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The Mavericks Say a Founding Member Has Been Fired for Drug Addiction. The Grammy-winning country-rock group opens up about Robert Reynolds' debilitating opiate addiction. Raul Malo and...
The Mavericks were founded in Miami, Florida, in 1989. [3] Lead vocalist and guitarist Raul Malo met bass guitarist Robert Reynolds, a native of Kansas City, Missouri, [4] when both were performing in local bands.
Robert Reynolds, Trisha Yearwood’s ex-husband, was a bassist and vocalist for The Mavericks until he was fired due to a battle with addiction. Reynolds and Yearwood were married for five...
Between 2007 and 2014, the musician was dealing with an opioid addiction that led to his departure from The Mavericks in 2014 (via Rolling Stone). A year later, his wife at the time Angie Crabtree Reynolds died after a 12-year battle with cancer.
The Mavericks announced the departure of founding member Robert Reynolds in October, and in a new interview, the band claim he was fired due to an ongoing addiction to opiates.
In 1994, Trisha, who was 30 years old at the time, said "I do" to Robert Reynolds, who was a member of the country group The Mavericks. The couple was married for five years before officially calling it quits in 1999.
The Mavericks are one of music's most resilient bands: they soldier on in the face of Raul Malo's cancer diagnosis with new album 'Moon & Stars.'
Miami-bred country-rock mainstays The Mavericks have confirmed that they have parted ways with founding member and bassist Robert Reynolds as a result of ongoing substance abuse issues.
Now let's talk demanding fans! Such was the unconventional launching pad of vocalist/songwriter Raul Malo, guitarist Nick Kane, drummer Paul Deakin and bassist/spokesman Robert Reynolds, together known as the Mavericks.
Along with lead singer Raul Malo, bassist Robert Reynolds and a cast of newer members, the Mavericks have somehow managed to maintain a large audience despite playing a meld of Tex-Mex, lounge jazz, and honky tonk which couldn’t be further away from the modern Nashville country-pop sound.