Southbound: An Illustrated History of Southern Rock
Scott B. Bomar
Backbeat Books
Trade Paperback
From the publisher's website:
Many of the architects of rock and roll in the 1950s, including Elvis
Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Little Richard, were Southerners who were
rooted in the distinctive regional traditions of country, blues, and
R&B. As the impact of the British Invasion and the psychedelic era
faded at the end of the following decade, such performers as Bob Dylan
and the Band returned to the simplicity of American roots music, paving
the way for Southern groups to reclaim their region's rock-and-roll
heritage. Embracing both Southern musical traditions and a long-haired
countercultural aesthetic, such artists as the Allman Brothers Band and
Lynyrd Skynyrd forged a new musical community that Charlie Daniels
called “a genre of people more than a genre of music.”
Focusing primarily on the music's golden age of the 1970s, Southbound
profiles the musicians, producers, record labels, and movers and
shakers that defined Southern rock, including the Allmans, Skynyrd, the
Marshall Tucker Band, Wet Willie, the Charlie Daniels Band, Elvin
Bishop, the Outlaws, the Atlanta Rhythm Section, .38 Special, ZZ Top,
and many others.
From the rise and fall of the mighty Capricorn
Records to the music's role in helping Jimmy Carter win the White House
and to its continuing legacy and influence, this is the story of
Southern rock.
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