Ray Herndon | |
---|---|
Born | July 14, 1960 |
Origin | Arcadia neighborhood of Phoenix, Arizona, United States [1] |
Genres | Country |
Occupation(s) | Singer/songwriter, musician |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, |
Years active | 1964–present |
Labels | Dualtone Records MCA Records Compendia Records |
Member of | McBride & the Ride |
Formerly of | Lyle Lovett's Large Band J. David Sloan and the Rogues |
Website | www |
Ray Herndon (born July 14, 1960) is an American country singer/songwriter and guitarist known mainly for playing with Lyle Lovett's Large Band and McBride & the Ride.
Ray Herndon grew up in an Arizona musical family. His father, Brick Herndon, also from a musical family, was a musician, band leader and owner of a Scottsdale, Arizona, club, Handlebar J, that played country music. Herndon's older two brothers were also musicians. [2] By age three he appeared with them on local television, singing, dancing and playing instruments. [3] At age four he recorded two Christmas songs in Los Angeles for RCA and at seven was playing guitar in his father's band. [4] He studied jazz at Mesa Community College; one of the guitar workshops there was led by Joe Pass. [5] He continued playing at Handlebar J through his years at school. Shortly after finishing at Mesa Community College he left the family business against his mother's wishes, [4] joining a Phoenix houseband, J. David Sloan and the Rogues. [2] The Rogues were a cover band of country hits with swing and jazz influences. [6]
The Rogues were invited to play at the 1983 Schueberfouer funfair in Luxembourg. [7] He met Lyle Lovett there and invited him to sit in with the band; they learned a few of his songs and backed him up during their sets. [8] The swing and harmony that Lovett found with the Rogues opened his eyes to what his songs could sound like with proper backing. [6] Sloan offered Lovett a deal on studio time, first day free. In 1984 Lovett took him up on the offer. After several stays in Arizona over that summer he recorded 18 songs, backed up by the Rogue musicians. The demo tape of those songs led to his first record deal. Thus began Herndon's relationship with Lovett; he's played with him since 1983, [9] became lead guitarist in 1985, played on many of his recordings, sang a duet with him on his first album [7] and toured with him, off and on, [10] from 1986. [11] Looking to "expand [his] horizons," [4] in 1989, he became a founding member of the country group McBride & the Ride; they had early success [12] with four consecutive top-five singles. He has had three stints with McBride & the Ride, 1989–1994, 2000–2002 [13] and when they reconstituted in 2021. The 1994 split was caused by their label, which was looking for mass appeal with a different style, and renamed the band after he left. [14] After the 2002 split, he released a solo album, Livin’ the Dream (with musical guests, including Lyle Lovett, Jessi Colter, Jon Randall Stewart, Sonya Isaacs and Clint Black). Herndon called the 2021 iteration "almost Zen-like." In February, 2022, the band had their first Nashville concert in 20 years. [15] [16]
During his Nashville years, he was an active songwriter. His major successes included co-writing Kenny Chesney's breakout Me and You and his own My Dog Thinks I'm Elvis, which was used in a television commercial for Radio Shack. [13] Besides Chesney, he has written songs for Aaron Tippin, Lee Greenwood, Linda Davis, Sonya Isaacs and McBride & the Ride. [2]
After his time as a Nashville songwriter, [17] he returned to Arizona to help his family run the Handlebar J, where he and his brother Ron have done weekly shows. [18] [19] In 2004 he and Jessi Colter hosted a show at the restaurant as a tribute to Waylon Jennings. It was called Outlaw Connection, carried by SIRIUS and introduced by Steven Van Zandt. [20] Other participants included Hank Williams Jr., Shooter Jennings, Tony Furtado, and Tony Joe White. [21] In 2008, he was inducted into the Arizona Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame. [22] In 2015 Herndon returned to the recording studio. Former Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods, to showcase Arizona in a different light, "rounded up a cast of Phoenix-area all-stars" and cut an album called Grant Woods' The Project. Herndon sang What Else Could I Do. [23] [24] After his mother died in 2017 he bought out his brothers and became the sole owner of the restaurant, which has been family owned since 1975. [25] He has remained active in the local Arizona music scene with mentoring young artists [26] and 2022 performances with Matt Rollings [27] and a tribute to Jerry Riopelle. [28] On Herndon's decision to leave Nashville and return to Arizona, Lyle Lovett commented:
Someone as immensely talented as Ray Herndon chooses to live where he's from, to run his family's business and uphold his family's legacy. That's where life is for Ray. And I just admire that greatly. [7]
Lyle Pearce Lovett is an American country singer. Active since 1980, he has recorded 14 albums and released 25 singles to date, including his highest entry, the number 10 chart hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, "Cowboy Man". Lovett has won four Grammy Awards, including Best Male Country Vocal Performance and Best Country Album. His most recent album is 12th of June, released in 2022.
Diamond Rio is an American country music band from Nashville, Tennessee. The band consists of Marty Roe, Jimmy Olander, Dan Truman (keyboards), Dana Williams, Micah Schweinsberg (drums), and Carson McKee. The band was founded in 1982 as an attraction for the Opryland USA theme park in Nashville, Tennessee, and was originally known as the Grizzly River Boys, then the Tennessee River Boys. It was founded by vocalists Matt Davenport, Danny Gregg, and Ty Herndon, the last of whom became a solo artist in the mid-1990s. After undergoing several membership changes in its initial years, the band held the same membership from 1989 to 2023, which consisted of Roe, Olander, Truman, Williams, Brian Prout (drums), and Gene Johnson. After the latter two retired in 2022, they were respectively replaced by Schweinsberg and McKee.
Robert Earl Keen is an American country singer-songwriter and entertainer. Debuting with 1984's No Kinda Dancer, the Houston native has recorded 20 full-length albums for independent and major record labels. His songs been covered by artists including George Strait, Joe Ely, Lyle Lovett, The Highwaymen and Nanci Griffith. Keen has toured in the U.S. and abroad.
Boyd Tyrone Herndon is an American country music singer and songwriter. His music career began in the 1980s as a member of the Tennessee River Boys, a predecessor to the country band Diamond Rio. Herndon quit the band early on and gained his first national exposure as a competitor on Star Search. He then played at various honky-tonks in Texas. After signing to Epic Records in 1993, Herndon made his debut in 1995 with his number-one single, "What Mattered Most". This was followed that same year by the release of his first album, also titled What Mattered Most.
Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers is an American rock band from Tempe, Arizona.
William Kenneth Alphin, best known by his stage name Big Kenny, is an American country music singer. He and John Rich comprise the duo Big & Rich, who recorded four studio albums and charted fifteen singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.
McBride & the Ride is an American country music band consisting of Terry McBride, Ray Herndon, and Billy Thomas. The group was founded in 1989 through the assistance of record producer Tony Brown. McBride & the Ride's first three albums — Burnin' Up the Road, the gold-certified Sacred Ground, and Hurry Sundown, released in 1991, 1992, and 1993, respectively — were all issued on MCA Nashville. These albums also produced several hits on the Billboard country charts, including the Top 5 hits "Sacred Ground", "Going Out of My Mind", "Just One Night", and "Love on the Loose, Heart on the Run".
Tony Brown is an American record producer and pianist, known primarily for his work in country music. A former member of the Stamps Quartet and backing musician for Emmylou Harris, Brown has primarily worked as a producer since the late 1980s. He is known primarily for his production work with Reba McEntire, Vince Gill, and George Strait.
Lyle Lovett is the 1986 debut album by American singer Lyle Lovett. By the mid-1980s, Lovett had already distinguished himself in the burgeoning Texas singer-songwriter scene. He had performed in the New Folk competition at the Kerrville Folk Festival in 1980 and returned to win in 1982. In 1984, he recorded a four-song demo with the help of the Phoenix band J. David Sloan and the Rogues and his music had begun to be distributed by the Fast Folk Musical Magazine
Pontiac is the second studio album by American singer Lyle Lovett, released in 1987.
Lyle Lovett and His Large Band is Lyle Lovett's third album, released in 1989. Lovett won the Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance for the album.
It's Not Big It's Large is an album by Lyle Lovett and his Large Band, released in 2007. The recording was made live in studio.
Francine Reed is an American blues singer, solo artist, and regular singing partner of Lyle Lovett since the 1980s and member of Lovett's Large Band. Reed has also recorded duets with Willie Nelson and Delbert McClinton and others.
Terry McBride is an American country music artist. Between 1989 and 1994, and again from 2000 to 2002, McBride was the lead vocalist and bass guitarist in the band McBride & the Ride, a country music group which recorded four studio albums, received CMA and ACM Nominations for Vocal Group of the Year, and charted more than ten singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts. The trio reunited a second time in 2021 and is currently touring throughout the country in support of their comeback EP, Marlboros & Avon. McBride continues to write and record solo music as well, including albums Hotels & Highways and Rebels & Angels. He is also the son of 1970s country singer Dale McBride.
Patrick Bergeson is an American guitarist, harmonica player and occasional songwriter. Based in Nashville, he is best known for his live and session work with Chet Atkins, Lyle Lovett, Suzy Bogguss and Les Brers.
Harry Stinson is an American multi-instrumentalist, noted as a session drummer and vocalist in the Nashville music community. He is also a songwriter and producer.
Jonathan Yudkin is an American multi-instrumentalist who is a proficient player of banjo, violin, mandolin, and other stringed instruments. He is a session musician in Nashville as well as a record producer, arranger, and band leader.
Larry Alvin Franklin is an American fiddler, mandolin and guitar player, session musician, and composer. His style embraces country, blues, rock and roll, jazz, and Western swing.
Paul William Leim is an American drummer and recording session musician based in Nashville.
Billy Williams is an American producer, arranger, and guitarist. He is most known for his production work with Lyle Lovett, sharing a 1997 Best Country Album Grammy award with Lovett as producers of The Road To Ensenada.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)