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Formed
in Houston, Texas, USA, in 1970, ZZ Top evolved out of the city's
psychedelic scene and consist of Billy Gibbons (b. 16 December 1949,
Houston, Texas, USA; guitar, vocals, ex-Moving Sidewalks), Dusty Hill
(b. Joe Hill, 19 May 1949, Dallas, Texas, USA; bass, vocals) and Frank
Beard (b. 11 June 1949, Frankston, Texas, USA; drums), the last two both
ex-American Blues. ZZ Top's original line-up - Gibbons, Lanier Greig
(bass) and Dan Mitchell (drums) - was also the final version of the
Moving Sidewalks. This initial trio completed ZZ Top's debut single,
"Salt Lick", before Greig was fired. He was replaced by Bill Ethridge.
Mitchell was then replaced by Frank Beard while Dusty Hill subsequently
joined in place of Ethridge. Initially ZZ Top joined a growing swell of
southern boogie bands and started a constant round of touring, building
up a strong following. Their debut album, while betraying a healthy
interest in blues, was firmly within this genre, but Rio Grande Mud
indicated a greater flexibility. It included the rousing "Francene"
which, although indebted to the Rolling Stones, gave the trio their
first hit and introduced them to a much wider audience.
ZZ Top Links
Their third album, Tres Hombres, was a powerful, exciting set that drew
from delta music and high-energy rock. It featured the band's first
national Top 50 hit with "La Grange' and was their first platinum album.
The trio's natural ease was highly affecting and Gibbons" startling
guitar work was rarely bettered during these times. In 1974, the band's
first annual "Texas-Size Rompin' Stompin' Barndance And Bar-B-Q" was
held at the Memorial Stadium at the University Of Texas. 85,000 people
attended: the crowds were so large that the University declined to hold
any rock concerts, and it was another 20 years before they resumed.
However, successive album releases failed to attain the same high
standard and ZZ Top took an extended vacation following their expansive
1976/7 tour. After non-stop touring for a number of years the band
needed a rest. Other reasons, however, were not solely artistic, as the
trio now wished to secure a more beneficial recording contract.
They resumed their career in 1979 with the superb Deguello, by which
time both Gibbons and Hill had grown lengthy beards (without each other
knowing!). Revitalized by their break, the trio offered a series of
pulsating original songs on Deguello as well as inspired recreations of
Sam And Dave's "I Thank You" and Elmore James' "Dust My Broom". The
transitional El Loco followed in 1981 and although it lacked the punch
of its predecessor, preferring the surreal to the celebratory, the set
introduced the growing love of technology that marked the trio's
subsequent releases. Eliminator deservedly became ZZ Top's bestselling
album (10 million copies in the USA by 1996). Fuelled by a series of
memorable, tongue-in-cheek videos, it provided several international hit
singles, including the million-selling "Gimme All Your Lovin". "Sharp
Dressed Man" and "Legs" were also gloriously simple yet enormously
infectious songs. The trio skilfully wedded computer-age technology to
their barrelhouse R&B to create a truly memorable set that established
them as one of the world's leading live attractions. The follow-up,
Afterburner, was another strong album, although it could not match the
sales of the former. It did feature some excellent individual moments in
"Sleeping Bag" and "Rough Boy", and the cleverly titled "Velcro Fly'. ZZ
Top undertook another lengthy break before returning with the impressive
Recycler. Other notable appearances in 1990 included a cameo, playing
themselves, in Back To The Future III. In 1991 a greatest hits
compilation was issued and a new recording contract was signed the
following year, with BMG Records. The band's studio work during this
decade failed to match the commercial and critical success of the 80s,
although 1996's Rhythmeen demonstrated a willingness to experiment with
their trademark sound. The trio celebrated three decades playing music
together on 1999"s XXX. The following year Hill was diagnosed with
hepatitis C, forcing the band to cancel a planned tour.
Over the years, one of ZZ Top's greatest strengths has been their
consistently high-standard live presentation and performance on numerous
record-breaking (financially) tours in the USA. One of rock's maverick
attractions, Gibbons, Hill and Beard have retained their eccentric,
colourful image, dark glasses and Stetson hats, complete with an almost
casual musical dexterity that has won over hardened cynics and carping
critics. In addition to having produced a fine (but sparse) canon of
work, they will also stay in the record books as having the longest
beards in musical history (although one member, the inappropriately
named Frank Beard, is clean-shaven). Whether by design or chance, they
are doomed to end every music encyclopedia. |