This video includes a few raw camera clips and the unedited, raw interview from my personal archive of TJ Tindall cutting the
In The Pocket track "
Disco Inferno" for the
Essential Songs of
Philadelphia series - see more at BluewireMedia.com & SongsInThePocket.org
From
XPN -
The Key:
Inducted twice into the Philadelphia
Music Alliance’s
Walk of Fame as a member of
MFSB and the
Salsoul Orchestra,
T.J. Tindall played on numerous hits born out of the legendary
Sound of Philadelphia. According to his publicist, he was 65 and died suddenly.
“He was a vital member of MFSB’s famed rhythm section, which laid the foundation for the Sound of Philadelphia,” said
PMA Board Chairman
Alan Rubens. “You can hear his guitar on so many great hits out of Philadelphia from the ‘
70s and ‘80s, from ‘Disco Inferno’ to “
You’ll Never Find Another Love Like
Mine.”
Tindall’s long list of credits is mind blowing. He was a very soulful guitarist who played on over 30 gold and platinum hits produced by legendary “
Sound of Philadelphia” architects Kenneth Gamble and
Leon Huff (
Gamble & Huff) for artists such as the
O’Jays, the
Trammps,
Lou Rawls,
Teddy Pendergrass,
Harold Melvin and the
Blue Notes,
Blue Magic, the
Intruders, and the
Three Degrees. He also played and recorded with
Bonnie Raitt, the
Chambers Brothers, the Jacksons,
Robert Palmer, the
Temptations, and many others. More recently, the
Trenton, New Jersey, native came out of retirement to play and record with
In the Pocket, the
Philly tribute collective led by drummer
David Uosikkinen of
The Hooters.
Tindall got his start in the
Trenton music scene in the
1970s, as guitarist for local legends
Duke Williams and the
Extremes, and went on to play guitar with the Philly band,
The Edison Electric Band.
In a
2013 story about him in Princetoninfo.com, writer
Alana Shilling had this to say:
TJ’s break into the
R&B; scene did not come easily. He describes constant trips to the studio of top
Philadelphia soul music producers,
Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff, begging for a chance to play. Bemused by the past, Tindall remembers, “There I was, this white hippy guy with long hair asking to play for an all black rhythm section of the Philadelphia soul movement.let’s just say they had their doubts.”
In 2013 when MFSB was inducted into the Philadelphia Music Alliance Walk of Fame, Tindall spoke with
The Philadelphia Tribune about his experience playing in the band:
“
It’s funny,” said Tindall. “My feeling about being part of that whole thing is, I don’t think you could buy an experience like that, so whatever we got or didn’t get, just to be part of that for that
10, 15 years was just unforgettable. It was one of the major points of you life, so I’m just extremely thankful that I was involved in that.” Eli concurred saying, “I was fortunate and blessed to have been part of it, really. It was a great training ground, it was better than any kind of university, just being there. I did learn from them. I mean,
Gamble and Huff were good producers, and you kind of learn what to do and what not to do also, at the same time.”
Tindall’s daily studio pilgrimages paid off, and in
1970 he finally got his chance to perform, by accident or more accurately because of an accident. A guitarist for
Edison Electric Band had a motorcycle accident, and Tindall was brought in to cover and, he says, was immediately adopted by the music crowd.
Below, listen to some of
T.J.’s work including a single he cut when he was in The Edison Electric Band, the classic “Disco Inferno,” a video about In The Pocket’s remake of “Disco Inferno,” featuring T.J., and a live television performance with
The Chamber Brothers on the
Mike Douglas Show from
1972.
Our condolences to his family and friends. More information will become available as we get it.
- published: 28 Jan 2016
- views: 696