Truly
NW heavy-pop-psych innovators & former Capitol & Sub Pop artist TRULY features all original members.
05/01/2026
After several months of hard core self promotion, we would like to give a shout out about some cool things happening in our sphere. Truly’s management team WEG will be releasing the first single from a new collab between Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, DJ Johnny Juice, and Brian Hardgroove. The band is called FREEDOM and this single, “I’m On Your Side” is a call to action and a call to strengthen the bond within the community that’s pushing back against racism, totalitarianism and the recent by the super-rich and powerful to consolidate that collective power and influence to deny rights and dismantle democracy. Plus, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels is not only a Hip-Hop legend and innovator, but a supercool-nerd who loves comics and sci-fi. Great to have him back in the scene, making music, speaking his mind and telling it like it is. We’re proud to be associated and inspired by the message and the intention… dig FREEDOM.
Run-DMC's DMC and Public Enemy Veterans Unite as New Hip-Hop Power Group FREEDOM - That Eric Alper Three architects of hip-hop history have joined forces. Darryl “DMC” McDaniels of Run-DMC, DJ Johnny Juice, and Brian Hardgroove, both veterans of Public Enemy, have formed FREEDOM, a new group built to bridge rock, hip-hop, and social consciousness. Their debut single, “I’m On Your Side,”...
04/30/2026
Happy Birthday to Robert Roth! Photo by Charles Peterson. Truly/Hammerbox April 1991.
Show intro/“Hot Summer 1991”, Hotel Vegas March 28th…
04/14/2026
Happy Birthday to the one and only Hiro Yamamoto!🎂👏👏👏👏❤️
04/12/2026
Review of Denver Colorado show…
https://bandwagmag.com/2026/03/truly-denver/
04/08/2026
Photos from Scott Lucett in Nashville, Truly live at the Basement March 26, ‘26. .com
04/03/2026
Wheels on fire and we’re rolling away…”. Truly arrived home a few nights ago are still over-flowing with love and gratitude to all the Truly fans, new and old, who came out, flipped out, got loud and stuck around through double solos, double encores and made our night every night of the tour. Thank you for welcoming us back in the most exciting and inspirational way we could have ever anticipated or imagined. Also, huge thanks once again to our brothers and sisters from the King Youngblood, Catatonic Suns and Angel of Mars. We’re extremely grateful to have had such great bands and great company on this adventure. We love you all so much. Lastly, Hiro and I would like to thank our fellow bandmates, our management, agent and promoters and who gave it everything to make everything happen. We’re feeling so blessed and honored. Now that we’re back in the PNW we’re going to rest our bones for a minute or two before we get onto wherever this takes us next. Please stay tuned for news on that and also a bunch more photos, videos and stories from the tour. truly
04/03/2026
The 1966 album cover shows five men on a California beach.
The uncredited female bass player who recorded it is missing.
The liner notes credit the vocalists. The union logs from Gold Star Studios in Los Angeles tell a different story.
Los Angeles in the early 1960s was an industrial factory for pop music.
The demand for new singles was insatiable. Radio stations needed constant rotation. A band might take six months to write and rehearse an album. The record labels didn’t have six months. They needed a hit recorded, mixed, and pressed by Friday.
This created a shadow economy of elite musicians.
Behind the heavy, soundproof doors of the recording studios, a rotating group of session players handled the actual instruments. They were known collectively as The Wrecking Crew.
They arrived at Western Recorders at eight in the morning. They drank stale coffee from paper cups. They recorded three entire albums for three different artists before the sun went down.
At the center of this relentless machine sat Carol Kaye.
She was a thirty-something mother of three holding a Fender Precision bass.
From 1957 to 1973, she played on an estimated 10,000 recording sessions.
Being an uncredited female bass player in that era was not an anomaly for her. It was a daily routine.
When you hear the rhythmic pulse of Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’,” you are hearing Carol Kaye’s fingers.
When you hear the descending bassline on “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” from the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds album, you are hearing her.
She played on “La Bamba”—the acoustic guitar intro.
She played the theme to Mission: Impossible.
She played on “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’.”
She played on “Sloop John B.” She played on “God Only Knows.”
The records sold tens of millions of copies. They defined the decade.
The record companies paid her a flat union rate of fifty-five dollars for three hours of work.
They did not put her name on the albums.
They did not invite her to the gold record ceremonies.
The bands took the finished vinyl and mimed playing her basslines on national television broadcasts.
She grew up in poverty in Everett, Washington.
Her parents were professional musicians who struggled to keep the rent paid. She started playing jazz guitar in smoky nightclubs at the age of fourteen just to keep the electricity turned on at home.
She was pragmatic, not romantic, about the music business. She viewed a recording session as a factory shift.
If the producer wanted a specific sound, she provided it. Then she packed her gear into her car and drove across town to the next studio.
The men in the session bands respected her. They had to.
She was faster than them. She often corrected their written chord charts on the fly with a pencil.
She wasn’t always patient with mistakes. During one 1968 session, she openly mocked a well-known producer’s arrangement in front of the room. She told him the horn section sounded like a dying dog.
She played the take her own way. They kept her version. The producer didn’t complain.
She carried her own heavy amplifier into every room. She wore practical cardigans. She chain-smoked ci******es through the takes.
When she couldn’t find a babysitter, she brought her children to the studio. They sat quietly in the corner of the control room while their mother cut platinum records.
A session player signed a W-4 form. They punched a timecard. They relinquished all legal rights to the recording before they even played a note.
No royalties. No residuals. No matter how many millions of copies the record eventually sold.
When the song hit number one on the Billboard charts three weeks later, she was already sitting in a different studio recording a thirty-second commercial for soap.
In 1964, she walked into Gold Star Studios and recorded the bassline for “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’.”
The song became the most-played track of the twentieth century.
Her name did not appear on the record.
In 1966, she recorded the complex, descending basslines for the Pet Sounds album. Brian Wilson called it his masterpiece.
Her name did not appear on the record.
In 1967, she sat in a chair and recorded the intricate acoustic guitar intro to “La Bamba.”
The song defined a cultural moment.
Her name did not appear on the record.
The work was relentless.
Some days required three different instruments for three different genres. Jazz guitar in the morning. Pop bass at noon. Soul music in the evening.
She adapted to all of it. She invented techniques out of necessity.
When the standard bass sound was too muddy to cut through AM radio speakers, she taped a piece of felt over the strings to dampen the overtones. She used a hard guitar pick on heavy flatwound strings.
The sound snapped. It punched through the static. It became the definitive sound of the decade.
Other bass players spent years trying to figure out what equipment the famous bands were using to get that tone.
They were looking at the wrong people.
The names that appeared on the vinyl pressings were chosen by the corporate marketing departments in New York.
They sold an image, not reality.
A mother in a sweater sitting on a stool did not fit the marketing profile of a rebellious teenage surf rock band.
So her name was simply left off the paperwork submitted to the printing plants.
The Beach Boys. Ray Charles. Frank Sinatra. Simon and Garfunkel. Stevie Wonder. The Supremes. Glen Campbell.
Ten thousand sessions.
The record executives assumed nobody would ever know the difference.
For thirty years, they were right.
The truth only began to surface in the late 1990s.
Musicians studying archival studio logs noticed the same union contract numbers appearing on thousands of hit records. The Wrecking Crew’s anonymity was slowly undone by the very paperwork that was supposed to keep them hidden.
Documentaries were eventually filmed. A few belated industry awards were handed out in quiet ceremonies.
The original session contracts, many bearing her rushed signature, are now preserved in music archives.
The music industry has since changed its crediting rules.
Every digital stream today lists pages of metadata. Producers, engineers, assistants, and studio musicians are meticulously documented.
But the original physical records from that era still sit in living rooms across the country.
The faded cardboard sleeves still list the wrong names.
The needle drops on the vinyl. The bassline starts.
The person playing it is still invisible.
Carol Kaye: the woman who secretly played the soundtrack of a generation.
03/30/2026
On Substack last week… https://aarongilbreath.substack.com/p/truly-one-of-the-best-rock-bands
03/30/2026
We had such a blast with these guys. They’re super-cool, as a band and as peeps and Truly fans have been really digging them. Check them out…
And that’s a wrap!!
We want to express our huge gratitude to Truly for bringing us along with them on the road and to everyone back home who’s supported our band in anyway and made this first tour such a success
Until next time!
03/29/2026
For reasons we’re still trying to get our heads around, we’ve been informed that the Dallas show at Dusty’s has been cancelled, It has something to do with “Ice Activity” affecting safety and attendance. We’re not a band whose ever shy’d away from protest or potentially volatile performance situations, but after fourteen amazing shows all over the country, we’re glad to not have our last show be some kind of bummer.
We’ve been told that ticket holders we’re informed and that the show was taken off the club’s schedule, but we noticed today that there have been a bunch of folks who thought it was still on. Our apologies. We’ll make it up sometime soon. Love and gratitude
to our fans and also brothers in King Youngblood and Catatonic Suns, who both slayed it onstage and who also were all a blast to hang out with offstage while on this long adventure across this weird-ass and wonderful
place we call the United States.
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