Muscle Shoals: East Avalon Recorder

Shenanigans happen during Muscle Shoals recording sessions with Reddog, the legendary Clayton Ivey and Bob Wray, the hilarious studio owner Charles Holloman, and joy-spreading-drummer Justin Holder. Tune in and turn it up!

Clayton Ivey has sat on hundreds of recording studio couches in his 55 years of playing keyboard on thousands of songs with some of the greatest musical artists from around the world. He was also producer on some of those toe-tapping and chart-topping songs recorded in Muscle Shoals or Nashville or Memphis or NY or LA.

“I love this room,” Clayton says, sitting on a long black velvet couch facing the recording board where Charles Holloman, owner of East Avalon Recorders, focuses on the computer’s pulsing tracks.

Of all the studio rooms he’s occupied, Clayton likes this room the best.

Looking from Clayton’s favorite room into the recording booth: Clayton is at the Wurlitzer on the right, Bob Wray is on bass, and Justin Holder is on drums.

Across the room, blues guitarist Reddog faces the recording booth, swaddled by his Stratocaster. His stance and uniform — backward baseball cap, black T-shirt and cowboy boots, cinched jeans — hasn’t changed in the 35 years I’ve known him.

Reddog’s cool exterior belies his churning passion for the blues, and the hard, hard work he’s done leading up to this moment: standing in Charles’ studio with just two sessions scheduled to record his nine songs alongside some crazy-talented musicians.

Reddog plays his tunes for the rhythm section in the booth.

We can’t leave women out of Reddog’s art form. Debra, his girlfriend, is here, supporting his every effort and documenting the scene. Also, female back-up singers will record in a subsequent session. Any time Reddog mentions adding the women’s voices to a chorus or intro, his eyes light up and he smiles underneath his Deputy Dawg mustache.

In this moment, though, Reddog’s cool exterior might just crack under the pressure of guiding a team of spirited musicians in laying down the rhythm for his album of diverse songs: a lullaby, a straight blues tune, a Steely Dan throw-back, a jazzy instrumental, and a Marshall Tucker-sounding homage to the sound legacy of Macon and Muscle Shoals.

I can’t say any more about Reddog’s songs or the album right now, but I’ll definitely write about all the details when the album launches in late 2025.

“I’ve always loved this room,” Clayton continues from the couch, where he’s reclined, his long legs crossed at the ankles.

“It’s cozy,” Charles says, spinning from his computer to face Clayton.

The black walls, baffles, fairy lights, and layers of rugs create the feeling of being in a Genie’s bottle; a place you don’t mind hanging out when the Muscle Shoals magic starts to happen.

East Avalon Recorders is Clayton’s favorite place for making music. He’s the reason Reddog is recording his second album with Charles, a North Carolina native who learned music technology at Georgia State University and followed his dream of moving to Muscle Shoals and opening his studio.

Charles Holloman, owner and sound engineer of East Avalon Recorder, captures music.

Charles carved the studio out of a 60s ranch-style home on East Avalon Drive, tucked behind industrial buildings only blocks from the flashing lights of Muscle Shoals’ airport.

Adding to the coziness, sound barriers of heavy velvet curtains or glass screen doors block noise from the house’s entry and kitchen. The woolen rugs dampen the sound.

There’s a living room for chatty people to visit, so their words aren’t captured, and a bedroom for musicians to catch up on sleep. Many, many people have poured themselves onto the black velvet couch where Clayton is chilling.

Charles didn’t share any specific story about a couch-crasher — like the one about Joe Cocker at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio sleeping on their camel-colored couch in a drugged state for a week, burning cigarette holes in the leather. It’s the same couch the Rolling Stones can be seen sitting on in the Muscle Shoals documentary. That same couch is still in the renovated Muscle Shoals Sound Studio today… patched with duct tape.

When Clayton agreed to play keyboard on Reddog’s album he pulled in Bob Wray on bass (another legendary session player) and Justin Holder on drums. Clayton also chose Charles and East Avalon Recorders. After recording an album at East Avalon in 2021, Reddog was hooked on Charles, too.

“Charles is so attentive and accommodating, Man,” Reddog says. “He’s kind and does good work.”

“What do you know about this rug?,” I ask Charles, pointing to the large rug under our feet. Its intricate floral design with sleeping lambs looks authentically Turkish, indicating great value, unlike the computer stand which is propped up by two books and held together with a blue ratchet strap. This comical (and effective) rigging shows how most recording studios in Muscle Shoals are not fancy. That’s because plain, good people use plain, good sense to design their plain, good creative spaces.

After all, studio design is all about the physical properties of sound waves. Expenses are spared on the aesthetics of a studio and lavished on the equipment that captures the sound. Placement of instruments, baffles, and ceilings are more important than decor when capturing sound. For instance, walls are sometimes angled 10 degrees to properly direct sound, and baffles of burlap-covered insulation help to “deaden” an area. Those baffles may not be pretty, but they work.

Muscle Shoals, thank the good Lord, is bling-free.

“My Mom bought this rug in the early 90s,” Charles says, looking down. He’s always responsive like that, turning his full attention to others. He’s also consistently upbeat, a laugh at the ready behind his beard and glasses. He’s the one usually cracking everyone up with his sharp wit. Funny flies out of Charles as natural and unstoppable as a sneeze. “For eight years these chairs have rolled over this rug, but you don’t see any wear.”

There is absolutely no wear on that nice rug. And why does the rug matter? Because if it’s truly antique and from the middle east, its value would indicate Charles comes from a well-to-do family. Yet, he doesn’t act like it. He’s as humble as his studio’s decor.

Charles is a down-to-earth guy. Nice and hard working.

As a musician, Clayton clearly feels at home here with Charles. The kind of home where family surrounds you, so you can be your true self. No judgment. Reddog feels at home here, too, even though he’s got some nervous energy as he prepares to record with Clayton.

Looking at Clayton — kicked back on the couch in his “Cat Dad” ball cap — you’d never know his storied career included playing keyboards for Etta James, Clarence Carter, Wilson Pickett, Mac Davis, and hundreds of other artists whose music nudged societal changes and still shapes our lives.

Clayton started playing at Rick Hall’s FAME Studios after the original group of session players, The Swampers, left to form Muscle Shoals Sound Studios. Clayton later opened Wishbone, his own recording palace closer to the Tennessee River. After selling Wishbone, he continues to play at studios around town… at his pleasure. Because, after his years on a piano bench, Clayton can do what he wants when he wants.

When Debra asks Clayton how many sessions he’s played since the 60s, he says, “Probably 10,000-15,000.” We all agree the total is likely closer to 15,000.

Debra, Reddog’s girlfriend, documents the session.

Clayton is just like his buddy Bob Wray and other Muscle Shoals session musicians: even though they’ve contributed to hundreds of hit records, and spent time with the most famous of celebrities, their daily life mirrors us average folk.

Clayton’s discography will wow anyone who looks him up, but Clayton is still the same Muscle Shoals guy of his youth: humble, funny, tolerant, hard working, straight talking, excellent piano player, and proud Papa to his feline “boys,” Scooter and Ollie.

He loves those two cats to pieces.

Bob, a Wisconsin native who somewhat resembles Walter Matthau, is another guileless, long-time session player who performed on hundreds of hit records and currently enjoys his simple Muscle Shoals life.

Bob still lives in his 1947 lakeside house which he bought in 1976 and proceeded — with his own hands — to put in all new plumbing and electrical systems. He’s had nine dogs since 1976, mostly labs, and his current pet, Elke (pronounced Elkah), is the first one to live inside. Bob is discovering the joys of having a puppy underfoot in the kitchen.

Bob is cool. Maybe it’s the decades of performing with famous people… and being famous himself. He’s not easily rattled and at 77 he still carries his own bass to his car, even in the dark and rain, even when others offer to help.

When Bob and Clayton sit together on the velvet couch in Charles’ cozy studio, they argue like Matthau and Jack Lemon in the movie Grumpy Old Men. Those of us lucky enough to witness their teasing banter can’t help but snigger and relish the fake acrimony. They may be “old,” (I’m not totally convinced of that) but these men definitely aren’t grumpy.

Clayton and Bob started playing together 55 years ago when the Osmonds came to Muscle Shoals; their first song playing together was One Bad Apple.

“Donnie Osmond was 11 years old,” Clayton says from under his cap bill. “I can’t believe he’s now 66!”

Donnie Osmond turned 67 in December 2024.

And yet here these two men are, still playing sessions together (and apart) and still arguing over chord charts, which Clayton writes.

Chord Chart for “Still Crazy After All These Years” on display in the Muscle Shoals Sound Studio.

Chord charts have a long history, but a special version is used in most Muscle Shoals studios, a method popularized in Nashville by Neal Matthews, Jr., who charted songs for the Jordanaires.

Talk about super-famous and super-prolific studio musicians! The Jordanaires formed in the late 1940s as a harmony gospel group and sang as back-up on thousands of hits, including most of Elvis’ gospel and hit-movie songs, only dispersing in 2013 when the group’s leader, Gordon Stoker, died from a stroke. Because Stoker was owner of the group’s name, he took it with him in death.

Matthews’ method of charting chords became known as the Nashville Number System (NNS) and he literally wrote the book on it: The Nashville Numbering System: An Aid to Playing by Ear. The method uses numbers to designate chords and other symbols for tone and sustain, etc.

Looking at a chart is like looking at space math.

“Heeeeere’s your chart,” Charles says to Justin, the drummer, a tall wild-child with a massive heart and massive black wavy hair which makes him look a little like Weird Al Yankovic. But Justin isn’t weird, he’s 150% alive with a wit to match Charles’ quick humor. Their exchanges are entertainment anyone would pay to see. If they go through with their podcast idea of “Muscle Shoals Now” (which I pray they do!!), it’ll be the most-accessed podcast in history.

Justin, 42 and built like a wrestler, loves wrestling and is on a high in the studio because he met his childhood hero, Hulk Hogan, just two days before. Adding to his glee, Justin tells us how he and his buddy were singing while waiting in line to see the Hulk and they made it onto the local news.

Justin very kindly let’s the author play drums while he taps the Tambourine.

Justin is high on life. He’s a session drummer around town, has recently worked with Band Loula, and will tour with Shenandoah for six months as their drummer heals from shoulder surgery. Musicians like Justin don’t just get invited to sessions because of their talent, they get picked because of their cheery personality and awesome attitude.

So when Charles hands Justin the chord chart for the next Reddog song they’ll record, Justin compliments Charles by saying, “Man, NO ONE hands me a chart the way you do.”

Charles energetically replies, “It’s an art. It’s Chart Art!”

Everything these guys are doing in the studio, from playing instruments to creating a collaborative environment, is art. Of course, folks comment on how a chord chart looks like trigonometry, not art.

As the players are all listening to Clayton explain number by number how he charted this particular Reddog song, Bob shouts out, “it’s wrong” and “it doesn’t make sense,” and Charles declares, “It’s Muscle Shoals Math.”

“Chart Art” and “Muscle Shoals Math”: Charles is the Shakespeare of this hamlet, making up new word phrases.

Clayton charted all of Reddog’s songs for the drum, bass, and keyboards weeks in advance of this session. These charts are excellent for players to use instead of reading sheet music, allowing them to create their own riffs throughout the song.

Clayton can play any keyboard, any genre. He’s quite a sight sitting at the grand piano, or Wurlitzer electric piano, or the Hammond B3 organ.

I’m terribly sorry for every person in this world who hasn’t had the privilege of watching/hearing Clayton run his fingers over any keyboard while recording or just warming up those fingers.

Clayton at the Wurlitzer with Reddog on the acoustic guitar.

At the Wurlitzer, he sits with earphones on, but the right ear exposed.

“Remember this tune?” Clayton says, glancing at me and Debra. The Wurlitzer hums out the chorus of Patches, the great Clarence Carter song.

“That’s Patches!” I say, thrilled to recognize it and sing along on the chorus.

“I played piano on that tune,” Clayton says, still pushing on keys.

Just the day before, Debra and I had stood in Studio A at FAME Records where Clarence and Clayton had recorded that very song and we listened as Jordan, our tour guide, played Patches through the studio’s incredible speakers. In the Very Room it was recorded in! Standing by the Very Piano. And now here’s Clayton, the Very Player on that song. I felt dizzy.

Jordan in FAME Studio A plays hits for us; Debra is on the left.

Then FAME tour-guide Jordan, who’s also an assistant engineer, played other songs recorded in Studio A, like Etta James singing Tell Mama, and Wilson Pickett singing Hey Jude, with Duane Allman on guitar, and Aretha Franklin’s I Never Loved a Man (the way I love you), and there, in front of us, was the grand piano she sat at and sang at. [Learn more about our FAME Tour]

The story of Aretha recording just that one song at FAME involves her drunken husband and studio owner Rick Hall later confronting the couple in their hotel room. I won’t share the story because Rick Hall tells it so well in his book The Man from Muscle Shoals: My Journey from Shame to Fame.

In his book, Rick tells stories about each hit song and artists he discovered, and best of all, it comes with a CD of the documentary Muscle Shoals.

Clayton is in the documentary!

“Do you remember this one?” Clayton says from the Wurlitzer.

Debra and I are digging this name-that-tune game. As Clayton is playing a few notes, Charles calls out to him.

“Clayton, let’s get started!”

“Hang on a minute!” Clayton yells, continuing to play for us.

“Baby, Baby,” Clayton says, and I finish by singing, “Don’t get hooked on me. That’s Mac Davis!”

“That’s right, I played keyboard on so many of his albums,” Clayton says.

And now Clayton is playing keyboard on Reddog’s album, right in front of us.

“Oh, sure,” Clayton says each time Reddog asks him to play another keyboard; He’ll practically run over, put on earphones, and play a few riffs to wake up the instrument.

These session players are seeing each of Reddog’s songs for the first time in real time. Clayton listened in advance and created the chord charts, so he’s had time to think about what he’d like to play on each song. But Justin on the drums and Bob on the bass are just now hearing the songs as Reddog plays and sings each one all the way through.

As Reddog plays and sings, Clayton, Bob, and Justin reference the chord chart and discuss amongst themselves what they’ll play during intros, verses, bridges, choruses, etc.

Sometimes they’re so inspired by what they’re hearing, they’ll get off that black velvet couch and head to the studio, walking quickly, with purpose. Bob is usually the first off the couch and marching to his bass. The musicians then perform the song together as Charles captures it all.

Occasionally someone will yell out “damn” or “shit” as they flub a note and the music stops while Charles, with a click of the mouse, backs them up a measure or two and they start over.

Clayton on his way back into the studio talking with Reddog about re-recording.

When the song has been recorded, these raucous musicians return to the couch, or Justin lies on the floor behind the sound board, and they all listen to their playing.

“Oh, I can fix that,” Bob says when he hears a missed bass note or an arhythm.

I just hear a good song, but there goes Bob, headed toward the booth’s door, saying to Charles, “Let me fix that spot,” or “let me take it from the top.” Bob’ll sit alone in the recording booth with his bass and run through the entire song all by himself.

Bassist Bob Wray.

Not to be outdone, Clayton will stand up and trot toward the booth saying, “I’m gonna’ redo that bridge on the acoustic,” and Charles just clicks the mouse and they re-record.

After 55 years as professional musicians, Clayton and Bob still want their sound to be perfect, and they’ll spend the extra time and energy to get it right, not listening to anyone who disagrees. They still have their work ethic. They still care.

They still trot to their instrument to do better.

By the end of the second night, we all feel like family.

Donna, Bob’s lovely friend, heats up the the crockpot of meatballs and tins of yummy jalapeño dip and artichoke dip she made for our crowd. We have to be quiet in the kitchen for most of the night because Reddog set his amplifier in there. Something about getting a better guitar tone with greater volume. So the amp is set apart to avoid overwhelming the other sounds.

Charles, Justin (standing), Donna, Bob, Clayton, Debra, and Reddog listening.

On our tour of Muscle Shoals Sound Studio earlier in the day, Chase, our tour guide, explained how Duane Allman would stand just outside the bathroom door, with the door open and his amp blasting inside the tiny room, and Duane would crank up his amp nearly twice as loud as the other instruments, to get that better tone.

Duane played that way on Boz Skaggs’ Loan me a Dime, one of my favorite tunes of all time, of all genres. That song is perfect and when tour-guide Chase had pointed to where I was standing and said that’s where Duane had played Loan me a Dime decades ago, I got goose bumps all over.

On the Muscle Shoals Sound Studio tour, Chase also played Take a letter, Maria, the first official hit for the new studio and its founders, the Swampers: Barry Beckett, Jimmy Johnson, Roger Hawkins, and David Hood.

For nine years at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, from 1978-1987, before they moved to a bigger studio down by the Tennessee river, the Swampers were involved in the biggest hits of the day. Barry Beckett, the piano player, was an intelligent man of few words and the only one who could read music, so he charted the songs at that studio.

The Swampers got their start at FAME as the second group of session players hired by Rick after the first group gained recognition from their many hits and struck out on their own to further their careers.

Cher and crew in front of Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, the first artist to record at the new studio.

The Muscle Shoals Sound Studio building started out as a casket showroom and continued on after the Swampers moved out, possibly as an appliance store at one point. The building eventually became run down but with the release of the Muscle Shoals documentary, a foundation was formed to restore and reconstruct the studio just like it appeared in 1978. The instruments that had gone home with musicians came back and were placed where they had originally stood.

Muscle Shoals Sound Studio is still available for recording, but three of the original Swampers are gone, leaving only David Hood to carry on their legacy.

Visitors to the Muscle Shoals Sound Studio will find their jaws dropping at stories from the studio’s glory days, as told by guides Chase and Terrell, a Muscle Shoals native who worked for record companies his entire career.

Terrell even went to Capricorn Record’s famous annual picnics back in the 70s where Dickey Betts ate off his plate and drank his cocktail while Terrell talked with Phil Walden, founder of Capricorn (with his brother Alan). Now living in Muscle Shoals and retired at 71, Terrell gives tours and tells stories.

Terrell and the author at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio with the Americana Music Triangle on the wall.

Seems you can stand anywhere in Muscle Shoals, say the name of a musician, and someone nearby will have a story about working with, playing with, fighting with, or just interacting with that person. The shoals are just as covered up in good stories as they’re covered up in good music and good musicians. And history and successes.

Rick Hall also had a linkage with Phil Walden and Capricorn Records — not just with Duane playing at FAME for a year before forming the Allman Brothers Band –but with Otis Redding recording at FAME. The studios also have a history of cooperating with other studios in Memphis and Nashville, each city only 2.5 hours from Muscle Shoals.

These cities are all part of the golden Americana Music Triangle reaching from Nashville to Memphis and on down through Muscle Shoals, Tupelo, and other hotspots, all the way to New Orleans.

The golden triangle encompasses areas where nine distinct American musical genres emerged: Blues, Jazz, Country, Rock n’ Roll, R&B/Soul, Gospel, Southern Gospel, Cajun/Zydeco, and Bluegrass. That’s a hell of a lot of artistry and history, dating back to the Paleolithic period before the arrival of Europeans, to be proud of. A hell of a lot.

Makes a person woozy to think of the musical masters and average Joes and Janes all dedicated to making music through good times and through horrible, oppressive times.

The Americana Music Triangle isn’t just a region where nine genres were formed; it’s where The Nine American Musical Genres originated.

I’m disappointed my home state of Georgia didn’t make it onto the map. We’re terribly proud of our musical history. But I’m grateful to have grown up around Macon with soul, “Southern rock,” R&B, blues, etc.

I lucked into being a Georgian by birth; Reddog chose the Deep South as his home decades ago. As a songwriter, singer, and guitarist, he was drawn to the region and performed in Atlanta for decades. Learn more about Reddog’s musical journey in this article.

Reddog’s current recording at East Avalon Recorders is a testament to his talent and fine skills and love of music. He wrote the songs at his kitchen table, just like Dickey Betts wrote Ramblin’ Man in the kitchen at the Big House, the Allman Brothers’ home located on Highway 41 in Macon and now a museum honoring the band.

Reddog was inspired as a teenager to pick up a guitar after hearing Duane Allman play. As a 70-year-old songwriter, Reddog writes his songs in his Pensacola, Florida, home and then begins more work: organizing recording dates, players, travel plans, finances, rehearsals, etc., all toward the goal of producing an album.

The rhythm section goes down in these two recording sessions, then Reddog will come back to record his vocals with final lyrics, and then his beloved female back-up singers will layer in grace and beauty, filling each song to its fullest.

As we’re recording over two days, Clayton pulls triple duty on the Wurlitzer, acoustic piano, and B3 organ, while Justin, the drummer, plays a dual role of drums and percussion, adding separate tracks for maracas, the tambourine, and a clapping tool. As with everything he does, Justin brings in the joy with his percussion playing; it’s hard not to smile when Justin is being Justin.

Come to think of it, being in the studio, watching the crew work and create, and cut up and tease each other, made my face ache from constant smiling.

Muscle Shoals hasn’t changed much since the 60s. I mean, chain restaurants and stores have moved in, but much of the old buildings/architecture remains, like a time capsule wedged in place by surrounding towns.

On our Muscle Shoals Sound Studio tour, Chase had told Debra and I that he got the tour guide job through a college friend. That evening, arriving for Reddog’s recording, we met Colin, an assistant engineer. At some point Colin mentioned having worked as a tour guide.

“Did you work at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio? I asked. “And did you get Chase his tour guide job?”

“Yes, I did,” Colin said.

“We just met him today and he told us his college friend got him the tour guide gig,” I tell Colin, laughing at the small-townness of meeting these two friends separately on the same day.

Music in Muscle Shoals is a tight industry; the studios seem to collaborate more than compete with each other. The musicians play at all the studios… and there are quite a few studios in town.

The Shoals area is about making music, playing creatively, supporting each other’s growth, and sharing opportunities. When everyone in Muscle Shoals plays to their strengths and to the community’s mystical roots, the entire area is lifted up… together.

And sustained like a note held.

The author with Clayton Ivey and Bob Wray.

Clayton and Bob walk around like the small-town guys they are, with a mountain of stellar legacy work behind them. They’re still building up that mountain. They carry the history of the Shoals sound in their blood and spread it to others like a virus people choose to catch.

Smart guitarists, singers, and songwriters like Reddog understand the value of working with and taking musical cues from Clayton and Bob.

After recording twice at East Avalon with Charles, and playing alongside Clayton, Bob, and Justin, Reddog is now woven into the musical heritage and magical mysticism of Muscle Shoals; an organic fabric that grows stronger with time.

Reddog, Blues Guitarist

Reddog’s soul is intact, even after decades of playing blues in clubs and bars across the South… even after 35 years of spending nights in front of tipsy party people, and true-blue music fans, never diverging from his passion to play and sing, remaining a gentle, quiet, observant man.

PensacolaBeach
                                                Reddog playing for an appreciative Florida crowd.

Although I’ve known Reddog since the late 80s, he still appears a little fuzzy around the edges, his origins and family, even his age, are vague. But recently Reddog opened up about his love of music and how he managed to make a living heading up his Band, Reddog and Friends.

ChrisLongDonnieMacBluesHarbor
Reddog with Chris Long on bass and Donnie McCormick on drums at Blues Harbor, Underground, Atlanta (c. 1990s)

The first mystery about Reddog is the origin of his stage name. “I spotted an advertisement for a vintage clothing store named Reddog, and the ad had beautiful, long, lean, red dogs,” Reddog explains. “I thought it would be a good band name. As band personnel changed over the years, everyone just started calling me Reddog.”

The second mystery we encounter is how he was able to make a living as a musician. Having to build his own career, and lacking 401Ks and employee-sponsored pension plans, means Reddog had to be financially creative and astute. Brave souls like Reddog who attempt making a living doing what they love are investing in their self-expression and way of life, not just earning to pay for shelter and food. Sometimes saving for the future takes a backseat, but not with Reddog.

Reddog tells the story of how a very well-dressed gentleman approached him years ago between sets at Fuzzy’s Place, a bar/restaurant in Atlanta. The man had seen the joy and fun Reddog and Friends were having on stage.

“I’ve amassed a sizable fortune,” the man said to Reddog, “and I would trade my fortune with you any day to be able to do what you do.”

“The conversation made me see how fortunate I was to do what I love in life,” Reddog says. “I felt thankful. Work has always been pure pleasure.”

Flying Finn Guitar

Reddog learned to play the guitar after high school. His step Dad noticed how much time he was spending playing guitar and suggested he take lessons… or not play so much.

“Within a couple weeks,” Reddog says, “I had packed a bag and caught a bus to a guitar workshop outside of New York City that I had seen advertised in Guitar Player magazine.”

His teacher was an excellent young guitarist who recognized Reddog’s talent and interest in music and gave him special attention.

“I got off the bus in Planting Fields Arboretum, Long Island,” Reddog says, “with no place to stay, a rather broken-down guitar, a suitcase and little money. Believe me, I stood out. My fellow students arrived each day in shiny new Cadillacs carrying expensive Martin acoustics.”

Reddog originally owned an inexpensive Japanese acoustic for about a year, but he soon acquired a Gold Top Gibson Les Paul Deluxe and a Fender Twin Reverb amp.

Early on, Reddog noticed all the great British guitar players like Clapton, Beck and Page had blues roots. “Duane Allman, Freddie King, B.B. King, Ray Charles… that was what was moving me!,” Reddog says. “Duane Allman is the reason I picked up the guitar. He created a new musical style and was just a burnin’ guitar player!”

Reddog’s blues destiny was set.

Although Reddog has written, performed and recorded original songs, he has always performed blues standards in his sets.

“Many blues clubs have kept me working through the years,” Reddog says, “because they know I revere the original artists who made the music, like Howlin’ Wolf, Freddie King and Muddy Waters.”

Little Brother & Reddog Atlanta
Reddog (right) with Little Brother at Blues Harbor, Underground Atlanta (c. 1990s)

Much of Reddog’s childhood was spent in Virginia and coastal North Carolina where his mother dabbled with the piano and continues to play out of the Methodist hymnal.

“The South just makes me feel like I’m home. That’s why I headed for the great state of Georgia as soon as the time was right. ”

The Allman Brothers, headquartered in Macon, Georgia, influenced Reddog a great deal, with Duane Allman, Freddie King and Otis Rush standing out as his biggest guitar influences.

Reddog attributes his successful musical career to being in the right place at the right time.

“I moved to the vibrant big city of Atlanta, a city with a strong economy and lots of live music venues. The norm for clubs was to hire a band for one night a month. Instead, I convinced club owners to book me one day a week (like every Thursday) and if their Thursday business picked up, my band remained the Thursday night house band. If business went down, they could fire me. Business usually picked up so we had lots of steady work. My trio had four or five steady gigs; Sunday on the North side of Atlanta, Monday in Underground Atlanta, etc. Many of our Atlanta gigs lasted years.”

Reddog kept his overhead low with a simple trio of guitar, bass and drums. All three players also sang.

Chris-RedDog-Spider-Webb
Chris Long, Reddog, Spider Webb (1986)

Current Reddog and Friends band members are Michael D on bass and TJ Jackson on drums. Infamous musicians who have been a part of Reddog’s trio over the decades include the late, great Donnie McCormick on drums from the Capricorn Record band, Eric Quincy Tate and Chris Long on bass, formerly with the King Johnson Band. Steve Hawkins, a powerful, talented drummer and vocalist, performed with Reddog in the late 90s and currently plays with Daryle Singletary. Bill Stewart, session drummer from the Capricorn Rhythm Section, recorded and performed live with Reddog in the late 80’s.

Selecting the right mix of musicians is essential to a good sound and future gigs. Equally important, Reddog paid close attention to where his money went while managing the band and growing his career,

“If you are a creative soul,” Reddog advises, “it is so important to save and invest for your future. Being a creative soul means you’ll likely have less, so you have to invest! It makes me sad to see elderly musicians in need. So many classic blues artists live in poverty, it pains me. I have influenced many around me to invest, especially in well-diversified, low cost index mutual funds, Vanguard, Fidelity, etc.”

Reddog’s Creative Space

Reddog’s favorite place to create is a perch in his hallway, where he has stacks of CD’s to choose from, a good sounding CD player, an electric keyboard and a guitar close at hand. He thinks it’s nothing fancy, but finds it peaceful. Like playing in a club, Reddog has a hard time telling if it’s night or day in his hallway perch, making it easier to shut out the world and focus on his music.

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“Music still burns in my veins,” Reddog says, “and I practice singing and playing guitar every day.”

Reddog’s discipline comes from his teenage years when he trained in Chinese Martial Arts, and he hasn’t just managed to preserve his voice, it has actually improved over the years.

In his prime, Reddog played nonstop. Reddog and Friends loved to perform and they often laughed about how many nights they were booked back-to-back. These days, in retirement, Reddog performs once every month or two at the local blues society.

“I love to sing and am so moved by that big, airy gospel sound of Reverend James Cleveland, Lee Williams and James Bignon,” Reddog says. “Practicing singing is so important to me. I practice ear training with a piano almost daily and sing along with some of my favorite gospel artists on CD. Just constantly in search of a bigger, warmer vocal tone! When you are singing, you are telling a story, trying to make every word believable and full of emotion. It takes work on my part.”

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Reddog and I became friends in Atlanta when he was the house band at Fuzzy’s Place and Blues Harbor at Underground Atlanta. I wrote for the hudspeth report, a local entertainment newspaper, and caught Reddog and Friends as often as possible, no matter the venue. I even recall seeing him play on an outdoor stage in Buckhead one St. Patrick’s Day. Listening to live music was a passion for me and looking back, I can see how how vital Atlanta’s music scene was to the city’s culture.

I once traveled with Reddog and Friends to a music festival in Tennessee and enjoyed the backstage/insider view of what it took to build a reputation and career, and learned that active bands who perform regularly eventually see just about every kind of human behavior, whether driven by physical, mental, emotional, sexual or spiritual needs.

Nightfall Chattanooga

“The night after the Centennial Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta in 1996,” Reddog says, “we performed on a House of Blues Buckhead stage to a sea of people. There was some tension in the air, people hoping it would be a safe evening. It was hot and humid and the audience was just incredible.”

Another memorable gig was in 1991 when Reddog opened for Garth Hudson and Rick Danko from “The Band” in Stone Mountain Park. “Rick Danko could not have been any nicer! He made sure we joined him on stage.”

One of Reddog’s favorite gigs was at Fuzzy’s Place in Atlanta on North Druid Hills. Fuzzy’s is now closed, but it had a reputation as the place to go for live blues and jazz. Fuzzy was a nice guy who cooked up fine Southern fare (Rib eye steak with green beans and mashed potatoes) but more than a restaurant, Fuzzy’s Place was a magical music venue.

Fuzzys Place

“We were the Tuesday night house band at Fuzzy’s,” says Reddog, “and because many musicians were off that night, they would come sit in. When I saw Gatemouth Brown’s tour bus pull into the parking lot one night while we were playing, I thought, ‘We’re going to have a great night.’ Billy Preston was in the audience on another night. That was one fun gig!”

Early on, Reddog had a gig in Sandy Springs at JP’s Paradise.

“JP’s was wide open!” Reddog recalls. “We performed every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night until 3 a.m. to great crowds, including strippers, drug dealers and musicians. Warren Haynes and Allen Woody from Gov’t Mule were among the many musicians who stopped by to jam with us. Before long, though, the authorities padlocked the place.”

Many other favorite musicians would show up to perform with Reddog, including guitar greats Oliver Wood and Barry Richman. “They were both world-class musicians,” Reddog says, “and really knew when to lay back and when to step it up and be aggressive. What an honor to have them sit in with our band.”

Reddog at Fuzzys

Other gifted artists that stopped by to share the stage with Reddog include Luther “Guitar Junior” Johnson, Jimmy Thackery, Tom Principato, Tinsley Ellis, Sax Gordon Beadle, Bob Margolin, and Jai Johanny Johanson. Johnny Neel and Duke Robillard stopped by to listen. 

Now, a special note about Luther “Guitar Junior “Johnson, who jammed with Reddog on stage at Blues Harbor in Underground Atlanta and then autographed Reddog’s black Stratocaster:

“Luther is the real deal,” says Reddog. “He performed with both Magic Sam and Muddy Waters and was in the Blues Brothers Movie. Luther is still performing. A few Luther Johnsons are running around, including one from Atlanta who regularly performed at Blind Willie’s in Atlanta. Be sure to look for Luther “Guitar Junior” Johnson to avoid confusion. One night, after playing on stage at Blues Harbor with Luther, I asked if he would sign my guitar. We went into the kitchen and I handed him my guitar, which he had been playing, and went to get a marker. When I got back, Luther had carved his name into my black Fender Strat as “Luter,” misspelling “Luther.” He was a nice Cat. Anyway, that’s how you can tell the autograph is authentic, because he misspelled his name!”

Luter Johnson guitar
Luther’s carved signature shows up well in this photo

With the release of his first record in 1986, Reddog gained widespread recognition and positive press.

Music publicist Mark Pucci helped Reddog spread the word. Reddog was in good company. Pucci had worked at Capricorn records in Macon, Georgia, for most of the 70s working to promote Southern hitmakers of the day, including The Allman Brothers Band, The Marshall Tucker Band, Sea Level, Wet Willie, Delbert McClinton, Dickey Betts, Elvin Bishop, Bonnie Bramlett, Percy Sledge, Dixie Dregs and Martin Mull. In the 90s, Pucci was back with Capricorn in Nashville working with the likes of Hank Williams, Jr., Lynyrd Skynyrd and Kenny Chesney.

“The press coverage of my first album release was unexpected and earth shattering for me,” says Reddog. “Tower Pulse Magazine from Sacramento was the first publication to give me an incredibly nice write up.”

Tower Pulse wrote, “At his worst Reddog sounds like a pre-pop-star Clapton filtered through southern sensibilities. At his best, he sounds purely like himself.”

Guitar World2

“I was also honored to be featured in a cover article in Guitar World, in 1988, entitled Who’s Who of the Blues/50 Bluesmen Who Matter. Stevie Ray Vaughan was on the cover with a headline reading, Special Issue Blues Power. That was a big deal for me! It was funny, guitar players would come into Atlanta for a gig and would ask about me. You know, it’s ironic because I’ve always been a musician who pays homage, respect to the originators like Albert Collins, Muddy Waters, Elmore James, etc.”

Jim Trageser, syndicated music critic, described Reddog’s guitar works when he wrote, “His playing is impassioned; his deftness at picking quickly is matched only by the smoldering intensity of his playing. In short, Reddog is one of the absolute best blues guitarists in the country today.” 

Over the years, as his reputation grew, Reddog was featured in a 1993 Guitar School article entitled, The Next Generation of Guitar Heroes. During that time, he also worked hard to win an 18-month Anheuser-Busch corporate sponsorship which helped update his band’s equipment.

Guitar School

In 2009, Reddog and Friends won “Best Blues Band” from the Blues Society of Northwest Florida. “We went on to participate in the International Blues Challenge in Memphis, Tennessee,” Reddog says.

Reddog’s favorite song to perform is Freddie King’s Yonder Wall. “It’s a powerful groove and I love delivering the verse: ‘I hear your old man has been to Vietnam, I heard he had it kind of rough, I don’t know how many men he’s killed, but I think he’s done killed enough.’”

Watch Reddog and Friends perform Yonder Wall:

https://www.facebook.com/pg/Reddog-Friends-203906956445/videos/?ref=page_internal

Reddog’s dream is to record in the legendary Muscle Shoals area of Alabama. He came close in 1998 when he recorded for a CD produced at Johnny Sandlin’s Duck Tape Studios in Decatur, Alabama.

Guitar World

“What an honor to work with Johnny,” Reddog says. “He was so gifted and generous to work with me. He brought some of my favorite players to the session, including Bill Stewart on drums, David Hood on bass and Clayton Ivey on keyboards. Gregg Allman, Bonnie Bramlett, and Jimmy Hall are among the gifted artists to record with Johnny at his Duck Tape Studios.”

Sadly, Johnny passed away in September 2017, before the CD was finished.

Reddog recorded at other Atlanta studios, including:

  • Studio One in Doraville, Georgia (where Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Atlanta Rhythm Section recorded)
  • Web IV (also where Lynyrd Skynyrd and Irma Thomas recorded)

Memories

As a musician, Reddog has many experiences and lots of stories to tell, not all of them pretty.

“I performed in a lot of biker bars, truck stops, country music halls and some seedy Southside Atlanta bars. One night after a gig in Tennessee, I was about to walk half a mile up the road to get some late night fast food. The club owner said, “Reddog, it’s not safe to walk late at night. Here, take this 9 mm handgun with you.” I listened, but didn’t take the handgun. I walked up the road and as I approached the fast food restaurant two police cars came speeding toward me, threw me on the hood of the car and yelled, “where’s the gun?” The police told me they just received a call that someone had a gun and was going to rob the restaurant. Like I said, it’s not always pretty.”

A sweeter story:

“We performed in Gray, Georgia, quite a bit. On one of our gigs there, Derek Trucks and his band were hanging out on the front porch listening to us play between their rehearsals in another building on the property. Later, the club owner suggested I go with Derek to see where they were rehearsing. It was just Derek and me in their rehearsal hall. Derek, in his late teens at the time, strapped on his guitar and played some slide for me. Let me tell you, the world shook. Derek had a big, big tone when he played slide. He played just a few notes, but what an earth shaking, incredible tone he had, even as a teenager.”

reddog-strat

Support

Club owners gave Reddog the boost his career needed and he gives them credit for being some of his biggest supporters over the years.

“Man, I’ve had quite a few club owners who said, ‘Reddog, I own a club, the stage is yours, I got faith in you. Come play my room, do your thing, pack the house, you’re in charge!’ As I was slowing down and semi-retired, I got to meet and work with music industry people and club owners who took an interest in my music. That meant the world to me.”

Reddog may be retired, but he still has some things he’d like to accomplish musically. He performs intermittently at the Blues Society of NWFL (and an occasional wedding, when asked by friends), and hopes to complete the CD started with Sandlin in 1998. 

“During a recent set at the Society,” Reddog says, “I worked up an arrangement of Will the Circle Be Unbroken in tribute to Gregg Allman, and performed it for the first time on stage. Gregg sang it on his moving Laid Back CD. Love that song and his version. My old drummer and bass player were with me so we could just closed our eyes and let it flow. It felt so good.”

When he’s not practicing or performing, Reddog has fun tending to the grapefruit, orange and lemon trees in his yard, and harvesting his blueberry bushes. He also relishes beautiful weather, the art, people, food and, of course, live music in his Florida neighborhood!

Another pastime that kept him going was tooling around on his motorcycle.

Reddog on bike

“I’ve had the motorcycle jones forever and am so relaxed on two wheels. A late night ride in the deep South when it is hot and humid is indescribable. I had a thunderous, head-turning, black and chrome V twin for 17 years. Unfortunately, my motorcycle days ended about a year ago.”

Reddog is still a big believer in the stock market and investing to provide additional income, even something as simple as the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund. His knack for investing will carry him securely through his retirement years. So will the knowledge that he’ll continue to perform and give back to his community.

“Someone once said the Blues are a Healing Power,” Reddog says. “I believe it’s true. To be creative, and get on stage with your band mates to entertain, have fun and get paid is incredible! But the music does heal. I lost count of the times someone in the audience had lost a wife or child, or was lonely, depressed, and somehow they found relief through the band and the music. It floors me. To see a listener leave a venue feeling better, even smiling, after you’ve performed makes it all worthwhile.”

Germany with Chris Long Spider Webb
Reddog playing in Germany with Chris Long and Spider Webb (c. 1990s)

References

Reddog’s Eight Guitars

  • Fender Stratocaster Black 1962 reissue: My main guitar. The strat is my instrument of choice. Sold to me as a parts guitar because a band threw it through a window and broke the neck. I had it repaired and brought back to life. It is a workhorse.
  • Fender Stratocaster 1960 White: I talked my brother into buying this guitar and he was nice enough to let me have it; he knew it should be with me. Holding a Fender Strat just feels natural and the Strat can make so many different tones.
  • Flying Finn Electric Guitar: A prototype guitar from Finland. We did a tour of Scandinavia which included a blues festival at the Arctic Circle in Finland. The Flying Finn guitar made it to me in that tour. A beautiful instrument!
  • Gibson Hummingbird 1968 acoustic: My acoustic guitar that’s been with me for years is beautiful and has a big, warm tone.
  • Sunburst Gibson 1959 ES-175: My jazz guitar. Easy to play while sitting and reading a chord chart.
  • Gibson SG Jr.: My guitar for playing electric slide.
  • Guild 12 string acoustic: Guild makes great acoustics!
  • Dobro: Old wooden body, great for acoustic slide guitar.

Reddog’s Five All-Time Favorite Albums

  • John Coltrane, A Love Supreme
  • Allman Brothers, Eat a Peach and Mountain Jam
  • Jeff Beck, Blow by Blow
  • Stevie Wonder, Songs in the Key of Life
  • Robert Johnson, The Complete Recordings

Reddog’s Albums

  • Reddog, 1986
  • Reincarnation, 1988
  • Standing in the Shadows, 1989
  • Broken Dreams, 1992
  • After the Rain, 1993

Album cover1

Reincarnation

IMG_3256
I’ve kept this publicity photo since Reddog gave it to me in the early 90s

Resources

Twitter: https://x.com/ReddogFriends/

Band Website: https://reddogandfriends.com/

Discography: https://www.discogs.com/label/256405-Survival-Records-4

One of Reddog’s favorite Duane Allman stories: http://swampland.com/articles/view/title:duane_allman_at_fame_studios_a_jd_wyker_cat_tale