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How the rock band ZZ Top got its name 👀 💡

 

Billy Gibbons had formed the band Moving Sidewalks in Houston in 1966 with Dan Mitchell on drums, Tom Moore on keyboards, and Don Summers on bass. The group earned Gibbons local recognition, with their single "99th Floor" becoming a hit in Houston. After opening for various popular groups such as the Doors, Jimi Hendrix, and the 13th Floor Elevators, Moving Sidewalks eventually released the album Flash (1969). By this point, both Moore and Summers had been drafted into the United States Army to fight in the Vietnam War, and Gibbons and Mitchell subsequently recruited bassist-keyboardist Lanier Greig, thus forming the first iteration of ZZ Top. The name of the band was Gibbons' idea; the band had a small apartment covered with concert posters, and he noticed that many performers' names used initials. Gibbons particularly noticed B.B. King and Z. Z. Hill, and thought of combining the two into "ZZ King", but considered it too similar to the original name. He then figured that "king is at the top" which gave him the idea of naming the band "ZZ Top".

source Wiki

 

Photo by Paul Natkin 
 

ZZ Top Deezer Bio
ZZ Top formed in the late 60s in Houston, Texas with founding members guitarist Billy Gibbons, bass player Lanier Grieg, and drummer Dan Mitchell. After their first single, 1969’s “Salt Lick”, Frank Beard became the drummer, and Billy Ethridge was tapped as the new bass player. The classic line-up of the band solidified when Ethridge left after the trio signed to London records and Dusty Hill came on board. 1971’s ZZ Top's First Album and the 1972 follow-up Rio Grande Mud showed the group rooted in rocking blues and revealed odd humor in Gibbons’ lyrics. Predominantly a live band at this stage, ZZ Top were making a name wowing live audiences. Following their 1973 breakout Tres Hombres, which landed in the top ten of the album chart, the group toured for 18 months on its Worldwide Texas Tour. With a cheeky sense of humor, the trio won legions of fans pushing out albums through the 1970s and 1980s. 1983's Eliminator incorporated synthesizers into their blues sound and produced the hit singles “Gimme All Your Lovin'” and “Legs”. The iconic music videos for these tracks, featuring a red Ford coupe, a surplus of leggy models, and the band’s visual trademark of Gibbons and Hill’s breastbone-length beards, led to the band becoming unlikely MTV superstars. They copied the formula for 1985’s Afterburner, and were rewarded with another top 10 album. 1990’s Recycler found them moving more toward traditional blues and away from the synthesizers prevalent on their previous two albums, and the album still went top 10. 1994’s Antenna was their last Platinum album, but the band continued to tour regularly while their album releases became more sporadic. After 2012’s La Futura, which returned them to the top 10 on the album chart for the first time since Recycler, they spent a decade touring with their album input limited to best-of collections and live LPs. Dusty Hill passed away on July 28, 2021, however Gibbons stated the band would continue at Hill’s request, with Hill’s guitar tech Elwood Francis replacing him.

 

 

They were all over MTV and the radio in the early 80s. Their riffs, choreography, unique style (including those legendary beards), and of course the music videos set them apart from all the New Wave, hair metal, and 80s pop going on.

For me they are a radio band, I love hearing one of their songs from time to time, but I can't really sit and listen to an album (the same way I feel about Van Halen).

 


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La Grange

ZZ Top

 

 


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