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Thomas Edward Conwell, was raised on the Main Line in Bala Cynwyd,
Pennsylvania. He arrived on the local music scene around 1982. As an
aspiring, 20-year old, blues guitarist/student at the University of
Delaware, Conwell fed on a diet of Junior Wells, the Fabulous
Thunderbirds, Slim Harpo, and Bo Diddley.

Conwell’s most formative experience
may have been as a roadie and guitarist with Rockett
88- a band led
by Dr. Harmonica, Mark Kenneally. Rockett 88 was a hell raising,
blues band that gained some local notoriety touring with Delaware
roadhouse blues rocker, George Thorogood. Conwell played with
Rockett 88 for a year and a half then briefly joined Radio Carolyn before starting his own band, The Young
Rumblers.

1984 Tommy Conwell and the Young Rumblers
started as a three-piece band with Chaz Molins on bass and Brad Fish
on drums. The Rumblers played their first professional
gig in the Spring at a party at a student housing project
known as Skid
Row. As luck would have it, Tommy Conwell’s picture
appeared on the cover of the student run newspaper. “We got lucky
from day one, and we got lucky again and again,” says Conwell.

1985 Paul Slivka and
Jim Hannum replaced the original rhythm section.
The band continued to add to its set list which included
"Workout," "Dig It," "Yeah Daddy,"
"Walking on the Water," and "Satisfaction
Guaranteed."

Two new band members became Rumblers
shortly before entering the studio to record Walkin’ on the
Water- guitarist Chris Day and keyboardist, Rob Miller, who
previously played with Robert Hazard and the Hooters.

1986
Walkin’
on the Water
Tommy
Conwell and the Young Rumblers built a reputation of incredible high
energy shows and established themselves as a major draw in the
Philadelphia clubs. The vibrant local music scene hit the roof with
the release of Walkin’ on the Water. The album was a nine
songs and produced by Andy King, bass player from the
Hooters. Philadelphia singer/songwriter, Robert
Hazard, wrote the radio friendly “Love’s on Fire” and
“Everything They Say is True.” Conwell’s songwriting
efforts “Walkin’ on the
Water,”and “Million Pretty Girls”
were about youthful invincibility and struck a chord with his new
audience.

Heavy radio airplay of “Million
Pretty Girls,” “I’m Not Your
Man,” and “Do You Still
Believe in Me” supported the Young Rumblers as the premier live
draw in the club circuit. The independent release sold more than
70,000 copies in the Philadelphia region alone. ``Conwell is all attitude……black
boots, spiked hair, Billy Idol sneer, snarling guitar,'' wrote a Philadelphia
Inquirer reporter. The Philly rock radio station WMMR-FM
93.3,
sponsored a contest in 1987 and received an astounding eleven
million postcards from high school students trying to win a free
concert with the Young Rumblers.

The Young Rumblers nurtured their
live act at bars or cabarets, the Spectrum, and Veteran’s stadium.
The band opened for big names such as the Pretenders, David Bowie,
Bryan Adams, John Lee Hooker, and Nick Lowe.

1988
Rumble
Columbia Records signed Tommy Conwell
and The Young Rumblers and nationally released their major label debut, Rumble.
The album was produced by Rick Chertoff, a journeyman producer who
had worked with Cyndi Lauper, Patty Smyth, and the Hooters. The Rumblers were exposed through
every outlet- Radio airplay, live performance, MTV, Europe’s Music
Television, David
Letterman, Arsenio Hall, and the American Music
Awards. Two singles from the album received heavy airplay, the new
version of “I’m Not Your Man” and the Jules Shear tune, “If
We Never Meet Again.” Columbia
estimated sales of Rumble at 300,000.

1989 After a tour of Europe, the local hype reached its
peak when the band returned to the States for EIGHT sold-out shows in
Philadelphia at the Theatre of the Living Arts on
South Street in April of 1989. The Rumblers premiered several gems
that would unfortunately never appear on vinyl including “Seven
Days to Rock,” “Play Your Music,” the Rolling Stone’s “Hand to
Fate,” and a crowd favorite called, "My Mae
Mae." In late 1989, the band toured Japan.
The rock/blues machine was beginning
to run out of gas.
Conwell recalls the 1989 American Music Awards
performance, “We looked like such rank amateurs. No way did we
belong up there. We were way over our heads.” The young guitarist
had grown disillusioned with the business and insecure with the
quality of his songwriting. back

1990
Guitar
Trouble
TROUBLE.....
best describes the Young Rumbler’s sophomore effort and the
band’s commercial challenges in 1990; Columbia urged Conwell to
work with professional songwriters to improve his original material;
Country-rock guitarist Billy Kemp replaced the popular Chris Day;
Pete Anderson, former producer for Dwight Yoakam, was hired to
produce; Sony’s subsequent purchase of Columbia/CBS affected the
Rumbler’s label relations.
A revamped, “Didn’t Want to Sing the Blues” and “Rock with
You” were the only songs from the 1989/90 live circuit to make
vinyl. Bruce Hornsby and Johnnie Johnson, legendary keyboardist for
Chuck Berry, contributed to Guitar Trouble. The catchy
pop/rock single, “I’m Seventeen” received extensive radio
airplay but a cool response locally.

1991 Conwell surprised the
Philadelphia music scene by sacking the two original rhythm section of the
Young Rumblers, bassist Paul Slivka and drummer Jim Hannum.
The duo resurface on a Jones Purcell album. Later, Paulie
moves to Nashville and embarks on a career as a session musician.

1991
Shout
Movie Soundtrack
Hollywood movie producer, Don
Hehmanand, asked Tommy Conwell to contribute two songs to an
upcoming film starring Jon Travolta. For movie buffs, the flick was
Gwyneth Paltrow’s debut. Tommy wrote two songs, “More Than a
Kiss” and “Devil Call Me Back Home.” The first song was
recorded in Los Angeles with Tommy on vocals backed by Stray Cat
alums, Brian Setzer and Lee Rocker. The other song was recorded with
blues legend Otis Rush on lead vocals with Conwell, Setzer, and
Rocker. back

1992
Neuroticus
Maximus
Conwell's recording contract
was dropped by Sony/Columbia/CBS and picked-up by MCA Records, new
home of the Hooters. Tommy Conwell dropped the name "Young
Rumblers" and his new backing band included Rob Miller on
bass, Billy Kemp on guitar, Danny
Beirne on keyboards, and drummer Andy Kravitz. Tommy assembled a new
lineup to record album#3 tentatively titled "Neuroticus
Maximus." A preview of the new rock material featured on a WMMR live
received a chilly local
response. "Neuroticus Maximus"
was later rejected
by MCA and the band was dropped.
In an interview with Jon
Springer, Conwell reflects on his roller coaster ride, “When I
realized the big time was over, there was a lot of ego deflation.
The scariest part was thinking about getting a job again. I never
wanted someone to say, Hey you are Tommy Conwell! What are you doing
cutting lawns?” back

1996
Buzz Zeemer; Play
Thing
In his hiatus as a professional
recording artist, Conwell plays guitar with a few local bands
including the eccentric Leroy Hawkes and the Hipnotics. In 1996,
Conwell hooks up with a Philly pop songwriter, Frank Brown, formerly
of Flight of Mavis. Record Cellar releases Play Thing, an
independent effort featuring Brown’s witty, sophisticated lyrics
and Conwell delivering dynamite grooves and harmony vocals. The
Inquirer dubs the combo, "Philly’s Travelling Wilbury’s." The
songs “Crush” and “Sometimes” get airplay on U of Penn’s
WXPN and WDRE. The band is a live favorite with
their Cheap Trick cover songs and originals at the Grape Street Pub
in Manayunk, PA. Tommy brings down the house with Let Them Eat
Rock at each performance. back

1997
Tommy Conwell & the Little Kings Sho’
Gone Crazy
Conwell starts a rockabilly
and jump blues band called The Little Kings. Wearing his trademark crown, the
Kings include guitarist Tommy Conwell, tenor saxaphonist Darryl Ray Jenkins
(former member of Philly’s Dynagroove), drummer Paul Ramagano, and bassist Pat
Coppa. In 1997, Llist Records, from
Lancaster, PA, releases Tommy Conwell’s first independent
studio recording titled Sho’ Gone Crazy. The music is
vintage and reminiscent of the big band swing of the 1950’s.
Conwell’s sassy humor is still evident in “Bad Haircut,”
“Josephine,” and “Bottle Woman.”
1997
Season’s
Greetings Philadelphia
Tommy Conwell contributes a
quirky song titled “Kinda Christmasy” to a soundtrack of
holiday tunes featuring local Philly bands such as Marah,
Rolling Hayseeds, the Friggs, Emily Valentine, and Buzz Zeemer.

1998
Delusions
of Grandeur
Buzz Zeemer’s follow-up effort to Play
Thing is more polished and reminiscent of an Elvis Costello or
Squeeze recording. Zeemer plays monthly with live favorites
including “This Town” and “Red Balloon.” The band steps up efforts for major
label exposure with a trip to the legendary Austin, Texas South
by Southwest Music Festival. In 2000, the band runs out of gas
and calls it quits. Frank Brown has surfaces with a new band of
singer/songwriters named Solid For
Sixty.

1999
Young Rumblers Reunion
The five band members who recorded "Rumble" reunite for
their first "reunion" gig at the General Wayne Inn located in Pennsylvania.

2000
Hi
Ho Silver!
The Little Kings, with Tommy and
Darryl, and a new rhythm section released a second album titled Hi Ho Silver!
on Llist Records. The album includes a heart-wrenching version of “Without
Love” which is an old classic recorded by Elvis Presely in 1969.
Tommy Conwell and the Little Kings
are still rockin’ in Philly today. You may discover them playing anything from
an AC/DC cover, to Chuck Berry rockabilly, to classic Young Rumblers. Cheers!
back

2002
Young Rumblers
Reunion
TCYR reunites for a gig at the Stone Balloon in Newark,
Delaware.

2004
Who's Not Forgotten
Tommy records the classic "Long Live Rock" with a band
called the Dipsomaniacs.

Radio DJ
94.1 WYSP-FM on Sunday
evenings from 10pm-11.
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