signalmankenneth
Verified User
Nice song, I'll smoke a joint to Tom this evening, travel well Tom!!
Tom Shipley of the 1960s and 1970s folk-rock duo Brewer & Shipley has died at the age of 84, reports the New York Times. Shipley's death on August 24 was confirmed by his son, Marc, to the paper, though no cause of death was given.
Brewer & Shipley — made up of Shipley and Michael Brewer — were the pair behind the iconic stoner song of 1971 "One Toke Over the Line," which peaked at No. 10 on the Billboard charts. According to the NYT, the song was inspired by the duo's "dizzying encounter" with marijuana at one of their gigs. A friend gave Shipley some pot at a gig in Kansas City and told him to stop at two hits because it was powerful stuff.
“Of course I wasn’t about to believe him and continued on,” he told It’s Psychedelic Baby in a 2011 interview, adding, "I said to Michael, ‘I’m one toke over the line,’ and he broke into song. There was a refrain that night and some verses the next day, and that was about it. We were trying to make ourselves, and some of our friends, laugh,” he added. “I never would have guessed what it would lead to."
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/music/articles/70s-folk-rock-singer-behind-152026017.html
Tom Shipley of the 1960s and 1970s folk-rock duo Brewer & Shipley has died at the age of 84, reports the New York Times. Shipley's death on August 24 was confirmed by his son, Marc, to the paper, though no cause of death was given.
Brewer & Shipley — made up of Shipley and Michael Brewer — were the pair behind the iconic stoner song of 1971 "One Toke Over the Line," which peaked at No. 10 on the Billboard charts. According to the NYT, the song was inspired by the duo's "dizzying encounter" with marijuana at one of their gigs. A friend gave Shipley some pot at a gig in Kansas City and told him to stop at two hits because it was powerful stuff.
“Of course I wasn’t about to believe him and continued on,” he told It’s Psychedelic Baby in a 2011 interview, adding, "I said to Michael, ‘I’m one toke over the line,’ and he broke into song. There was a refrain that night and some verses the next day, and that was about it. We were trying to make ourselves, and some of our friends, laugh,” he added. “I never would have guessed what it would lead to."
https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/music/articles/70s-folk-rock-singer-behind-152026017.html