Bobby Ogdin
Bobby Ogdin | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Robert Ford Ogdin |
Born | Detroit, Michigan, USA | September 28, 1945
Genres | country, rock, alternative rock |
Occupation(s) | keyboardist, non-vocal instrumentalist |
Instrument(s) | Piano, electric piano, organ, clavinet |
Years active | 1975–present |
Robert Ford Ogdin (born September, 1945) is a Nashville-based recording session pianist. He is best known as a member of Elvis Presley's TCB band. He performed on 20 of Presley's recordings and accompanied him on 45 live shows until Presleys' death in 1977. Ogdin's experiences during these tours have been chronicled in a four-part series of video interviews by Billy Stallings.
Over a career spanning four decades as a session player, Ogdin recorded with country artists including Kenny Rogers, Willie Nelson, George Jones, The Judds, Kenny Chesney, Ray Charles, and Ronnie Milsap. In rock music, he was a member of the Marshall Tucker Band for five years (1984–1989) after departures of some of the original members. He also recorded and performed concerts with the alternative rock band Ween.
Career
Born in Detroit, Ogdin grew up in Knoxville, Tennessee.[1] As a youth, he studied piano and violin from age 4 to 16 and won a Knoxville Symphony Orchestra music-writing contest. His father was an executive at Robertshaw Controls Company; his sister, Sue Ogdin Lynch, is a visual artist.[2][3] As a teen, he became interested in rock and roll music and played piano and a Hammond B3 organ in local bands.[1] He graduated from the University of Tennessee and attended law school briefly, but dropped out to pursue a music career. Tom Collins, a Nashville record producer whom Ogdin had known in college, urged him to come to Nashville to explore music opportunities and arranged for him to get some work playing on advertising jingles and demo recordings.[1] He worked his way up to become an in-demand studio player for scores [4] of major artists including Elvis Presley, Willie Nelson, Kenny Rogers, The Judds, Travis Tritt, George Jones, Kenny Chesney, Ray Charles, Barbara Mandrell, Dan Hill, Amy Grant and Ronnie Milsap.[5]
With Elvis Presley
In 2018, Ogdin was interviewed by Billy Stallings in a four-part video series chronicling Ogdin's experiences on tour with Presley.[1] These first-hand accounts are the source for the following information.
In early 1977, a vacancy opened in Elvis Presley's TCB Band when David Briggs resigned.[6] Ogdin was chosen as his replacement primarily by Briggs and by Elvis' record producer Felton Jarvis, seconded by Bob Beckham. When Ogdin accepted, Jarvis told him there were no charts and no rehearsals. He was given a cassette tape of the show to memorize. There were no sound checks for him to attend; the instruments were transported, positioned and tuned by roadies and sound levels and monitors were done by a crew supervised by veteran sound engineer Bill Porter.[1]
Ogdin's debut performance in what would become a series of 45 shows[7][8] was on March 23, 1977, at Arizona State University in Tempe.[8] He had written himself cue cards to refer to on stage. After the warm-up acts finished, TCB Band members along with the Joe Guercio Orchestra from Las Vegas took their places and began the overture with a dramatic build-up as Elvis appeared and pandemonium followed. Ogdin said, "I was the most excited one in the place".[1] He saw Presley for the first time only then, and was seated at the front of the stage fairly close to him. Elvis walked over to Ogdin and shook his hand during the initial crowd reaction, acknowledging Elvis' awareness and collegiality toward the new member. Three powerful spotlights on Elvis blinded Ogdin and his cue cards were of no use.[1]
Elvis' isolation from the other musicians during those days was near complete, to the extent that no band member had any contact with him except during the actual performances. His schedule was opposite from theirs. When the performance was over, he was immediately taken to his own plane and flown to the next city to spend the night and usually slept until the next afternoon. The band stayed in town after the show and left the next morning. Ogdin said, "We stayed in the best hotels and everything was taken care of for us."[1] Wardrobe was provided (seven different pastel outfits) and there was a per diem allowance for food and expenses. In each city, the people there knew this was a big event, and each hotel where the musicians stayed was full of excitement. Ogdin was amused when people asked for his autograph and brought food and gifts for the band. He said, "You accepted but never ate the food, and the gifts (usually teddy bears) were collected and donated."[1]
Ogdin recalled how they added a new song, "Moody Blue" to the show. An on-the-road rehearsal was called one afternoon and the musicians assembled at the arena, which was already set up for that evening's show. Felton Jarvis called to the stage an Elvis impersonator whom he had hired. This person sang "Moody Blue" (imitating Elvis) standing on Elvis' very spot to rehearse the band.[1]
On the day Presley died, August 16, 1977, Ogdin was waiting at a private airport in Nashville along with Randy Cullers, J.D. Sumner, members of the Stamps Quartet, Felton Jarvis and others. They were the last pickup for a large plane, already-airborne, containing the Joe Gurcio Orchestra[7] and others from Los Angeles and Las Vegas. After picking up the Nashville group, the plane was to head for Portland, Maine, for a show scheduled on August 17, 1977. Ogdin said, "The airport wasn't busy and we were about the only people there. We got the news through the air-traffic controllers that Elvis had died." Shortly thereafter, Felton Jarvis, who was to be on the plane with them, appeared and said simply and succinctly, "Elvis is dead, everything is cancelled... go home ... act of God".[1] Ogdin said that Felton had just been on the phone with Tom Parker and "act of God" was a phrase from the musicians' contracts that dealt with financial obligations if some disastrous event occurred. Ogdin opined that it was probably not something Felton would have said, and believed that Tom Parker had told him to make a point of using that phrase.[1]
Associated acts
The Marshall Tucker Band, one of the major southern rock bands of the 1970s,[9] had an upheaval in 1983 when five of the original seven members quit the band.[10] The two remaining founders, Doug Gray and Jerry Eubanks decided to recruit replacements and carry on. They chose primarily studio musicians including Ogdin, bassist Bob Wray, drummer James Stroud, and guitarists Rusty Milner and Ken Mimms. Ogdin played in the group for five years (1983-1988)[11] and recorded the album Still Holdin' On which yielded two country chart singles, "Hangin' Out in Smokey Places" (No. 44) and "Once You Get The Feel of It" (No. 79).[12][13]
"Ween", the duo of Aaron Freeman and Mickey Melchiondo, a.k.a. Gene and Dean Ween, built a cult following with their oddball musical parodies in various genres; however, their recordings, said the New York Times, sounded "homemade".[14] That changed in 1996 when they came to Nashville to record a country album on Elektra called "12 Golden Country Greats " (a misnomer since the album contained less than 12 songs). This time they used seasoned session players including Charlie McCoy, The Jordanaires, Hargus Robbins, Russ Hicks, and Bobby Ogdin.[14] The success of this association led to Ogdin's being asked to tour with Ween with a backing unit dubbed "Bobby Ogdin and the Shit Creek Boys".[15] One of these shows (October,1996) was released as a live album entitled "Live in Toronto Canada " and he reunited with Ween at a concert Nashville's Ryman Auditorium in 2018.
Playing style
Ogdin is known musically for his skill in playing to bring out or enhance the vocalist or soloist without overplaying. Although it sounds simple, many otherwise skilled players cannot seem to master it.[1] Barry Beckett, one of the founders of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section and later a Nashville record producer, was asked in an interview, "Who would you use for keyboards?" His answer: "There are three: Matt Rollings, John Jarvis, and Bobby Ogdin. Those three really know taste. They know when not to play. That is probably the most important thing".[16]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Stallings, Billy. "Elvis Presley Keyboard Player Bobby Ogdin 1977/Parts 1–4". youtube.com. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
- ^ "Torpedo Factory Art Center/Artists/Sue Lynch". torpedofactory.org. Torpedo Factory Art Center. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
- ^ Leiter, Rickie (April 13, 2014). "The Rickie Report/Sue Lynch". therickiereport.com. Retrieved August 17, 2019.
- ^ "Bobby Ogdin/Credits/Instruments and performance". discogs.com. Retrieved August 16, 2019.
- ^ "Bobby Ogdin/credits". allmusic.com. AllMusic, member of the RhythmOne group. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
- ^ Eder, Mike (2013). Elvis music FAQ : all that's left to know about the King's recorded works. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Hal Leonard Corporation (Backbeat Books). p. ebook. ISBN 978-1-61713-049-6. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
- ^ a b Tunzi, Joseph A. (2004). Elvis sessions III : the recorded music of Elvis Aron Presley, 1953-1977 (Rev. and expanded ed.). Chicago: JAT Productions. ISBN 1-888464-10-0.
- ^ a b "TCB-Meter/Musicians and Shows". users.skynet.be. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
- ^ Ruhlman, William. "The Marshall Tucker Band". allmusic.com. Retrieved August 16, 2019.
- ^ Bishop, Pete (May 13, 1985). "Tucker band survives defections". No. Vol.101, No.330. Pittsburgh Press. p. C1. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
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has extra text (help) - ^ "The Marshall Tucker Band". rateyourmusic.com. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
- ^ Smith, Michael B. "Still Holdin' On (Review)". allmusic.com. Retrieved August 16, 2019.
- ^ "The Marshall Tucker Band Top Songs/ Chart singles discography". musicvf.com. Retrieved August 16, 2019.
- ^ a b Pareles, Jon (July 23, 1996). "Pop Review; Grinning Mischief-Makers Breaking Country Rules". nytimes.com. New York Times. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
- ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Ween/biography". allmusic. Retrieved August 16, 2019.
- ^ Schultz, Barbara, Ed. (2000). Music producers : conversations with today's top hit makers. Emeryville, California: Intertec. p. 111. ISBN 0-87288-730-8. Retrieved August 13, 2019.
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