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Bloodrock was an American hard rock band based in Fort Worth, Texas, that had success in the 1970s.<ref name="AllMusic Bio">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The band emerged from the Fort Worth club and music scene during the early to mid-1970s.

HistoryEdit

The Naturals, Crowd + 1 (1963-1969)Edit

Bloodrock initially formed in Fort Worth in 1963, under the name the Naturals. This first lineup featured Jim Rutledge on drums and vocals, Nick Taylor on guitar and vocals, Ed Grundy on bass and vocals, and Dean Parks on guitar. They toured the region playing at battle of the bands, opened locally for national acts like The Beach Boys, Paul Revere & The Raiders, and The Five Americans, and released their first single in 1965 "Hey Girl" b/w "I Want You" (Rebel MME 1003). In 1966, they changed their name to Crowd + 1, and released the single: "Mary Ann Regrets” b/w "Whatcha Tryin’ to Do to Me" (BOX 6604), that same year they signed a deal with Capitol Records and released two more singles: "Don’t Hold Back" b/w "Try," and "Circles" b/w “Most Peculiar Things."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Despite a growing regional fanbase, the singles failed to chart and Capitol dropped the group, not long after Parks left Crowd +1 to become the musical director for The Sonny & Cher Show (the beginning of a long career as a session musician). He was replaced by Lee Pickens on guitar. It was also at this time that Stevie Hill joined the group on keyboards and vocals. They continued as Crowd + 1 until 1969 when they changed their name to Bloodrock, a name conceived by Grand Funk Railroad manager/producer Terry Knight, who signed the band to Capitol almost within two weeks of hearing them.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> They also recorded their first album with Knight as producer, Bloodrock (Capitol ST-435). The album, released in March 1970, peaked at 160 on the Billboard 200 chart. Knight had described the naming of Bloodrock on the back of the Capitol Cassette Tape version in 1970 as: "Get into it... Let it run through your veins... Believe in BLOODROCK!". Therefore their name was really meant to be their rock sound running through your Bloodline and not referring to any actual gory/bloody sounding music (exception was of course "D.O.A.")

Shortly after the first album was recorded, Rutledge (at Knight's behest) moved from behind the drum set to take on lead vocal duties exclusively. Austin-area drummer Rick Cobb took over the percussive duties and added his voice to the group as well.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This lineup recorded their next four albums: Bloodrock 2 (ST-491), Bloodrock 3 (ST-765), Bloodrock USA (SMAS 645), and Bloodrock Live (SVBB-11038).

Bloodrock opened for Grand Funk on the 1970 tour.

Bloodrock 2 and "D.O.A." (1970-1971)Edit

File:Bloodrock trade ad 1971 crop.jpeg
Taylor and Grundy in 1971

Bloodrock 2 was their most successful album peaking at number 21 on the Billboard Pop Album Chart in 1971, mostly on the strength of their single "D.O.A.", which reached number 36 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on March 6, 1971. "D.O.A." also gave the band considerable regional exposure throughout the Southwest and West, particularly in Texas and Southern California. "D.O.A." was probably the band's most well-known and well-remembered single. However, some radio stations would not play the song because of its explicit, gruesome description of fatal plane crash injury and the use of sirens, the latter out of concerns that the siren sound would confuse motorists. The motivation for writing this song was explained in 2005 by guitarist Lee Pickens. “When I was 17, I wanted to be an airline pilot,” Pickens said. “I had just gotten out of this airplane with a friend of mine, at this little airport, and I watched him take off. He went about 200 feet in the air, rolled and crashed.” The band decided to write a song around the incident and include it on their second album.<ref>Wheeler, Lisa. “Grapevine: I Remember . . . Bloodrock Reunite”. Goldmine 31 (18 March 2005): 10, 51.</ref>

Style and personnel change (1972-1973)Edit

In May 1972, both Lee Pickens and Jim Rutledge left Bloodrock, with Pickens forming the Lee Pickens Group (LPG) and released the album LPG in early 1973 on Capitol Records. Meanwhile, Rutledge released a solo album in 1976 on Capitol Records titled Hooray for Good Times. Bloodrock replaced Rutledge on vocals and Pickens on guitar with Warren Ham on vocals, flute and saxophone. Stevie Hill on keyboards adjusted to Ham's presence by shifting his own style. These changes to personnel and style moved the hard rock sound of the band in a lighter direction, more toward progressive rock, pop and jazz, alienating some fans.<ref name=TexasMusic>Template:Cite book</ref> The subsequent album, Passage was the last time Bloodrock visited the charts. It peaked at number 104 on the Billboard 200 in 1972.

1973 brought another personnel change: Rick Cobb left the band, he was replaced by Randy Reader. This lineup recorded one album: Whirlwind Tongues (1974).

Unspoken Words, Break-Up (1974-1976)Edit

Nick Taylor quit the group, and he was replaced by Warren's brother, Bill Ham, and Randy Reader was replaced by Matt Betton, an album, later titled Unspoken Words, was recorded, but Capitol rejected the material due to the group’s waning popularity, and the recordings would go unreleased until 2000 when it was included as part of the CD release Triptych (along with cuts from Passage and Whirlwind Tongues).

The band would break-up not long after they were dropped by Capitol, they performed their last gig on April 14, 1974 in Flint, Michigan.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

After the breakup, Rutledge, Pickens, and Taylor hired a rhythm section and briefly formed a Bloodrock spinoff group, performing in small clubs for about a year.

In 1976, Capitol issued a greatest hits album, Bloodrock N Roll, which featured only tracks from the first three albums and the live set.

Around the same time, the original lineup temporarily put their differences aside and attempted a comeback. Initially led by Rutledge, the group lasted long enough to record some demos, including a cover of Heartbreak Hotel, Rutledge eventually dropped out, and was replaced by Rusty Robertson, a friend of Pickens, but due to lack of label interest, and the departure of Cobb, the band called it quits.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

2005 reunion concertEdit

A reunion concert featuring all five members of the original lineup (Jim Rutledge, Lee Pickens, Ed Grundy, Nick Taylor, and Stevie Hill), plus Chris Taylor (Nick's son) in place of drummer Rick Cobb III from the classic six-member lineup, was held on March 12, 2005, in Fort Worth, for the benefit of their keyboardist Stevie Hill, to help with medical costs related to his combating leukemia. The reunion concert was filmed and released on DVD.

Nick Taylor (born Doyle Taylor in Texas on October 29, 1946) died on March 10, 2010, after a car accident in Cleburne, Texas, at age 63.<ref name=NashvilleScene>Template:Cite news</ref>

Stevie Hill died on September 12, 2013, from leukemia.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

MusicEdit

Bloodrock's music has been categorized primarily as hard rock.<ref name="AllMusic Bio"/> Bloodrock's 1970 self-titled debut album was described in the context of hard rock and early heavy metal by AllMusic's Donald A. Guarisco.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Bloodrock 2 was not as gloomy (except for "D.O.A.") and heavy, and more of a chart success,<ref name=Guarisco/> while Bloodrock 3 and Bloodrock U.S.A. saw the band introduce progressive rock elements.<ref name=Guarisco>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The band's 1972 personnel changes shifted them toward prog rock (like Jethro Tull), jazz and pop music.<ref name=TexasMusic/>

MembersEdit

Classic lineupEdit

  • Jim Rutledge – lead vocals (1969–1972, 2005), drums (1969–1970)
  • Lee Pickens – lead guitar, backing vocals (1969–1972, 2005)
  • Nick Taylor – rhythm guitar, backing vocals (1969–1972, 2005), lead guitar (1972–1974; died 2010)
  • Stevie Hill – keyboards, backing vocals (1969–1974, 2005; died 2013)
  • Ed Grundy – bass guitar, backing vocals (1969–1974, 2005)
  • Rick Cobb – drums, percussion (1970–1974)

Former membersEdit

  • Warren Ham – lead vocals, saxophone, flute (1972–1974)
  • Randy Reeder – drums (1974)
  • Matt Betton – drums (1974)

Session/touring musiciansEdit

  • Bill Ham – lead guitar (1974)
  • Chris Taylor – drums (2005)

TimelineEdit

<timeline> ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20 PlotArea = left:80 bottom:95 top:5 right:15 Alignbars = justify DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:01/06/1969 till:12/05/2005 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy Legend = orientation:vertical position:bottom columns:4 ScaleMajor = increment:5 start:1970 ScaleMinor = increment:1 start:1970

Colors =

id:lvocals     value:red     legend:Lead_vocals
id:lguitar     value:teal   legend:Lead_guitar,_backing_vocals
id:rguitar     value:brightgreen   legend:Rhythm_guitar,_backing_vocals
id:bass        value:blue    legend:Bass_guitar,_backing_vocals
id:keys        value:purple  legend:Keyboards,_backing_vocals
id:drums       value:orange  legend:Drums
id:perc        value:claret     legend:Percussion
id:flute        value:tan2      legend:Saxophone,_flute
id:studio      value:black   legend:Studio_album
id:live        value:gray(0.6)   legend:Live_release_recording
id:bars      value:gray(0.92)

BackgroundColors = bars:bars

BarData =

bar:Jim      text:"Jim Rutledge"
bar:Warren   text:"Warren Ham"
bar:Lee      text:"Lee Pickens"
bar:Nick     text:"Nick Taylor"
bar:Ed       text:"Ed Grundy"
bar:Stevie   text:"Stevie Hill"
bar:Rick     text:"Rick Cobb III"
bar:Randy    text:"Randy Reeder"
bar:Matt     text:"Matt Betton"

PlotData=

 width:11 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(11,-4)
color:lvocals
bar:Jim      from:start       till:31/05/1972
bar:Jim      from:12/05/2005  till:end
bar:Warren   from:01/06/1972  till:30/09/1974
color:rguitar
bar:Nick     from:start       till:31/05/1972
bar:Nick     from:01/06/1972  till:30/09/1974 width:3
bar:Nick     from:12/05/2005  till:end
color:lguitar
bar:Lee      from:start       till:31/05/1972
bar:Lee      from:12/05/2005  till:end
bar:Nick     from:01/06/1972  till:30/09/1974

color:bass
bar:Ed       from:start       till:30/09/1974
bar:Ed       from:12/05/2005  till:end
color:keys
bar:Stevie   from:start       till:30/09/1974
bar:Stevie   from:12/05/2005  till:end
color:drums
bar:Jim      from:start       till:31/05/1970 width:3
bar:Rick     from:01/06/1970  till:01/01/1974
bar:Randy    from:02/01/1974  till:15/03/1974
bar:Matt     from:16/03/1974  till:30/09/1974
color:perc width:3
bar:Rick     from:01/06/1970  till:01/01/1974
color:flute
bar:Warren   from:01/06/1972  till:30/09/1974

LineData =

 layer:back color:live
 at:09/05/1972 # Bloodrock Live
 color:studio
 at:16/03/1970 # Bloodrock 
 at:09/10/1970 # Bloodrock 2
 at:01/04/1971 # Bloodrock 3
 at:06/03/1972 # Bloodrock 4 (USA)
 at:03/11/1972 # Passage 
 at:15/02/1974 # Whirlwind Tongues 

</timeline>

DiscographyEdit

Studio albumsEdit

Year Title Details Peak chart
position
Template:Small
Certifications
1970 Bloodrock 160
Bloodrock 2 21 RIAA Gold
1971 Bloodrock 3 27
Bloodrock U.S.A. 88
1972 Passage
  • Released: November 1972
  • Label: Capitol
  • Formats: LP, 8-track, cassette
105
1974 Whirlwind Tongues
  • Released: February 1974
  • Label: Capitol
  • Formats: LP, 8-track, cassette

Live albumsEdit

Title Details Peak chart
position
Template:Small
Bloodrock Live 67
The Bloodrock Reunion Concert
  • Released: 2007
  • Label: Self-released
  • Format: CD, DVD (self-released)

CompilationsEdit

Title Details Remark
Hit Road European compilation
Bloodrock 'n' Roll U.S. compilation
D.O.A.
  • Released: 1989
  • Label: Capitol
  • Format: Cassette
Budget U.S. compilation
Triptych
  • Released: 2000
  • Label: One Way
  • Format: 2×CD
Passage, Whirlwind Tongues and Unspoken Words

SinglesEdit

Year Title Format Label Catalog
Template:Abbr
From album Peak chart
position
Template:Small
1970 "Gotta Find a Way" b/w "Fatback" 7" single Capitol ST 2736 Bloodrock
1971 "D.O.A." b/w "Children's Heritage" 7" single Capitol ST 3009 Bloodrock 2 36
"A Certain Kind" b/w "You Gotta Roll" 7" single Capitol ST 3089 Bloodrock 3
"Jessica" b/w "You Gotta Roll" 7" single Capitol ST 3161 Bloodrock 3 129 Template:Small
"Rock & Roll Candy Man" b/w "Don't Eat the Children" 7" single Capitol ST 3227 Bloodrock U.S.A.
1972 "Erosion" b/w "Castle of Thoughts" 7" single Capitol ST 3320 Non-album single
"Help Is on the Way" b/w "Thank You Daniel Ellsberg" 7" single Capitol ST 3451 Passage
1973 "Thank You Daniel Ellsberg" b/w "Voices" 7" single Capitol ST 3770 Passage

Other releasesEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Sister project

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