stg, US
Musician of World
Tommy Dodd is a Steel Guitar player in the Southeastern United States. The son of a career Air Force family, Tommy Dodd has lived all over the world. His love of music came naturally. His mother and brother both enjoyed singing, and his father played several instruments, including steel guitar. Music was a huge part of their lives. He had his first steel guitar lesson at the age of 13 when they were stationed in Anchorage, Alaska. Just two years later, at age 15, Tommy was performing at shows and dances around the Tampa, Florida area. Summerville, South Carolina was the last stop after Tommy’s father retired from the military, and where Tommy graduated high school in 1967. After high school, Tommy moved to Charlotte, NC, where he attended the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and earned his engineering degree. He then began his professional recording career at Mark Five Studios in Greenville, South Carolina. Tommy has contributed his talents to the recordings of such icons as Travis Tritt and Doug Stone. He has also played with The Supremes, as well as an impressive array of country giants at the 1994 Super Bowl half-time show featuring Clint Black, Tanya Tucker, and The Judds. In 1992, Tommy played the role of a musician in When the Music Stopped, a season-6 episode of In the Heat of the Night with Carroll O'Connor and Robert Goulet. However, he says his greatest claim-to-fame came early in 1972 while playing with JD Sumner and the Stamps, when he actually shared the stage with Elvis! Working full-time now as a studio musician, Tommy plays frequently with local bands in Georgia and with artists from Alabama, Tennessee and North Carolina. And, you don’t have to look far for evidence of this Bodacious Bobcat’s contributions to multiple productions of Always, Patsy - the much loved story of the late, great country singer, Patsy Cline.