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Tom Hampton

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Tom Hampton
Tom Hampton, guitarist for Poco, onstage in February of 2020.
Tom Hampton, guitarist for Poco, onstage in February of 2020.
Background information
Birth nameThomas Darrell Hampton
Born (1965-07-25) July 25, 1965 (age 59)
Savannah, Tennessee, United States
GenresAmericana, Folk, Country, Rock, Singer-Songwriter
Instrument(s)guitar, lap and pedal steel guitar, dobro, banjo, mandolin, more
Websitewww.tomhampton.com

Tom Hampton (born July 25, 1965 in Savannah, Tennessee) is a multi-instrumentalist, sideman, session musician and singer/songwriter. In April 2020, he joined the country-rock band Poco as guitarist and vocalist.

Biography

Tom Hampton (born July 25, 1965 in Savannah, Tennessee) is an American musician who has predominantly worked as a session musician and touring sideman. Hampton is also an accomplished recording artist and singer/songwriter who occasionally releases his own material.[1]

Early years

Hampton began his musical career as a drummer during his junior high school years; having taught himself to play on a kit that he bought from a neighbor. By his late teens, he was a veteran of the clubs and "beer joints" that dotted the landscape of his hometown and surrounding area. Hampton had been inspired by musical artists such as Jackson Browne, Dan Fogelberg and Stephen Stills, which led to his desire to learn guitar and explore songwriting...noting that "it’s prohibitively difficult to write a song on the drums."

After graduating high school, he enlisted in the United States Navy, where he served from 1984 to 1988. After his honorable discharge from the military, Hampton relocated to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He immediately began working as a musician, first joining bands and later as a solo acoustic act. He recorded a self-financed, cassette-only set of original songs in 1991, but focused largely on playing cover material to earn a living for his family.

Sideman and session work

Emboldened by his growing confidence in his songwriting, Hampton began focusing on his original material in the mid-nineties. He began seeking out opportunities in the Philadelphia music scene (which he had purposely avoided while playing cover material) and quickly made friends and established a reputation. He began frequenting the Monday night Open Mics at the Grape Street Pub,[2] eventually becoming the host of the popular songwriters' nights until 1996. In 1997, Hampton released Our Mutual Angels on Longview records, with Steven Wellner producing.[3]

In 2001, after struggling to find an audience for his music, Hampton went back to playing guitar for local cover bands for a time. Already an accomplished multi-instrumentalist, he found himself suddenly in demand for sideman and session work with other artists who were once his contemporaries as a songwriter within the local musical community. Hampton's abilities on an array of instruments (guitar, lap steel, pedal steel guitar, dobro, banjo, mandolin, baritone guitar, Vox mandoguitar, Weissenborn Hawaiian guitar, mandola, octave mandolin, cittern, bouzouki, coral electric sitar[4]) created a niche for him over the years as a first-call utility player for a number of notable artists - some of whom he tours and records with on a regular basis, such as Nashville songwriting legend Craig Bickhardt (Hampton can be heard on Bickhardt's 2011 live concert recording, Live At Sellersville Theater.). Hampton has also toured with Bickhardt's band Idlewheel,[5] which included Poco bassist Jack Sundrud. He has also toured and recorded with Hooters guitarist John Lilley, Dan May, J.D. Malone, and Cosmic Americana band Boris Garcia. He has also appeared occasionally with folksinger Tracy Grammer, and has played behind Craig Fuller of Pure Prairie League and Little Feat, and longtime personal guitar hero Paul Cotton of Poco at times.

Hampton was the last guitarist that played in Philadelphia legend Robert Hazard's touring band before Hazard died in 2008. He has also backed and performed with Poco, Pure Prairie League, Eric Andersen, Jonathan Edwards, Jim Photoglo, Vonda Sheppard, Don Henry, Julie Gold, Daryle Singletary and many others. In 2011 alone, Hampton figured prominently in album releases by J.D. Malone, Dan May, Craig Bickhardt, and (co-producing along with Grammy winner Andy Kravitz) the debut album by legendary Philadelphia radio DJ Michael Tearson,[6] titled Stuff That Works.

In late 2012, Hampton appeared on lap and pedal steel guitar as a guest with the Marshall Tucker Band at the Newton Theater in Newton, NJ, beginning a series of shows with the band that have included appearances throughout the Northeast US in the time since. In an interview, Doug Gray called him "one of the best kept secrets" in the Philadelphia area, stating that "Tom is one of those guys that just fits our band."[7]

In 2014, after concluding his stint as a "semi-regular special guest" with Marshall Tucker, Hampton relocated from Philadelphia to Nashville, occasionally touring with songwriter friends Rob Snyder, Channing Wilson, and Erik Dylan while returning to Philadelphia regularly for sessions and live appearances.

Poco

In 2020, Hampton was recruited to fill in on guitar for a series of live shows with Poco in February and March. The success of those shows culminated in an offer to become a permanent member of the band shortly thereafter.

Discography

  • Our Mutual Angels, 1997 (LongView Records)
  • Noises From The Basement, Volume One, 2006 (ItsAboutMusic.com)
  • Friends and Heroes, 2013 (Self-released)

Session Work Discography

Year Album Title Artist Instruments Played
2011 Live at Sellersville Theater Craig Bickhardt lap steel guitar, baritone guitar, mandolin, harmony vocals
2011 Stuff That Works Michael Tearson acoustic guitar, electric guitar, mandolin, mandola, mandocello, dobro, weissenborn, mandoguitar, 12 string electric guitar, coral electric sitar, banjo, lap steel guitar, baritone guitar, harmony vocals.
2011 Avalon J.D. Malone pedal steel guitar, lap steel guitar, baritone guitar, 12 string electric guitar, acoustic guitar, high-string acoustic guitar, mandolin, dobro, harmony vocals
2011 Dying Breed Dan May lap steel guitar, acoustic guitar, high-string acoustic guitar, electric guitar, national resolectric, dobro, baritone guitar, harmony vocals
2011 Leaning Tree Blake Allen pedal steel guitar, baritone guitar, harmony vocals
2011 Rosewood Mercy Blue pedal steel guitar, lap steel guitar
2010 Eden Craig Bancoff electric guitar, lap and pedal steel guitar, dobro, banjo, mandolin, mandola, bouzouki, baritone guitars
2009 Lucky Kinda Guy John Lilley pedal steel guitar, lap steel guitar, baritone guitar, harmony vocals

References

  1. ^ Review - Tom Hampton's Our Mutual Angels Written by Ryan Sheeler(Yahoo)December 16, 2006 Retrieved 10 December 2011
  2. ^ Info on Grapestreet Pub
  3. ^ http://www.itsaboutmusic.com/tomhampton.html Tom Hampton Page Biography on itsaboutmusic.com Retrieved 21 December 2011
  4. ^ Tom Hampton Story Archived 2011-02-07 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 11 November 11
  5. ^ 2006-2009 Tours with Idlewheel Retrieved 28 December 2011
  6. ^ Tom Hampton and Michael Tearson Written September 28, 2011 by Tara Lynn Johnson Retrieved 7 January 2012
  7. ^ Tom Hampton: A Great Sideman Steps Out Front by Michael Morsch, Montgomeryville News