During rehearsal one night, someone found a key ring in the warehouse where they practiced that belonged to a local piano tuner named Marshall Tucker. The band's name was born. While opening a show at the Ruins in Spartanburg for Wet Willie, the Marshall Tucker Band was heard by Willie's lead singer, Jimmy Hall. Hall took the band to Macon, Georgia, where he introduced them to Capricorn Records CEO Phil Walden, who signed the band almost immediately. From 1972 to date, Gray has acted as lead vocalist for the Marshall Tucker Band. In 1979, the band shifted to Warner Bros. following the bankruptcy of Capricorn. In 1980, bassist Tommy died following an auto accident in his hometown of Spartanburg. In 1983, his brother Toy, along with McCorkle and Riddle, decided to retire from the band. Gray and Eubanks carried on, hiring some of Spartanburg's finest musicians and recording a series of excellent albums. The band continued to tour on a regular basis and in 1999, the Marshall Tucker Band featured Gray, David Muse, Rusty Milner, Stuart Swanlund, Barry Borden, and Tim Lawter.
In 1998, the band released its first all-new album in over five years, Face Down in the Blues. This version of MTB toured and recorded during much of the first decade of the 21th century with varying lineups, releasing the gospel record Dedicated in 1999, a hailed comeback effort entitled Beyond the Horizon in 2004, Tenth in 2005, Carolina Christmas in 2006, and Next Adventure in 2007 -- all of them with Gray at the helm. In 2011, he released the often rumored but never previously issued Soul of the South. The eight out-of-character R&B-styled cover tunes on this set were recorded in 1981 by the original MTB and a host of studio aces at Gray's studio in Spartanburg for a solo record that he shelved because of MTB's recording schedule. ~ Michael B. Smith, Rovi