Randy Ciarlante

Randy Ciarlante is an American musician who frequently played with The Band. He joined The Band in 1990,[1] singing harmony and playing drums. He played and sang on their albums from the 1990s, including Jericho, High on the Hog and Jubilation.[2] After the Band dissolved, he joined the Jim Weider Band from 1998 to 2006 and continues to play occasionally with Weider's Percolator band.[3] In 2006, he joined the Organiks, a band based in Woodstock, New York, in which he is a primary vocalist, songwriter and drummer, along with Bruce Katz, Jay Collins and Chris Vitarello. Randy Ciarlante has also been a mainstay of the Woodstock music scene since 1981 and has played with many of that area's leading musicians over the years.

Randy Ciarlante
BornWoodstock, New York, United States
GenresBlues rock, roots rock, instrumental rock, jazz fusion, jam rock
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter
InstrumentsVocals, drums, percussion
Years active1970s–present[1]
Associated actsThe Band, the Levon Helm Band, Mad Conductor

Discography

With Eric Andersen

  • 1968 More Hits from Tin Can Alley

With The Band

With Rick Danko

With Levon Helm

  • 2000 Souvenir, Vol. 1

With Jim Weider

  • 2000 Big Foot
  • 2003 Remedy
  • 2006 Percolator

With Mad Conductor

  • 2010 Central America
  • 2015 Space Rock Steady
gollark: (U+202E)
gollark: You should try RTL override.
gollark: I guess the cryptic mechanisms of YouTube are able to convince humans to do this.
gollark: This seems like the product of deranged AI, but of course video lags images by quite a lot so it isn't there yet.
gollark: It seems vaguely plausible that if you take large amounts and the biological half life is fairly long, it'll still be around in sleep-inducing amounts for a while, but biology is weird and complex.

References

  1. Gabites, Lee (5 May 1997). "Randy Ciarlante on The Band, The Woodstock All Stars & The Crowmatix". The Band. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  2. Pareles, Jon (2 April 1994). "Review/Pop; From the Band, the Name and Sometimes the Sound". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  3. Terlesky, John (9 January 2003). "Jim Weider finds a remedy to cope with Band's legacy". The Morning Call. Retrieved 6 October 2012.


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