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Great Caesar's Ghost With G.E. Smith: ...

113K streams

112,961

Incense, Herbs & Oils

41.7K streams

41,743

In the World

13K streams

12,975

In the World

3K streams

2,969

Let The Sunshine In

America

Black Is The Color

Take Cover

Stony Hill

Biography

One of the busiest and best-respected guitarists in the music business, G.E. Smith rarely works as a headliner, but as a session musician, sideman, and musical director, he's worked with some of the most prestigious artists in rock and blues. Known for his versatile style and stinging leads, Smith led the house band for Saturday Night Live from 1985 to 1995, toured with Daryl Hall & John Oates and Bob Dylan (among others), and played on sessions for artists such as David Bowie, Tom Waits, and Mick Jagger. As a frontman, Smith made his debut with the lean, new-wave-inflected rock of 1981's In the World, showed off his blues and roots influences on 1998's Incense, Herbs & Oils, and collaborated with full-bodied R&B vocalist Leroy Bell on 2020's Stony Hill. G.E. Smith was born George Edward Haddad on January 27, 1952 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. Smith first picked up the guitar when he was four years old, and by the time he was seven, he was good enough that his uncle bought him a Martin acoustic guitar. His initial influences were folk artists like Odetta and Josh White, and he later fell under the sway of Bob Dylan. His mother gave him his first electric guitar when he was 11, a Fender Telecaster made in the year of his birth. (He still has the guitar and plays it sometimes.) By the time he was in his mid-teens, Smith was gigging regularly, playing everything from school dances to elaborate stage shows at resort hotels in the Pocono Mountains. He regularly played East Coast venues with a combo called the Scratch Band, and was brought in for the sessions that produced Dan Hartman's 1978 album Instant Replay; when the title track became a hit, Hartman invited him to join him for a tour of Europe where they often simply mimed to the track for television broadcasts. In 1979, Smith joined the band for Gilda Radner's Broadway show Gilda Live; Smith would marry Radner in 1980, and they divorced in 1982. In 1979, Smith signed on to play guitar with Daryl Hall & John Oates, both on the road and in the studio. The timing was fortunate; with the 1980 album Voices, Hall & Oates experienced a major career revival thanks to a run of hit singles (among them "Private Eyes," "Man Eater," "You Make My Dreams," and "Kiss on My List"), and he stayed with them until 1985, when the duo went on hiatus. During his time with Hall & Oates, he found time to cut a solo album, 1981's In the World. In July 1985, Smith was part of the band for the American Live Aid benefit concert, where he backed up Mick Jagger and Tina Turner, among others. In 1985, Smith was tapped to become the new bandleader for the popular sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live, providing the opening and closing music, playing during breaks, and occasionally backing the musical guests. He also frequently invited some of his favorite guitarists to sit in with the band, among them Buddy Guy, Johnny Winter, and Eddie Van Halen. (He also had the honor of co-writing the theme for the recurring sketch "Wayne's World.") In 1992, Smith issued his second solo album, Get a Little, where he was backed by the SNL Band. In June 1988, Smith joined Bob Dylan's road band, often playing shows with Dylan during the week and flying back to New York to do SNL on the weekends; he stayed in the band until October 1990. He was also the musical director for the 1988 Emmy Awards, the Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Concert at Madison Square Garden in 1992, the 1993 Rhythm & Blues Foundation Awards, as well as events at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Smith left SNL in 1995, but as a last hurrah, he cut an album with Buddy Guy using the SNL Band as their backing band, Live: The Real Deal. In 1998, Smith released a tough, bluesy solo effort, Incense, Herbs & Oils, and he continued to work as a musical director for major television events, including the Kennedy Center Honors and the Mark Twain Awards. In 1990, he married vocalist Taylor Barton, and he produced and played on several of her albums, including 1997's Thoroughbred, 1998's Skinny Kat, and 2002's Dry Land. From 2004 to 2006, Smith and his band regularly appeared at Cleveland Browns home games, providing entertainment for football fans and performing his theme song for the team, "Browntown." In 2010, Smith joined Roger Waters for a tour where they staged the classic Pink Floyd album The Wall; Smith was part of the show until 2013. In 2012 and 2016, he was the musical director for the Republican Party's national conventions, though he emphasized to reporters that he himself was not a member of the G.O.P. In 2015, Smith and Barton launched a concert series known as Portraits, in which they gave intimate performances with artists they admire examining the nature of the creative process; guests have included Billy Squier, Richard Thompson, and Ethan Hawke. In 2020, Smith and R&B vocalist Leroy Bell teamed up to record a soulful album titled Stony Hill. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi