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Alex Chilton
Alex Chilton
American songwriter, guitarist, singer & producer
1
Tav Falco
Tav Falco
American actor, filmmaker and singer
2
The Box Tops
The Box Tops
American rock band
3
The Cramps
The Cramps
US psychobilly band
4
Charlie Feathers
Charlie Feathers
American country music and rockabilly musician; songwriter
5
Jim Dickinson
Jim Dickinson
American musician
6
Paul Burlison
Paul Burlison
American rockabilly guitarist
7
The Gun Club
The Gun Club
band
8
Jim Sclavunos
Jim Sclavunos
American musician
9
R. L. Burnside
R. L. Burnside
American blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist
10
Jessie Mae Hemphill
Jessie Mae Hemphill
American country blues guitarist, songwriter, and vocalist
11
Big Star
Big Star
American rock band
12
Oblivians
Oblivians
band
13
Chris Bell
Chris Bell
American singer
14
The Scruffs
The Scruffs
American band
15
Bodeco
Bodeco
American rock band
16
The Reverend Horton Heat
The Reverend Horton Heat
American psychobilly trio
17
Roddy Radiation
Roddy Radiation
British musician
18
The Meteors
The Meteors
British Psychobilly Band
19
Cloudland Canyon
Cloudland Canyon
American experimental rock band
20
Brownsville Station
Brownsville Station
American rock band
21
Steve Miller Band
Steve Miller Band
American rock band
22
Eleven Hundred Springs
Eleven Hundred Springs
23
Kings of Rhythm
Kings of Rhythm
American musical group; R&B/Soul band led by Ike Turner
24
The Trashmen
The Trashmen
surf rock band
25
Blood, Sweat & Tears
Blood, Sweat & Tears
American rock music band
26
The Rivieras
The Rivieras
US rock band
27
The Jesters
The Jesters
28
Marty Stuart
Marty Stuart
American musician
29
Black Oak Arkansas
Black Oak Arkansas
American Southern rock band
30
The Crickets
The Crickets
American rock and roll band
31
Social Distortion
Social Distortion
American punk rock band
32
Memphis Jug Band
Memphis Jug Band
band
33
Black Stone Cherry
Black Stone Cherry
American rock band
34
Warumpi Band
Warumpi Band
35
Cinderella
Cinderella
American rock band
36
Micky Waller
Micky Waller
British musician
37
Blackfoot
Blackfoot
American Southern rock musical ensemble from Jacksonville, Florida
38
The Birthday Party
The Birthday Party
Australian band
39
Ronnie Dawson
Ronnie Dawson
American musician
40
The Amboy Dukes
The Amboy Dukes
American rock band
41
Bluesology
Bluesology
band
42
Beasts of Bourbon
Beasts of Bourbon
Australian band
43
Booker T. & the M.G.'s
Booker T. & the M.G.'s
American musical group; R& B/funk band
44
Jon Tiven
Jon Tiven
American record producer
45
Brian Setzer
Brian Setzer
American singer
46
The Grass Roots
The Grass Roots
American pop rock band
47
Bar-Kays
Bar-Kays
American band
48
The Dogs D'Amour
The Dogs D'Amour
English band
49
Foghat
Foghat
British band
50
Love
Love
American rock group
51
Johnny Burnette
Johnny Burnette
American musician
52
Scotty Moore
Scotty Moore
American musician
53
Canned Heat
Canned Heat
American rock band
54
Spin Doctors
Spin Doctors
American rock band
55
Dave Edmunds
Dave Edmunds
Welsh Musician
Tav Falco's Panther Burns
American rock band

Tav Falco's Panther Burns

Intro
American rock band
Record Labels
Music
Members, past and present

Tav Falco's Panther Burns, sometimes shortened to (The) Panther Burns, is a rock band originally from Memphis, Tennessee, United States, led by Tav Falco. They are best known for having been part of a set of bands emerging in the late 1970s and early 1980s who helped nationally popularize the blending of blues, country, and other American traditional music styles with rock music among groups playing in alternative music and punk music venues of the time. The earliest and most renowned of these groups to imbue these styles with expressionist theatricality and primitive spontaneity were The Cramps, largely influenced by rockabilly music. Forming just after them in 1979, Panther Burns drew on obscure country blues music, Antonin Artaud's works like The Theater and Its Double, beat poetry, and Marshall McLuhan's media theories for their early inspiration. Alongside groups like The Cramps and The Gun Club, Panther Burns ranked among the contributing influences and progenitors of the Southern Gothic-tinged roots music revival scene that arose during the last two decades of the 20th century and continued into the early 2000s.

Artists who have referenced Panther Burns as one of their influences include the American alternative music artists Southern Culture on the Skids, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Jack Oblivian, the Royal Pendletons, and The Gories. In Europe, neo-psychedelic groups who have cited the Panther Burns as an influence include England's Spacemen 3; Scotland's Primal Scream; Germany's Cuban Rebel Girls (named after one of Falco's original songs); France's The Dum Dum Boys; and Italy's Time Machine.

For Panther Burns' own professed influences, the list is lengthy, from The Cramps to Bix Beiderbecke, Jessie Mae Hemphill, The Sonics, Mack Rice, Chuck Berry, Phineas Newborn Jr., Calvin Newborn, Frank Sinatra, Booker T. and the M.G.'s, Einstürzende Neubauten, the Johnny Burnette Rock and Roll Trio, Brian Eno, Marlene Dietrich, Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Xavier Cugat, Junior Kimbrough, Laura Dukes, Mud Boy and the Neutrons, Chris Spedding, Jimmy Reed, The Nightcrawlers, the Velvet Underground, Junior Parker, Othar Turner, Charlie Feathers, Howling Wolf, Mose Vinson, Van Zula Hunt, Cordell Jackson, Ronnie Hawkins, the Ventures, Scotty Moore, Elvis Presley, Skip James, Pat Hare, The Doors, R. L. Burnside, Karlheinz Stockhausen, John Fahey, Joe Meek, Bobby "Blue" Bland, Gene Pitney, and Elmore James, among many others Falco has listed over the years.

After forming Tav Falco's Panther Burns and making their first recordings in Memphis, the group soon evolved as a rotating crew of additional musicians hailing mostly from Memphis, New York, and New Orleans. In the early 1990s, Falco moved to Vienna and later, Paris; at that time he began working more with European musicians. He currently resides in Vienna.