Electric blues and rock fans searching for a new guitar hero need look no further.

Biography

In just a few years the Terry Quiett Band has become a mainstay across America’s Heartland. From 6th Street in Austin…to the windy city of Chicago…through the mountains of Colorado…across the deserts of Arizona…jamming down on Beale Street in Memphis…wherever they go the TQB has won over young and old with their energetic and soulful sound.

Along the way they have forged relationships with Grammy-winning studio masters Jim Gaines and Blaise Barton, who have worked with legends of the blues industry such as Stevie Ray Vaughan, Carlos Santana, Steve Miller Band, George Thorogood, Luther Allison, Albert Collins, Pinetop Perkins, Willie Smith, Michael Burks and many more.

Jim, Blaise and Terry first teamed up on the 2011 release Just My Luck (on Lucky Bag Records) exposing the Terry Quiett Band to a national audience for the first time. By the end of 2011 it was listed as #74 on the top 100 played CD's on the Roots Music Report Blues Chart for the year. They joined forces again in 2012 to record the live CD A Night at the Orpheum which received fantastic reviews from the blues world.

In 2014 found Terry and Blaise once again collaborating with Blaise mixing the studio album Taking Sides which was released March 25, 2014. Taking Sides features 12 original songs (plus a bonus track of the classic Let’s Get It On) and is split into two distinct sides. Side one showcases the rootsy slidework for which Terry is fast becoming known - while side two finds the band tapping into a bluesy, contemporary twist on vintage Soul and R&B. Two perspectives from one of the most promising artists on the blues scene.

The band has spent the last several years on hiatus, but are jumping back into the scene with a brand-new EP of original music entitled Truth & Intent to be released on May 16, 2020 at the historic Orpheum Theatre in Wichita, KS. This album finds Terry reuniting with the original power trio from Cut the Rope and Just My Luck, featuring his long-time drummer Rodney “Shotgun” Baker and bassist Rev. Aaron Underwood. Truth & Intent contains a batch of energetic and groovy tunes TQB fans will find a fresh extension of the soulful blues rock they love.

Watch for select shows across the Midwest in support of the new album Truth & Intent.

 
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Terry Quiett

Vocals, Guitar

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Rodney Baker

Drums

Aaron Underwood

Bass

 

TQB has shared the stage with an impressive array of music legends including:

  • Buddy Guy

  • Robert Cray

  • B.B. King

  • Jonny Lang

  • Kenny Wayne Shepherd

  • Johnny Winter

  • Walter Trout

  • Robin Trower

  • Tab Benoit

  • Robert Randolph and the Family Band

  • Bernard Allison

  • Big Head Todd and the Monsters

  • .38 Special

  • Dave Mason

  • Los Lonely Boys

 

Taking Sides Review

Electric blues and rock fans searching for a new guitar hero need look no further than Terry Quiett, roaring from the heartland like a tornado on his latest, greatest release. Ten albums since 1999 have proven his staying power while allowing him to develop his exceptional talents as a singer, songwriter and virtuoso instrumentalist in preparation for “overnight success” he has earned and deserves.

Twelve scorching, soulful originals, along with one classy cover, range from raw country blues to grooving R&B driven hard by bassist Nathan Johnson and drummer Rodney Baker and augmented by “Miss’ippi” Hal Reed (harp), Scott Williams (keyboards and tenor sax), Brad Turgeon (trumpet) and Jordan Northerns (trombone). The stomping “Come the Morning” with Quiett ripping on his resonator guitar and Reed matching on “Mississippi Saxophone” contains the sly demand “Be gone come the morning, mama, don’t call my bluff. Oh, but before you take off and start your new life, I need to get me your jelly roll for one more night.” “Nothing At All” continues the musical onslaught, revealing Quiett as the new “King of the Slide,” with chilling commentary: “Down to the ground in a fiery rain, some live a lie, others kill for nothing.” The dark remake of his earlier “Cut the Rope” finds Quiett employing a wah pedal and his slashing slide to intensify the stinging confessional lyrics “My lies are growing quite thin, you see right through each of them.”

Wheelhouse Blues” sports a sinewy shuffle under Quiett’s burning vocal passion “Well, I walked out of my wheelhouse and I won’t back down…stepped up on a new road, put my feet back on solid ground,” his soaring slide expressing his resolve. The heavy rocking “Voodoo Queen” hypnotizes with a guitar/bass “spell” and the lyrics “Waiting for the voodoo queen to make her move and turn this heart to clay. Waiting for that conjurer to pull my pin and siphon off this pain” while building drama to the uplifting choruses. Johnson and Baker provide unexcelled support and a groove that will not quit on “Weak-Minded Man” that warns “Weak-minded man, you worry too much about ‘bout your pride. Weak-minded man, you’re taking too long to decide” with uncommon harp accompaniment.

Quiett bares his naked soul on the broken-hearted ballad “A Fool Should Know” with “The moment you left, I knew I’d regret every word I said to you. The instant I heard that old car in reverse, I feared the worst had come true” in a stunning vocal and guitar benchmark. The gently shuffling minor key “Two Hearts” produces an aural dreamscape with the highly creative, intelligent lyrics “Can’t you see what the problem is? The quantum mechanics of love can’t be solved with your formula. Some mysteries just don’t add up.” The strutting, horn-inflected R&B “Gimme Some” drips eroticism with “I been thinking a long time about how good it must feel to have your legs wrapped around my neck, Long slow kisses along those thighs” in a vocal tour-de-force.

The undulating, funky “I Come Running” highlights the poetic vocals “You can’t wait for tonight, well watch me pull down the sun. You ask for a pound, well watch me bring back a ton.” Dramatic stop-time and snappy syncopation in the defiant “Get Back On” features the witty lyric “I’m your right hand man playing a left hand lead. Oh, but don’t get me wrong, there ain’t no discouraging me” and a razor-like solo. “You Can’t Come Back” uses rocking R&B for Quiett to accuse “At last woman, I can see what all the trouble’s about. I see the stains on your skirt, I see the rip in your blouse,” his spectacular, unleashed, extended solo a centerpiece speaking wordless volumes about loss and regret in a devastatingly emotional performance about which other musicians can only envy. Closing the set soothingly is Marvin Gaye’s classic “Let’s Get It On” with Quiett making the sensuous lyrics ring as true as his velvety guitar licks.

Terry Quiett has created a modern masterpiece of scarifying, testifying, exulting blues, every track an exciting, inspiring musical statement that embeds itself in the mind and body. Talent this extraordinary only comes along every so often.

- Dave Rubin, KBA recipient in Journalism