Born in Maine but raised in California,
White began playing the guitar at an early age, joining his brothers' band, the Country Boys, when he was just ten years old. The band eventually evolved into
the Kentucky Colonels.
Clarence left
the Colonels in the mid-'60s, becoming a session musician; he played electric guitar on many
rock and
pop albums.
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Born in Maine but raised in California,
White began playing the guitar at an early age, joining his brothers' band, the Country Boys, when he was just ten years old. The band eventually evolved into
the Kentucky Colonels.
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Clarence left
the Colonels in the mid-'60s, becoming a session musician; he played electric guitar on many
rock and
pop albums. He also began playing with the duo of Gib Gilbeau and Gene Parsons in local California clubs. Gilbeau and Parsons frequently worked with
the Gosdin Brothers, so the duo was able to land a cameo appearance for
White on the Gene Clark With the Gosdin Brothers album. Around the same time,
Clarence recorded a solo album for Bakersfield International which the label didn't release.
In 1968,
White joined
Nashville West, which also featured Gene Parsons, Gib Gilbeau, Sneaky Pete Kleinow, Glen D. Hardin, and Wayne Moore.
Nashville West recorded an album for Sierra Records, but the record didn't appear until 1978.
White was invited to join
the Byrds in the fall of 1968.
Roger McGuinn was rebuilding
the Byrds' lineup after the departure of
Chris Hillman and
Gram Parsons, who went on to form
the Flying Burrito Brothers.
Clarence White fit into the revamped
Byrds'
country-rock direction. He played on the group's untitled album, which spawned the single "Chestnut Mare." While he was with the band, he continued to work as a session musician, playing on
Randy Newman's
12 Songs (1970),
Joe Cocker's eponymous 1969 album, and
the Everly Brothers' Stories Would Could Tell (1971), among others.
After the
Muleskinner record was finished,
White played a few dates with
the Kentucky Colonels and began working on a solo album. He had only completed four tracks when he was killed by a drunken driver while he was loading equipment onto a van; he died on July 14, 1973. Following his death, several posthumous albums of his work with
the Kentucky Colonels and
the Byrds appeared, as did various albums that featured his playing, including
Jackson Browne's
Late for the Sky and Gene Parsons' Kindling. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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