Best known as leader of
the Drive-By Truckers, songwriter
Patterson Hood was born into a musical family, with his father (
David Hood) serving as the longtime bassist for studio legends
the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section.
Patterson began writing songs at the tender age of eight, and by the time he was 14 he was playing guitar in a local rock band. While attending college in 1985, he formed the band Adam's House Cat with his friend
Mike Cooley, and the group won Musician Magazine's Best Unsigned Band competition three years later. However, the band's regional acclaim didn't translate into significant commercial success, and its sole full-length album was never released.
After Adam's House Cat split up,
Hood and
Cooley continued to work together. They eventually formed
the Drive-By Truckers in 1996, following a mutual relocation to Athens, GA. Drawing equal influence from country and rock & roll,
the Drive-By Truckers released their first album,
Gangstabilly, in 1998. However, it was with their ambitious double-disc set, 2001's
Southern Rock Opera, that garnered
the Truckers their first dose of nationwide critical acclaim.
Southern Rock Opera's success as an independent release helped earn the a band a contract with Lost Highway Records, which soon reissued the album on a wider scale. After the label had a falling out with
the DBTs over their somber follow-up,
Decoration Day, the group bought the album back from Lost Highway and, instead, partnered with the independent label New West Records.
Decoration Day was then released to rave reviews in 2003.
Throughout the bulk of
the Drive-By Truckers' career,
Hood also wrote music that didn't suit the band's muscular stomp. In 2001, as
the Truckers were completing
Southern Rock Opera,
Hood -- who by his own admission was going through a difficult period, having weathered a divorce and some personal difficulties with his bandmates -- recorded a set of acoustic demos that were considerably darker than most of his compositions for the group.
Hood pressed up a CD of the acoustic sessions, titled the collection
Killers and Stars, and sold copies at his periodic solo shows, with the album described as "a work in progress." In 2004,
Hood enlisted the help of producer
David Barbe, who mastered the records before New West gave
Killers and Stars a proper release.
Hood returned to the solo game several years later with
Murdering Oscar (And Other Love Songs), which found him partnering with his father for the first time on record. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide