Music
ZZ Top - Hell Raisers Tour
About ZZ Top - Hell Raisers Tour
ZZ TOP a/k/a "That Little Ol' Band From Texas," lay undisputed claim to being the longest
running major rock band with original personnel intact and, in 2004, the Texas trio was inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Of course, there are only three of them – Billy F Gibbons,
Dusty Hill, Frank Beard -- but it's still a remarkable achievement that they're still very much
together after almost 45 years of rock, blues, and boogie on the road and in the studio. "Yeah,"
says Billy, guitarist extraordinaire, "we're the same three guys, bashing out the same three
chords." With the release of each of their albums the band has explored new ground in terms of
both their sonic approach and the material they've recorded. ZZ TOP is the same but always
changing.
It was in Houston in the waning days of 1969 that ZZ TOP coalesced from the core of two rival
bands, Billy's Moving Sidewalks and Frank and Dusty's American Blues. The new group went on
to record the appropriately titled ZZ Top's First Album and Rio Grande Mud that reflected their
strong blues roots. Their third, 1973's Tres Hombres, catapulted them to national attention with
the hit "La Grange," still one of the band's signature pieces today. The song is unabashed
elemental boogie, celebrating the institution that came to be known as "the best little whorehouse
in Texas." Their next hit was "Tush," a song about, well, let's just say the pursuit of "the good life"
that was featured on their Fandango! album, released in 1975. The band's momentum and
success built during its first decade, culminating in the legendary "World Wide Texas Tour," a
production that included a longhorn steer, a buffalo, buzzards, rattlesnakes and a Texas-shaped
stage. As a touring unit, they've been without peer over the years, having performed before
millions of fans through North America on numerous epochal tours as well as overseas where
they've enthralled audiences from Slovenia to Argentina, from Australia to Sweden, from Russia
to Japan and most points in between. Their iconography – beards, cars, girls and that magic
keychain – seems to transcend all bounds of geography and language.
Following a lengthy hiatus during which the individual members of the band traveled the world,
they switched labels (from British Decca's London label to Warner Bros.) and returned with two
amazingly provocative albums, Deguello and El Loco. Their next release, Eliminator, was
something of a paradigm shift for ZZ TOP. Their roots blues skew was intact but added to the mix
were tech-age trappings that soon found a visual outlet with the nascent MTV. Suddenly, Billy,
Dusty and Frank were video icons, playing a kind of Greek chorus in videos that highlighted the
album's three smash singles: "Gimme All Your Lovin', "Sharp Dressed Man" and "Legs." The
melding of grungy guitar-based blues with synth-pop was seamless and continued with the follow-
up album Afterburner as they continued their chart juggernaut. ZZ TOP had accomplished the
impossible; they had moved with the times while simultaneously bucking ephemeral trends that
crossed their path. They had become more popular and more iconic without ever having to be
"flavor of the week." They had become a certified rock institution, contemporary in every way, yet
still completely connected to the founding fathers of the genre.
They stayed with Warner for one more album, Recycler, released in 1990 and switched to RCA
where they debuted with Antenna and followed with Rhythmeen, XXX and Mescalero. Beyond
that, both a lavish four CD box set compilation, Chrome, Smoke & B.B.Q. and a two-CD
distillation of that package, Rancho Texicano, were released by Warner prior to The Complete
Studio Albums set.
In 2012, ZZ TOP unveiled LA FUTURA, their first studio album in nine years. Produced by Rick
Rubin and Billy F Gibbons, and released on American Recordings, it reflected the solid blues
inspiration that has powered the band since the very beginning with a contemporary approach
that underscored the group's inclination to experiment and explore new sonic vistas. The album
included the widely lauded "I Gotsta Get Paid" that has become both a video and in-concert
sensation. ZZ Top's rich history became the subject of a box set release the following year. ZZ
Top: The Complete Studio Albums 1970-1990 offered no fewer than 10 of the band's most
lauded albums all with the original mixes restored.
ZZ TOP's brand new career retrospective The Very Baddest spans the entire course of their
London, Warner Bros. and RCA years. Listeners can follow the evolution of the band's sound
from the early 70s into the 00s on either a 40 track double CD or a 20 track single CD. Live at
Montreux 2013, just released on Eagle Rock Entertainment on both Blu-ray and DVD formats,
showcases their live act, leaving no doubt as to why they have been such a huge concert draw
for the last several decades. When it comes to the live experience, they've still got it.
The elements that keep ZZ TOP fresh, enduring and above the transitory fray can be summed up
in the three words of the band's internal mantra: "Tone, Taste and Tenacity." Of course, the three
members of the band have done their utmost to do their part in assuring that ZZ TOP prevails.
As genuine roots musicians, the members of the band have few peers. Billy is widely regarded
as one of American finest blues guitarists working in the rock idiom. His influences are both the
originators of the form – Muddy Waters, B.B. King, et al – as well as the British blues rockers who
emerged the generation before ZZ's ascendance. In his early days of playing, no less an idol that
Jimi Hendrix singled him out for praise. Part mad scientist, part prankster, he's a musical
innovator of the highest order and a certified "guitar god." He's a recurring small screen presence
in the hit TV series Bones in which he plays a bearded, gruff, rock guitarist. No type casting
problems for Billy.
Dusty has long had an affinity for rock's origins; his earliest performances as a child included
Elvis songs convincingly performed. Not only is he a bass virtuoso in his own right, his vocal
prowess is awe-inspiring. He's the lead voice you hear on "Tush" and his ferocious vocals are
heard, to great effect, on his idol Elvis Presley's "Jailhouse Rock," these days, often a concert
encore number and recorded by the band on Fandango! Good natured and diligent, Dusty is the
rock solid bottom of ZZ TOP.
Frank has also been keeping the beat in that great tradition. As both a roots and progressive
drummer, he has been acknowledged as key to the band's powerful on-stage and in-studio
presence. He and Dusty, in their early years together, served as Lightnin' Hopkins' rhythm section
which, as Frank tells it, was a life changing experience. Frank, despite his last name, is the guy
in the band without a beard. But when you're with him, you're with a Beard. He's a rockin'
paradox who provides the pulse of ZZ TOP.
ZZ TOP's music is always instantly recognizable, eminently powerful, profoundly soulful and
100% Texas American in derivation. The band's support for the blues is unwavering both as
interpreters of the music and preservers of its legacy. It was ZZ TOP that celebrated "founding
father" Muddy Waters by turning a piece of scrap timber than had fallen from his sharecropper's
shack into a beautiful guitar, dubbed the "Muddywood." This totem was sent on tour as a
fundraising focus for The Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale, Mississippi, site of Robert
Johnson's famed "Crossroads" encounter with the devil. ZZ TOP's support and link to the blues
remains as rock solid as the music they continue to play. They have sold millions of records over
the course of their career, have been officially designated as Heroes of The State of Texas, have
been referenced in countless cartoons and sitcoms and are true rock icons but, against all odds,
they're really just doing what they've always done. They're real and they're surreal and they're
ZZ TOP.
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