Moving Sidewalks
The Moving Sidewalks were an American psychedelic blues rock band perhaps most famous for giving future ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons his start in the music business. The band consisted of Gibbons on guitar, Don Summers on bass, Dan Mitchell on drums and Tom Moore on keyboards.
History
Gibbons founded the Texas psychedelic group in the mid-1960s and quickly drew a large following, especially among the Houston "teen scene". They recorded several singles and one full-length album, Flash. Their single "99th Floor" was well received and topped the charts at No. 1 in Houston for six weeks. The success of this record led the Sidewalks to sign with Wand Records which then released "Need Me", also a Top 10 Hit for the band. The group was asked to open for many rock tours, including Jimi Hendrix and The Doors.
After Tom Moore and Don Summers were drafted into the United States Army, Gibbons and Mitchell added Lanier Greig and formed the original ZZ Top.
While attending Warner Brothers' art school in Hollywood, California, Gibbons engaged with his first bands including The Saints, Billy G & the Blueflames, and The Coachmen. By 1967, Gibbons returned to Houston and formed an artfully designed band, conceptually inspired by friend and fellow musician, Roky Erickson and The 13th Floor Elevators. The "Moving Sidewalks" name was chosen and shortly thereafter 99th Floor. Around this time Gibbons had developed quite a camaraderie with the rock and roll superstar Jimi Hendrix. As a guest on The Dick Cavett Show, Hendrix started that Gibbons was slated to be the next big thing as a guitarist.
The Moving Sidewalks continued to appear along with the 13th Floor Elevators at the short-lived yet legendary Houston psychedelic venue, Love Street Light Circus at Allen's Landing. One night the Elevators set was cut short by Houston Police who arrested the band's lead singer Roky Erickson for marijuana possession.
In January 2013 Gibbons announced the Moving Sidewalks would reunite with all original members for one show on March 30, 2013, at B.B. King's Blues Club in New York City.[1] Since that successful sold out NY show and despite their single show announcement, the band played as official headliners of Austin Psych Fest on May 1, 2013, and the Charity Gala for The Deacons of Deadwood Ball on September 28, 2013, in Houston.
Discography
Albums
- Flash (1969) Tantara TS 6919
(the original album release; produced by manager Steve Ames)
- 99th Floor (1982) Eva 12002
(reissue of the Tantara album plus the 5 tracks that were issued on singles only)
- Flash (2000) Akarma AK 117
(another reissue of the Tantara album with the 5 singles only tracks added again)
- The Pre-ZZ Houston Roots (2004) Lone Star LSR 19629
(a compilation of material by The Moving Sidewalks including 6 unreleased tracks; 21 songs total)
- The Roots Of ZZ Top (2010) Fuel 61820
(a compilation of 7 Moving Sidewalks songs, 4 Warlocks songs, 7 American Blues songs; all tracks previously released on various singles and albums)
- The Complete Collection (2012) Rockbeat ROC 3018
(a compilation of material by The Moving Sidewalks including 6 unreleased tracks; also includes demo material by Billy Gibbons' first band...The Coachmen; 26 songs total)
EPs
- The Moving Sidewalks - A Band From Texas (1968) Another Mangy Mutt 1030
(this 7" EP was released on the indie label MUTT, a subsidiary of the Moxie Record Company. It is a mono recording and the playback speed is at 45rpm. This record is a combination/compilation of the band's A & B sides from their first 2 singles for Wand Records)
- Side A: 99th Floor; What Are You Going To Do
- Side B: Every Night A New Surprise; Need Me
Singles
- "99th Floor" / "What Are You Going To Do" (1967) Tantara 3101; reissued as Wand 1156
- "Need Me" / "Every Night A New Surprise" (1967) Wand 1167
- "I Want To Hold Your Hand" / "Joe Blues" (1968) Tantara 3108
- "Flashback" (4:15 - radio edit) / "No Good To Cry" (3:08 - radio edit) (1969) Tantara 3113
See also
References
- Kozinn, Allan (January 1, 2013). "The Return of Moving Sidewalks". The New York Times. Retrieved July 11, 2018.