 From the very beginning, Jesse and Noah Bellamy
were surrounded — surrounded by the musical life of their father, David
Bellamy of The Bellamy Brothers: by members of the Oak Ridge Boys and
Lynyrd Skynyrd and David Allan Coe, who would visit the family’s cattle
ranch in Darby, Fla.; on the tour bus to Nashville with their father
for the old “Fanfair” events; when they met fans and country music
stars like George Jones, Tanya Tucker, Loretta Lynn and Ray Stevens. It
made quite an impression. So it’s not
surprising that the brothers would become music-makers in their own
right, but with a phenomenal sound — country rock with two-part harmony
— that separates them from the pack. They’ve
found an affinity for Texas music that could date back to The Bellamy
Brothers touring the Lone Star State and their father returning to the
ranch with albums by Texas artists — or while they toured the state as
front men of their early band, Elston Gunnn. They say they realized a
connection with the music and recognized that both Florida and Texas
share a blend of cultures and musical styles that makes it difficult to
view a particular sound as simply country or rock when it’s really a
mix — like their country-rock harmony. Early
on, they converted an old hay barn to a recording studio, where they
rehearsed and recorded their first demos. They listened to and learned
from Guy Clark, Hank Williams Sr., The Byrds, Bob Dylan, Townes Van
Zandt, Van Morrison, Johnny Cash, Willis Alan Ramsey, John Prine,
Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Graham Parsons, Waylon
Jennings, The Beatles, Buck Owens, Rosanne Cash, George Jones, Emmy Lou
Harris, Jimmie Rogers, The Eagles, The Band and Billy Joe Shaver. Their
first notoriety came as front men of the Central Florida roots-rock
band Elston Gunnn (one of Dylan’s early stage names), which in 2001
released the critically acclaimed album, THE KEY TO THE HIGHWAY on
their own Bellerophon Records. The band
hit the road behind THE KEY and toured the East Coast and Southeast,
playing every venue from state fairs and music festivals to clubs as
diverse as Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge in Nashville and CBGB, the
underground rock haven in New York City. Playing for large and small
crowds helped them to sharpen the sound, and they focused their
songwriting with frequent trips to Nashville to network with some of
the city’s best songwriters. As the duo
Jesse and Noah, the brothers toured Europe during the summers of 2005
and 2006, performing at festivals in Switzerland, Norway, and the
United Kingdom, delighting audiences and earning rave reviews and major
international airplay along the way. Willing to do anything to share
their music, they once rode a cable car to a gig high in the Austrian
Alps because it was the only way to get there. Back
in that home studio on the ranch, the brothers work constantly,
recording and even stopping to demo while they write so they can tweak
and refine the music. What has evolved are Jesse’s vocal ability and
songwriting talents and Noah’s engineering and guitar skills and an
instrumental repertoire that includes electric and acoustic guitars,
percussion, bass, mandolin, keyboards, Dobro and banjo. Now
comes their 2007 album, NOWHERE REVISITED (Smith Entertainment), with
two tracks — the friendly warning “Daddy’s Got a Shotgun” and the
rambunctious “Wild and Willin’ ” — already making waves and already
demonstrating the duo’s smart storytelling lyrics, solid rock guitar
and outstanding brotherly harmonies.
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Popular Songs by Jesse and Noah
Nowhere Revisited Drivin' Nowhere
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