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George and Gilda

George in the Navy

George Receives Gold Record

George with Marshall Tucker Band

George doing a Songwriter Night

George with love of his life Vivienne |
George's Bio:
GEORGE MCCORKLE
Music is
George McCorkle’s passion. He has enjoyed great success with
the Marshall Tucker Band, as a solo artist and through the
legacy of songs that he is actively creating. “I’m not writing
music and performing to try and be a major success,” George
states. “I’m an artist and I’ve got something to say. And I need
to say it. That’s sort of the way I look at it.”
Raised in
Spartanburg, South Carolina from the time he was nearly two,
George was born in nearby Chester, South Carolina. As the
youngest of three brothers, he grew up poignantly aware of the
long and hard hours his mother Mildred put in at the cotton
mill. “We were a typical South Carolina mill family,” George
remembers. “Very poor.” Through his life experiences he
developed a strong and active work ethic. Although George’s
greatest achievements would come through a career in music, he
remembers that in the course of his lifetime he took gigs as a
dental lab technician, race car driver, and car salesman, owner
of both a glass company and a car lot to supplement his
professional music livelihood. He believes his work ethic has
its roots in his “meager beginnings” and “growing up Southern”.
As a young man, George was not focused on frivolous activities.
He was drafted into the navy as an 18-year-old graduate of
Spartanburg High School and was stationed on the USS Little Rock
at Gaeta, Italy.
Listening to music helped George pass the time while he was away
from his friends and loved ones back home in Spartanburg. Music
was already an integral part of his life. As a teenager George
listened to his brother Chuck play guitar and his brother Tony
play in bands around the Spartanburg/Greenville area. His
friend Jimmy Hughes’ brother Paul was another influence as
George realized that playing guitar was a meaningful way in
which to express artistically himself. He borrowed Chuck’s
guitar and learned to play it. He listened to radio station
WLAC out of Nashville and loved the blues he heard broadcast.
“The blues was like a magnet,” remembers George. “I liked to
listen to B.B. King, Albert King and guys like that. Then I
would try improvising their songs with my own ideas.” Other
musicians such as the “funky playing” Jimmy Nolen, rhythm guitar
player for James Brown, would greatly influence George’s guitar
evolution. “I’d play what I felt they were playing but in my own
style.” While working part-time in a drug store at the age of
sixteen, George bought a Gretsch guitar paid for via “the
installment plan.” He remembers his first stage appearance as
playing with a band called The Originals at an American Legion
hut. George’s first “major” appearance was playing with The
Rants, a high school band that played English and Beach music at
frat parties, teen clubs and high school events.
After
his discharge from the Navy, George contemplated his future and
decided to return to what he loved most in life: making music.
In an effort to mature musically, George and long time friend
Toy Caldwell formed The Toy Factory. The Toy Factory was highly
successful, but when Toy decided that he needed to devote his
energies to earning steady money George temporarily teamed up
with others to play in Pax Parachute. When it’s all said and
done, music is in George’s soul and playing with the Marshall
Tucker Band was one of the highlights of his life. “Playing
guitar with Toy Caldwell wasn’t just playing guitar, it was
sharing a mind. With me at his side he had the freedom to do
whatever came into his mind and I could instinctively interpret
whatever that was and experiment with him. And Toy had a heart
of gold.” George had the time of his life playing with the
Marshall Tucker Band and contributing to such hit albums as
Carolina Dreams, Searchin’ For A Rainbow, A New Life, and Where
We All Belong.
As much
as George enjoys playing guitar, he loves creating songs. He
wrote his first song while still in high school. Although he
surprisingly would never write with his dear friend Toy
Caldwell, he would corroborate with others to create many
memorable songs. “I love co-writing with other people,” says
George. “I like to see where their influences and personalities
take us.” Although he would write many memorable songs with
other musicians, George has experienced some rather stellar
success writing on his own. It is “Fire on the Mountain,”
George’s first recorded solo songwriting effort that generated
recognition and fame. The lyric sheet for this Marshall Tucker
Band hit, which opens the album Searchin’ For A Rainbow, resides
in the Country Music Hall of Fame and a label from that record
is part of a display in the Aerospace Museum of the Smithsonian
Institute. Another achievement for George is his song “Last of
the Singing Cowboys” performed by the Marshall Tucker Band on
the album Running Like the Wind. Country star Gary Allen
recently cut “Cowboy Blues,” a song George wrote with Mike
Geiger and Michael Huffman and George has high hopes for the
thoughtful and highly entertaining new song “Jesus Never Had No
Motorcycle.” George McCorkle is an established and prolific
songwriter. He lately writes about six songs a week and has over
350 completed songs in his songwriting catalogue.
Staying
at home merely reflecting on the past isn’t something that
George sees himself doing. He has recently released his debut
solo album American Street. “That was a dream come true,” George
says. “It was a major thing for me to step out and do something
like that.” Judging from the reception the album has been
receiving, it won’t be the last solo effort we can expect.
George keeps his musical irons in the fire in other creative
ways as well. When he is not enjoying the companionship of his
wife Vivienne and his children Justin and Justin's wife Beebe,
and Vivienne's childern Alex, Kevin, at his rural home outside
of Nashville, George is making plans to record and play some
gigs with The Renegades of Southern Rock, a band which consists
of George and other original members of major Southern Rock
Bands.
George has traveled all over the world and performed for 12
years to over 20,000 people a night with the Marshall Tucker
Band. He has played beside B.B. King, Carlos Santana, Dickie
Betts, Charlie Daniels and a host of other legendary guitar
players. Yet to George, his long career is not about the fame
but about the music. “My greatest accomplishment is the fact
that somebody wants to listen to something I wrote or played
on,” says George. “As I write in one of my latest songs, “The
Only Thing I Can Do Is Give It Away.”
Marley Brant
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