Scott Boyer
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All My Friends
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Remote Control
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General Info
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Genre: Blues / R&B / Southern Rock
Location Muscle Shoals, Alabama, US
Profile Views: 61498
Last Login: 6/24/2011
Member Since 11/4/2006
Website www.scottboyer.net
Record Label Rockin' Camel Records
Type of Label Indie
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Bio
Charles Scott Boyer Jr. (17 October, 1947), professionally known as Scott Boyer, a consummate guitarist-singer-songwriter, gained acclaim internationally as a founding member of the seminal folk-rock group Cowboy, and as the songwriter of hits for Gregg Allman, Eric Clapton, and Bonnie Bramlett. Boyer spent his youth in Upstate NY and Kentucky, before settling in Jacksonville, Florida, where his musical skills were honed. He played piano and viola, before gravitating to the guitar. In 1965, Boyer and, following Dylan and the Lovin’ Spoonful’s foray into electrified folk, put together a band two high school friends, David Brown and Butch Trucks (Allman Bros.), blending folk and rock elements. Boyer had an early hit with “Sandcastles”; encouraged by Duane and Gregg Allman, Boyer and trio found a club gig in Daytona Beach, and then cut a cover “Let’s Get Together,” later a huge hit for The Youngbloods, another folk-rock trio. Changing the name from The Bitter IND, to the 31st of February their early singles paved the way for a 1967 session at Criteria Studio in Miami resulting in an eponymous album on Vanguard Records, reaching No. 98 on the Billboard charts. During this period, Boyer participated in open-air groundbreaking concerts at Riverfront Park in Jacksonville, witnessing the emergence of what would be labeled Southern Rock; on scene were bands such as The One Percent (later known as Lynyrd Skynyrd), The Second Coming (with future Allman Brothers members Berry Oakley and Dickie Betts), and Duane Allman, himself (Gregg would remain in Los Angeles a while). The 31st of February expanded to a quintet briefly to include Duane and Gregg Allman; that quintet cut demos under the name The 31st of February, which were sent to Vanguard but declined; the session reappeared in 1971 as Duane and Gregg Allman, The Early Years on Bold Records. In 1968, Boyer was living in Gainesville, FL, and playing with keyboard player Bill Pillmore; the two co-wrote “Living in the Country,” which appeared on the first Cowboy album Reach for the Sky on Capricorn (1970), which also featured Boyer’s song “It's Time,” the title song of Bonnie Bramlett’s first solo album (1974) on Capricorn Records. The band, Cowboy, formed in Orlando in late 1968, cut four albums for Capricorn Records between 1970 and 1977: these were Reach for the Sky (1970); the second album, 5'll Getcha 10, was cut at Muscle Shoals Sound’s 3614 Jackson Highway Studio in 1971, which featured Boyer’s “Please Be With Me” featuring Duane Allman; the song was picked up by Eric Clapton, who covered it on his Grammy-winning 461 Ocean Boulevard, in 1974. A double album on Capricorn titled Why Quit When You’re Losing, was released in 1975 featuring material culled from the first two Cowboy albums. Boyer and Talton emerged as the driving force behind Cowboy, touring with the Allman Brothers Band for six weeks in 1973. Boyer and Talton were also recruited as members of the house rhythm section with Bill Stewart and David Brown, at Capricorn Studio in Macon, often working with producer Johnny Sandlin (Hour Glass). With Cowboy, Boyer was involved in two further album projects for Capricorn before the label’s 1977 demise: Boyer & Talton (1975) and Cowboy (Unedited) (1976) Boyer and Talton’s involvement in the Capricorn house band, yielded fine sessions for Bonnie Bramlett, Martin Mull, Alex Taylor, Kitty Wells, and Gregg Allman. Gregg Allman’s Laid Back, a gold record for Capricorn in 1974, resulted in a follow-up tour late in 1974 featuring the Capricorn rhythm section; the double album, The Gregg Allman Tour (produced by Johnny Sandlin) featured a cameo set billed as Cowboy/Boyer and Talton. Boyer’s work on Laid Back included a cover of his song “All My Friends,” which had appeared on Cowboy’s 5’ll Get You Ten (1971). Boyer worked on two highly acclaimed albums by Alex Taylor; Taylor’s Friends and Neighbors was recorded in Macon at Capricorn Studio at a time when Boyer was living at a lake cabin formerly occupied by the Allman Brothers and known as Idlewild South, the title of the Allman Bothers’ second album. Boyer left Macon in 1976, moved to Fair Hope, Alabama, and spent time in Los Angeles in the late 1970s. Boyer worked with Locust Fork around the Birmingham circuit, joined The Convertibles with Topper Price, staying with that group until 1988, when he moved to Decatur. The Convertibles recorded a five-song EP tape in 1985 in Muscle Shoals, signaling a return to a gutsier blues-oriented style. In 1988, Boyer joined Johnny Sandlin, forming The Decoys. Boyer also gigged in Huntsville with a band called Red, Hot, and Blue. In 1991, Boyer recorded All My Friends in Decatur at Sandlin’s Duck Tape recording studio. The album credits Scott Boyer and the Decoys, and the title is appropriate since it gathers together musicians from Boyer’s Capricorn days as well his associates from the Decoys. Boyer began an on and off collaboration in 1990 with Kelvin Holly and N.C. Thurman, who would become regulars in the Decoys. The group began a six-year run at a club called Union Station in Muscle Shoals in 1991, where the band featured luminary players such as Butch McDade, Jimmy Clay, David Hood, and Roger Hawkins. In 1993, Polygram Records released on Compact Disc a retrospective set from Cowboy’s oeuvre culled from the Capricorn vaults, title A Different Time. Boyer has continued writing and recording material. Boyer and Thurman contributed “Silence Ain’ t Golden” to Gregg Allman’s 1998 set Searching for Simplicity, cut at Duck Tape. He and Sandlin recorded an album of classic country material as well as tongue-in-cheek originals parodying the country music world, which resulted in the Scalded Dogs project (2000). Boyer then cut a set with songwriting partner N.C. Thurman under the title Old Dogs, New Tracks. The Decoys recorded their Shot From The Saddle (MSR002) at Fame in Muscle Shoals in 2001, which features Holly, Thurman, and Hood. Boyer also produced an album of assorted songs with singer/songwriter Mitch McGee titled The Spring Cove Demos (2001). Boyer co-wrote with Shoals-area legend Donnie Fritts “Don’t Beat Around the Bush,” cut at Dan Penn’s studio in Nashville, and “Muscle Shoals”, cut at Boyer’s Spring Cove Studio in 2003. Also in 2003, Boyer joined Gregg Allman and Levon Helm on comedian Tim Wilson’s paean to Southern soul, The All Nighters, recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound. Boyer and Thurman contributed “Don’t Hit Me No More” to Jimmy Hall’s set on the reformed Capricorn label titled Rendezvous With The Blues; the songwriting duo contributed “Rock Bottom Blues” to Johnny Jenkins’ Blessed Blues on the same label. Boyer’s “The Blues Are Flowing Freely” appears on the Johnny Sandlin production of The Skeeters. Boyer and Fritts, as committed supporters of the Muscle Shoals music community, spearheaded a fundraising campaign to enshrine Arthur Alexander’s Florence gravesite with a well-deserved and overdue memorial stone. Boyer performs regularly with Donnie Fritts - he appeared at Nashville’s Bluebird in August of 2005, and he is a mainstay of the Songfest and W.C. Handy Festival concerts (with Percy Sledge, Bonnie Bramlett, Rita Coolidge, Delbert McClinton, Kris Kristofferson, Billy Swan, and Gary Nicholson). Boyer continues performing and recording at a regular pace, and has recently (2005) begun a collaboration with his former Macon cohorts Tommy Talton, Paul Hornsby, Bill Stewart, Johnny Sandlin – along with Texas-born Nashville guitarist Lee Roy Parnell – to perform as the Capricorn Rhythm Section. Recent concerts in Macon at the Georgia Music Hall of Fame demonstrate that the musical legacy, of which Boyer is a charter member, is alive and well. .. .. .. .. .. -
Members
...... ...... The Capricorn Rhythm Section ...... CRS with Bonnie Bramlett ...... Scott, Tommy Talton, Gregg Allman, Lee Roy Parnell ...... Scott, Donnie Fritts, Delbert McClinton ...... The Decoys -
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12 Songs | Jun 6, 2010
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Bio:
Charles Scott Boyer Jr. (17 October, 1947), professionally known as Scott Boyer, a consummate guitarist-singer-songwriter, gained acclaim internationally as a founding member of the seminal folk-rock group Cowboy, and as the songwriter of hits for Gregg Allman, Eric Clapton, and Bonnie Bramlett. Boyer spent his youth in Upstate NY and Kentucky, before settling in Jacksonville, Florida, where his musical skills were honed. He played piano and viola, before gravitating to the guitar. In 1965, Boyer and, following Dylan and the Lovin’ Spoonful’s foray into electrified folk, put together a band two high school friends, David Brown and Butch Trucks (Allman Bros.), blending folk and rock elements. Boyer had an early hit with “Sandcastles”; encouraged by Duane and Gregg Allman, Boyer and trio found a club gig in Daytona Beach, and then cut a cover “Let’s Get Together,” later a huge hit for The Youngbloods, another folk-rock trio. Changing the name from The Bitter IND, to the 31st of February their early singles paved the way for a 1967 session at Criteria Studio in Miami resulting in an eponymous album on Vanguard Records, reaching No. 98 on the Billboard charts. During this period, Boyer participated in open-air groundbreaking concerts at Riverfront Park in Jacksonville, witnessing the emergence of what would be labeled Southern Rock; on scene were bands such as The One Percent (later known as Lynyrd Skynyrd), The Second Coming (with future Allman Brothers members Berry Oakley and Dickie Betts), and Duane Allman, himself (Gregg would remain in Los Angeles a while). The 31st of February expanded to a quintet briefly to include Duane and Gregg Allman; that quintet cut demos under the name The 31st of February, which were sent to Vanguard but declined; the session reappeared in 1971 as Duane and Gregg Allman, The Early Years on Bold Records. In 1968, Boyer was living in Gainesville, FL, and playing with keyboard player Bill Pillmore; the two co-wrote “Living in the Country,” which appeared on the first Cowboy album Reach for the Sky on Capricorn (1970), which also featured Boyer’s song “It's Time,” the title song of Bonnie Bramlett’s first solo album (1974) on Capricorn Records. The band, Cowboy, formed in Orlando in late 1968, cut four albums for Capricorn Records between 1970 and 1977: these were Reach for the Sky (1970); the second album, 5'll Getcha 10, was cut at Muscle Shoals Sound’s 3614 Jackson Highway Studio in 1971, which featured Boyer’s “Please Be With Me” featuring Duane Allman; the song was picked up by Eric Clapton, who covered it on his Grammy-winning 461 Ocean Boulevard, in 1974. A double album on Capricorn titled Why Quit When You’re Losing, was released in 1975 featuring material culled from the first two Cowboy albums. Boyer and Talton emerged as the driving force behind Cowboy, touring with the Allman Brothers Band for six weeks in 1973. Boyer and Talton were also recruited as members of the house rhythm section with Bill Stewart and David Brown, at Capricorn Studio in Macon, often working with producer Johnny Sandlin (Hour Glass). With Cowboy, Boyer was involved in two further album projects for Capricorn before the label’s 1977 demise: Boyer & Talton (1975) and Cowboy (Unedited) (1976) Boyer and Talton’s involvement in the Capricorn house band, yielded fine sessions for Bonnie Bramlett, Martin Mull, Alex Taylor, Kitty Wells, and Gregg Allman. Gregg Allman’s Laid Back, a gold record for Capricorn in 1974, resulted in a follow-up tour late in 1974 featuring the Capricorn rhythm section; the double album, The Gregg Allman Tour (produced by Johnny Sandlin) featured a cameo set billed as Cowboy/Boyer and Talton. Boyer’s work on Laid Back included a cover of his song “All My Friends,” which had appeared on Cowboy’s 5’ll Get You Ten (1971). Boyer worked on two highly acclaimed albums by Alex Taylor; Taylor’s Friends and Neighbors was recorded in Macon at Capricorn Studio at a time when Boyer was living at a lake cabin formerly occupied by the Allman Brothers and known as Idlewild South, the title of the Allman Bothers’ second album. Boyer left Macon in 1976, moved to Fair Hope, Alabama, and spent time in Los Angeles in the late 1970s. Boyer worked with Locust Fork around the Birmingham circuit, joined The Convertibles with Topper Price, staying with that group until 1988, when he moved to Decatur. The Convertibles recorded a five-song EP tape in 1985 in Muscle Shoals, signaling a return to a gutsier blues-oriented style. In 1988, Boyer joined Johnny Sandlin, forming The Decoys. Boyer also gigged in Huntsville with a band called Red, Hot, and Blue. In 1991, Boyer recorded All My Friends in Decatur at Sandlin’s Duck Tape recording studio. The album credits Scott Boyer and the Decoys, and the title is appropriate since it gathers together musicians from Boyer’s Capricorn days as well his associates from the Decoys. Boyer began an on and off collaboration in 1990 with Kelvin Holly and N.C. Thurman, who would become regulars in the Decoys. The group began a six-year run at a club called Union Station in Muscle Shoals in 1991, where the band featured luminary players such as Butch McDade, Jimmy Clay, David Hood, and Roger Hawkins. In 1993, Polygram Records released on Compact Disc a retrospective set from Cowboy’s oeuvre culled from the Capricorn vaults, title A Different Time. Boyer has continued writing and recording material. Boyer and Thurman contributed “Silence Ain’ t Golden” to Gregg Allman’s 1998 set Searching for Simplicity, cut at Duck Tape. He and Sandlin recorded an album of classic country material as well as tongue-in-cheek originals parodying the country music world, which resulted in the Scalded Dogs project (2000). Boyer then cut a set with songwriting partner N.C. Thurman under the title Old Dogs, New Tracks. The Decoys recorded their Shot From The Saddle (MSR002) at Fame in Muscle Shoals in 2001, which features Holly, Thurman, and Hood. Boyer also produced an album of assorted songs with singer/songwriter Mitch McGee titled The Spring Cove Demos (2001). Boyer co-wrote with Shoals-area legend Donnie Fritts “Don’t Beat Around the Bush,” cut at Dan Penn’s studio in Nashville, and “Muscle Shoals”, cut at Boyer’s Spring Cove Studio in 2003. Also in 2003, Boyer joined Gregg Allman and Levon Helm on comedian Tim Wilson’s paean to Southern soul, The All Nighters, recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound. Boyer and Thurman contributed “Don’t Hit Me No More” to Jimmy Hall’s set on the reformed Capricorn label titled Rendezvous With The Blues; the songwriting duo contributed “Rock Bottom Blues” to Johnny Jenkins’ Blessed Blues on the same label. Boyer’s “The Blues Are Flowing Freely” appears on the Johnny Sandlin production of The Skeeters. Boyer and Fritts, as committed supporters of the Muscle Shoals music community, spearheaded a fundraising campaign to enshrine Arthur Alexander’s Florence gravesite with a well-deserved and overdue memorial stone. Boyer performs regularly with Donnie Fritts - he appeared at Nashville’s Bluebird in August of 2005, and he is a mainstay of the Songfest and W.C. Handy Festival concerts (with Percy Sledge, Bonnie Bramlett, Rita Coolidge, Delbert McClinton, Kris Kristofferson, Billy Swan, and Gary Nicholson). Boyer continues performing and recording at a regular pace, and has recently (2005) begun a collaboration with his former Macon cohorts Tommy Talton, Paul Hornsby, Bill Stewart, Johnny Sandlin – along with Texas-born Nashville guitarist Lee Roy Parnell – to perform as the Capricorn Rhythm Section. Recent concerts in Macon at the Georgia Music Hall of Fame demonstrate that the musical legacy, of which Boyer is a charter member, is alive and well. .. .. ..Member Since:
November 04, 2006Members:
The Capricorn Rhythm Section
CRS with Bonnie Bramlett
Scott, Tommy Talton, Gregg Allman, Lee Roy Parnell
Scott, Donnie Fritts, Delbert McClinton
The Decoys










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10 of 393MoreThinking of you with love. pjk
great set last night!
HEY SCOTT, JUST A NOTE TO SAY WE LOVE YOU BUNCHES, AND HOPE YOUR CHRISTMAS WAS MERRY AND THAT THIS YEAR WILL BRING ALL OF THE FORTUNE YOU SO DESERVE FROM YOUR BEAUTIFUL MUSIC AND TALENT..HAPPY HAPPY NEW YEAR BABY.CYN AND ELLE WHITESIDE...YOUR CHEERLEADERS!
You're a great songwriter!
Dropping by to say Merry Christmas and Happy Happy. Look forward to seeing ya'll
after Xmas. xxxooo pammy
Welcome to ShoalsBEAT, don't forget to come back often and post updates,Videos or new concert events in my messages. Also check out the new site http://theshoalsbeat.com on how to send band info you want posted or an article on your band
Richard McCulley
the ShoalsBEAT the First BEAT
Hi Scott, Sending you All Gods Love and And a Very Merry Christmas to You & Yours!
All Peace & Love Lee
Hi Scott, What a long strange trip it's been! No putter for 2 weeks but back now!
Hope ya'll had a great Holiday and that all is great in your life.
And this weekend is filled with music and fun and Love!
All Peace & Love Lee
Hello up there! When it gets cold enough that you start thinking about heading down this way to thaw out, remember to check us out for what is happening on the live music scene in FLA. Best!
www.JazzBluesFlorida.com
HOPE YOU ARE WELL AND HAPPY~ALL OF OUR LOVE TO YOU~FROM THE GYPSEY GIRLS IN MACONGA!