He was playing in a Spartanburg coffee house with Hyatt when Ball first saw him, and the former man would also be Hood's partner in a quintet known as the Contenders that was based out of Nashville between 1973 and 1976. Meanwhile Uncle Walt's Band moved back and forth between Austin and Nashville, peaked in the late '70s, and had broken up by 1983. Hood had a new partnership with Austin's Jimmie Dale Gilmore by then, followed by some nine years working with songstress Toni Price. Lyle Lovett, a fan of Uncle Walt's Band as a college student, hired Hood for his own Large Band. The Threadgill Troubadours was Hood's pet project in the '90s -- finally, his own band after so many years as a collaborator and sideman. His son, Warren Hood, took up the fiddle and was himself performing on #Austin City Limits in the latter part of that decade. Sadly, Hood is one of two members of the original Uncle Walt's Band who died when they were only in their forties. Cancer had destroyed him completely by the end of 2001; Hyatt went down in the Florida Everglades Valu Jet crash five years before. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi