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Artist
Ward Dotson once said that he left the band The Gun Club because he got tired of playing for people in black leather who never smiled and he responded by forming the considerably lighter hearted hard rock outfit the Pontiac Brothers. Given this logic, it probably made sense that after The Pontiac Brothers called it a day in 1989, Dotson found himself moving away from the good-natured crunch of the Pontiacs and started indulging his fondness for '60s-style pop and the result was a witty and tuneful new project called the Liquor Giants. The group released their first album in 1992, You're Always Welcome (which was released in some overseas markets as America's #1 Recording Artists), but from the start it was obvious that this was a "group" in only the broadest sense. Dotson, who handled guitar and lead vocals and wrote the lion's share of the material, was the only musician who played on every cut of the album, with a round-robin crew of various L.A. cronies pitching in on bass, drum, and keys (among them former Pontiacs drummer Dave Valdez on bass; drummers Dan Earhart and Bill McGarvey, and keyboard man Dan McGough dominated the supporting cast). The material played down the hard rock stomp of Dotson's work with the Pontiac Brothers in favor of hooky but enjoyably unpolished pop/rock tunes that made no secret of their roots in the sounds of '60s AM radio. You're Always Welcome was released by short-lived indie label Lucky Records, and the second Liquor Giants full-len

Every Other Day at a Time

Up With People

Liquor Giants

Here

Something Special for the Kids

You're Always Welcome
Tributes Or Not Tributes
The Ultimate Power Pop Guide Vol 8
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