A group of studio singers and musicians came together in Nashville in 1998 to form
the Time Jumpers, a lively Western swing outfit. Initially, it was a loose gathering, consisting of a handful of members in a lineup that was subject to frequent change. The first lineup, which played for pure fun in a garage, featured
Hoot Hester,
Michael Blaustone,
Dennis Crouch, and
Danny Parks. The band's first time playing out featured
Hester and
Crouch, with the addition of
Andy Reiss,
Aubrey Haynie,
Kenny Malone,
Johnny Cox, and
Robert Bowlin. They played out infrequently until they made their informal home at the Station Inn, where they began playing about twice a month. Informal sessions also occurred behind the scenes at the Grand Ole Opry, where
the Time Jumpers would start dressing-room jams while waiting to back other artists. When the group's Station Inn sessions increased to weekly,
Rick Vanaugh stepped in to take
Malone's place while
Kenny Sears took over for
Bowlin. In the meantime, Jeff Taylor also came aboard. Within months,
Haynie opted to drop out. At one time, the group also featured vocalist
Adie Grey. The band's On the Air album features
Hester and
Sears on vocals and fiddle, steel guitarist
Cox, bassist
Crouch, guitarist
Reiss, vocalist and accordionist Taylor, and drummer
Vanaugh. The band has also included singers Carolyn Martin and the late
Dawn Sears, who was married to
Kenny Sears. On the Air features an appearance by
Eddie Stubbs, announcer for the Grand Ole Opry.
Vince Gill joined the band in 2012, and is featured on the group's self-titled
The Time Jumpers, which appeared later that same year from Rounder Records. The album was a critical success, earning the group a Grammy nomination for Best Country Album in 2013. Just prior to the September 2016 release of their follow-up LP,
Kid Sister, founding member
Hoot Hester succumbed to cancer.
Kid Sister was itself dedicated to another
Time Jumpers member who died from cancer,
Dawn Sears, who passed in 2014. ~ Linda Seida