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Pete Worden and the Hardtimers play “real deal rockabilly music.”
Worden describes his brand of music as bop. “We're no oldies
band” says Pete, “I'm writing new bop carrying on the music that
the cats started in the 50s.”
A brilliant guitar slinger and vocalist, Worden delivers an exciting
live show, the likes of which will have you asking yourself, ‘how
does he do that?’ As you stand outside a club where Worden is
working out hard inside, you will swear you’re standing on Beale
Street in Memphis. An older fan with a DA and pack of smokes
rolled in his sleeve says, "I was there in the 50's and those guys do
it right – like some kind of time machine." Younger fans see his
show and think, ‘so this is what it was like...’
Pete Worden remembers the first 45 record his parents gave him
as an eight-year-old. He says it was an RCA record: Elvis's cover of
“Hound Dog,” flip side “Don't Be Cruel.” When he heard those
sides, his fate was sealed. “It really kicked my ass” says Pete, “that
killer guitar, and beat, oh man.”
However, Worden’s early music career, the Elvis 45
notwithstanding, wouldn’t necessarily indicate his current path. He
has always had a diverse taste in music, and his personal collection
– ranging from jazz and classical to roots music and heavy metal –
reveals not only his taste in music, but also his maturation as a
musician. After playing cello and clarinet in grade school, he
settled on electric bass for a large part of his early professional
career. He toured nationally in the ‘80s, playing bass with hard
rockers Ice Water Mansion.
When that band broke up, Worden began pursuing his love of jazz
and his interest in moving from bass to guitar. He studied jazz
guitar with Frank Gerard. “But to play jazz,” he says, “you really
have to know blues.” So after studying the music and playing with
other bands like Shakin’ Smith, he formed his own blues trio. He
had always written songs, so fronting his own band gave him an
opportunity to play originals alongside blues standards. One of his
songs, “Christmas Time Again,” was placed in the LeeAnn Rimes
movie Holiday in Your Heart, and appears in film and TV shows each
season.
But he never quite forgot the thrill of that first Elvis 45. More
country and rockabilly crept into his record collection and into his
playing, until he formed a rockabilly trio. In 2002 they released their
first CD Rock-A-Way containing 10 songs written by Worden.
In 2004 Worden formed the record label Royal Tone Records under
which he has released his latest CD Catch Me if You Can. This CD
contains 13 tracks, 12 original songs, including “Bazz-A-Jilly”, which
is a nod toward his jazz influences, and “Heart of a Fool,” originally
recorded by Eddie Cochran in the late ‘50s, but unreleased until
1982.
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