Was Doc Holliday An Outlaw

Was Doc Holliday An Outlaw 3,5/5 2057 reviews

Doc Holliday are an American Southern rock band from Macon, Georgia, United States, who were named after the American frontier gambler, gunfighter, and dentist, Doc Holliday.

  • And the truth of Doc Holliday’s life is even more intriguing than the legend. As his cousin Mattie said, “He was a much different man than the one of Western legend.” The real Doc Holliday is waiting to be found, but to find him we have to look beyond the legends – and the ghost of Ed Bailey.
  • 10 hours ago  Why Doc Holliday From Wynonna Earp Looks So Familiar. In the form of resurrected outlaws her great-great-grandfather originally put down. Her mission: put.

Career[edit]

Doc Holliday was a gambler, vagabond, gentleman, and gunfighter. A friend to Wyatt Earp, he was deputized in Tombstone, Arizona before the famous gunfight at the O.K. Doc Holliday’s father, Henry B. Holliday was a trained pharmacist who served in several wars, including the Cherokee Indian War, the Mexican-American War, and as a Major.

In 1971 Bruce Brookshire, a guitarist, singer and songwriter, formed a blues band called Roundhouse. Towards the end of that decade, the outfit came to the attention of Molly Hatchet's manager, which led to a renaming as Doc Holliday and securing of a recording contract with A&M Records.[1]

Their initial line-up comprised Brookshire, John Samuelson, Ric Skelton, Eddie Stone and Herman Nixon, who recorded their self-named debut album in 1981. It was produced by Tom Allom and peaked in the Top 30 of the Billboard 200. This was followed the next year by Doc Holliday Rides Again, which also used the services of Allom plus David Anderle. The band went on to share tours with Black Sabbath, Gregg Allman, and Molly Hatchet amongst others.[1] Doc Holliday's third album, Modern Medicine, was produced by Reinhold Mack and alienated some of their existing fan base for its change in musical direction.[2] The band broke up at this time due to the perceived lack of commercial success, but reformed to release the harder edged Danger Zone on the Metal Masters label in 1986. In 1989, the live album, Song for the Outlaw - Live, also garnered good reviews.[2] After a quite few years, from the early 1990s, the band continued to record and tour, mainly in Europe.[1]

Original lineup 1981-1983[edit]

  • Bruce Brookshire - Lead guitar, lead vocals
  • Eddie Stone - Keyboards, vocals
  • John Samuelson - Bass guitar, vocals
  • Ric Skelton - Lead guitar, vocals
  • Herman Nixon - Drums

Band members (active)[edit]

  • Eddie Stone - Lead vocals, keyboards, guitar
  • Michael Gilbert - Lead guitar, vocals
  • Tim Elliott - Guitar, vocals
  • Rob Walker - Guitar, musical collaborator
  • Will Gerbich - Bass guitar, vocals
  • Dave Hanowitz - Drums
  • Ross Lindsey - Drums (he joined the band for the November 28, 2014, show in Macon, Georgia and played on their June 6, 2015 performance in Byron, Georgia.)

Discography[edit]

Studio albums[edit]

  • Doc Holliday (1981)
  • Doc Holliday Rides Again (1982)
  • Modern Medicine (1983)
  • Danger Zone (1986)
  • Son of the Morning Star (1993)
  • Legacy (1996)
  • A Better Road (2001)
  • Good Time Music (2003)
  • Rebel Souls (2006)
  • From The Vault (2011)[3]

Live albums[edit]

  • Song for the Outlaw – Live (1989)
  • 25 – Absolutely Live (2008)

Compilations[edit]

  • Gunfighter: The Best of the '90s (2003) compilation of Son of the Morning Star and Legacy plus two previously unreleased tracks.

See also[edit]

Holliday

References[edit]

  1. ^ abc'Doc Holliday Biography & History'. AllMusic. Retrieved November 14, 2019.
  2. ^ abColin Larkin, ed. (1995). The Guinness Who’s Who of Heavy Metal (Second ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 111. ISBN0-85112-656-1.
  3. ^'Doc Holliday Album Discography'. AllMusic. Retrieved November 14, 2019.

External links[edit]


Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Doc_Holliday_(band)&oldid=1004105576'

How Fast Was Doc Holliday

In the opening scenes of the movie “Tombstone,” Wyatt Earp asks his brother Virgil if he happened to see anything of Doc Holliday while he was in Prescott on his way to Tombstone. Virgil replies, “Yeah. He had a streak when we left, him and Kate.” The scene soon cuts away to show Holliday sitting at cards in a saloon, with a monumental painting of a nude woman on the wall behind him and his elegantly dressed Hungarian mistress, Kate Elder, at his side. On the green baize table in front of him are the scattered paraphernalia of poker: paperboards, poker chips and silver coins, a gold pocket watch. And across the table, his anger seething, sits gambler Ed Bailey who is clearly losing this hand.

“Why, Ed Bailey,” says Doc in his best gentlemanly Southern drawl while he gives a tap to the pearl-handled pistol in his pocket, “are we cross?”

“Them guns don’t scare me,” replies Ed Bailey darkly. “‘Cause without them guns you ain’t nothin’ but a skinny lunger.”

WasDoc

“Ed, what an ugly thing to say. I abhor ugliness. Does this mean we’re not friends anymore? You know, Ed, if I thought you weren’t my friend, I just don’t think I could bear it.” And to show his cordial intent, Doc pulls out his pistols and lays them down on the table with the coins and the poker chips. “There. Now we can be friends again.”

Ed Bailey knifing scene from the movie “Gunfight at the OK Corral”

But the words only enrage Ed Bailey, who lunges across the table at Doc – and gets a knife slid into his side by the smiling doctor while Kate pulls a derringer to cover their retreat. It’s one of the classic scenes from the legend of Doc Holliday: the knifing of Ed Bailey in a Fort Griffin, Texas, saloon – only this time set in the Arizona Territory capital of Prescott. The change of venue was just a convenience for the sake of the film, letting the audience know two important things in this opening scene of Doc Holliday: he was a cold-blooded killer and he passed through Prescott on his way to Tombstone. And as long as those two things are true, does it really matter where the knifing happened?

What matters is that the knifing of Ed Bailey likely didn’t happen anywhere – not in Fort Griffin, Texas, nor in Prescott, Arizona, nor any of the other towns Holliday visited in his Western travels. In fact, the story of the Ed Bailey knifing was never even told during Holliday’s lifetime. The first appearance of that story comes nine years after Doc Holliday’s death, in an 1896 article in the San Francisco Enquirer. The article claims to be an interview with Wyatt Earp, who was in San Francisco at the time, and tells a gory tale about Doc slicing up Ed Bailey and leaving him for dead. Problem is, the story as told is so flowery and wildly descriptive that it’s hard to believe it came from the famously laconic and spare-on-words Wyatt Earp. And it may have been this very article that Wyatt was referencing years later, when he said:

“Of all the nonsensical guff which has been written around my life, there has been none more inaccurate or farfetched than that which has dealt with Doc Holliday. After Holliday died, I gave a San Francisco newspaper reporter a short sketch of his life. Apparently the reporter was not satisfied. The sketch appeared in print with a lot of things added that never existed outside the reporter’s imagination…”

Was the Ed Bailey knifing one of those imaginary incidents? As far as researchers can determine, poor Ed Bailey himself never existed, as his name appears nowhere in historical record. And how did Doc Holliday manage to kill a man who didn’t exist?

“Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal”: Some truth, lots of legend

How Did Doc Holliday Meet Wyatt Earp

But although the Ed Bailey story is likely just the imaginings of a reporter looking for a good story, when author Stuart Lake included it in his 1931 historical novel, Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal, the story became legend. Now it’s one of the pillars of the Doc Holliday myth, and even though the pillars are sunk into very shallow ground the incident is used to show how Holliday had turned from a gentleman to a killer. It’s a convenient example – but not real history.

The problem with legends is that if we believe they’re true, we stop looking for the truth. And the truth of Doc Holliday’s life is even more intriguing than the legend. As his cousin Mattie said, “He was a much different man than the one of Western legend.” The real Doc Holliday is waiting to be found, but to find him we have to look beyond the legends – and the ghost of Ed Bailey.

Fun Links:
“Tombstone” Movie Trailer
“Tombstone” The Knifing of Ed Bailey
Prescott’s Whiskey Row
Fort Griffin, Texas
Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal

Click the book cover below for more info or to order.