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The Cardinals

 
Artist: The Cardinals
The Cardinals

Group Members:

Meredith Brothers, Sam Aydelotte, Ernest Warren, Donald Johnson, Leon Hardy

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Followers:

See The Cardinals Lyrics
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Representative Albums: "The Door Is Still Open

Biography

The Cardinals, early balladeers that few remember, recorded 12 singles for Atlantic Records (their only label) between 1951 and 1957. They debuted with "Shouldn't I Know," a willowy ballad featuring a prominent lead guitar, tight harmonies, and a deep bass; lead Ernie Warren impressed listeners at the fade by holding a long note in breathtaking fashion. One of the bird groups, the Cardinals formed in their hometown, Baltimore, MD, in 1946, a year before a more famous bird group from Baltimore, the Orioles. Originally they were the Mellotones. The lineup was Warren, Donald Johnson, Meredith Brothers, Leon Hardy, and guitarist Sam Aydelotte, who also sang. They did the Baltimore bar scene for years, imitating all the ballad and modern harmony groups including the Ink Spots. A recording opportunity came in 1951 when a representative from Atlantic Records inked them after a talent search audition.

Atlantic renamed them the Cardinals to avoid confusion with another Mellotones group that recorded for Columbia Records. The first single "Shouldn't I Know" (1951) mimicked the Orioles' sound; it rode into the R&B Top Ten and took the fellows on tours at big-city venues with other star R&B artists. A second single "I'll Always Love You," a 1951 release, didn't do as well but wasn't a total flop either. They followed with "Wheel of Fortune," a song from their first recording session. It wasn't a scheduled release; Atlantic took advantage of four pop releases of "Wheel..." at the same time by Sunny Gale, Bobby Wayne, Kay Starr, and the Bell Sisters; all cracked the pop Top Ten except Gale's which nailed down the number 13 spot. The Cardinals competed with Dinah Washington for R&B honors and managed a number six R&B showing. Uncle Sam drafted Warren who was replaced by Leander Tarver for the fourth single "The Bump" b/w "She Rocks." James Brown (not "Mr. Please, Please") replaced Tarver who left for unknown reasons; Warren, on a leave, participated in the next session which included six Cardinals. The septet recorded "You Are My Only Love" (1953) and "Under a Blanket of Blue" (1954); both flopped, Atlantic lost interest in recording and promoting the group; that interest didn't return until Warren's service duty ended and he rejoined full-time early in 1954. A new recording session resulted in the Chuck Willis-penned "The Door Is Still Open to My Heart" (1955); the slow ballad with the grumbling bass and smooth harmonies, punctuated by a sax break, became their biggest record. The lineup was now Warren, Johnny Douglas, Brothers, Hardy, and Johnson.

The gigs picked up and the Cardinals toured extensively on shows sponsored by Alan Freed, Buddy Johnson, and others. They appeared with the Ravens, the Moonglows, the Nutmegs, Chuck Berry, Dinah Washington and other stars. They hit the Midwest many times. In Cleveland, OH, they played the Circle Theater two or three times, and once did a show at the Uptown in bright orange suits, sharing the bill with Luther Bond & the Emeralds, Arthur Prysock, Tiny Grimes, and others. Atlantic issued six more singles that didn't do well, though a couple are considered classics. The interest in the Cardinals' singing style was waning. About the time Atlantic dropped the final Cardinals single "One Love" (1957), the group had splintered. Warren formed another group before reuniting the originals with different members. The new guys hung in until the early '60s before breaking up for good. Atlantic thought a lot of the group -- they recorded 36 sides, though only 24 were released via 12 singles. The 36 singles have not been released as an album. ~ Andrew Hamilton, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Cardinals (rock band)
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The Cardinals

The Cardinals, live at the Manchester Academy, England, November 2008
Background information
Origin USA
Genres Alternative country, rock, jam band, progressive rock
Years active 2004 – present
Associated acts Ryan Adams, Willie Nelson, Gin Wigmore
Website Official Site
Members
Jon Graboff
Chris Feinstein
Brad Pemberton
Neal Casal
Former members
Ryan Adams
J.P. Bowersock
Cindy Cashdollar
Catherine Popper
Jamie Candiloro

The Cardinals are an American rock band that were formed in 2003 by alternative country singer-songwriter Ryan Adams and fronted by him until 2009. The band was featured on Ryan Adams and the Cardinals albums Cold Roses, Jacksonville City Nights, Follow the Lights, and Cardinology. Though credited as a solo Ryan Adams release, the 2007 album Easy Tiger also features the Cardinals, as well as many other musicians who did not ever play in Ryan Adams and The Cardinals, constituting it be named a solo album.

Regarding the band's name, Adams states that he "suggested the Cardinals because it was my high school football team." [1]

Following Ryan Adams' hiatus in 2009, a few members of Ryan Adams and The Cardinals recorded an album with singer-songwriter Gin Wigmore.[2]

Contents

History

Ryan Adams and The Cardinals first began as a duo when singer-songwriter Ryan Adams met J.P. Bowersock through his friend Ryan Gentles, manager of The Strokes, who were also Ryan Adams neighbors in New York in 2001. J.P. Bowersock and Ryan Adams rehearsed and performed in New York at various clubs under the name The Cardinals and were eventually joined for a short time by G.E. Smith, of the SNL band fame during the late 1980's and 1990's.

After recording the album, "29", Adams suggested to J.P. Bowersock that they might form a touring band. Brad Pemberton was the first member to join reuniting Ryan Adams and Brad Pemberton who had toured together until Adams' "Love is Hell" album. Following Pemberton shortly thereafter was Catherine Popper who initially played Stand-up Bass or "Double Bass" for the band.

The first touring line of Ryan Adams and the Cardinals consisted of Ryan Adams, Brad Pemberton, JP Bowersock, Catherine Popper, and Cindy Cashdollar. The band toured in 2004 and recorded Cold Roses. Cashdollar left in 2005. Jon Graboff was a hired replacement for the next two years until he became a full time member for their final album as Ryan Adams and The Cardinals.

The band toured worldwide without Cashdollar to promote Cold Roses, and during this period returned to the studio to record their second album, Jacksonville City Nights. Bowersock left after the album was recorded, and was replaced by Neal Casal.

In 2006, Popper left the band and was replaced by Chris Feinstein prior to a European tour in 2006. In 2007, The Cardinals joined Ryan Adams to record his new album, Easy Tiger, and the album's producer, Jamie Candiloro, was added to the lineup on piano. Follow the Lights appeared later in the year, once again produced by Candiloro.

Their latest album, Cardinology, was released in October 2008, and, according to Pitchfork Media, Ryan Adams & the Cardinals may be known as simply "The Cardinals" from now on.[3]

In January 2009, Adams announced that he would leave The Cardinals in order to "step back" from making music, citing hearing loss due to Ménière's disease as part of the reason for his decision.[4][5][6]

In April 2009, when asked about the Cardinals' future, guitarist Neal Casal stated: "I have absolutely no idea what the future holds. The Cardinals were the best band I've ever been in, and I would love to play with them again. Only time will tell what's going to happen. [...] I'll certainly miss it a lot."[7]

In May 2009, drummer Brad Pemberton stated that: "everyone was a bit fried, so it was the right time to step back for a minute. I encouraged Ryan to go and get married, and have a life and find some peace; the guy hasn’t really slowed down in ten years, and he needed it as much as we did. Ryan and I have shared too much and are too good of friends to not ever do anything again, but I think we all need to do our own thing for a minute."[8]

In July 2009, it emerged that former members of The Cardinals were not finished and had landed a gig with singer/songwriter Gin Wigmore in New Zealand. The only original founding member of Ryan Adams and The Cardinals that remains is Brad Pemberton. Ryan Adams continues to make music with J.P. Bowersock as well as other founding member of Ryan Adams and the Cardinals. [9][10][11]

Band members

The most recent line up of The Cardinals Live Cincinnati, OH 2008. Left to right, Ryan Adams, Brad Pemberton, Neal Casal, Chris Feinstein and Jon Graboff.

Current

Former

Discography

With Ryan Adams

With Willie Nelson

With Gin Wigmore

  • 2009: Holy Smoke

References

  1. ^ http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/23181054/page/29
  2. ^ Lindsay, Andrew (2009-07-27). "Gin Wigmore and the Cardinals". Stereokill.net. http://stereokill.net/2009/07/27/gin-wigmore-and-the-cardinals/. Retrieved 2009-07-27. 
  3. ^ Maher, Dave (2008-08-06). "Ryan Adams Schedules Fall Cardinals Tour". Pitchfork Media. http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/news/142646-ryan-adams-schedules-fall-cardinals-tour. Retrieved 2008-08-12. 
  4. ^ "Ryan Adams quits The Cardinals". NME. January 14, 2009. http://www.nme.com/news/ryan-adams/42069. Retrieved 2009-01-14. 
  5. ^ Cohen, Jonathan (January 14, 2009). "Ryan Adams Taking Hiatus From Music?". Billboard. http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/ryan-adams-taking-hiatus-from-music-1003930005.story. Retrieved 2009-01-14. 
  6. ^ "Ryan Adams Saga Continues". January 15, 2009. http://www.relix.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3635&Itemid=3635. Retrieved 2009-01-15. 
  7. ^ Lindsay, Andrew (2009-04-19). "Interview: Neal Casal (Ryan Adams & the Cardinals)". Stereokill.net. http://stereokill.net/2009/04/19/interview-neal-casal-the-cardinals/. Retrieved 2009-04-19. 
  8. ^ Lindsay, Andrew (2009-05-12). "Interview: Brad Pemberton (Ryan Adams & the Cardinals)". Stereokill.net. http://stereokill.net/2009/05/12/interview-brad-pemberton-ryan-adams-the-cardinals/. Retrieved 2009-05-12. 
  9. ^ "Ryan Adams’ Band Moves On with Gin Wigmore". TwentyFourBit. July 24, 2009. http://www.twentyfourbit.com/post/148325315/ryan-adams-band-moves-on-with-gin-wigmore. Retrieved 2009-07-25. 
  10. ^ "Holy Smoke! Gin Wigmore Readies Debut Album". OzMusicScene. July 14, 2009. http://www.ozmusicscene.com/holy-smoke-gin-wigmore-readies-debut-album/. Retrieved 2009-07-25. 
  11. ^ Lindsay, Andrew (2009-07-27). "Gin Wigmore and the Cardinals". Stereokill.net. http://stereokill.net/2009/07/27/gin-wigmore-and-the-cardinals/. Retrieved 2009-07-27. 

External links


 
 
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