Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 2023
Time: 45:24
Size: 104,4 MB
Label: Self Released
Styles: Americana/Blues/Rock/Country
Art: Front
Year: 2023
Time: 45:24
Size: 104,4 MB
Label: Self Released
Styles: Americana/Blues/Rock/Country
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Born Inside A Hard Rock - 3:48
2. Everybody Gets The Blues Sometime - 3:06
3. Fanny - 2:38
4. In The Morning Rain Or Shine - 4:22
5. Sweet Lorretta - 4:14
6. Going Where The Money Is - 2:59
7. In For Stormy Weather Once Again - 3:53
8. Maybe Someday - 3:51
9. I'll Go Down In The Hole For You - 5:28
10. Love's The Real Thing - 3:28
11. Stuck At The Bottom Of The Ocean - 3:25
12. A Beggar For Your Love - 4:07
1. Born Inside A Hard Rock - 3:48
2. Everybody Gets The Blues Sometime - 3:06
3. Fanny - 2:38
4. In The Morning Rain Or Shine - 4:22
5. Sweet Lorretta - 4:14
6. Going Where The Money Is - 2:59
7. In For Stormy Weather Once Again - 3:53
8. Maybe Someday - 3:51
9. I'll Go Down In The Hole For You - 5:28
10. Love's The Real Thing - 3:28
11. Stuck At The Bottom Of The Ocean - 3:25
12. A Beggar For Your Love - 4:07
The Gene Butler Band plays an all original eclectic mix of Americana/Blues/Rock/Country. Butler has been likened to John Prime, Ray Wylie Hubbar, Jim Lauderdale, Buddy Miller & Gurf Morlix.
Born and raised in Macon, Georgia, Butler began singing publicly at the age of nine with the Cotton Street Gospel Choir (an all Afro-American choir in which he was the only Caucasian). Originally starting out as a high tenor without pitch or tone, he was relegated to being the one member of the choir asked to whistle and hum all the songs rather than attempt to sing along with the others. However, he stuck with it and by the age of thirteen he had developed into a middle baritone and was actually allowed to sing with everybody else.
Butler wrote his first song in collaboration with his best friend, Larry Crawford, after they spent a night in jail for violating Macon's "under eighteen" ten o'clock curfew law. They were both ten years old at the time and the song is titled "Momma, Wished I'd Listen To You". Butler still sometimes sings the acapella song during his show and always makes a point of performing it before ten o'clock.
At the age of sixteen, Butler and his family left Georgia for Seattle, Washington. There he began to play the guitar, and with two of his five brothers, formed a group called the Mudville Flats. They were a local hit and toured the Northwest for several years. It was in Seattle that Butler sold his first song to a recording group, The Jerry Rowen Trio. "What Moment of the Day" was written as a kick-butt country song, but wound up as a tame bosa nova tune on the Rowen album. After listening to the album once, Butler never played the song again.
Butler struck out on his own at the age of twenty-one and headed for the Big Apple. It was there that the acting bug bit him. He put down his guitar and picked up Stanavaski's Method. After doing a ton of theater in New York, he became a "quad-costal-ite" by moving to Los Angeles.
Since relocating to Los Angeles, Butler has been able to scratch out a decent living by acting and writing in film, television and stage. But during that time his first love, music, would not let him go, and in the year 2000 he picked up his guitar again and hasn't stopped playing, singing and songwriting since.
Born and raised in Macon, Georgia, Butler began singing publicly at the age of nine with the Cotton Street Gospel Choir (an all Afro-American choir in which he was the only Caucasian). Originally starting out as a high tenor without pitch or tone, he was relegated to being the one member of the choir asked to whistle and hum all the songs rather than attempt to sing along with the others. However, he stuck with it and by the age of thirteen he had developed into a middle baritone and was actually allowed to sing with everybody else.
Butler wrote his first song in collaboration with his best friend, Larry Crawford, after they spent a night in jail for violating Macon's "under eighteen" ten o'clock curfew law. They were both ten years old at the time and the song is titled "Momma, Wished I'd Listen To You". Butler still sometimes sings the acapella song during his show and always makes a point of performing it before ten o'clock.
At the age of sixteen, Butler and his family left Georgia for Seattle, Washington. There he began to play the guitar, and with two of his five brothers, formed a group called the Mudville Flats. They were a local hit and toured the Northwest for several years. It was in Seattle that Butler sold his first song to a recording group, The Jerry Rowen Trio. "What Moment of the Day" was written as a kick-butt country song, but wound up as a tame bosa nova tune on the Rowen album. After listening to the album once, Butler never played the song again.
Butler struck out on his own at the age of twenty-one and headed for the Big Apple. It was there that the acting bug bit him. He put down his guitar and picked up Stanavaski's Method. After doing a ton of theater in New York, he became a "quad-costal-ite" by moving to Los Angeles.
Since relocating to Los Angeles, Butler has been able to scratch out a decent living by acting and writing in film, television and stage. But during that time his first love, music, would not let him go, and in the year 2000 he picked up his guitar again and hasn't stopped playing, singing and songwriting since.
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