ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons (pictured above, 2nd from right) will reunite with his former band, Moving Sidewalks, for the first time in 44 years.
The New York Times reports that before ZZ Top became a blues-rock band known for gritty, boogie-based rhythms, sizzling guitar flights, humorous lyrics and luxuriously long beards, it was a Houston-based psychedelic proto-punk garage band called the Moving Sidewalks.
And though its following was decidedly regional at the time – its biggest hit,“99th Floor,” was a chart-topper in Houston for six weeks in 1967 – the group’s recordings can be found on more than half a dozen compilations of 1960s garage band tracks, not to mention the ZZ Top anthology “Chrome, Smoke & BBQ: The ZZ Top Box.”
The group also recently released its own archival trove, “Moving Sidewalks – The Complete Collection”, which brings together its only album, “Flash” (1969), a handful of singles (including a bruising cover of the Beatles’ “I Want To Hold Your Hand”) and several outtakes.
And now, with ZZ Top between tours, Billy Gibbons, the guitarist and founder of both bands, has reconvened the Moving Sidewalks for a gig at B.B. King Blues Club and Grill in Manhattan on March 30.
I’ve been checking out some vintage ZZ Top lately; I mean, the real early stuff – "ZZ Top’s First Album" (’70), "Rio Grande Mud" (’72) and "Tejas" ('76). This is some of the tastiest blues-rock you’ll probably come across; don’t confuse it with the 80’s sound the band perfected with 1983’s “Eliminator.”
As the band celebrates its 40th anniversary this year, listening to this early material has made me curious about the era, including pre-ZZ stuff.
ZZ formed in late ’69 around guitarist Billy Gibbons, who had regional success in Texas with the Moving Sidewalks, whose final lineup was the original ZZ – with Lanier Greig on bass and Dan Mitchell on drums. ZZ’s first single, “Salt Lick” b/w “Miller’s Farm” was released on manager Bill Ham’s own label, before Greig was fired and replaced by Bill Ethridge. Gibbons then invited drummer Frank Beard of the Texas band American Blues to join him, and Beard brought bandmate Dusty Hill into the ZZ fold.
Trivia:“Salt Lick” and “Miller’s Farm” appeared on 2003’s “Chrome, Smoke & BBQ: The ZZ Top Box”
Gibbons history is tres cool: the Moving Sidewalks released a series of singles and one album (“Flash,”in 1968), while opening Texas dates for both The Doors and Jimi Hendrix. Jimi was so taken with Gibbons’ talent, that he not only taught him a bunch of things, he even gave Billy a pink Strat as a momento. Gibbons’ profile was given a boost when Jimi named him as “America’s best young guitar player” during an appearance on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.
Jimi Hendrix with The Moving Sidewalks, Houston, 1967 (Gibbons is 2nd from right in white shirt)
Trivia: legend has it that Gibbons met future ZZ Top manager Bill Ham backstage while partying as a fan at a Doors show in Houston in 1967.
Written by Gibbons, the Sidewalks had a local hit in Houston with “99th Floor,” which was #1 for six weeks.
"Pluto-Sept 31st" has a Hendrix vibe to it and is very representative of the era.
The Moving Sidewalks – Pluto–Sept 31st (1968)
I’ve been searching for audio or video clips on Dusty’s and Frank’s American Blues band; despite the fact they released two albums, I haven’t located anything...just yet.
Speaking of which...I have noticed that it’s pretty hard to find any video (or pictures, for that matter) of ZZ Top before the beards arrived in the late 70s; as it turned out, my hunch was correct: legend has it that the band refused to do any tv appearances through the 70s – ironic, given the band’s success with videos in the 80s.
Here’s a rare clip of the band live on their famous ‘76-‘77 Worldwide Texas Tour; with a stage in the shape of Texas, the show included cactus, live cattle, buffalo and snakes, among other things.