The Road Hammers

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
East Bound And Down 03:13 Tools
I'm A Road Hammer 04:07 Tools
Girl On The Billboard 04:08 Tools
I Don't Know When To Quit 03:18 Tools
Nashville Bound 04:27 Tools
Overdrive 03:49 Tools
I've Got The Scars To Prove It 03:32 Tools
Keep On Truckin' 03:57 Tools
The Hammer Goin' Down 05:16 Tools
Mud 00:00 Tools
Willin' 04:09 Tools
Heart With Four Wheel Drive 03:42 Tools
Homegrown 03:07 Tools
Workin' Hard At Lovin' You 03:37 Tools
Mud (feat. Jeffrey Steele) 00:00 Tools
Get On Down The Road 00:00 Tools
Crazy About You 04:03 Tools
I've Been Everywhere 00:00 Tools
Call It A Day 04:03 Tools
Your Love Is The Drug 00:00 Tools
One Horse Town (feat. Tim Hicks) 03:22 Tools
Wheels 03:41 Tools
4 Wheel Drive 03:42 Tools
Flat Tires (Bloopers, Out-Takes 'N Such) 00:00 Tools
Hillbilly Highway 00:00 Tools
All Your Favorite Bands 03:57 Tools
A Girl Who Loves To Truck 02:31 Tools
Cowboy 'Til I Die 03:29 Tools
Gettin' Screwed 03:21 Tools
Goodbye Dust 04:27 Tools
Thank God I'm A Country Boy 02:57 Tools
I'm A Road Hammer (Reprise) 00:00 Tools
Annie 00:00 Tools
Wide Open 00:00 Tools
Roll On Down The Highway (Feat. Fred Turner) 00:00 Tools
No Time For Long Goodbyes 03:28 Tools
Rollin' Of A Ramblin' Man 00:00 Tools
Freewheelin' 03:56 Tools
Down and Dirty 03:56 Tools
Fender Benders 00:00 Tools
Haulin' Ass 00:00 Tools
Detroit Alison 03:57 Tools
You're My Highway 00:00 Tools
Easy Rider 00:00 Tools
The Squeeze 00:00 Tools
One Horse Town 00:00 Tools
I’m A Road Hammer 00:00 Tools
Hammer Goin’ Down 00:00 Tools
Party Girl 03:37 Tools
Yazoo Street Scandal 00:00 Tools
Keep On Truckin’ 03:57 Tools
Flat Tires & Stripped Gears (Outtakes) 00:00 Tools
I’m A Road Hammer (Reprise) 00:00 Tools
Willin’ 00:00 Tools
Rollin’ of a Ramblin’ man 00:00 Tools
The hammer going down 00:00 Tools
Zamboni 00:00 Tools
Heart with Four Wheel 00:00 Tools
You’re My Highway 00:00 Tools
Call it day 04:03 Tools
I'm A Road Hammer [Reprise] 00:00 Tools
Workin Hard At Lovin You 03:37 Tools
Roll On Down The Highway 00:00 Tools
Not Just The Beer Talkin' 00:00 Tools
Willin 00:00 Tools
Flat Tires 00:00 Tools
Keep On Truckin 00:00 Tools
The roadhammers-I'm A Road Hammer 00:00 Tools
Flat Tires Bloopers 00:00 Tools
Hammer Goin’ Down 00:00 Tools
East Bound & Down 00:00 Tools
I’m A Road Hammer 00:00 Tools
Keep On Truckin’ 00:00 Tools
Flat Tires [Bloopers, Out-Takes 'N Such] 00:00 Tools
The Hammer Goin Down 00:00 Tools
Hillbilly Highway (feat. Colt Ford) 00:00 Tools
Heart With 4 Wheel Drive 00:00 Tools
Willin’ 00:00 Tools
One Horse Town ft. Tim Hicks 00:00 Tools
The Road Hammers - I'm A Road Hammer 00:00 Tools
I’m A Road Hammer (Reprise) 00:00 Tools
Absolutely Nothing 00:00 Tools
The Road Hammers - East Bound And Down 00:00 Tools
I've Been Everywhere - Australian Version 00:00 Tools
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Like a big ol' 18-wheeler barreling down across the border, The Road Hammers are an unstoppable musical force, bound and determined to deliver a trailer load of the toughest, coolest, real-est country music to come down that southbound pike in a long, long time. Conceived as a side project by Canadian country star Jason McCoy and forged under the unforgiving reality-TV lights of CMT Canada's "Making the Band," The Road Hammers took on a life of its own from the very beginning. "It was an unplanned pregnancy, and it was an experiment on camera," McCoy says with a laugh. "But we're all real happy with the baby. The thing with the TV series was this; if it flies, you've got a successful band to launch off of this thing, and if it flops, well, everybody likes to see somebody fall." Needless to say, The Road Hammers flew, a lot higher than anyone, even the band members themselves, ever expected. Those band members guitarist/vocalist Clayton Bellamy and the world class, kickass rhythm section of bassist/vocalist Chris Byrne and drummer Corbett Frasz may have come together on camera, but onstage and in the studio the Road Hammers quickly formed the kind of greater-than-the-sum-of-its-parts bond that every musican dreams of. "The first time I saw Clayton Bellamy, he was playing in a beer tent at a Cowboy Stampede," McCoy recalls. "I thought he was a real good player with a good stage presence, and he was obviously a fantastic singer. Exactly what he was doing was exactly what I wanted." With the exhilarating musical and vocal tension between Bellamy's go-for-broke, rock 'n' roll heart and McCoy's deep-fried country soul providing the creative fuel, and the Bryne/Frasz rhythm section hammering it all home, the band's self-titled debut album quickly ascended to the upper reaches of the Canadian country charts, with four songs "East Bound and Down," "Nashville Bound," "Girl On the Billboard" and "I'm a Road Hammer" hitting the Top 10. The latter track, a sweat-drenched, blue-collar anthem with a countrified "We Will Rock You" groove, serves as the band's theme song and begs the musical question, "Just what is a road hammer?" It's a question for which McCoy has a ready reply. "We always say, if you drive 18 wheels, four wheels, two wheels or a unicycle; if you make your living on or near the highway, or if you've just got a restless spirit in your heart, then you're a road hammer," he says. "All of a sudden we've got 20 rows deep standing at the stage and we're going, 'Whoa, I guess we're not the only ones.'" In 2005, the band was nominated for six CCMA awards and walked away with the trophy for Group or Duo of the Year. Road Hammers also picked up a Juno Award for Country Recording of the Year. The following year, the band received two CCMA awards Group or Duo of the Year and Best Video for "Girl On the Billboard," their high-octane remake of Del Reeves' #1 single from 1961. The video for the song also shot to # 1 at CMT Canada. "I loved Del Reeves and 'Girl on the Billboard' when I was a kid, and I knew that all it needed was a modern twist from this band," McCoy says. "It's such a great song, and it's early rap, it really is." Songs just don't get much more country than "Girl On the Billboard" but onstage and on record the Road Hammers rock, and the band has quickly evolved into one of the most respected outfits on the road. At the recent Canadian Country Music Awards in Regina, Saskatchewan, Byrne and Fras were tapped for the CCMA's All Star Band on bass and drums respectively, along with The Road Hammer sidemen Mike Little (keyboards) and Kenny Greer (steel guitar). Mixing steady-rolling standbys from Reeves and Jerry Reed and contemporary trucking classics from artists like Paul Thorn ("Heart With Four Wheel Drive") and Lowell George ("Willin'") with freewheeling originals like "Nashville Bound," "Overdrive" and "I've Got the Scars to Prove It," The Road Hammers is a wild ride that covers a lot of musical ground. While his own decade-long career which has already produced six hit albums, 10 Top- 10 singles, and a slew of awards including Male Vocalist of the Year at the 2001 Canadian Country Music Awards and three SOCAN Song of the Year awards was running on plenty of momentum, McCoy's restless creative spirit moved him to take to a sharp left turn at the end of 2005, and The Road Hammers was born. "I wasn't ready to make another solo record, and I'd had this idea in my head for a long time," he says. "And I always thought The Road Hammers would be such a cool band name." When McCoy mentioned his cool band name and concept to a friend at CMT Canada and the network caught wind of what he was up to, things got real crazy real fast, with cameras filming the fledgling bands every move, from meetings to rehearsals to recording studio to songwriting sessions. The show ran for two successful seasons with Hollywood actor/Vancouver native/The Road Hammers fan Jason Priestley stepping in as director for season two. The Road Hammers were pretty much conceived and born on TV. "In Canada the show certainly helped us," McCoy says. "Everybody in the country scene kind of knew who I was, but the marketing strategy was like a three-headed monster. We had a good radio campaign, we had good TV and we had good print, and it just worked." Word of the band's success at home quickly drifted south to Nashville, and The Road Hammers eventually signed with indie upstart Montage Music Group and headed into the studio with Jason Aldean producer Michael Knox to record some additional tracks and fine-tune their debut for American release. Those tracks, "Working Hard and Loving You," "I Don't Know When to Quit," and "I've Got the Tracks to Prove It," perfectly round out the project with the one-two punch of Nashville-sized hooks and that trademark The Road Hammers intensity. With the bulk of the album recorded in Nashville by McCoy and his longtime co/producer/collaborator Scott Baggett, The Road Hammers put a new coat of paint on a neglected corner of country music's foundation. From Red Sovine's "Phantom 309" to Dave Dudley's "Six Days on the Road" to Kathy Mattea's "18 Wheels and a Dozen Roses," all the way to Garth Brooks' "Calllin' Baton Rouge," trucking songs have been a country music constant. And this band of road hammers know from experience that hard-touring musicians and long-haul truckers have long been kindred spirits. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.