|

Tom
"T-Bone"
Giblin
2004 INDUCTEE
Tom “T-Bone” Giblin (or
just “Gibby”) has 30 years experience as a professional musician. Playing
everything from Rock, to R&B, to Blues. He’s been a solid organ and
piano sideman to Elvin Bishop, Albert
Collins, Jimmy Rogers, Luther Allison,
Big Joe Turner, The Dynatones,
A.C. Reed, Bryan
Lee, Kenny Neal, Andrew “B.B.”
Odom, Jimmy Johnson, Lonnie
Brooks (13+ years), Bo Diddley,
Otis Rush, Junior Wells, Mary
Wells, Koko Taylor, Fenton Robinson,
Mighty Joe Young, Carey
Bell, Abb Locke, and Big Time Sarah.
The following interview with Tom was conducted and written by Jamie
Gorecki in 2000.
“There was always music in the house as far back as I can remember,”
reflects Tom. “It was my father that played the piano and later the organ.
My first memory of the ivories was playing “Mary Had A Little Lamb” and
having the keys eye level.” Gibby remembers starting piano lessons while in
second grade and staying with it up until seventh grade while attending St.
Matthew’s grade school.
“I took organ lessons from Mary Jo Votroubek at St. Matt’s,” Tom says. “She was great!
She’d teach me as much as I could learn. Basically, they were the modern
day standards, the songs from the radio. We’d hear a new song and she’d
play it for me. I then took my assignment home and learned it before the next
lesson. That was my homework! At that time, groups like The
Beatles, The Monkees, etc.
were on the Top Ten. I do have to admit, I am a big Monkees fan. A lot of
people won’t 'fess up to it, but I will.”
Tom’s early musical influences came from the two local AM stations.
He was into the Pop scene, but was also influenced by his older
sister’s musical taste. She passed on the sounds of Motown and R&B such
as The Supremes and The
Box Tops. T-Bone formed his first band with neighborhood and school
friends in his freshman year of high school. They called the band Aspen Grove and it lasted about a year. They would play at school
dances and were able to land a gig at Farrah’s Lounge. Remember, these kids
were only 14 to 16 years old.
One night at Farrah’s, he was approached by two “older guys.” They
liked his style of playing organ so much they invited him to sit in with them
on their weekend show at The Mirror Lounge. “I think it paid $35 a night.
Pretty good bucks for back then,” adds Gibby. Those two “older guys”
were local favorites Dennis
“Daddy-O” McMurrin and Ron
DeWitte [a member of the IBHOF] and their group was called Mercy.
He stayed with that for about a year and a half. While still in high school,
Tom played with a couple more popular local bands, American Legend and Steamboat
Willie, which gave him more exposure in the local bar and club scene.
Shortly after high school, Iowa’s own favorite son of the Blues,
keyboardist Steve Miller [also a
member of the IBHOF], left the very successful and popular Blues band, The
Linn County Band to join the Southern-rock group Grinderswitch.
Creating a vacancy on the keys, Tom was invited to fill it. “That was the
first Blues band I played with,” Tom says. He stayed with that band close
to two and a half years. During that time, Tom experienced several personal
and musical changes. Tom’s father passed away in ’76 and Tom stayed
around town to help out his mother. Disco was big during those years and
there wasn’t that much call for live music around Cedar Rapids.
Tom was in his early 20s and had never been away from Cedar Rapids. He was
getting antsy and was ready for a change. January of ’78 found Tom moving
to San Francisco. “I heard that was a real cool place so I thought I’d
give it a try,” Tom says. “While out there, I hitched up with a couple
bands, did the coffee house circuit and such. While out there, I got a call
from Milwaukee Bluesman Bryan Lee. He got my number somehow through the
grapevine and invited me to play with him. I said, ‘Sure!’ It would bring
me closer to home for one thing.” Playing with the likes of Freddie King and other rockin’ Blues bands, this was something Tom
could identify with for awhile. But once again, Gibby got bored and found
himself at a point of not knowing what to do.
Returning back home to Cedar Rapids in mid ’79, Tom tended bar for a
while. Then one day, he got a phone call from Blues legend Mighty Joe Young
of Chicago. “He got my number from the old sax player with The Linn County
Band and asked me if I wanted to move to Chicago and play the Blues. I said,
‘Sure,’ and off I went,” says Gibby. “I played with Joe for about a
year and a half, and boy, did I do a lot! I took my first trip to Europe, had
a cameo shot in the movie Thief
starring James Caan and Tuesday Weld [also Willie
Nelson and James Belushi]. The
Mighty Joe Young band played in a bar scene in the movie. I played with Joe
at one of the very first Chicago Blues Music Fests. It was great!”
Time ran its course with that gig and it was time once again to try
something new. Tom looked up friend Bryan Lee from Milwaukee again, and
played Midwestern gigs for about 6 months, but kept his residence in Chicago.
Gibby moved back to San Francisco when he got a call from his buddy Walter
Shufflesworth, the old drummer for The Linn County Band. He’d been
working with Charlie Musselwhite
as his back-up band, The Dynatones. The band was going on their own and
Walter wanted to know if Gibby wanted to join up. This was right up Tom’s
alley, and during the period Tom played with the great Motown/R&B/Soul
band, things were going their way.
Tom remembers, “It was about a year and a half later when I got a call
from one of my old Chicago buddies, Lonnie Brooks. Back when I lived in
Chicago and played with Mighty Joe Young, Lonnie and I hit it off pretty
well. We’d hang out and shoot pool together and we became pretty good
friends. When Lonnie had an opening come up for a keyboardist in his band, he
offered me the gig and I couldn’t refuse. I played with Lonnie from January
of ’84 till November of ’97, and what a ride it was!”
“I have to say one of the biggest thrills for me came back in 1980
during my first tour to Europe. I was with Mighty Joe Young playing this huge
Jazz and Blues fest called Tour de Grande Jazz Festival. It was chock full of
talent: B.B. King, John
Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, all the great names in Jazz and Blues. These tour
buses would take all the musicians back and forth to the hotels. One day, I
got on the bus, went all the way to the back and found an empty seat next to
this guy. He was sitting there, gazing out the window, turns to me, and it
was Dizzy Gillespie. What an
honor. We shared some quality time, exchanging stories all the way back to
the hotel. I’ll never forget that! I remember another time, I was playing
the Grand Emporium in Kansas City with Lonnie one night in about ’86 or
’87. This guy appears on the side of the stage, and it’s Stevie
Ray Vaughan! Our rhythm guitarist, O.C.
Anderson, offered up his ax and Stevie took over. He jammed with us for
an incredible hour and a half. That was fantastic!” says Gibby.
So why give up all that fame and fortune and move back here? “After
being on the road for over 20 years, playing basically the same gigs, the
same sets for the last 13 years, it was time for a change,” Gibby explains.
“It takes a toll on a person. By that time, I saw more reasons to move back
than I did to stay. When I moved back, I knew I’d be playing but I didn’t
know with who or where. I’d kept in contact with friends and such. It was
great to fit into the Flat Cat
band (early ’98) and play with a bunch of my childhood buddies. It’s
really rewarding to play with and for people you know, friends you grew up
with.”
Tom’s also 25% of another local “super group” called D-Dog
& the B-Bits. They cut an album in 2000 called No
Foolin’! He also hosts a live music jam at J.M. O’Malley’s, a
popular local pub every Thursday night as well. Tom completed a project of a
CD of live recordings titled Choice
Cuts, also from 2000, from his Thursday evening sessions. “I had this
idea to bring in new bands to every week and sit in with them. It’s evolved
into a nice, relaxed setting where everyone has a good time. It’s really
great to be able to play with all these guys.” [end of interview]
Giblin has since played on albums by Bryce Janey and Mike Bader.
Previously, he appeared on albums by Bryan Lee, Craig Erickson (Force Majeure
from 1996, which also featured Chris
Duarte and Eugene Gales), and
several albums with Lonnie Brooks on Alligator Records.
Gibby has also been a part of the Lonnie Brooks band in some concert
films, including Houston PBS’ Live At
The Woodlands (during the B.B. King tour), Milwaukee’s Got The Blues, Pride
& Joy - The Story of Alligator Records (commemorating the 20th
Anniversary tour - directed by Robert Mugge), and a Lonesome Pine television special.
Earlier this year, he became a member of the Iowa Rock & Roll Hall of
Fame as part of The Linn County Band. Obviously, 2004 is a big year for
T-Bone Giblin and all in all, he has a very impressive career resumé, to say
the least.
More photos in the SCRAPBOOK>
|