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Gary Louris

 
Artist: Gary Louris
Gary Louris

Similar Artists:

Worked With:

Marc Perlman, Brian Paulson, Mark Olson, Joe Henry

Formal Connection With:

  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar (Electric), Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Vagabonds," "Acoustic Vagabonds"

Biography

Long before rising to prominence as leader of the insurgent country group the Jayhawks (and the all-star collective Golden Smog), Gary Louris grew up in Toledo, OH, where he took piano lessons as a youngster. When he was 14, his mother gave him a classical guitar, suggesting he could bring the instrument to parties and become more popular. He started writing songs in college, but it wasn't until he had graduated that he purchased his first electric guitar. In the early '80s, Louris joined the group Safety Last.

Vocalist/guitarist Mark Olsen, who had been in a rockabilly band called Stagger Lee, and Marc Perlman from the Neglectors had formed the Jayhawks in Minneapolis by early 1985, playing their first show in front of a small crowd. Louris happened to be in the audience and, after hitting it off with his future songwriting partner Olsen, joined the band. The Jayhawks released their debut album in 1986, pressing only a few thousand copies. The group's popularity grew and Olsen and Louris started to work as a songwriting team. In 1988, Louris was injured in a nearly fatal automobile accident and the band went on hiatus. Meanwhile, in 1989, Twin/Tone Records released Blue Earth, a collection of overdubbed and remixed demos that became a critical success. Louris soon rejoined the rejuvenated band.

The band was signed to American Records for their breakthrough album, 1991's Hollywood Town Hall, and scored an opening slot on tour with the Black Crowes. However, shortly after the next album, Tommorrow the Green Grass -- which featured the successful single "Blue" -- Olsen left the band. With Louris at the helm, the Jayhawks released 1997's Sound of Lies and 2000's Smile. The albums represented a move away from the band's trademark country rock, experimenting with pop and different sonic landscapes. Although the Jayhawks took an extended (and possibly permanent) break in 2005, Louris continued experimenting with different genres, even writing material for the Dixie Chicks' Grammy-winning effort Taking the Long Way. He also launched a solo career, teaming up with co-producers Thom Monahan and Chris Robinson to fashion the sounds of 2008's Vagabonds. Meanwhile, he continued his membership in the all-star roots rock collective Golden Smog, having played with the band since the release of their debut EP in 1992. ~ Erik Hage, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Gary Louris
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Gary Louris

Gary Louris May 30, 2009
Background information
Born 10 March 1955 (1955-03-10) (age 54)
Origin Toledo, Ohio, US
Genres Folk, Americana, alt-country
Years active 1985–Present
Labels Rykodisc
Associated acts The Jayhawks
Golden Smog
Mark Olson
Website Official website

Gary Louris (born March 10, 1955 in Toledo, Ohio) is a guitarist, singer, and songwriter of alternative country and pop music. He was a founding member of the Minneapolis-based band The Jayhawks, and their principal songwriter and vocalist after the departure of Mark Olson; he is often credited with the band's subsequent move from folk-country toward a more progressive, poppier sound.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Gary Louris grew up in Toledo, Ohio, where he took piano lessons before becoming a guitarist as a teenager. He graduated from St. John's Jesuit High School in 1973.

1985-2005: The Jayhawks

The Jayhawks were formed in 1985 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Louris had formerly played guitar in a rockabilly band called Safety Last. On May 13, 2003 The Jayhawks returned to the Late Show with David Letterman where they performed their title track "Save it For a Rainy Day" off their "Rainy Day Music" CD. The Jayhawks recorded seven albums prior to going on indefinite hiatus in 2005.

2005-Present: Solo career

Louris is also a member of the intermittent Midwest musical collective/side-project Golden Smog; other members have included fellow Jayhawk Marc Perlman, Jeff Tweedy of Wilco, Dave Pirner and Dan Murphy from Soul Asylum, Kraig Johnson of Run Westy Run and Chris Mars of The Replacements.

In spring 2005, Louris and Olson toured together billed as "From the Jayhawks: An Evening with Mark Olson & Gary Louris, Together Again."

He co-wrote the Nickel Creek song Jealous of the Moon with Chris Thile in 2005, and it appeared on the Nickel Creek album Why Should the Fire Die?.[1] Louris is also a songwriter on the 2006 Dixie Chicks album Taking the Long Way.

Louris wrote and performed "Every Word," the theme song for the 2006 documentary Wordplay.[2][3]

In 2008, Louris released his first solo album called Vagabonds. The album was produced by The Black Crowes frontman Chris Robinson. [4][5] Of Vagabonds, Louris said in an interview: “It wasn’t my intention to recapture the ’70s or anything, that’s just what comes out when I sing,” Louris says. “Once we got the band together for the sessions, it actually reminded me of how the Jayhawks were when we started out. The music is new and exciting for them, and it was good for me to feed off of that.” [6] Vagabonds was recorded in Laurel Canyon, which is famous for being the center of the 1970s' singer-songwriter scene. [7]

Robinson has also produced a collaboration between Louris and his former Jayhawks bandmate Mark Olson. The album, called Ready for the Flood, was released in November 2008 (January 2009 in the U.S.).

On touring Louris said: "Personally I'm not that into touring anymore. I found that I'm not in a band for that. The type of musician I am I'm not somebody that ad libs and creates. I'm more a recreator who when I tour I tend to recreate parts that I've written so touring and playing live is fun to me to a point." [8]

Equipment

A 1968 Gibson SG guitar reputed to have been formerly owned by lead guitarist John King of The Litter is now owned and frequently used by Gary Louris of the Jayhawks and Golden Smog. The Gibson SG guitar was owned from 1977-1986 by Kevin Waddick. Chris Osgood, at the time the guitarist of the legendary Suicide Commandos seminal punk trio, originally suggested that Kevin Waddick buy the guitar and then was the one who later informed Gary Louris that it was for sale. Louris also uses a Martin 000-18 acoustic guitar.

Discography

With The Jayhawks

Safety Last

With Golden Smog

Solo

With Mark Olson

References

External links


 
 
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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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