Doubting Thomas
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Doubting Thomas

Charlotte, North Carolina, United States | Established. Jan 01, 1990 | INDIE

Charlotte, North Carolina, United States | INDIE
Established on Jan, 1990
Band Americana Rock

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"Reunion Concert Celebrates Musical Legacy of Doubting Thomas"

Gina Stewart fondly remembers a gig that her groundbreaking Queen City band, Doubting Thomas, played in the mid-1990s at Hartigan’s, a now-closed pub once located in Uptown Charlotte. As the band launched into its first number, the crowd began to sing along — and they continued singing for the entire set.
“[There] was consistent strong energy playing at Hartigan’s,” Stewart recalls. “[We] were seeing the same people — and they started to know every single word.”
Stewart’s bandmate and group co-founder Brenda Gambill says these spontaneous singalongs were not confined to one venue. Countless Doubting Thomas shows were marked by fan devotion conjoined with the band’s connection to the crowd. It was a tangible energy, she says.
“Whether there’s two people or 300,000, it’s contagious when the energy is right and everything is coming through you,” Gambill offers. “You become the vehicle for your instrument. It’s not about you.”
Perhaps this devotion to its listeners is one reason that Doubting Thomas, a band that officially disbanded in 2001, still maintains its hold on Charlotte’s musical imagination. Historically, the city’s rock and pop scene is arguably built upon the legacies of three local acts — The Avett Brothers, Fetchin’ Bones and Doubting Thomas. Of the three, Doubting Thomas is the only one not to score a major label record deal, and while they’re beloved by many, Stewart and Gambill’s female-fronted group rarely gets credit for helping to break down gender barriers in Charlotte’s male-dominated music scene of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Similarly, the combo was an early supporter of LGBTQ rights and visibility, which is how they found themselves playing so many gigs at Hartigan’s, one of the city’s few clubs catering to a lesbian clientele at the time.
Doubting Thomas also forged its legacy with a sound that is varied yet cohesive. The group is often shoehorned into the country rock genre, and while there are echoes of 1970s folk-inflected Laurel Canyon singer-songwriters and sympathetic rockers like The Eagles in Doubting Thomas’ early songs, tunes like the title track of its 1993 debut album Blue Angel pull from a much broader sonic palette, including contributions from guest players Peter Buck and Bill Berry of R.E.M. Here, Stewart and Gambill’s swarming harmonies entwine in a braided stream of vocal lines surrounding Tim Hill’s pointillist crystalline guitar:
“Flying on a dare across the blue skies / There were arms around me there/There was magic in the air…”
As the voices cradle and enfold each other, the cantering rhythm section of bassist Glenn Kawamoto and drummer Paul Andrews smoothly switch keys and time signatures.
“What we were doing was so interlaced — it was a whole lot of melody, and it was pretty complicated,“ Stewart says. “Toward the end we didn‘t do so much of the changing time signatures and things like that.”
The band’s 1998 album Who Died and Made You King illustrates the band’s later, more simplified and direct approach. The collection’s title track couples bright and swaggering saxophone with soulful call-and-response vocals traded by Stewart and Gambill. The production sparkles but remains tethered to the heart and spirit of storytelling honky-tonk.
Despite changes in approach, however, Doubting Thomas‘ music always feels grounded, animated and alive, whether its sashaying across the dance floor or chugging like a runaway locomotive. Similar to its shape-shifting music, the group’s timeline is also fluid and in flux.
“We had 10 final gigs,” Gambill says with a laugh.
“We retired more times than Tina Turner,” Stewart adds.
There were several one-off reunion gigs throughout the 2000s, including a set at the Atlanta Pride Festival in 2009. In 2020, the band members attempted to set up another reunion, but COVID kept forcing postponements. After three reschedules, Doubting Thomas finally nailed down a date that sticks, Gambill says.
A Sept. 17 gig scheduled for Neighborhood Theatre will be much like an extended family reunion, Stewart adds.
“The core group is me and Brenda, plus [multi-instrumentalist] Matthew Davenport and [bassist] Bill Carroll,” she says.
Guitarist Hill is coming in from Atlanta for the show, and will be joined onstage by second guitarist Mike Corrigan. Percussionist Kris Krull is slated to be a surprise guest, and new member Lenore Prisco will play keyboards and banjo. Stewart says some good friends of the band will also pop up on stage to play songs toward the end of the evening.
Gambill acknowledges that the roll call could lead to a stage packed with performers.
“We had quite a few members over the years in different configurations, and we played with so many talented people,” she says. “It’s such an honor to write a song and then have everyone put their talent into it, perform it and be willing to go out onto the road for barely nothing.”
Fetchin’ Bones, R.E.M. and the Indigo Girls
Stewart says she began her love affair with music when she first heard Linda Ronstadt sing. Meanwhile, her older sister was dating musicians exclusively. Exposed to this parade of talented suitors for her sibling, Stewart picked their brains for musical knowledge. In return they taught her to sing, play guitar and understand music theory. By the time Stewart attended North Mecklenburg High School, she was smitten with The Eagles and southern California rock.
Meanwhile, Gambill was growing up in Ohio. She describes herself as the little girl who sat with her ear on the speaker of the stereo, learning the harmony parts to every Beatles song. Her family moved to Charlotte, where Gambill attended Garinger High School and sang in various choirs while studying violin.
In the mid-1980s, Stewart attended UNC Charlotte, where she studied dance and drama. The biggest obstacle to graduation, she says, was her high school friend Hope Nicholls and her band Fetchin’ Bones. Stewart played bass in an early lineup of the band for about a year, appearing on a demo produced by Don Dixon at Mitch Easter’s Drive-In Studio in Winston-Salem. By the time the band recorded its debut album Cabin Flounder, Danna Pentes had replaced Stewart on bass.
“I stopped playing in Fetchin’ Bones because I needed to finish college,” Stewart says. She’d already quit school several times because she wanted to play in rock ‘n’ roll bands, Stewart says, and her parents were running out of patience. One night after playing with Fetchin’ Bones in New York City, Stewart hopped a flight back to Charlotte just in time to take an exam. She finally stopped burning the candle at both ends and graduated in 1986.
By the time she met Gambill, Stewart was playing in The Blind Dates, a trio inspired by 1960s girl groups that included guitarist Deanna Lynn Campbell and drummer Penny Craver. Stewart and Gambill hit it off and started writing songs together. The pair had been writing together for about a year when Gambill let it drop that she was an accomplished violinist.
The Blind Dates wound down in 1988, and Stewart and Gambill launched Doubting Thomas with guitarist Dale Alderman, drummer Paul Andrews and Andrews‘ brother Mike on bass. Mike Andrews subsequently left to be replaced by jazz-trained bassist Glenn Kawamoto. The band was initially quite different from the proto-Americana act it eventually became.
“There was a marriage of theatre and music because I majored in theatre,” Stewart says. “In the early stuff you can hear the influence from musical theatre with so many vocals and harmonies going every which way.”
The material proved to be difficult to adapt for live performance. While the band grappled with that challenge, it composed music for theatre troupes including Children’s Theatre of Charlotte and the now-shuttered Charlotte Repertory Theatre.
In 1990, Doubting Thomas was selected for the North Carolina Music Showcase in Chapel Hill. Music critic Jim Desmond compared the band favorably to 10,000 Maniacs and Fleetwood Mac, calling Doubting Thomas the highlight of the festival.
Soon after, Doubting Thomas opened for the Indigo Girls at Ovens Auditorium. Charlotte attorney Bill Diehl was duly impressed. He helped the fledgling band find financing and the necessary contacts to record an album.
“We dreamed of making an album of our original songs, and [Diehl] made that dream come true,“ Stewart says. After searching for a producer who was making their kind of music, Doubting Thomas recorded with John Keane at his studio in Athens, Georgia. At the time, Keane was working with the B-52s, Widespread Panic and R.E.M. Keane recruited R.E.M.‘s Buck and Berry to play on the Doubting Thomas debut Blue Angel.
Blue Angel was released on independent label Big Diehl Records. Stewart and Gambill say they had second thoughts when it came to inking a deal with a major label.
“A lot of friends that got signed didn’t have the privilege of making up their own minds in the studio,” Gambill says. “Not to say that every decision made by a record company is bad [but] they would take a song and totally rearrange it if you didn’t have guidelines in ink that you could do it your way.”
Doubting Thomas never signed a deal with a major label.
The band’s follow-up album Two was recorded in Atlanta with producer DeDe Vogt of cowpunk band Sweethearts of the Rodeo. Charlotte musician and reverend Christy Snow came down to the sessions to sing. Emily Saliers of Indigo Girls lends vocals to two songs on the record, “Tiny Lights” and “How High.” Vogt also performs on the album, released in 1994 on Doubting Thomas’ own indie label Oh Very Records.
The record was financed through contributions from fans, says Stewart.
“We were ahead of our time, because it was pre-crowdfunding,” she says. “We made a record and paid back all our investors. Everybody made money.”
Orphan songs, Americana and the end?
The origin of Doubting Thomas’ 1997 release Cut It Out, a collection of demo tapes and orphaned songs, led to a Charlotte music tradition and the beginnings of a successful promotion company.
Stewart entered the now-razed Elizabeth music venue The Double Door Inn one Tuesday night and noticed that the place was dead. She approached venue owner Nick Karres with a proposition: If Karres would let Doubting Thomas practice onstage with the venue’s P.A. on Tuesday nights, the band would encourage their fans to pay $5 a head to see the show.
Soon, the place was packed, and Stewart and Gambill decided to share their good fortune. They invited other Charlotte bands and performers like The Rank Outsiders and David Childers to take part in the Tuesday night gig, and thus Americana Night at The Double Door was launched. Greg McGraw became inspired to promote the players taking part in the show, and his work on Americana Night fueled the launch of mighty Charlotte-based music promotion company MAXX Music, say Stewart and Gambill.
Doubting Thomas had been recording songs during Americana Night with the idea of launching a Charlotte-centered record label, which would feature performers from the city’s vibrant music scene. Unfortunately, the idea went south and Doubting Thomas decamped the weekly event to launch another Tuesday night residency across town. To find a home for the songs the band had recorded for Americana Night, Doubting Thomas released Cut It Out.
In 1999, the band returned to Athens to work with producer John Keane again on the soulful, horns and Hammond organ-fueled Who Died and Made You King? At this point, many players had entered or moved through Doubting Thomas’ orbit, including Bill Carroll on bass, keyboardist Bryan Williams, Mark McColl on drums and a cadre of guitarists comprised of Irwin Bostian, Mike Corrigan and Tim Hill.
“We were usually playing three or four gigs a week, so most of our writing happened at sound checks,” Stewart says. The talented ensemble’s connectivity meant jams would often come together as songs. “That’s how Who Died and Made You King? happened.”
During this process, bassist Bill Carroll became indispensable, Gambill says.
As a solo artist, Carroll appeared on Dick Clark’s American Bandstand TV show in 1988 with his song “When We’re Apart.” He also branched out into orchestral composing and arranging.
“Most of the time Bill was writing, and he’d bring in finished songs for us to collaborate on and add to, and he’d do some arranging,” Gambill says.
She considers Carroll the third lyricist in Doubting Thomas, in addition to herself and Stewart. “Working with him now is amazing because he’s better than ever.”
The band recorded and released a live album in 2000. As Doubting Thomas toured the album, they started changing the band’s configuration.
“We would go out there with three or four of us. It wouldn’t be six people going out every time,” Gambill says.
Then came the end to Doubting Thomas’ 11-year run. Stewart calls it a strange, but not dramatic, end.
“It wasn’t a fight,” Stewart says. “We all looked at each other after a gig and went, ‘I think it’s time we stopped.’”

The band never really ended, however. Though Stewart and Gambill formed the acoustic folk-rock trio Volatile Baby with Allison Modafferi, they kept hearing the call from fans to reform Doubting Thomas at least for one more night. The band’s road manager Tammy Whisnant, who also acts as Doubting Thomas’ archivist along with Scott Rutherford, encouraged the reunion, Gambill says.
Recent rehearsals have gone so well that Gambill and Stewart hope to play many more gigs with Doubting Thomas — just not three or four a week.
“We won’t ever do it in the way that we have, but we’re not done,” Stewart says. “My favorite quote from someone who followed us closely for a long time was, ‘You were the soundtrack of my 20s and 30s.’”
She cherishes that feedback, but says it inspires her to write about today rather than just play songs from the past.
“When I go out to hear music, it amazes me that people are still writing things that everyone can relate to,” Gambill says. “Then I think, why am I amazed by that? We did that as well.”
“I think the point of writing songs is lessening the loneliness of being alive,” Stewart adds. “That’s what songs do. There is something about the emotional communication of a song that expresses the inexpressible and leaves you with [the thought] ‘Somebody knows what I’m feeling. I’m not the only one who’s ever gone through what I’m going through.’”
Pat Moran - Queen City Nerve - Pat Moran QC Nerve


"Doubting Thomas Band"

"Most Deserving of National Attention" by the readers of Charlotte's Creative Loafing weekly. - Creative Loafing


"No Doubting Doubting Thomas Band"

The Doubting Thomas band was also recently voted "Best Band" in Charlotte's Best magazine - Charlotte's Best


"The Doubting Thomas Band to play Atlanta Pride"

The Latest:

The Doubting Thomas Band to play Atlanta Pride
Indie rock band hails from Charlotte, NC
By SOVO STAFF | Aug 24 2019, 2:00 PM

The Atlanta Pride Committee on Monday announced that The Doubting Thomas Band, an indie rock band from Charlotte, N.C., will perform at this year's festival, set for Oct. 31 to Nov. 1 in Piedmont Park.

Earlier this month, the Pride Committee announced a host of other festival details, including performances by Eric Himan & The Adams and Goddess & She, as well as times and locations for annual events like the commitment ceremony, dyke march and Pride parade.

The Facebook page for The Doubting Thomas Band lists the band's influences as The Beatles and Fleetwood Mac.

Here is the complete description of the band:

Sometimes rock, sometimes pop, sometimes folk, other times funk, with soaring vocals laced together with melodies that never leave you -- but it can only truly be described as the sound of the Doubting Thomas band. The group has carved out an impressive place for themselves on the club and college circuits — performing over 200 dates a year — and has quickly gained top standing in their home region clubs.

Blue Angel, the band's first album, was produced by John Keane (Widespread Panic) with guest turns from Peter Buck and Bill Berry of R.E.M. Their second release, Two, features special guest Emily Saliers (Indigo Girls) on the tracks "Tiny Lights" and "How High." Their newest 13-song release, Who Died And Made You King, was also produced by Keane. The record has been hailed as their best work to date. The Doubting Thomas band was also recently voted "Best Band" in Charlotte's Best magazine, and named "Most Deserving of National Attention" by the readers of Charlotte's Creative Loafing weekly.

Founding member Gina Stewart started the band with her guitar and a batch ofself-penned songs that drew on her many influences, from the folksy stories and celtic-tinged melodies of the Old South to the raging thump of the Detroit sound. With her music came a desire to create a band that was visually memorable as well as sonically, carried along by cascading waves of melody by "delicately intertwined vocal harmonies," as noted by one reviewer.

But like a perfect picture without color, the core of "the Doubting Thomas band sound" couldn't be complete without the soaring vocal talents of co-founder Brenda Gambill, an extraordinary Generation-X poet and songwriter who continually tips the emotional scale with her powerful musical performances that include her masterful violin, harmonica and percussion skills. She's one of the lucky few in the business who can literally knock down an audience with a whisper.

Bill Carroll, bassist, vocalist and songwriter, has sung and played bass and lead guitar in bands from Ohio to South Carolina. He charted a regional hit in 1988, as a solo artist, with a song that was performed on Dick Clark's long-running "American Bandstand" television series. Several of his other songs have been chosen as finalists in international competitions, and used as soundtracks by the Voice of America radio network.

Matthew Davenport honed his drumming chops during his travels around the United States, from South Carolina to California, banging on pots, pans, rocks, bongos or anything else that would make a sound. Now he joins his cousin (bassist Bill Carroll) in one of the tightest rhythm sections in the biz. - Southern Voice


"Indie rockers Doubting Thomas to play Pride"

Indie rockers Doubting Thomas to play Pride
By Project Q Atlanta | Aug 24, 2009 |
The entertainment line-up for the Atlanta Pride Festival in late October continues to take shape, with the latest addition coming from just a few hours north on Interstate 85.
Indy rock group Doubting Thomas is now among the performers for Pride, joining previously announced acts that include Josh Zuckerman, Eric Himan & The Adams, Halcyon and Goddess & She. Festival organizers announced the addition of Doubting Thomas on Monday, though a full schedule of who performs when during the 3-day event is still being pieced together.
Doubting Thomas, which has picked up accolades in the Charlotte press, has produced three albums. “Blue Angel,” “Two” and “Who Died and Made You King.” The group describes itself as “sometimes rock, sometimes pop, sometimes folk, other times funk,” according to its Facebook page:
Sometimes rock, sometimes pop, sometimes folk, other times funk, with soaring vocals laced together with melodies that never leave you—but it can only truly be described as the sound of the Doubting Thomas band. The group has carved out an impressive place for themselves on the club and college circuits - performing over 200 dates a year—and has quickly gained top standing in their home region clubs.
Blue Angel, the band’s first album, was produced by John Keane (Widespread Panic) with guest turns from Peter Buck and Bill Berry of R.E.M. Their second release, Two, features special guest Emily Saliers (Indigo Girls) on the tracks “Tiny Lights” and “How High.” Their newest 13-song release, Who Died And Made You King, was also produced by Keane. The record has been hailed as their best work to date. The Doubting Thomas band was also recently voted “Best Band” in Charlotte’s Best magazine, and named “Most Deserving of National Attention” by the readers of Charlotte’s Creative Loafing weekly.
Founding member Gina Stewart started the band with her guitar and a batch ofself-penned songs that drew on her many influences, from the folksy stories and celtic-tinged melodies of the Old South to the raging thump of the Detroit sound. With her music came a desire to create a band that was visually memorable as well as sonically, carried along by cascading waves of melody by “delicately intertwined vocal harmonies,” as noted by one reviewer.
But like a perfect picture without color, the core of “the Doubting Thomas band sound” couldn’t be complete without the soaring vocal talents of co-founder Brenda Gambill, an extraordinary Generation-X poet and songwriter who continually tips the emotional scale with her powerful musical performances that include her masterful violin, harmonica and percussion skills. She’s one of the lucky few in the business who can literally knock down an audience with a whisper.
Bill Carroll, bassist, vocalist and songwriter, has sung and played bass and lead guitar in bands from Ohio to South Carolina. He charted a regional hit in 1988, as a solo artist, with a song that was performed on Dick Clark’s long-running “American Bandstand” television series. Several of his other songs have been chosen as finalists in international competitions, and used as soundtracks by the Voice of America radio network.
Matthew Davenport honed his drumming chops during his travels around the United States, from South Carolina to California, banging on pots, pans, rocks, bongos or anything else that would make a sound. Now he joins his cousin (bassist Bill Carroll) in one of the tightest rhythm sections in the biz.
Bone up on the band through its YouTube videos.
- By Project Q Atlanta | Aug 24, 2009 |


Discography

Blue Angels CD, Two CD, Cut it Out EP, Who Died & Made You King CD, Live CD, History CD
Http://www.youtube.com/doubtingthomasband

Photos

Bio

Doubting Thomas

“They Broke the Mold”

It was 1990 when Doubting Thomas was added to
the music scene. At a time when rock bands were strictly a boy’s club Doubting
Thomas, proved that women musicians could carry instruments as well as a tune.
Gina Stewart & Brenda Gambill, not only broke down the clubs & coffee
house doors they did it on their own terms. Playing over 200 shows a year. It was about the music, with
soaring vocals laced together with melodies that never leave you, but it can
only truly be described as the sound of Doubting Thomas.

Along with Bill Carroll, Matthew Davenport, Mark McColl, Irwin Bostian, Tim Hill, Michael Corrigan & Bryan Williams it was instant magic. The group has carved out an impressive name for
themselves performing over 200 shows a year and named “Most Deserving of
National Attention” by the readers of Charlotte, NC’s Creative Loafing.

After their reunion show September of 2022, they decided they wanted to get back together and put together new shows. and Gina, Brenda, Bill, Matthew & Michael with the addition of Lenore Prisco on Keyboards and help from Tim Hill and special guest Mike Jones on guitars they  are putting together a new album that they are really proud of called "Forever Changed" Due out in 2024.

Released five albums; Blue Angel, the band’s
first album, was produced by John Keane (Widespead Panic) features special guests Peter
Buck and Bill Berry of R.E.M. Their second release, Two, features special guest
Kristen Hall (Sugarland) and Emily Saliers (Indigo Girls) on tracks “Tiny
Lights” and “How High” Their 13 song release, Who Died & Made You King, was
also produced by Keane. Have a 12 song greatest hits from all five
albums called History with a song never released featuring the late Bryan Williams on piano called
“Spotlight”. We have an digital album out this past September of 2022 called "45 Ghosts" which consist of recordings never released before and a remastered version of "Spotlight"


All these albums are now available Amazon,
Apple Music, Google Play, YouTube, iHeartRadio, iTunes, Napster, Pandora,
Tidal, TikTok & Spotify.