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The Lamont Cranston Band is an American blues band based in Hamel, Minnesota. [1] It was founded in 1969 by brothers Pat and Larry Hayes and continues today with Pat as the band's frontman. [ 1 ] The band is named after the alter ego of the pulp hero The Shadow .
Also related to this category is the Minnewiki, a Wiki of Minnesota music. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Musical groups from Minnesota . Subcategories
Pat Hayes of American blues band, The Lamont Cranston Band (active since 1969) Pat Hayes of Australian alternative-rock band, Falling Joys (active since 1985) Pat Hayes (rower) (born 1951), American Olympic rower
Larry Hayes, formerly of the Lamont Cranston Band, wrote "Excusez Moi Mon Cheri" which The Blues Brothers recorded. [111] James Samuel "Cornbread" Harris, who collaborated with Augie Garcia and is the father of Jimmy Jam, is one of the area's senior players. [111] [112]
Saunders also worked with The Lamont Cranston Band in Minneapolis. In 1994, Saunders went into a Minneapolis drug rehabilitation facility, where he met Pearl Jam 's Mike McCready . After completing treatment, Saunders and McCready returned to Seattle and formed a band called The Gacy Bunch with vocalist Layne Staley of Alice in Chains and ...
JAM VIII - 1999 Cheap Trick, ELO Part II, Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, Blue Öyster Cult, The Outfield, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Hank Williams Jr., Chris Duarte, Lamont Cranston, REO Speedwagon, Eddie Money, .38 Special, John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown Band, Starship featuring Mickey Thomas, Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels
Dawkins toured in the late 1970s, backed up by James Solberg (of Luther Allison and the Nighthawks) on guitar and Jon Preizler (the Lamont Cranston Band, Luther Allison, The Drifters, and Albert King), a Seattle-based Hammond B-3 organ player.
Pat Hayes of the Lamont Cranston Band played guest harmonica on Strother's reworking of Little Walter's tune, "One Of These Mornings." [10] Another track, "Forty Days and Forty Nights", [11] had earlier appeared as one of Strother's contributions to Ready To Go. [12] The liner notes to the album quoted Lazy Bill Lucas as saying "Mercy, Mr. Percy!"