusicguyma
    @MrMusicguyma 6 лет назад +3

    The out credits video includes Memphis, Muscle Shoals and LA stalwarts as well.

  • @mapp4751
    @mapp4751 8 лет назад +10

    HI,
    i am not a musician but i love watching this stuff! nice to get behind the scenes!

  • @SciFiArtman
    @SciFiArtman 6 лет назад +34

    I was speaking with other long-time session and hired-gun players the other day, and we all agreed that beyond our own personal abilities to impress and such, the one thing that we did best was to make whoever we were playing with sound their best - in the studio or live, and maybe especially live because we had the ability to read the room or the crowd and play in such a way to fill in the gaps (or not) and let the artist shine. Sometimes this meant to turn on the charm and stand out a bit, or fall back and find that gentle pocket, depending on the other players' ways, the artist's strengths and weaknesses, the overall feel of the production, or of course a producer's directions.
    My point being - it was all about LISTENING, and then playing to suit the situation. Might seem obvious, but we all thought this was a bit of a special talent beyond the obvious chops required for the gig. You can see some players just banging out their parts, making little effort to adapt to the gel of cohesion. Just a thought...

    • @mattkaustickomments
      @mattkaustickomments 3 года назад

      You are spot on! I’m a drummer, and I’ve gotten a lot of nice compliments over the years. It’s not because I’m technically that good. (I’m not - I know just enough “to be dangerous” across a variety of genres). It’s because I play to the music I’m hearing and not over it. I’ve sat in with different players over the years and the first thing most other musicians say is “Thank you! We can’t normally hear what we’re doing when our usual drummer plays!” A big part of that is I long ago stopped playing with the telephone pole sticks of my youth, and now play with nylon-tipped 7A’s so I can play with more finesse and dynamics.

    • @scootergreen3
      @scootergreen3 3 года назад

      That makes all the sense in the world SciFiArtMan!

  • @ronnorman1367
    @ronnorman1367 Год назад +1

    Nowadays music is done on computers it's a synthetic form it saddens me music has a soul I only hope it isn't dying

  • @ThePansye
    @ThePansye 8 лет назад +2

    Such good team work too!

  • @timtompkins6752
    @timtompkins6752 Год назад

    Great video of THE legends of recording. One thing I’ve never understood is why unionization got intermingled with creating art. The industry worked those guys like plow mules…whilst they just wanted to play.

  • @tidepoolbay
    @tidepoolbay Год назад

    These are the Men! WooF!!

  • @JerryFla2000
    @JerryFla2000 4 года назад +3

    "Walkin' After Midnight" the film stopped before it got to the great Hank Garland. No mention of Hank Garland because he was so good he pissed off all the others.

  • @woxnerw
    @woxnerw 6 лет назад +1

    Magic happens when these guys are in front of their microphones..

  • @josmotherman591
    @josmotherman591 Год назад

    I saw Brenda Lee in one of those really cheesy Rock & Roll movies around 57' or 58'. Which put her at 13, and me around.6 or 7 years old. I fell in love with the "older woman". Lol! I.mean, we were the same height....... 😅😅😀
    ..... Peace.
    ..

  • @christyrpak4378
    @christyrpak4378 3 года назад +1

    Great video, but I’m not sure why there was footage of LA’s Wrecking Crew in a video about Nashville’s A-team.

  • @millerezra8
    @millerezra8 2 года назад +2

    Owen Bradley invented the Nashville sound. Listen to Cocaine and Rhinestones!

    • @kevingavigan7883
      @kevingavigan7883 6 месяцев назад

      Owen Bradley was also a respectable musician, and a very underrated keyboardist. According to the AFM session logs, Owen Bradley played the piano on Patsy Cline's "Walkin' After Midnight", and played the organ on "Crazy" (Floyd Cramer played piano part on that song) also by Patsy Cline.

    • @VidarLund-k5q
      @VidarLund-k5q 3 месяца назад

      Plus Chet Atkins, RCA.

  • @dinodeluca6210
    @dinodeluca6210 6 лет назад +3

    Just listen to Little Sister, Witchcraft & I Feel So Bad by Elvis and Poetry in Motion by Johnny Tillotson to hear how these guys made records with unmatched power and swing....nobody played like these greats!

  • @mikewood8561
    @mikewood8561 2 месяца назад

    Can't believe these musicians were payed hourly. They were the reason the songs existed and became hits! Hell they should've been paid royalties. Hell just a penny wouldve made them rich. I mean its insane to think about everyone gets royalties except the guys that actually make the song listenable. Just absolutely crazy! I hope this gets straightened out and their paid substantially better now. I mean what would happen if they all went on strike and no musician would play unless they got royalties and hourly wage? There would be no music. Obviously the bands that play their own music would make money because they all get royalties. But these session guys are huge and some of them become actual artists. But man I'm so mad that they don't get their due.

  • @pkranz937
    @pkranz937 5 лет назад +4

    Nashville had more than 1 A-Team
    Starday had Floyd Cramer, Billy Linneman, DJ Fontana, Tommy Williams, Jimmy Day, Bobby Caldwell, and others who played for Webb Pierce, Red Sovine, George Jones, Goldy Hill, and Dotty West.

  • @redbear4027
    @redbear4027 Год назад

    SERVE THE SONG!

  • @bavlen
    @bavlen 6 лет назад +1

    Another great video. If I could vote I would vote that musicians (the very foundation that the singer stands on) should get royalties.

  • @erichargreaves1960
    @erichargreaves1960 Год назад

    If this is all about the Nashville "A-Team", why towards the end are there interspersed clips of the Westcoast's "Wrecking Crew" Glenn Campbell and Carol Kaye are the dead giveaway playing together...

  • @alanair7019
    @alanair7019 5 лет назад +2

    Greed, Pay'n 15 bucks/hour. These guys shoulda got together on their own why people don't think like this.????

    • @petergriffin613
      @petergriffin613 2 года назад

      Grady actually had his own band and recorded for Decca, so i think he might have had a little more material freedom

  • @Dougdenslowe714
    @Dougdenslowe714 8 лет назад +3

    What's the name of this documentary and is it available on RUclips?Thanks for any information.

  • @peterhansen5685
    @peterhansen5685 Год назад +1

    What about Lloyd Green he is left out as well. Most recorded steel player on session's.

    • @richardbuchanan5497
      @richardbuchanan5497 Год назад

      I was going to say that too. From Paul Mcartney, to a few of his own albums. Reggie Young too.

  • @LANACHAPEL
    @LANACHAPEL 3 года назад

    This is how it's SUPPOSED to be ya'll! Been there---done that---with the best!! Nashville sucks today.

  • @rythymsection7335
    @rythymsection7335 Год назад

    Was the A-Team and the Wrecking Crew the same or 2 different units using the same musicians?

  • @billlowe6883
    @billlowe6883 4 года назад

    She got the gold mine, they get the shaft.

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 3 месяца назад

    Now in Nashville we’ve got 20 people that can knock it out, so if you can’t make it on guitar, I’ll call Brent Mason lol or ask Gary Prim to line them up or Kelly Back.?

  • @newwavepop
    @newwavepop 2 года назад

    what exactly are these clips from? is this available, id there a title?

  • @ginnywhite333
    @ginnywhite333 9 лет назад +3

    sadly studeo bands don't get the money or the recognition they deserve ps did Buddy play on the Johnny Horton sessions?

  • @J.B24
    @J.B24 10 месяцев назад +1

    Was Carol Kaye in this group?

    • @kevingavigan7883
      @kevingavigan7883 6 месяцев назад

      She was in "The Wrecking Crew". Bob Moore was the principal bassist for "The Nashville A-Team". Fellow Wrecking Crew bassist Joe Osborn later joined the A-Team, and while *not* technically members of the A-Team, Norbert Putnam and Michael Rhodes were very popular session bassists in the Nashville recording scene.

    • @J.B24
      @J.B24 5 месяцев назад

      @@kevingavigan7883 These stories fascinate me, the production stories that led to these great songs.

  • @melodymakermark
    @melodymakermark Год назад

    Sneaking in some closing video of Chips Moman’s Memphis Boys under a Nashville banner! Shame. 🤣 Although Reggie did find a home in Nashville.

  • @shanemichaels8289
    @shanemichaels8289 5 лет назад

    So basically my favorite songs were all the same musicians either the A team or the swampers

  • @bennyrocks7668
    @bennyrocks7668 6 лет назад +1

    Can someone tell me the song at 1:27 ?

    • @irisheyes5890
      @irisheyes5890 5 лет назад

      That was Patsy Cline - Break it to me gently

    • @phillymathguy8142
      @phillymathguy8142 4 года назад

      @@irisheyes5890 No, that's Brenda Lee.

  • @avanti6058
    @avanti6058 2 месяца назад

    I can't believe that musicians don't receive royalties in the United States or England. Smaller, poorer, capitalist countries pay royalties to their musicians. It's called performance royalties and you just go to the organization with a record that has your name in the credits.

  • @adamhill3107
    @adamhill3107 6 лет назад +1

    Wasn't Billy Grammer in there?

  • @wiseowl2335
    @wiseowl2335 5 лет назад +2

    the players were the real talent and should have been paid accordingly. It's all moot now, not a lot of recording anymore

  • @mgmartin51
    @mgmartin51 4 года назад

    Aptly named.

  • @justsaying9913
    @justsaying9913 5 лет назад +1

    Musicians don’t get royalties?! WTF 🤬 was that statement....Anyone know if that’s still true?

    • @Gratefulman1965
      @Gratefulman1965 4 года назад +1

      Yes it’s still true. A great example is Jonny Hiland as well as Brent mason. Even though they are endorsed now, but when they are in the studio recording for another artist it is still union scale. Absolutely ridiculous if you ask me.

  • @fishfoolishness4222
    @fishfoolishness4222 Год назад

    I guess studio time is too expensive to have the actual band wasting time trying to get it right. Get in get it done get out. Thank you boys here's $300.

    • @fishfoolishness4222
      @fishfoolishness4222 Год назад

      And 16,000 X $300.00=4,800,000. May not be star money but back in the 50s, 60s, 70s, that was a he'll of a lot of money.

  • @stretch54
    @stretch54 6 лет назад +3

    The movie and television business are much more fair than the music business to the people that make the project happen, when it comes to pay and royalties afterwards. Musicians should get at least as much respect as actors who are not only closely directed but just read someone else's words. An actor can spend an hour on a stupid line but a musician generally has to perform the whole song at once. It's not very equitable.

  • @mosrite60
    @mosrite60 9 лет назад +3

    Nashville session excellent. But somehow IMO the LA Wrecking Crew were supreme. I mean Carol Kaye bass player , none better. Tommy Tedesco, how great was he? Howard Roberts no better session player anywhere. But yes, Nashville had the better country guys. Garland, Grady Martin, awesome.

    • @EclecticHillbilly
      @EclecticHillbilly 8 лет назад +6

      +mosrite60 You had the Wrecking Crew in LA, the Swampers in Muscle Shoals, the A team in Nashville, the Funk Brothers in Detroit and the Stax house band in Memphis. All were great and all made great records.

    • @steveborsa681
      @steveborsa681 8 лет назад +1

      +EclecticHillbilly ..oh yeah certainly. But somehow the "Wrecking Crew" gets most of the attention. perhaps of the fact that Glen Campbell started there. Fans were more familiar with the great Howard Roberts, Tommy, Carol Kaye, etc.. But yeah all groups were amazing musicians. thx for your observations. mos60

    • @Hearsticles
      @Hearsticles 6 лет назад

      The Swampers will always be my personal favorites. Those FAME records have such an amazing feel to them.

    • @jboyshyne
      @jboyshyne 6 лет назад +3

      "Carol Kaye bass player , none better." WHAT! Clearly she's the most overrated bass player ever, but best, um NO. Her flatpicking, rudimentary bass lines don't do shit for me. And, most importantly, her claims that she and not James Jamerson played on certain Motown classics is outright bullshit. Christ, you live in a fantasy world where true greats like Mingus, Clarke, Pastorius, Graham, Wooten, etc. never existed. Eah . . . whatever . . .

    • @stretch54
      @stretch54 6 лет назад

      Calm down. Jamerson was THE Bass player for Motown but Carol Kaye DID play on some of the hits. Why slam her?

  • @JS45678
    @JS45678 5 лет назад +1

    I’m sick...Why would a band have a player who can’t play the parts? And if somebody else played it for an album, then how in the world would the real band member play the song in a live concert???
    Why in the world has the music business become like that??? I always thought the band walks into a studio, plays on a stage all 12-15 songs in order, it’s recorded, and the album is finished and sold. This makes me ill, it’s all fake.
    Obsession w perfection spawned fraud on the general public.

  • @rockers2rockers616
    @rockers2rockers616 4 года назад +33

    Pay these men Royalties!

    • @hairlab_dc4417
      @hairlab_dc4417 3 года назад +3

      All of them are due production and even co-writing credits for lots of songs, but they did have the benfit of being union members unlike studio musicians today. Union scale back then was about 600 bucks a session in today's money money and the A-Teamers probably did 2-3 sessions a day. At least they were able to raise families and send kids to college doing what they loved to do--something that's all been impossible for even the most-called Nashville musicians to do for about 30 years.

    • @giulioluzzardi7632
      @giulioluzzardi7632 Год назад +1

      We know thier game, making em wait so long for credits/Royalties hoping the musicians will forget or pass away...brutal b.stads, treat you real nice and polite then throw you crumbs when it's time to pay the bills. We have a Union here in UK..they try very hard indeed to get your dues for a small annual fee which is just 1 benefit among many.

    • @redbear4027
      @redbear4027 Год назад

      I'm a songwriter. The Muse comes to songwriters. Most of us pay the dues, and souls are tattered and torn from being lovers in the world without any.
      I spent $20,000 of my own money making my indie album. Way the business works is this is my creative product or my intellectual property. I hired a whole bunch of session people and they were real glad to get the work and to have an outlet for their creativity because many of these people are Masters at certain instruments or sometimes a few instruments. So back to the math. I spent 20 grand to make the album. I paid studio musicians about $3,000. None of them had any interest to tour or support the album so it had a band and I had an album but then 3 months later my weak pussy bandmates left me cuz I got in a fight with an asshole club promoter who was pushing me around and I pushed back. I have a box full of 950 CDs here if anybody wants one... it's a complicated business it seems like at least two of us in the thread are trying to explain it from actual real world experience. I'm very proud of my album my name is Fred Kresge the album is Varuna. All of my music has been stolen and is on RUclips, Spotify as well as iTunes I believe... true story if I want a lawyer up it'll be about 3 Grand.
      So I'm going to make a new album do proper copyright protect myself and if they steal my next album I will probably Sue or take whatever recourse I have to but usually they respond to cease and desist orders first cuz they don't want to get sued and if you do see you have to prove monetary losses and if you're shitty getting played you don't have any monetary losses even though I put 20 grand in the album...

    • @Martin-iv6lq
      @Martin-iv6lq Год назад

      They didn't sign up for royalties so they don't deserve them.
      Next topic.

    • @tom_olofsson
      @tom_olofsson Год назад

      You don't understand how capitalism works. In America we get paid for a days work or we take a chance and maybe get royalties someday. Take made a choice to get paid hourly instead of possibly never getting paid.

  • @terryallard1918
    @terryallard1918 Год назад +7

    The original “A team”. Fantastic. Sooo much talent there. 👍 Grady Martin was The man.

  • @tommyshown741
    @tommyshown741 7 лет назад +13

    It 's those session men that makes the artists sound good. I don't care if the song is Mary Had A Little Lamb. It's that session man that makes the artists sound good. I have done session work myself.

  • @rokkebill
    @rokkebill 3 года назад +7

    RIP Bob Moore ! Is there a full length interview of this Nashville A-team somewhere ?

  • @jdexposure
    @jdexposure 7 лет назад +16

    Los Angeles: The Wrecking Crew.
    Motown: The Funk Brothers.
    Nashville: The A Team.
    Muscle Shoals: The Swampers.
    Am I missing anyone?

    • @1LOCKNLOAD
      @1LOCKNLOAD 7 лет назад +5

      Yes, Memphis American Sound Studio.

    • @GeorgiaBoy1961
      @GeorgiaBoy1961 6 лет назад +8

      Stax Studio Band - Booker T. and the M.G.'s plus Isaac Hayes, David Porter, as well as the Memphis Horns (see below) Also, the studio band at Hi Records - The Hodges Brothers (Charles, organ; Leroy, bass; Mabon "Teenie", guitar), Howard Grimes or Al Jackson, drums, plus the Memphis Horns - Andrew Love (saxophone) and Wayne Jackson (trumpet). Also, you have the boys down at American Studios and the Dixie Flyers as well.

    • @jboyshyne
      @jboyshyne 6 лет назад +4

      There was a London scene too with cats like Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones, Bobby Graham, John McLaughlin, Big Jim Sullivan, Nicky Hopkins, to name a few.

    • @richardpehtown2412
      @richardpehtown2412 6 лет назад +1

      Atlanta Rhythm Section

    • @BenPrevo
      @BenPrevo 5 лет назад +3

      The Meters !

  • @ercsplawn403
    @ercsplawn403 2 года назад +2

    Hank Garland was definitely part of the A team in Nashville.

  • @dantheman3716
    @dantheman3716 3 года назад +4

    R.I.P The Legendary Iconic Bass Player - Bob Moore

  • @TomMarvan
    @TomMarvan 7 лет назад +4

    Great stuff! What was the play out tune (just a little chord progression jam?). Did Billy Sanford come into the studio to record Pretty Woman? I really enjoyed his work with Don Williams in the later years.

  • @shaunmcinnis566
    @shaunmcinnis566 5 лет назад +4

    What would these artists sound like without great session musicianship?...shit, that what they would sound like.

  • @clarkewi
    @clarkewi 8 лет назад +9

    Brenda Lee is an absolute DIVA.

  • @johnhughes3963
    @johnhughes3963 3 года назад +3

    Charlie McCoy was responsible for me loving and learning how to play the harmonica.. Man can he BEND a note!!

  • @dannybaseball2444
    @dannybaseball2444 2 года назад +2

    Had no idea session musicians were cut out of the royalty stream entirely. Even a .005 per record would have been a fortune, given how many hit records these guys delivered. Hope that got fixed.

  • @stevehughes1510
    @stevehughes1510 Год назад +2

    The boys(and girl) that we knew very little of back in the day, God bless 'em all for the great music they made........magical.

  • @pacard33
    @pacard33 4 года назад +2

    Man, listening to Patsy sing "Crazy", you didn't need a loud noise or a lot of busy in the background--the musicians just let her go and her incredible voice just saturates the entire studio. You know there's music backing her up, but they were wise to let it slowly, quietly marinate so as not to upstage her in any way. That's being a pro. Her voice just MELTS you.

  • @georgehgordy1690
    @georgehgordy1690 3 года назад +1

    Shame on Nashville! That town has been screwing session musicians over for too long..

  • @phillymathguy8142
    @phillymathguy8142 4 года назад +2

    More captions on the video would have been beneficial so we could recognize the guys. Especially as they got older. I would never have recognized Grady Martin if it hadn't been captioned.

  • @patbarnes5874
    @patbarnes5874 6 лет назад +4

    How about Henry Strzelecki on bass? He was left out... played with all these side men.

    • @michaelterry4394
      @michaelterry4394 5 месяцев назад

      Henry played on 64 tour of norway sweden with Jim Reeves .

    • @VidarLund-k5q
      @VidarLund-k5q 3 месяца назад

      ​@@michaelterry4394With Kenny Buttrey on drums.

    • @michaelterry4394
      @michaelterry4394 3 месяца назад

      Right on the money ! A historian well versed .

  • @Sniffthedrippings
    @Sniffthedrippings 9 лет назад +10

    It's a shame they left out Hank Garland.

    • @mosrite60
      @mosrite60 9 лет назад +3

      +jebesi - yes and Nashville sound without Chet Atkins? something is being left out here. mosrite60

    • @theproductioncompanyusa4547
      @theproductioncompanyusa4547  7 лет назад +3

      Hank was to sick to be interviewed when Session Men was shot in 1997.

    • @theproductioncompanyusa4547
      @theproductioncompanyusa4547  7 лет назад +5

      Chet was "too busy" to be interviewed for Session Men.

    • @adamhill3107
      @adamhill3107 6 лет назад

      And Billy Grammer.

    • @TheRUTHIE999
      @TheRUTHIE999 6 лет назад

      was hank strzelecki too sick? whoops dead? i mean too busy being dead to be mentioned. sorry my bad.

  • @drumtravelfun
    @drumtravelfun 7 лет назад +4

    RIP-Glen Campbell.

  • @dhix2388
    @dhix2388 6 лет назад +1

    in a sense there artist? then why the hits not recorded with pick up players. lets be honest the singer is the record. but great singers may not have a proficent band. the sessions players never got there due/money.

  • @hugh-johnfleming289
    @hugh-johnfleming289 7 лет назад +1

    My Mom worked for Dinah Shore for a long while off and on and I remember when those 'Nashville Cats' showed up. People set up in their chairs.

  • @johnnyhawkins43
    @johnnyhawkins43 5 лет назад +1

    Back in the day they would ALL be in the recording studio at the same time,nowadays like the late great Waylon Jennings said IS that they don't make music or albums anymore,they build them!!!!!!!!

  • @neilhaverstick1446
    @neilhaverstick1446 2 года назад +1

    I agree about royalties, not always fair. Tommy Tedesco spoke of getting royalties, and that's because he was associated with the Musician's Union in LA, who had a strong presence in the area. I believe that was more for his TV/film work than his Wrecking Crew sessions. Betting that was Union scale, like in Nashville.

  • @4425evergreen
    @4425evergreen 7 месяцев назад

    this is how money destroys art... everything sounds the same. Nashville is a factory, playing the same way behind different singers. AI will continue this bc the producers can finally get rid of session players. the future looks bleak. money always wins

  • @KittraKittra
    @KittraKittra 8 лет назад +6

    Gil Baker is the coolest. He recognized the shameful injustice dealt these brilliant musicians before the musicians themselves realized what had happened.

    • @theproductioncompanyusa4547
      @theproductioncompanyusa4547  8 лет назад +3

      +Kittra Moore Thanks, Kittra. Your husband, Bob Moore was among the most brilliant. Bob knew precisely what note, and exactly how to play it. 40,000 sessions. Hundreds of hits. Genius.

  • @nixonreaganbush1
    @nixonreaganbush1 6 лет назад +1

    In Canada, we have neighboring rights...and musicians do get royalties.

  • @lamper2
    @lamper2 6 лет назад +2

    who played that lead on pretty woman?

  • @coreyzimmerman9782
    @coreyzimmerman9782 6 лет назад +1

    6.50. The into to a ccr song! They should have been paid

  • @TM-jo4wz
    @TM-jo4wz 2 года назад +1

    When the drummer did the pickup lick
    I new immediately that he’s the man!

  • @dannycorser
    @dannycorser 5 лет назад +1

    what about Hank Garland ?????

  • @dwaynecarroll6098
    @dwaynecarroll6098 Год назад

    This team and the west coast “Wrecking Crew” are the reason so much popular music sounds so bland and dull in my opinion. Musicians acting like machines to pump out a product. Give me a great live band any day.

  • @tdrtx
    @tdrtx 2 года назад +1

    How could Harold Bradley be left out? He played rhythm or 6-string bass on countless sessions -- and in fact in Chicago, before Nashville was a recording center. He's likely the most recorded guitarist in the world, even surpassing Tommy Tedesco.

    • @JordanRobertKirk
      @JordanRobertKirk Год назад

      Didn’t he die pretty young

    • @tdrtx
      @tdrtx Год назад

      Harold? He was 93!

    • @kevingavigan7883
      @kevingavigan7883 Год назад

      I couldn't agree more. One of the most prolific guitarists, and was also one of the first musicians to use the "tic-tac bass" that's long since been popular in the Nashville recording industry. Nothing beats the sound of a muted 6-string bass doubling the main bassline.

  • @HughRailey
    @HughRailey Год назад

    Ridiculous discrepancy in pay. A royal shaft. You’d think the Artists would at least throw a little tip if there was a mega hit ? Should be a bit of retirement for these fellows, besides a Pat on the back.

  • @floydgonzales3864
    @floydgonzales3864 Год назад

    One has performance rights if your performance is documented or recorded and you should copyright them. But, an employee of the label has few rights.

  • @miropribanic5581
    @miropribanic5581 Год назад

    is that the rightest band in the universe? Which only could be matched by Motown's Funk Brothers?

  • @theeaskey
    @theeaskey 2 года назад

    The Nashville mob, they had it all sewed up..

  • @lawrencetaylor4101
    @lawrencetaylor4101 Год назад

    For the amount of money that the executives stole, I mean made off of these musicians, there should be something in their Christmas stockings for years to come.

  • @marcminermusic
    @marcminermusic 7 лет назад

    Hey,
    I just came along your video. Seems you're into country, so please check out my vids too. I'm sure you will like them.
    Have a great day!
    Cheers,
    Marc

  • @jmack619
    @jmack619 5 лет назад +1

    Great teamwork and talent with respect

  • @WaveRyeDer99
    @WaveRyeDer99 5 месяцев назад

    Criminal they never got royalties.

  • @SteveBlevins
    @SteveBlevins 2 года назад

    Hank Garland....

  • @andyokus5735
    @andyokus5735 Год назад

    I think I subconsciously learned more about music from listening to Dylan'' " Nashville Skyline Rag " album before I even began to play all the instruments I mastered. How simply and tastefully they backed the songs up. Unfortunately it's not how good you play it's how well you fit in and be an " ass-kisser ". Otherwise I'd of been rich and famous 40 years ago. Arts got nothing to do with the music world. It's run by the Mafia and the Drug Cartels. It always has been and always will be.

    • @MrPhilfridge
      @MrPhilfridge 9 месяцев назад

      The album is called 'Nashville Skyline' not sure where the rag comes from.