Pirates Of The Mississippi

Pirates of the Mississippi were an American country music band founded in 1987 in Nashville, Tennessee. The original members were Bill McCorvey (lead vocals, guitar), Rich Alves (lead guitar, background vocals), Jimmy Lowe (drums), Pat Severs (steel guitar, Dobro), and Dean Townson (bass guitar, background vocals). Severs quit in 1994 and was briefly replaced with Greg Trostle. The band recorded for Capitol Records, Liberty Records, and Giant Records between 1990 and 1995. They also charted nine singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts, the most successful being "Feed Jake", which went to number 15 in 1991. After disbanding in 1996, both Alves and McCorvey went on to write songs for other artists. In 2006, the two reunited under the Pirates of the Mississippi name, releasing an additional album titled Heaven and a Dixie Night before disbanding again. Pirates of the Mississippi are known for a country rock sound, and they received significant media attention for sociopolitical messages in some of their songs.

Similar Artists

Doug Supernaw

T. Graham Brown

Highway 101

Ronnie McDowell

Eddy Raven

Southern Pacific

The Kentucky Headhunters

Lee Roy Parnell

Marty Stuart

Brother Phelps

Ricky Lynn Gregg

Sweethearts of the Rodeo

The Notorious Cherry Bombs

George Fox

Confederate Railroad

Ray Scott

Paul Overstreet

John Schneider

Hal Ketchum

David Ball