Tommy Bolin

Guitarist

Birthday August 1, 1951

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Sioux City, Iowa, U.S.

DEATH DATE December 4, 1976, Miami, Florida, U.S. (25 years old)

Nationality United States

#19782 Most Popular

1951

Thomas Richard Bolin (August 1, 1951 – December 4, 1976) was an American guitarist who played with Zephyr (from 1969 to 1971), The James Gang (from 1973 to 1974), and Deep Purple (from 1975 to 1976), in addition to maintaining a notable career as a solo artist and session musician.

1964

Tommy Bolin was born in Sioux City, Iowa, and began playing with a band called The Miserlous before he was asked to join another band called Denny and The Triumphs in 1964 at age 13.

The band included Dave Stokes on lead vocals, Brad Miller on guitar and vocals, Bolin on lead guitar, Steve Bridenbaugh on organ and vocals, Denny Foote on bass, and Brad Larvick on drums.

They played a blend of rock and roll, R&B and the pop hits of the moment, and when bassist Denny Foote left the band to be replaced by the drummer's brother George Larvick Jr, they changed their name to A Patch of Blue.

1969

An album was released in 1969, Patch of Blue Live! from two 1967 concerts in Correctionville, Iowa and in Sioux City.

1972

In 1972, the 20-year old Bolin formed the fusion jazz-rock-blues band Energy.

Unable to secure a record contract, the band never released an album during Bolin's lifetime.

However, several recordings have been released posthumously.

Bolin briefly reunited with David and Candy Givens in a band called the 4-Nikators, after which he took nearly a year off from music.

During this time, he wrote close to a hundred songs.

1973

Stuck between the musical direction he wanted to pursue and a nearly-empty bank account, Bolin in 1973 replaced Domenic Troiano, who had replaced Joe Walsh in the James Gang.

He recorded two albums: Bang in 1973 and Miami in 1974; Except for one song on Bang, Bolin wrote or co-wrote every song on these two albums.

1974

in 1974 Tommy also played on the song "Invisible Song" by the Colorado band Rainbow Canyon, who were friends of Jim Fox, who also produced their album 'Rollin In The Rockies'.

In between the James Gang albums, Bolin played on Mahavishnu Orchestra member Billy Cobham's solo album Spectrum, which included Bolin on guitar, Cobham on drums, Leland Sklar on bass and Jan Hammer (also of Mahavishnu Orchestra) on keyboards and synthesizers.

Jon Lord of Deep Purple called Spectrum "an utterly astounding album. There was Tommy Bolin just shredding away like mad. And it was just gorgeous stuff, all improvised, all just off the top of his head."

After the Miami tour, Bolin wanted out of the James Gang.

He went on to do session work for numerous rock bands and also with a number of jazz artists including Alphonse Mouzon's album Mind Transplant, considered "easily one of the best fusion recordings of all time" by AllMusic reviewer Robert Taylor.

He also toured with Carmine Appice and The Good Rats.

1975

At the start of 1975, Bolin was a guest studio guitarist for Canadian band Moxy during the recording of their debut album, on which Bolin contributed guitar solos for six songs.

Later in 1975, Bolin signed with Nemperor records to record a solo album.

Bolin was encouraged and coached by The Beach Boys to perform his own vocals on this album as well.

Session players on this record included David Foster, David Sanborn, Jan Hammer, Stanley Sheldon, Jeff Porcaro, Phil Collins and Glenn Hughes (uncredited due to contractual reasons).

During the recording of this album, he was contacted by Deep Purple.

After Ritchie Blackmore left Deep Purple, the band had a meeting and discussed whether to disband or try to find a replacement, and chose the latter option.

David Coverdale had been listening to the Billy Cobham LP Spectrum, on which Bolin was lead guitarist for four songs.

He decided he wanted Bolin in Deep Purple, and invited him over for a jam.

He jammed with the band for four hours and the job was his.

Deep Purple Mk IV was born.

The band then relocated to Munich, Germany, to begin work on Come Taste the Band.

Bolin wrote or co-wrote seven of the record's nine tracks, including the instrumental "Owed to G," which was a tribute to George Gershwin.

Come Taste the Band was released in October 1975, and Australian, Japanese and US tours ensued.

Bolin's solo album Teaser was released in November, but his obligations to Deep Purple meant he could not support his own album with a tour.

While the Come Taste the Band album sold moderately well and revitalized Deep Purple for a time, the concert tours had many low points.

Audiences expected Bolin to play solos that sounded like Blackmore's, but the guitarists' styles were very different.

1999

A Patch of Blue was inducted in the Iowa Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1999.

Bolin moved to Boulder, Colorado in his late teens and then played in a band called American Standard (with future songwriting collaborator Jeff Cook) before joining Ethereal Zephyr, a band named after the California Zephyr train that ran between Oakland and Chicago.

When record companies became interested, the name was shortened to Zephyr.

This band included Bolin on lead guitar, David Givens on bass, and Givens' wife Candy Givens on vocals.

The band had begun to do larger venues, opening for more established acts such as Led Zeppelin.

Their second album, entitled Going Back to Colorado, featured a new drummer, Bobby Berge, who would pop up from time to time in musician credits in album liner notes from Bolin's later projects.