Scott Wilson (musician)

Scott Wilson (born November 25, 1972) is an American musician, songwriter, and music producer from Colorado Springs, Colorado.[1] He is most known for his time as the bass guitarist for the post-grunge band Tantric, having appeared on their 2014 album Blue Room Archives and Mercury Retrograde in 2018, and for being the director of jazz studies at the University of Florida.[2] Scott is now the bass guitarist of Saving Abel and has completed the band's fifth studio album.

Scott Wilson
Wilson performing live in 2017.
Background information
Born (1972-11-25) November 25, 1972
OriginColorado Springs, CO, United States
GenresHard rock, Metal, Post-grunge
Instrumentsbass guitar
Years active1990-Present
Associated actsTantric, Saving Abel, John Michael Montgomery, Montgomery Gentry, Steve Wariner
Websitewww.scottwilsonmusic.com

Tantric (2013-2017)

Wilson served as the bass guitarist for Tantric beginning in 2013, appearing with them on multiple national tours, the band's 2014 album Blue Room Archives, and on Mercury Retrograde in 2018. He was recruited shortly after the production of the band's previous album 37 Channels,[3] and appeared with the band on multiple tours, including the 2016 edition of the Make America Rock Again tour, sharing the stage with Trapt, Saving Abel, Saliva, and more.[4] In an interview with Stone Age Rock Report, Wilson described the tour as "a big success for the band and quite eventful”.[5] In July 2017, Wilson announced publicly that he would be leaving the band, and had already begun working on new material with Saving Abel.[6]

Saving Abel (2017-Present)

Saving Abel announced via their Facebook that Wilson would be replacing Eric Taylor on bass guitar on June 14, 2017. The band is currently working on writing a new record.[7]

gollark: Wikipedia says "stenotype" is faster. I wonder if anyone's implemented that.
gollark: As I said, from what I've heard, it was just designed to stop them jamming by spreading the keys out, not by making you type slower; I shall have to check.
gollark: which is not the same thing.
gollark: Apparently it was designed to put frequently accessed keys far away from each other.
gollark: I've heard that QWERTY was designed to slow you down and I don't think it's true.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.