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Gib Guilbeau

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Birth name
  
Floyd August Guilbeau

Years active
  
1960s – 1990s


Name
  
Gib Guilbeau

Role
  
Musician

Gib Guilbeau usersskynetbefa388247gibjpg

Born
  
September 26, 1937 (age 86) Sunset, Louisiana, US (
1937-09-26
)

Instruments
  
Vocal, fiddle, guitar, mandolin

Associated acts
  
Nashville West, Flying Burrito Brothers, Swampwater, Guilbeau & Parsons

Music group
  
The Flying Burrito Brothers

Genres
  
Country rock, Cajun music, Folk rock, Outlaw country, Bakersfield sound, Americana

Albums
  
Songs I Like, Close Up the Honky Tonks, Flying Again, Hearts on the Line, Live from Tokyo

Similar People
  
Gene Parsons, John Beland, Sneaky Pete Kleinow, Clarence White, Skip Battin

The Flying Burrito Brothers - Live in a Unknown French TV Show (*1975)


Floyd August "Gib" Guilbeau (September 26, 1937 – April 12, 2016) was an American Cajun country rock musician and songwriter. As a member of Nashville West, Swampwater, The Flying Burrito Brothers, and later The Burrito Brothers, Guilbeau helped pioneer the fusion of rock and country music in the 1960s.

Contents

Gib Guilbeau wwwburritobrothercomtiteljpg

Gib guilbeau flying burrito brothers nashville west castaways


Biography

Gib Guilbeau Gib Guilbeau Former Flying Burrito Brother Dead at 78

Guilbeau was born in Sunset, Louisiana and raised among fiddle players. His father and brothers played fiddle, and he himself started playing fiddle at the age of fourteen.

Gib Guilbeau Linda Ronstadt at Pauls Mall Ronstadt performing with Gib Guilbeau

In 1960, Guilbeau formed The Four Young Men with guitarist Wayne Moore, which Bobby Edwards then joined to become Bobby Edwards & the Four Young Men. Together, they released the single "You're the Reason", which became a nationwide hit, peaking at #4 Country and #11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1961.

Gib Guilbeau Gib Guilbeau with Nashville West

In 1967, Guilbeau formed The Reasons (aka "Nashville West," actually the name of a club they played at in El Monte, CA), a short-lived country rock group with multi-instrumentalist Gene Parsons, who had played with Guilbeau in a band called the Castaways years earlier, guitarist Clarence White, formerly of the Kentucky Colonels, and Wayne Moore on bass. Along with bands such as the Byrds, Dillard & Clark and the International Submarine Band, Nashville West was one of the first country rock bands. Country rock notables such as Gram Parsons and future Flying Burrito Brother Sneaky Pete Kleinow would sit in with the group. They also provided backing for other groups, such as the Gosdin Brothers and others on Gary Paxton's Bakersfield International record label. The Reasons came to an end in 1968 when Gram Parsons abruptly left the Byrds and the group asked Clarence White (and, shortly thereafter, Reasons drummer Gene Parsons—no relation) to replace him.

In 1969, Guilbeau played in the group Swampwater, originally formed to back Linda Ronstadt following the breakup of the Stone Poneys. Swampwater played a unique brand of Cajun rock that had no precedents in rock music. Swampwater recorded two albums before they broke up.

Gib Guilbeau Gib Guilbeau and the Burrito Brothers

In 1972, Guilbeau contributed to the soundtrack for the Martin Scorsese film Boxcar Bertha. In 1974, along with Gene Parsons and original members Chris Ethridge and Sneaky Pete Kleinow, he formed a latter-day version of the Flying Burrito Brothers. The band underwent many personnel changes, performing and recording sporadically into the 1990s.

Guilbeau died in 2016, aged 78.

As a songwriter, Guilbeau's songs have been covered by many artists, including The Byrds, Ricky Nelson, Bobby Womack, Ronnie Wood, and Rod Stewart.

References

Gib Guilbeau Wikipedia