Pedal steel guitarist
Tom Brumley remains best remembered for his six-year stint as a member of
Buck Owens' famed backing group
the Buckaroos -- his contribution to the
Owens classic "Together Again" is widely celebrated as among the greatest pedal steel solos in country music history. Born in Powell, MO, in 1935, he was the son of gospel giant
Albert E. Brumley, the composer behind such staples as "I'll Fly Away," "Turn Your Radio On," "I'll Meet You in the Morning," and "He Set Me Free" -- all six of the
Brumley children possessed musical talent of their own, and when Al Jr. relocated to Bakersfield, CA, to join the cast of KERO-TV's daily country music showcase The Jimmy Thomason Show,
Tom soon relocated west as well. Al Brumley, Jr. also cut a series of little-noticed singles for Capitol, hiring
Tom to play pedal steel on a 1963 session --
Owens heard the resulting record and immediately extended
Brumley an invitation to join
the Buckaroos alongside guitarist
Don Rich, bassist
Doyle Holly, and drummer
Willie Cantu.
Brumley remained with
Owens through 1969, and his stretch with
the Buckaroos coincides with the creative and commercial zenith of the singer's career, a period that yielded smash hits including "Act Naturally" and "Tiger by the Tail" and effectively crystallized the fabled Bakersfield sound. After leaving
the Buckaroos,
Brumley signed on with
Rick Nelson's
Stone Canyon Band, appearing on the singer's 1972 comeback hit "Garden Party" -- in the years to follow, he also guested on sessions headlined by everyone from
Dwight Yoakam to
Reba McEntire to
Chris Isaak. In 1989,
Brumley retired from touring to rejoin Al Jr. in Branson, MO, where together they appeared at the 76 Music Hall headlining the Brumley Family Music Show, which also included two of
Tom's children. A member of both the Texas Steel Guitar Hall of Fame and the International Steel Guitar Hall of Fame,
Brumley died February 3, 2009, in San Antonio, TX -- he was 73.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi