For artists like George Thorogood, or any music act really, making it all comes down to that one big break. Itâs usually a first single that gets a ton of airplay, goes viral and, well, a career is launched.
For Thorogood, it happened pretty much like it has for so many before and after him. Rejection, tenacity and right-place-at-the-right-time luck.
Thorogood is and always has been a blues guy. He loves mining obscure numbers and repurposing them in a jacked-up signature way of his band, The Destroyers: harder, faster, louder.
Thatâs what he was doing when his first record label found him, signed him, and put him on a relentless tour schedule in the late 1970s.
His eponymous âGeorge Thorogood and The Destroyersâ in 1977 and âMove It On Overâ the following year â both on Rounder Records, both going Gold â hit at just the right time. Disco was king, but not all worshipped strobe lights and leisure suits.
âWe had a couple things going for us when we released our first two records. They were very raw. Very low budget. Rounder didnât have a lot of money,â Thorogood told Cowboy State Daily. âBut they caught peopleâs attention.
âDuring that time the disco craze was very big and a lot of people were a little down on that for some reason. I don't know why. And we were embraced as something different.â
Rock and roll has made similar runs. Birthed out of teen rebellion to the big band sounds of the 1940s, the genre roars back into the mainstream following temporary hiatuses.
A disco slapback helped Thorogoodâs Destroyers get off the ground. Seattleâs grunge scene was the alternative answer to the over-synthed new wave â80s decade.
Whenever mainstream pop has become too refined, artists like Thorogood swing the pendulum back to music at its rawest.
Move It On Over
Known in certain circles, Thorogood was still searching for that signature song, the big hit that would define him.
More than five years knocking around on the road playing mainly old blues standards, The Destroyers were just treading water when the â80s came and still opening for bigger bands like the Rolling Stones.
Maybe âJust Can't Make It,â the Hound Dog Taylor cover off âMore George Thorogood and The Destroyersâ in 1980, was destined to be the bandâs defining number.
It was then Thorogood finally put words to a blues riff the band had always warmed up with during sound checks. The best songs come easy and Lonesome George said âBad to the Boneâ wrote itself in about two hours.
Still, Thorogood never envisioned it a song he would perform. He first shopped it around, beginning with his idol.
Pitched to Muddy Waters as something that would fit nicely into the legendary bluesmanâs catalogue as a modern-day version of his 1955 standard âMannish Boy,â he got nowhere. Watersâ people reportedly told the brash 27-year-old white guy from Delaware to pound sand.
Thorogood thought it reverse-discrimination, but the rejection lit a fire. He recorded it himself, released it on 1982âs âBad to the Boneâ and, though it was a slow burn, the song solidified Thorogood into the annals of boogie-woogie blues.
I Drink Alone
Thorogoodâs sweat-drenched live shows are still high energy even as the showman turned 74 this year.
The Destroyers play an average of 70-75 shows a year these days. Thatâs a far cry from 1981 when George Thorogood and The Delaware Destroyers played an unimaginable 50 states in 50 days.
The ambitious 50/50 tour was nuts.
Other than flights to and from shows in Hawaii and Alaska, George and company drove, sometimes up to 500 miles a day, in a converted checker taxi. It conjures up images of the Bluesmobile (1974 Dodge Monaco sedan) used by the Blue Brothers in their 1980 Universal Pictures film.
The group was originally trying to play at the Wyoming State Penitentiary in Rawlins, Wyoming. The show ended up getting moved to Casper.
âWhen we played 50 states in 50 days, we played in Casper,â Thorogood remembered. âIt was crazy. When we played there, Casper was about 50,000 people. We played a venue that seats about 2,000 and we drew 1,900 people.
âThatâs a pretty good percentage for the amount of people that lived in that town at that time.â
Thorogood, who is an imposing 6-foot-2, paces himself more these days. The former baseball player was once a minor league standout in the 1970s before an axe replaced his bat.
âMy routine [on the road] is to try to get into a horizontal position as often as possible. You can take that any way you want, alright?â Thorogood said. âLook, we have an excellent crew around us. The best thing for all involved is to leave Thorogood alone. Keep him away from other people.
âI have a tendency to be pretty much of a blabbermouth. And you know, I'm getting up there in years and I like people. I like to talk to them. But I gotta save my voice and energy for the show. So, they try to isolate me as much as possible. Get as much rest and liquids as I can. It sounds boring but it is necessary.â
Thorogood says he is looking forward to a return to Wyoming. Itâs been a while.
The band is in Park City, Utah, the night before it will descend upon Casper at the Ford Wyoming Center on Aug. 14.
âWhat do you call Wyoming? I know you got a cowboy on the license plate. Whatâs your moniker over there, the Cowboy State?â he asked.
Willie And The Hand Jive
Thorogood hasnât set foot in a recording studio in a while. But his hits live on and a robust touring schedule proves he is still in demand.
âI'm very fortunate over the years that our music has never really gone away,â Thorogood said. âWhen we started, there was no MTV. When MTV came along, we had the right song at the right time: âBad to the Bone.â
âA few years after that we had classic rock radio. And we rode the gravy train of that. I don't deny it. Now there is Sirius radio, which is all over the world and in every category. I've heard songs on there by our band that I forgot I even recorded.
âYou have so many more outlets for exposure now. Due to that we have been able to retain some kind of image. Of course, not on a level of a Lady Gaga or Taylor Swift. Nobody can be up to that level. But weâve been able to maintain.â
Thorogood shows continue to pack punch.
His tour is less reunion garbage like some rock band rebrands. George can still lay it down. Drummer Jeff Simon has been there since Day One. Bassist Bill Blough played on the first album and never left. The newest Destroyers, Jim Suhler (lead guitar) and Buddy Leach (sax), still count 55 years with the band between them.
Thorogood says he never tires of playing the same material night after night. âI Drink Alone,â âGear Jammer,â âIf You Donât Start Drinkinââ and âGet a Haircutâ are all predictable staples on the setlist.
Two-thirds of the way through the night, Thorogood will likely cup his ear and ask the crowd what they came to hear before hammering the opening notes of âBad to the Bone.â
âThe other cats kind of stick to what they did originally [on the records]. As time goes on, my memory fades as to how I originally did it, so it evolves into something different which is nice,â Thorogood told Cowboy State Daily. âAnd youâll get very few solos, anyway, from me.
âLetâs face it, I'm a rhythm guitar player and a slide guitar player. Jimmy Suhler is brilliant at what you would call conventional rock/blues lead guitar. Thatâs just not me.
âI've heard some people come to see our show and go, âWell, Thorogood didnât play that many solos. He relied on his other guitar player too much.â I say, âNo, you don't get it. I don't play lead guitar. I'm not any good at it. I'm rhythm and slide. Jimmy plays lead. He sticks to the main thing. I just get there and let it go, and let nature takes its course.ââ
No Particular Place To Go
George Thorogood and the (Delaware) Destroyers are survivors. Plugging away at a genre that has never truly gone away. Thorogood, rhythm and blues. Theyâre one in the same and as enduring as the Mississippi Delta.
Theyâve been punks to Donna Summerâs âHot Stuff.â
âComing out of disco there was also this punk rock thing happening. We would, believe it or not, draw a small amount of punk rock audiences who thought we were a punk rock band,â Thorogood said. âI thought, âI don't know about thatâ but every dollarâs green, right?â
Fast forward to now. With programs Ableton and Pro Tools, the computer age gives anyone with purchase power the ability to record in their bedroom, market and distribute with a click.
âIn this day and age where you are recording into a computer. Somethingâs gained and somethingâs lost. Technology might be brilliant, but there might be some character lost from the days when you recorded with one mic in the studio and the amps were kinda sub-par,â Thorogood said. âSometimes that added to the charm of the music.â
Itâs hard to imagine the original Destroyer being anything but raw. Could he fit in todayâs Gaga world?
âIt would be interesting if I were starting out now. I won't say I prefer the times I came up in, because with all the exposure you can give yourself nowadays from your own house,â Thorogood pondered. âYou can make you own video, make your own album.
âThat would have been interesting to not have to rely on a record company or rent a studio, which costs a lot of money. It poses an interesting thought.â
Jake Nichols can be reached at jake@cowboystatedaily.com.