The Veterans Of Rock and Roll

Title taken a local Atlanta radio station’s theme weekend, featuring artists who are veterans of the United States armed forces. Which ones can you think of? I’ll start off with:

Elvis Presley (drafted)

M.C. Hammer
What other musicians ave veterans? (British and European Veterans included)

Jimi Hendrix

Normie Rowe

Paul Revere of Raiders’ fame.
He was in the army in the early 1960’s.
Archie “Tighten Up” Bell was in the army.(late 1960’s I think).
Edwin Starr “War - what is it good for?” was in the army in the early 1960’s.
Jimi Hendrix was a paratrooper, again in the early 1960’s.
The group “Essex” (“Easier Said Than Done”) were ALL members of the US Marine Corps. (The group included 2 women by the way).
I don’t want to monopolize this so let’s here from some other SD Message Board folks.

John Fogerty

Country Joe MacDonald

Wow someone posted Jimi Hendrix before I did.
Well, I forgot to highlight his name (no sense now) but at least I’ll show
the Essex (“Easier Said Than Done”) one more time.
(Got lazy and didn’t use the preview button.)
:smack:

Johnny Cash was in the Air Force and Jerry Garcia was in the army.

Hey wolf_meister, I remember reading that Paul Revere was granted conscientious objector status due to family religious beliefs and spent his time as a cook in a mental hospital. Don’t know if that counts as being a veteran.

John Prine was in the army, stationed in Germany.

Roy Harper was in the RAF, and John Mayall was an army clerk in Korea, which makes him the British Radar O’Riley.

some “brief stints”

Mike Nesmith, The Monkees, Air Force.

Willie Nelson, Army

Kris Kristofferson (father was an Air Force General), Army (pilot)

Link Wray is a Korean War vet.
http://www.rockabillyhall.com/LinkWray.html

Waits
I believe people who actually serve in the armed forces (including conscientious objectors) are considered veterans.
I know Paul Revere has participated in the last couple of years in the “Ride to The Wall”. Here’s the link:
www.paulrevereraiders.com
He’s more of a veteran than John Wayne ever was.

The greatest 60s band of all time, The Monks came together when they were stationed in Germany.

John Joseph of the Cro-Mags was AWOL from the navy for years when his bandmate Harley Flanagan turned him in so he could get control of the direction of the band.

Jon

Ice-T was in the Army - paratroopers I think.

Micky Hart of the Grateful Dead was in the Air Force.

Tough thread. Excepting Ice-T - who was in the Army from 1979 - 1981 - these are all draftees from like the 60’s.

They weren’t married, with kids; not in college, not fortunate sons of Senators or Congressmen.

Why is AWOL-Bush president? What about those 18 months in the Texas National Guard?

Dick Cheney got his first deferment by getting married. When that deferment was dropped, and the only one left was a child - what do ya know - 9 months later his wife had a child.

Why am I hijacking this thread? Well…I’m not:

Yeh, some folks inherit star spangled eyes,
ooh, they send you down to war, Lord,
And when you ask them, how much should we give,
oh, they only answer, more, more, more, yoh,

Quaff some root beers.

Quite all right Corbomite.
I’ll take the blame for hijacking the thread too. (John Wayne reference).
Anyway, I think I was the only person so far to find female veterans of rock. As I said in the Essex there were 2 women. One was Anita Humes but I forget the name of the other one.
There must be other veterans of rock out there.

IIRC, Terrence Trent D’Arby was a U.S. Army deserter. Do deserters count as vets?

I’m not sure if this is correct, but I heard he was a Ranger.

Well, multi-instrumentalist Ian McDonald of King Crimson and Foreigner served several years in the British Army, and actually played clarinet in one of the British Army’s leading marching bands.

Hard to imagine that’s the same guy wailing on "21st Century Schizoid Man, eh?

Bob Mosley of Moby Grape joined the Marines in 1969. For someone from a hippie band from San Francisco to join the U.S.M.C. at the height of the Vietnam War is rather incredible.

Other than a few examples such as Jimi Hendrix…I wonder whether the general dominance of British rock in the 1960’s was helped by the fact that the UK ended conscription back in the 1950’s, while the US had a draft until 1973. Imagine how rock history may have been different if at least some of the members of The Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who and so on had their early careers interrupted by military service

Just a random thought…