The band began playing out in 1972 and 1973. On February 8, 1973, they played at Cowtown Ballroom in
Kansas City, Missouri. Later that month, on February 21, they played a concert at
Shawnee Mission Northwest High School in
Shawnee, Kansas. Two weeks after that, on March 9 and 10, they played at
Kiel Opera House in
St. Louis and Cowtown Ballroom again, this time with Brewer & Shipley, accompanied by
Loudon Wainwright III. Performances from both those March shows later turned up on a CD called
Archive Alive in 1997. The group's demo tape eventually caught the attention of
A&M Records staff producer
David Anderle, who was looking for an
Eagles country rock type of band to place on the label. Anderle and the Eagles' first producer,
Glyn Johns, flew to Missouri to catch the band's aforementioned performance at Cowtown Ballroom on March 10, 1973. But the band, nervous about Johns and Anderle being in the audience, did not play their best. Later on, Paul Peterson invited the two men back to his place to hear the band give an unplugged performance by candlelight. This time Anderle and Johns were blown away and they were signed to A&M on May 1, 1973, and sent to England to record their first record at
Olympic Studios in London with Johns at the helm during that June and July. The first record,
The Ozark Mountain Daredevils (also referred to as "The Quilt Album"), was released in December 1973 and spawned the Top 30 hit "If You Wanna Get to Heaven" in the summer of 1974. The album introduced the band's unique mixture of rock, country, bluegrass and pop to the world and is still the favorite of many of the group's fans. Bluegrass song "Standing on the Rock" and hillbilly-influenced "Chicken Train" are recurring live performance fan favorites. For the second album, ''
It'll Shine When It Shines'' (October 1974), Johns and Anderle came to Missouri to record, utilizing a mobile recording truck set up outside of the band's rehearsal home. During the sessions, Johns overheard Larry Lee sitting at a piano playing and singing a song about a mysterious friend of his who sometimes dealt drugs on the side. Johns loved the melody and thought it could be a smash hit if the lyrics were altered to be about a girl and the drug references downplayed. Lee and Cash did as Johns asked and the song,
Jackie Blue, became the Daredevils' signature song and a huge hit (No. 3) in the spring of 1975. The Ozark's third release,
The Car Over the Lake Album (September 1975), recorded in
Nashville, Tennessee, and produced by Anderle alone, featured their old compatriot Bill Jones joining them to play and arrange their songs. He also toured with them in late 1974 thru early 1977. The album sold fairly well but produced no hits. In 1976, Dillon, Brayfield, Lee and Chowning also appeared on
Hoyt Axton's A&M LP
Fearless, contributing back-up vocals on the album's opening song, "Idol of The Band." One reason why the band's fortunes began to falter might have been their reluctance to relocate to
Southern California after being asked to do so by A&M co-head
Jerry Moss. Another was their reluctance to embark on the constant touring that many of their contemporaries were doing at the time. A further sticking point was the band's unwillingness to try and duplicate their biggest hit, "Jackie Blue", or copy what other groups were doing. As a result, A&M began to lose a bit of its enthusiasm for the act. Personnel shifts within the group also began to change the chemistry. In the spring of 1976, the band embarked on a tour of Europe. But by the time the exhausted troupe hit
Copenhagen,
Denmark, in early May, for their final show at Daddy's Dance Hall, they were confounded by a horrible sound mix at the venue. An angry Randle Chowning responded by turning up his amplifier all the way, which upset the other band members and resulted in a huge shouting match at the end of the night. Upon their return home, Chowning refused to speak to the others or take their calls. Norwegian musician Rune Walle, whom the band had met while on tour in Europe with his band the
Flying Norwegians, was then contacted in June to replace him. Walle's first show with the group was at
Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City on July 23, 1976, on a bill that also included
the Beach Boys,
the Doobie Brothers,
Jeff Beck and
Firefall. Chowning went on to form his own Randle Chowning Band That same year, the Daredevils headed west to the
Rockies, to
Caribou Ranch near
Nederland, Colorado, to record their fourth album, which they had originally titled
Nuclear Fishing but then changed to
Men From Earth after A&M objected. The
Nuclear Fishing title was later used up in Canada for a greatest hits album release. Anderle was once again in the producer's chair and
Evergreen, Colorado resident Jerry Mills joined the band on mandolin and also served as the group's advance publicist. Another face from the past, Steve Canaday, also came back into the group's life in 1975 as road manager and opening act before joining the band during the making of
Men From Earth. In the fall of 1976, Buddy Brayfield departed to study medicine and Ruell Chappell (vocals, keyboards), from the popular Springfield group Spillwater Junction, came in. But the band's next several releases –
Men From Earth (September 1976), ''
Don't Look Down (October 1977, produced by David Kershenbaum, once again at Caribou Ranch) and It's Alive (September 1978) – sold in smaller quantities than their previous records had. Jerry Mills and his mandolin were dropped from the group after It's Alive'' since the band was performing fewer acoustic numbers in their show by this time. During the summer of 1978, the Daredevils went out for a short run of shows where they opened for
Fleetwood Mac. Granda was not available since he was at home with his wife after the birth of their second child, so Springfield bassist Larry Van Fleet (from the Randle Chowning Band) sat in for these dates. On August 26, 1978, the Ozarks appeared at
Canada Jam on a large bill that also included
Kansas,
Atlanta Rhythm Section,
the Doobie Brothers,
the Commodores and others. Also in 1978, John Dillon and Steve Cash contributed to an album,
White Mansions, which documented life in the
Confederacy during the
American Civil War.
Waylon Jennings,
Eric Clapton,
Jessi Colter,
Bernie Leadon and several other musicians appeared on this record as well. 1978 also had Larry Lee recording a solo album for A&M that was not released. In September 1978, the group flew to
Hollywood to appear on
The Midnight Special. But when A&M's Jerry Moss witnessed the inebriated band members race through their set on the show, he decided not to pick up the option on their record deal and the Ozarks found themselves without a home in 1979. == 1980s ==