Atlanta Rhythm Section
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Atlanta Rhythm Section, sometimes abbreviated ARS, is an American southern rock band. The band unofficially formed in 1970 as former members of the Candymen and the Classics IV became the session band for the newly opened Studio One in Doraville, Georgia, near Atlanta. After playing on other artists' recordings, they decided to become a true band in their own right. The members of the original band were Rodney Justo (singer), Barry Bailey (guitarist), Paul Goddard (bassist), Dean Daughtry (keyboardist) and Robert Nix (drummer). Justo left the band after the first album and was replaced by Ronnie Hammond. Buddy Buie, the band's manager and producer, is listed first on almost all of the songwriting credits of the band's songs.
While ARS would never reach the commercial success of Lynyrd Skynyrd or the Marshall Tucker Band, the group had a strong following in the south and charted a number of hits such as "I'm Not Going to Let it Bother Me Tonight," "Champagne Jam," "So In To You," and a remake of a Classics IV hit, "Spooky."
The band also influenced a number of rock and country artists, notably Travis Tritt, who recorded a cover of the ARS songs, "Back Up Against the Wall" and "Homesick." The group Shudder to Think covered "So Into You."
[edit] Discography
- Atlanta Rhythm Section (1972)
- Back Up Against the Wall (1973)
- Third Annual Pipe Dream (1974)
- Dog Days (1975)
- Red Tape (1976)
- A Rock and Roll Alternative (1976)
- Champagne Jam (1978)
- Underdog (1979)
- Are You Ready (Atlanta Rhythm Section) (1979)
- The Boys from Doraville (1980)
- Quinella (1981)
- Truth in a Structured Form (1989)
- Atlanta Rhythm Section '96 (1996)
- Partly Plugged (1997)
- Eufaula (1999)
- Live at The Savoy, New York October 27, 1981 (2000)
[edit] Classic Lineup 1973-1982
- Ronnie Hammond - lead vocals
- Barry Bailey - guitar
- J.R. Cobb - guitar, background vocals
- Paul Goddard - bass
- Dean Daughtry - keyboards
- Robert Nix - drums, background vocals
- Roy Yeager - drums (1979 - 1982)
[edit] External links
Former drummer Roy Yeager is involved in a controversy concerning the destruction of a Tennessee landmark.