|
BASSIST
Gerald
Wade Chambers
Born: October
8, 1946 in Athens, Alabama
Currently resides in Auburndale, Florida
Gerald Chambers was the fifth
of seven children born to Henry Sears Chambers and
Elsie Hudson Chambers in Athens, Alabama. His father
taught himself to be a highly skilled block mason,
despite his humble beginnings as the son of a North
Alabama sharecropper. Sears Chambers moved his family
to Central Florida in May of 1952 when Gerald was 5
years old. Gerald is a 1964 graduate of Auburndale
High School.
From about age 8, Gerald and his
first cousin, Carl
Chambers (they were the same age), grew up next
door to each other in Auburndale, Florida. Carl recalls
his Aunt Elsie (Gerald's mother) leaning out their
back door (about 20 feet from his bedroom window) and,
in a sort of yodel, calling "Jes........see, supper".
Carl started to refer to him as Jesse and in later
years that was who he became known as, especially in
music circles.
In the late 50s, Gerald's oldest
brother, Billy Joe, had a Harmony acoustic guitar and
used to sit around and sing the old country ballads
and some of the newer rock and roll songs he would
hear on the radio. Soon, Gerald and Carl had their
own guitars and were also learning to follow along
as well as sing harmony with Billy on those songs.
It was about 1959 when the Chambers
cousins started visiting drummer, Jon
Corneal's house after school and had the first
makings of a band. After coming in second in a Junior
High School talent show the guys added some other local
talent to the line-up and that band became "The
Dynamics".
The
first "bass" the Dynamics had was
Gerald's Airline (Mongomery Ward) guitar, with the
strings tuned down a half an octave. This made for
very loose tension on the strings and required a light
touch in order to be played in tune. Aaron Hancock,
was the designated bass player at the time, but never
did quite get the feel for those loose strings. While
making an audition tape to try and get jobs for the
group, Gerald traded the rhythm guitar chores to Aaron
and the rest is history. A bassist was born.
The Dynamics played sock-hops,
teen centers, etc. and made several appearances on "Hi-Time",
a weekly "live" dance program on WFLA television
in Tampa. That group at various times included Buddy
Canova on sax, Ray Lee on drums, Randy Green on piano,
and Bobby Braddock on piano.
In 1962, while the Dynamics were
rehearsing at the Auburndale Teen Center, Gram Parsons
showed up for a rehearsal with some musicians he had
recently been playing with and introduced himself.
He told them he really liked their sound, and the guys
invited him to come and sit in on a gig at the Tiger's
Den, a teen club in Cocoa Beach.
One
thing led to another and Gram soon asked Gerald and
Jon to join the Legends,
a group he had with Jimmy Stafford. A couple of the
guys in the group had graduated high school and were
leaving. Gerald and Jon both agreed and the the Legends played
together, in that configuration, for about a year.
Gram immediately bought Gerald his first "real" bass,
a cherry red Gibson EB0. They played all around the
state of Florida and often played the more prestigious
gigs that the affluent Gram Parsons had access to.
But when Gram failed the eleventh grade at Winter Haven
High School, he was sent to Bowles Academy in Jacksonville
to repeat his junior year. When Parsons left the group,
it soon disbanded.
In 1963, soon after Gerald left
the Legends, the Starfires (the band
that Gerald's cousin Carl had been playing with) asked
him to come sit in on a gig they were playing at the
Bartow Teen Center. At the end of that evening, Gerald
was asked to join the group on a permanent basis, and
that began a musical relationship that would last for
almost a decade.
Gerald covered the state of Florida
and parts of Georgia with "Ron & the
Starfires" playing at frat parties, teen
clubs, and youth centers. They did recording sessions
at Criteria Studios in Miami and Bee-Jay Studios in
Orlando as well as a couple of other less memorable
facilities. But success on the national level seemed
always, just out of reach.
In
mid 1967 Gram Parsons returned to Winter Haven for
a visit. While here he tried earnestly to persuade
Gerald and drummer Jon Corneal, to return to Los Angeles
with him to perform and record with the International
Submarine Band. Gram had this idea that, with the I.S.B., he
could combine country music with rock and roll. Although
intrigued with the idea, Gerald was ultimatly afraid
that Gram might leave him stranded in a far away place
and decided to pass on the opportunity. That decision
turned out to be eerily prophetic. Corneal took Gram
up on his offer and shortly followed him back to California.
Before I.S.B.s album "Safe At Home" was
released, Gram had left the group and joined the Byrds.
Gerald continued to perform with
the Starfires and an offshoot group Cinnamon until
they finally broke up in the early 1970s.
Also
in the early seventies, Gerald took a job with International
Paper Company that had a large corrugated box plant
there in Auburndale. Always the astute business man,
he rose to the position of plant Sales Service Manager
in a short period of time, while often moonlighting
in area lounges with the group Matanzas and
later doing week-end one nighters and lounges with
the group Dizzy
Rambler. He was also doing a lot of recording
session work for Len Walls, one of the owner, producer,
engineers of Central
Sound Studio which was also located in Auburndale.
It
was in 1978 that Jesse had to once again make a serious
career decision. Carl told him that he had been approached
by Howard and David Bellamy, who were looking to put
together a road and recording band. They had had a
#1 pop hit with "Let Your Love Flow" a couple
of years prior. The Brothers remembered the Chambers
cousins performing with the Starfires at the Dade City
Teen Center (near where they lived) during the sixties.
Carl was persuasive and soon Jesse Chambers on bass,
Carl Chambers on guitar, Rodney Price on drums, Dannie
Jones on Steel guitar and John Lafrandre on keyboards
started eight weeks of daily rehearsals. They put the
show on stage for the first time on September 1, 1978
at the "Beer Barrel" in San Antonio, Florida.
Jesse was the bass player and road
manager for the brothers and played on four Bellamy
Brothers albums that yeilded six number one hits.
While on a European tour with the
Bellamys in 1980, as the opening act for Emmylou Harris,
Jesse became friends with Emmylou's muli-instrumentalist
and harmony singer, Ricky Skaggs. Ricky was then negotiating
a recording deal with CBS and was looking to put together
his own group to tour and record. In early 1981, Jesse
and drummer Rodney Price left the Bellamy's and started
work with Skaggs. Jesse also managed to get Mickey
Merritt, another Auburndale native and Central Sound
comrad, the job as pianist and harmony singer with
Skaggs. The original Ricky Skaggs Band was:
Rodney Price - drums
/ Jesse Chambers - bass / Bruce Bouton -
steel guitar /
Bobby Hicks - fiddle / Ray Flack - lead guitar
/ Mickey Merritt - piano and harmony vocals

Jesse was also Skaggs' road and personal
manager, being responsible for just about everything
except booking the jobs.
He played
on several Ricky Skaggs albums, including Highways
and Heartaches, Country Boy, Live in London, Comin'
Home to Stay, and Love's Gonna Get Ya - that yeilded
numerous number one and top five hits, as well as
toured every corner of the world.
One
of Jesse's favorite cuts while he was with
Ricky Skaggs - "San
Antonio Rose"
In July of 1989 Jesse Chambers quit
the Skaggs organization and came back home to Auburndale.
Something happened that "turned my whole life around," said
Chambers. That something was when he met his wife,
Denise.
During
the 1990s, Chambers played a pair of reunion jobs
with Ron & The
Starfires, a couple of years of
weekend gigs with Willie
Mets and the Canadian Rogues, and a few jobs
with blues guitarist, David Bowden. In the Y2k's
he has for the most part been musically retired
except for occasional one nighters with the
reunion shows of Ron & The Starfires.
|