Uncle Walt's Band

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GenresAmericana
Years active1972 (1972)–1983 (1983)
LabelsLespedeza
Uncle Walt's Band
OriginSpartanburg, South Carolina
GenresAmericana
Years active1972 (1972)–1983 (1983)
LabelsLespedeza
Past members

Uncle Walt's Band was an Americana band founded in Spartanburg, South Carolina, by Walter Hyatt, Champ Hood, and David Ball. They were among the most popular acoustic bands in Austin, Texas, during the late 1970s and early 1980s, and were particularly noted for their intricate 3-part vocal harmonies as well as a sound that combined traditional country motifs with jazz, bluegrass, and Beatles-esque influences.[1]

Shortly after forming, Uncle Walt's Band moved from Spartanburg, South Carolina, to Nashville, Tennessee, in 1972, where they caught the attention of Texas singer-songwriter Willis Alan Ramsey, who would become the band's first noted fan. It was in 1972 that, with Ramsey's encouragement, the band first visited Texas where they would eventually reside.

The band returned to the Carolinas in 1974, recording Blame It on the Bossanova, their first record, at Charlotte, North Carolina's Arthur Smith Studios. It, and a similar release titled simply Uncle Walt's Band (released in 1978 with same songs in a re-shuffled order), were released on Hyatt's Lespedeza Records label.

In 1978, Uncle Walt's Band played a reunion gig in Austin, Texas, and the success that followed kept the band together in subsequent years. They played regularly in and around Austin until 1983, when they broke up after David Ball returned to Nashville to pursue his solo music career. During this period in Austin the band enjoyed considerable popularity and was a major influence on other artists including Lyle Lovett, Marcia Ball, Toni Price, Jimmie Dale Gilmore, and Lucinda Williams.[1] During this time Uncle Walt's Band released two more albums on the Lespedeza label, An American in Texas (1980) and Uncle Walt's Band Recorded Live (1982), the latter of which was recorded at the Waterloo Ice House in Austin.

Legacy

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