Gary Smith | |
---|---|
Birth name | Robert Gary Smith |
Born | Phoenix, Arizona, United States | March 8, 1950
Genres | Rock, jazz, jazz-rock fusion |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instruments | Drums, percussion |
Years active | 1969–present |
Website | garysmithdrums |
Robert Gary Smith (born March 9, 1950) is an American musician and songwriter. He was a member of Chase and a founding member of Survivor. Smith has also performed or recorded with B.B. King, Joe Williams, Vic Damone, Patrick Leonard, Leslie West (Mountain), Steve Forman, Will Lee, Elliott Randall, Bobby Kimball, Tommy Shaw, Darryl Jones, Jim Peterik, John Gary, Bruce Gaitsch, Eric Miyashiro, Clark Terry, Chuck Findley, Larry Carlton, Jaco Pastorius and many others. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
Smith was born in Phoenix, Arizona, United States. He began backing up local musicians in his teens and had stints with Steve Forman's Eclectic Mouse and Joe Williams before the age of 21.
Smith joined the Chicago-based jazz-rock fusion band Chase in the fall of 1971 and recorded the album Ennea . [4] The band received a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist that year. [4] Smith, trumpeter/vocalist Ted Piercefield and bassist Dennis Keith Johnson left the band in 1972 and formed the band X in South Florida. X disbanded before it could sign a pending record deal. Chase bandleader Bill Chase, keyboardist Wally Yohn, drummer Walter Clark, guitarist John Emma, pilot Dan Ludwig and the co-pilot died in a tragic plane crash in 1974. [4] [6]
Smith returned to Chicago in 1976 to do studio work. He formed Shy Rhythm with Johnson, keyboardist Terry Fryer and guitarist Bruce Gaitsch. The group backed singer Jim Peterik on his first solo album, Don't Fight The Feeling, on Epic Records, [7] and formed the Jim Peterik Band.
Gaitsch and Fryer departed in 1978, both going on to become in-demand session musicians. The remaining members added singer Dave Bickler and guitarist Frankie Sullivan and became Survivor. The band was signed by Atlantic Records A&R executive John Kalodner, and its self-titled debut album was released in 1979 on the Atlantic subsidiary Scotti Brothers. [8] [9] Smith co-wrote “Rockin’ into The Night” and “Rebel Girl,” but neither song was included on the group's first album. “Rockin' into the Night" became .38 Special's first hit single. It has appeared on multiple .38 Special albums, including the platinum-selling Flashback. The Survivor non-album single "Rebel Girl" was covered by the Outlaws. Survivor's versions of both of these songs appeared on their 2004 greatest hits album, Ultimate Survivor .
Smith and Johnson were replaced in Survivor in 1981, in part because of conflicts with their other projects. Survivor went on released its first Top 40 single, "Poor Man's Son," the same year. The band made its breakthrough in 1982 when "Eye of the Tiger" hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts for six weeks and won a Grammy Award. [8]
Meanwhile, Smith formed the Chicago jazz-rock band Software with Johnson, Patrick Leonard, Bill Ruppert and Mark Colby. The band recorded one album, Marbles, released in 1981.
Smith later toured with Leslie West, but opted out of recording and touring with West because of his session work. Smith became one of the first-call studio drummers in Chicago through the 1980s and into the 1990s before he returned to Arizona. He played on several thousand studio sessions, including records, movie tracks and hundreds of radio and TV commercials.
Smith was noted for his work with Chase in the April 2002 Modern Drummer article "Jazz/Rock Pioneers" in company with drummers Bobby Colomby (Blood, Sweat & Tears), Danny Seraphine (Chicago), Billy Cobham (Dreams, Mahavishnu Orchestra), and Jay Burrid (Chase). [2] He is currently a member of Chase Revisited, along with many of the original Chase members. Chase Revisited has been playing live at venues throughout the country, often featuring trumpet player Eric Miyashiro. [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
(Singles/Epic) (1978)
38 Special is an American rock band that was formed by Donnie Van Zant and Don Barnes in 1974 in Jacksonville, Florida.
Bill Chase was an American trumpeter and leader of the jazz-rock band Chase.
Survivor is an American rock band formed in Chicago in 1978 by Jim Peterik and Frankie Sullivan. The band achieved its best success in the 1980s, producing many charting singles, especially in the United States. The band is best-known for their double-platinum-certified 1982 hit "Eye of the Tiger", the theme song for the 1982 motion picture Rocky III; that single spent six weeks at number one in the US. The band continued to chart in the mid-1980s with singles like "Burning Heart", "The Search Is Over", "High on You", "Is This Love", and "I Can't Hold Back".
Ennea was the second album by jazz-rock band Chase. It did not repeat the commercial success of their debut album Chase.
Rockin' into the Night is the third studio album by the southern rock band 38 Special, released in 1979.
Live at Sturgis is a live album by the southern rock band 38 Special, released in 1999. It was recorded at the Buffalo Chip Campground in Sturgis, South Dakota, on August 12, 1999, during the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally except for the last track, which is a new studio recording from the same year.
"Eye of the Tiger" is a song by American rock band Survivor. It was released as a single from their third album of the same name and was also the theme song for the 1982 film Rocky III, which was released a day before the single. The song was written by Survivor guitarist Frankie Sullivan and keyboardist Jim Peterik, and it was recorded at the request of Rocky III star, writer, and director Sylvester Stallone, after Queen denied him permission to use "Another One Bites the Dust", the song Stallone intended as the Rocky III theme. The version of the song that appears in the film is the demo version of the song. The film version also contained tiger growls, which did not appear on the album version. It features original Survivor singer Dave Bickler on lead vocals. The song is also the title song to the 1986 film of the same name. "Eye of the Tiger" is written in the key of C minor.
The Ides of March is an American rock band that had a major US and minor UK hit with the song "Vehicle" in 1970. After going on hiatus in 1973, the band returned with their original line-up in 1990 and has been active since then.
James Michael Peterik is an American musician, singer and songwriter. He is best known as the founder of the band Survivor, as vocalist and songwriter of "Vehicle" by the Ides of March, and as co-writer of the anthem "Eye of the Tiger", the theme from the 1982 film Rocky III.
Frankie Sullivan is an American guitarist and songwriter, best known for being a founding member of the rock band Survivor. He has been the only permanent fixture in its lineup since the band's 1977 inception.
David Bickler is an American musician, best known as the lead singer for the rock band Survivor from 1978 until 1983, most notably on the #1 U.S. hit "Eye of the Tiger". In addition to his wide vocal range, his trademark look included a beret. Bickler would go on to provide the vocals in advertisements, including Bud Light's "Real Men of Genius" TV and radio commercials.
Chase were an American jazz rock band led by Bill Chase. They are best known for their 1971 hit single, "Get It On".
Vicious Cycle is the twelfth studio album by Lynyrd Skynyrd, released in 2003. It was the first album recorded by the band following the death of original bassist Leon Wilkeson, who appears on two songs, "The Way" and "Lucky Man", and the song "Mad Hatter" is a tribute to him. The album is the first to feature bassist Ean Evans, the first mainstream album with Michael Cartellone on drums, and the last album that guitarist Hughie Thomasson played on before he died. It included the single "Red, White & Blue" which peaked at number 27 on the US Mainstream Rock charts.
Too Hot to Sleep is the seventh studio album from rock band Survivor, released in 1988. It was a relative commercial disappointment, reaching only #187 on the Billboard album charts, though "Across the Miles" is one of their biggest AC chart hits. After this album, founders Frankie Sullivan and Jim Peterik put the band on indefinite hiatus, while lead vocalist Jimi Jamison would continue to tour under the Survivor name. Drummer Marc Droubay and bassist Stephen Ellis were replaced by studio musicians on the album. This album marks the final Survivor release to feature Peterik. The lineup of Sullivan and Jamison would not reunite until 2000.
Survivor is the eponymous debut album by American rock band Survivor, recorded & released in 1979. It is their only album with original drummer Gary Smith and bassist Dennis Keith Johnson. The recording sessions, overseen by A&R executive John Kalodner, were not without difficulties. First Ron Nevison replaced Barry Mraz as producer, and then the project had to be taken to Bruce Fairbairn in Vancouver to achieve a mix that was to Kalodner's satisfaction. The album took eight months to finally be released.
Jimmy Wayne Jamison was an American singer. Best known as Jimi Jamison, he earned recognition as the frontman for the rock bands Target, Cobra, and Survivor from 1984 to 1989, performing the songs "Burning Heart" from the film Rocky IV, "The Moment of Truth" from The Karate Kid, along with other top-20 Survivor hits "I Can't Hold Back", "High On You", "The Search is Over" and "Is This Love". He officially rejoined Survivor in 2000, remaining in the group until 2006, only to rejoin again in 2011. Acclaimed for his vocal abilities, Jamison is also known for having co-written and performed the theme song "I'm Always Here" for the 1990s TV series Baywatch.
Kelly Dean Keagy is an American drummer and co-lead vocalist, best known for his work with Night Ranger. Keagy sang lead vocals on several of their hits, such as "Sister Christian", "Sing Me Away", and "Sentimental Street".
Pure Music was the third and final album by jazz-rock fusion band Chase. The failure to sell the Ennea LP on a mass market forced Bill Chase to re-group several times and come up with a new musical approach; the result was Pure Music.
Bruce R. Gaitsch is an American guitarist, composer, and producer. He is best known for working with notable bands and musicians such Chicago, Peter Cetera, Madonna, and Agnetha Fältskog as a session musician and songwriter. Gaitsch co-wrote the Madonna song "La Isla Bonita", an international #1 single that earned Gaitsch an award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers in 1987. He has collaborated numerous times with fellow Chicago native Richard Marx whose career he was instrumental in launching.
"Rockin' into the Night" is a song by American band 38 Special. Written by Gary Smith, Frank Sullivan and Jim Peterik of Survivor, it is the title song of 38 Special's third album, Rockin' into the Night. The song reached number 43 on the Billboard Hot 100. Don Barnes sang lead vocals on the song.
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