BS&T's
first album sold an amazing ten million copies and
launched three gold singles, "You've Made Me So Very Happy," "And When I
Die" and "Spinning Wheel." The album won an unprecedented five Grammy
awards, including album of the year and best performance by a male
vocalist. Five successive gold albums and three more gold
singles, "Hi De Ho," "Lucretia MacEvil" and "Go Down Gamblin'" followed,
and by 1972 BS&T was at the very top of the music industry.
Blood, Sweat and Tears, daring and innovative, a fiery fusion of jazz
and rock, blues and the classics . . . This superb band defied all
boundaries, performing with consummate artistry in front of a symphony
one night, thousands of rock fans the next. BS&T played the Metropolitan
Opera, the Fillmores, the Newport Jazz Festival, and Caesar's
Palace -- all in the same year. It was the first contemporary band to
break through the iron curtain with the historic 1970 tour of Eastern
Europe, and of course headlined at Woodstock, Madison Square Garden,
Carnegie Hall and the Hollywood Bowl . . . Blood, Sweat and Tears was
the hottest concert ticket in America.
From the beginning, BS&T was a strange hybrid. The Julliard
graduates, with their classical training, felt the band should aspire to
loftier musical goals, and Bartok and Satie became a part of the
repertoire. The Berklee grads were jazz purists, and long improvised
solos became a part of the show. Others were pure rockers whose
experience included "The Blues Project" and Frank Zappa's "Mother's of
Invention."
Yet in spite of the success and accolades, the old tensions and
rivalries still existed in the band. Here lies the magic -- and the
eventual downfall -- of the early band. The Julliard types, embarrassed
by the hype of pop stardom, tried to steer the band in a more classical
direction, disdainful of both jazz and rock. The Berklee boys resented
the structure of the classics and the simplicity of rock and pushed
towards a more complex improvisational style.
By the mid-70's, BS&T was submerged in a wave
of its own creation. Every record company had its horn bands:
Chicago,
Earth Wind And Fire,
Tower of Power... even the Rolling Stones carried a
horn section.
The founding members of BS&T began to drift away to pursue
their own musical ambitions. The classical musicians went on to film
scoring and teaching fellowships. The jazz players left to play pure
jazz. One by one they were replaced with an illustrious lineup of
renowned musicians: Joe Henderson, Jaco Pastorius, Mike Stern, Larry
Willis, Don Alias, Gregory Herbert. In concert, the band was a musical
powerhouse, but inwardly it was in turmoil. The unique creative team was
gone, so the band took to the road, playing 300 concerts a year through
the 70's. David left the band twice, exhausted by the brutal tour
schedule and frustrated by the lack of creative time. In 1976, even
Bobby Colomby, the sole remaining founding member, left to become a
music executive, and David was the only one left from the glory years.
They recruited musical director/trumpeter Steve Guttman, graduate of
Oberlin Conservatory of Music, former musical director for the 70's
recording stars Gloria Gaynor and Evelyn "Champagne" King, and alumnus
of the Tito Puente and Machito big bands, and he assembled an exciting
lineup of top New York musicians. With Steve conducting, Blood, Sweat &
Tears began performing with prestigious American symphonies like the
Detroit, the Houston, and the Oklahoma City Symphony Orchestras.
Larry Dorr was right. A revitalized BS&T under his direction came storming back to the concert stages of the
world, playing international jazz festivals, symphonies, concert halls
and casino show rooms. The personnel of the
band stabilized, and BS&T once again delivered the same exciting diverse
sound that made it such a well-loved part of America's musical heritage.
In 1996, David Clayton-Thomas was inducted into
the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, where he takes his place alongside his
country's musical giants... Oscar Peterson, Joni Mitchell,
Neil Young...
Artists of legendary stature around the world.
In 2005, David Clayton-Thomas left the group again.
BS&T currently has special guest Chuck Negron performing with them.
Blood, Sweat and Tears members are ---