PS....for any of you just seeing this topic for the first time, your CD's waiting for you....

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JERRY--You are absolutely correct...I was the piano player at the Imperial Inn Jam Session for four years and I learned more from Al that anyone else I every worked with! When I first started (I took Clyde Griffins place when he moved back to Georgia) it was AL, me, Archie Francis on drums, and Dale Bennett on bass. Dale went with Henson Cargile (spelling?) and the Tony or Larry Booth started playing bass. (They would swap off every other week for awhile) It was the most enjoyable time of my "music life"--ROBERT LEE CRIGGER--Jerry Hayes wrote:Thanks y'all for the kudos on Al's CD. I wish some of you guys could have known him and heard him play in the sixties & seventies. He was a monster player then and even greater now. At the old Imperial Inn afterhours show & jam in SoCal, Al was the staff guitarist every Friday & Saturday for years. Any night you'd go in there around 3:00 AM you'd find about half of the lead guitar players in LA trying to see if they could get the latest Bruno lick. You'd also find road guitarists who happened to be in town watching Al. That's where I met Jerry Reid who was playing with Mel Tillis at the time and a bunch of others. A good friend of mine (Jimmy Lester) who was a fine player used to go there with me a lot and we'd both watch Al and then compare notes to see if one of us missed something the other didn't. A lot of times it was "Hell, I ain't even gonna try that!" Al was/is one player who can burn up the neck in a live performance and then go to the studio and do some of the most tasteful fills and solos you've ever heard!.... JH in Va.