The Return of the Formerly Brothers explained

The Return of the Formerly Brothers
Type:Album
Artist:Doug Sahm, Amos Garrett and Gene Taylor
Cover:The Return of the Formerly Brothers.jpg
Released:1987
Genre:roots music
Length:43:12
Label:Stony Plain Records
Producer:Holger Petersen
Next Title:Live in Japan
Next Year:1991

The Return of the Formerly Brothers is an album by Doug Sahm, Amos Garrett and Gene Taylor, released in 1987 on Stony Plain Records.[1]

The album was recorded after the three musicians played a collaborative set together at the Edmonton Folk Festival in 1986. The album's title was a self-mocking reference to the fact that all three of the musicians were frequently billed by the media as "formerly of" various notable bands. Although the album was credited to the musicians as individuals, some later sources have reified "The Formerly Brothers" into the actual band name of the project.[2] The album was supported by a tour, which also included supporting musicians Bohdan Hluszko on drums and Kit Johnson on bass guitar.

The album won the Juno Award for Best Roots & Traditional Album at the Juno Awards of 1989.[3] In the same year, it was released in the United States on Rykodisc.

The trio released a second album together, Live in Japan, in 1991.[2]

Notes and References

  1. "Roots traditionalists play it safe". Toronto Star, August 14, 1987.
  2. "Clarity, order out of the chaos". The Province, August 28, 1991.
  3. "Blue Rodeo ropes two Junos: And k.d. lang makes it four big ones for the country folks". Toronto Star, March 13, 1989.