Steve Gorman | |
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Gorman (center) performing with fellow members of The Black Crowes, Sven Pipien and Chris Robinson, at the 2008 Newport Folk Festival.
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Background information | |
Born |
August 17, 1965 (age 51) Muskegon, Michigan, U.S. |
Genres |
Rock Blues |
Instruments | Drums, percussion |
Associated acts |
The Black Crowes Stereophonics Trigger Hippy |
Website |
blackcrowes triggerhippy |
Steve Gorman (born August 17, 1965, Muskegon, Michigan) is an American musician and sports talk radio host. Gorman is best known as the drummer of the American country rock/blues rock band The Black Crowes. He spent time as the drummer for British rock band Stereophonics. He currently serves as host on his own radio show Steve Gorman Sports! on Fox Sports Radio.
While a fourth grader at Benfield Elementary School in Severna Park, Maryland, Gorman joined the band and played the snare drum. Like so many others, he was initially inspired and moved when he first listened to the Beatles. After moving to Hopkinsville, Kentucky in 1975, Gorman went to high school (University Heights Academy) with Clint Steele, an aspiring guitarist. Gorman later attended college and was a broadcasting major at Western Kentucky University but still found time to play, practice, and stay in touch with music while working as a Resident Assistant in North Hall. He played drums with several Bowling Green bands including Alfred & The Stately Wayne Manors, Swale, A Tribute to Elvis and the Ricky Nelson Story. Finally, in 1986, Steve, along with friends Brent Woods and Jon Vanover, formed Lack of Interest and recorded a four-song demo tape titled "Content to Sit and Stare" in April 1986 at the University Heights Academy gymnasium.
In February 1987, he joined his high school friend Clint Steele in Atlanta, Georgia to drum for Steele's band, Mary My Hope. While in Atlanta he became good friends with Chris Robinson and his brother Rich. When the Robinson brothers lost their drummer Jeff Sullivan to the band Drivin n Cryin, Gorman was asked to sit in and play on "Mr. Crowes Garden's" demo session for A&M records. He ended up playing with the renamed Black Crowes for their first nine albums over 15 years. In late 2001, he decided to leave the band to pursue other avenues and relocated to Los Angeles. In 2005, he rejoined the reformed Black Crowes.