Jimmie Dale Gilmore

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Jimmie Dale Gilmore
Gilmore performs at the 2014 Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival
Gilmore performs at the 2014 Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival
Background information
Born (1945-05-06) May 6, 1945 (age 78)
Amarillo, Texas, U.S.
GenresCountry, progressive country[1]
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar
Years active1972–present
LabelsHighTone
Elektra
Rounder
New West
Websitejimmiegilmore.com

Jimmie Dale Gilmore (born May 6, 1945)[2] is an American country singer-songwriter currently living in Austin, Texas.[3]

Life and career

Gilmore is a native of the

honky tonk brand of country music that his father played. In the 1950s, he was exposed to the emerging rock and roll of other Texans such as Roy Orbison and Lubbock native Buddy Holly, as well as to Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley, the latter two being in the line up at a concert he attended on October 15, 1955, at Lubbock's Fair Park Coliseum. He was profoundly influenced in the 1960s by The Beatles and Bob Dylan and the folk music and blues
revival in that decade.

With Joe Ely and Butch Hancock, Gilmore founded The Flatlanders.[4] The group has been performing on and off since 1972. The band's first recording project, from the early 1970s, was barely distributed. It has since been acknowledged, through Rounder's 1990 reissue (More a Legend Than a Band), as a milestone of progressive, alternative country.[2] The three friends continued to reunite for occasional Flatlanders performances, and in May 2002, released a long-awaited follow-up album, Now Again, on New West Records.[2]

After briefly attending

Denver, Colorado, studying metaphysics with teenaged Indian guru Prem Rawat, also known as Maharaji. In the 1980s, he moved to Austin, where his first solo album, Fair & Square, was released in 1988.[4]

In 1994, Gilmore teamed up with Willie Nelson to contribute "Crazy" to the AIDS benefit album Red Hot + Country produced by the Red Hot Organization.

Gilmore appeared as himself in Peter Bogdanovich's 1993 film The Thing Called Love, a love story about young songwriters in Nashville. He also had a small but memorable acting role in the 1998 movie The Big Lebowski. He portrayed a bowler named Smokey, an aging, emotionally "fragile" pacifist threatened with a pistol by Walter Sobchak, "The Dude" Lebowski's best friend and sidekick (John Goodman). He has also been a guest on The Tonight Show, with host Jay Leno, the Late Show with David Letterman, Garrison Keillor's A Prairie Home Companion on NPR, and the Fresh Air radio program with Terry Gross. Gilmore's son, Colin Gilmore, is also a singer–songwriter based in Austin.

Gilmore's song "Braver Newer World" is featured in the 1995 Noah Baumbach film Kicking and Screaming. In 2005, Gilmore released Come on Back,[2] an album of songs his father loved. Gilmore said of the album, "This new album is a compilation of recordings of some old songs that my dad loved. I love them too, and it is a project very dear to me." His version of "Mack the Knife" from the album One Endless Night is on the soundtrack of Jacques Audiard's 2009 film, A Prophet (Un Prophète).

Gilmore has been nominated for three Grammys, Best Contemporary Folk Album for Spinning Around The Sun in 1993, Best Contemporary Folk Album Braver Newer World in 1996, and Best Traditional Folk Album Come On Back in 2005.[5]

Discography

See also

References

  1. ^ "Progressive country". AllMusic. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Jimmie Dale Gilmore | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
  3. ^ "Jimmie Dale Gilmore". MTV. Retrieved January 12, 2011.
  4. ^ .
  5. ^ "Recording Academy Grammy Awards", Grammy.com, Retrieved Feb. 14, 2018.

Further reading

External links