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Dusty hill king of the hill

Dusty, Hank, and the rest of ZZ Top. bassist, keyboardist, and co-vocalist Dusty Hill (May 19, 1949-July 28, 2021) is the bass player for ZZ Top. He was introduced as Hank Hill's paternal cousin in season 11, episode 5 ("Hank Gets Dusted"), in which Hank is crestfallen that Cotton is giving his Cadillac to Dusty instead of him. When Dusty arrives at the
Hill Household, it is revealed that Dusty is starring in a new reality TV series titled "Behind the Beard". Dusty enters the Cadillac into a demolition derby, where it is later destroyed. He and the rest of ZZ Top were known and annoyed by Hank for pranking and harassing him for their reality show. Dusty later apologies for destroying the Cadillac, not
knowing Hank had wanted it but was passed over. Dusty's father was said to be Cotton's brother, making the latter Hank's paternal uncle. Flashbacks ZZ Top tricks Hank as adolescents by having women rub against him during work ZZ Top tricks Hank by lying to him about the propane commission which is instead a ZZ Top concert ZZ Top tricks
Hank and Peggy by taping a beard to the just born Bobby Hill’s face The death of longtime ZZ Top bassist and co-vocalist Dusty Hill on Wednesday (July 28) at age 72 sent a shockwave through the rock community. Subsequently, numerous musicians shared tributes and remembrances in his honor. But TV viewers and moviegoers not clued into ZZ
Top's bluesy brand of Southern rock might remember Hill differently.That's because, over the last 20 years, the bass player moonlighted as an on-screen entertainer — usually alongside his bandmates — in several television productions and a couple of movies. And outside of the band's own song clips, home videos and concert films, a few Dusty Hill
screen appearances stand out.Watch the videos down toward the bottom of this post.Maybe the most indelible of Hill's TV turns came in a 2007 episode of the animated sitcom King of the Hill — he and ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons and Frank Beard appear as the cartoon versions of themselves, with Hill voicing himself. But the bass player
additionally acted on Two and a Half Men, Deadwood and The Drew Carey Show.That's not to mention the instances that Hill has contributed to feature-length fictional entertainments. 1990's Back to the Future Part III likely sticks out as the pinnacle of the musician's film appearances, but there's also a Disney movie from around the same time in
which Hill and ZZ Top make a cameo in…a bathtub.Below, bask in seven of Dusty Hill's most memorable on-screen appearances.Hill appears with his ZZ Top bandmates in a Season 7 episode of Two and a Half Men, "Gumby With a Pokey," wherein the lead character, Charlie Parker (Charlie Sheen), is trying out marijuana to help ease his insomnia.
But the grass goes to head, and he subsequently sees all three ZZ Top members assembled in his living room, leading viewers to believe their manifestation is just a dream.Watch the full episode on Peacock here.Wrestling fans saw Hill on WWE's signature Monday night program, WWE Raw, a handful of times from 2009–2015, often alongside his
musical foil Gibbons. For a Raw broadcast in July 2009, the two guest-hosted the entire show. Hill also cropped up during WWE's Unforgiven pay-per-view event in 2005.Stream the WWE Network here.Hill voices an animated version of himself, alongside the likenesses of his ZZ Top brethren, in a Season 11 episode of King of the Hill, "Hank Gets
Dusted." The fictional Hill family's shared surname with that of the bassist lends itself to comedy gold — Dusty plays patriarch Hank Hill's cousin; Hank's dad, Cotton, gifts his prized Cadillac to Dusty instead of his son, angering Hank. The hilarity notches up further when ZZ Top start playing pranks on Hank.Watch the full episode on Hulu here.Hill
and Gibbons' joint background cameo as townsmen in the 2006 Deadwood series finale is so brief that it seems almost impossible to find a clip online showing just their appearance. Yet, once you zero in on the two bearded men in the background while watching Season 3's "Tell Him Something Pretty," they're impossible to miss.Watch the full episode
on HBO Max here.The Drew Carey Show started its fourth season with a bang when several famous rockers — Joey Ramone, Dave Mustaine, Slash and others — appeared among a cache of musicians trying out for a fictional band formed by Carey and his friends in the second episode ("In Ramada Da Vida"). Hill shows up to audition on bass but is told
the lose the beard — his "Texas goatee," as he calls it. It doesn't work out.The Drew Carey Show Season 4 is unavailable to stream.Strangely enough, one of the perhaps most high profile of ZZ Top's on-screen appearances doesn't even acknowledge the band members' acting parts in its closing credits. But ZZ Top fans surely remember Hill and his
cohorts' appearance in Back to the Future Part III's Old West as the party band at a town festival. Top's studio version of "Doubleback," a tune from the group's Recycler album, is also heard in the movie — they perform it in a reworked acoustic version in their scene.Back to the Future III was removed from Netflix on June 30.One of the earliest times
ZZ Top inhabited an on-screen world outside their own came when Hill and his bandmates embodied the "Three men in a tub" from the nursery rhyme "Rub-a-Dub-Dub" in the 1990 Disney Channel musical film Mother Goose Rock 'n' Rhyme. The colorful kids' movie, a pretty odd film in retrospect, stars The Shining's Shelley Duvall and other
music legends such as Little Richard. Check out ZZ Top's tub-tastic appearance at 16:20 in the below video.The full movie is available in the player below. We’ve detected that JavaScript is disabled in this browser. Please enable JavaScript or switch to a supported browser to continue using twitter.com. You can see a list of supported browsers in our
Help Center. Help Center image captionDusty Hill played bass with ZZ Top for over 50 yearsDusty Hill, the bassist of US blues rock band ZZ Top, has died at the age of 72.Bandmates Billy Gibbons and Frank Beard said that Hill died in his sleep at his home in Houston, Texas. They did not give further details.Earlier in July, ZZ Top had announced that
Hill would not play some upcoming shows due to a hip injury.Known for his bushy beard and sunglasses, Hill played with ZZ Top for over 50 years."We, along with legions of ZZ Top fans around the world, will miss your steadfast presence, your good nature, and enduring commitment to providing that monumental bottom to the 'Top'," the statement
from Gibbons and Beard said."You will be missed greatly, amigo."Born Joseph Michael Hill, the bassist originally played guitar alongside his brother Rocky in Dallas before moving to Houston and joining Beard.ZZ Top was founded in 1969, and played their first live concert the following year.The trio would go on to release 15 studio and four live
albums, with hit singles like Gimme All Your Lovin', Sleeping Bag, and Viva Las Vegas.ZZ Top was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.In addition to the bass guitar, Hill played keyboard and was a secondary lead vocalist for the band. Hill also made cameo acting appearances in the Back to the Future Part III film and HBO's
Deadwood, along with the animated television series King of the Hill.Following news of his death, fans and fellow musicians of Hill's took to social media to express their grief."For 50 entire years, Dusty Hill anchored down one of the greatest rock power trios that's ever existed," music journalist Corbin Reiff wrote on Twitter.media captionZZ Top on
Glastonbury and beard etiquette (2016 report) Dusty Hill, the bearded bassist for Texas trio ZZ Top, died in his sleep at his home in Houston. The surviving members made the announcement Wednesday on Facebook."We are saddened by the news today that our Compadre, Dusty Hill, has passed away in his sleep at home in Houston, TX. We, along
with legions of ZZ Top fans around the world, will miss your steadfast presence, your good nature and enduring commitment to providing that monumental bottom to the ‘Top'. We will forever be connected to that "Blues Shuffle in C.” You will be missed greatly, amigo," read a post from Frank Beard and Billy Gibbons. Hill, who was born in Dallas,
turned 72 in May. Condolences came in quickly from fellow musicians, including rock band Junkyard, Blue Mother Tupelo and Gary P. Nunn, who simply wrote, "Damn." Rapper Bun B thanked Hill and ZZ Top "for all the frat music and for helping make being a Texan cool" on social media. In a tweet, Gov. Greg Abbott called Hill "a great friend and a
remarkable Texan." Longtime fan John Villarreal vividly recalls the band's Nov. 2, 2003 concert at Compaq Center, the last before the venue became Lakewood Church. Villareal and his best friend were able to meet the band backstage. "Even for a fleeting moment, you knew they were the kings of cool," Villarreal, who was 20 at the time, recalls. I've
still to this day never been to a concert as loud as that one. We were the youngest people backstage. Dusty was very soft-spoken and quiet. He is forever a Texas legend whose fingerprints and influence are all over the music that comes out of Texas." THE MAKING OF AN ICONIC TEXAS BAND: ZZ Top's first album turns 50. On July 23, the band
posted on its website that Hill was "on a short detour back to Texas, to address a hip issue" while on tour. He was temporarily replaced by Elwood Francis, the band's longtime guitar tech. Drummer Leesa Harrington-Squyres, who plays with Led Zeppelin tribute act Lez Zeppelin and doom metal band Sabbath Warlock, met Hill in the '90s when she
played with Houston native Carolyn Wonderland. "I will miss him," Harrington-Squyres said. "He was a super nice guy who appreciated good music. His contribution to rock and roll will go down in the history books." Jesse Dayton, a singer, songwriter and filmmaker from Beaumont, wrote that he was "devastated." He was 19-years-old when he met
Hill at a Houston nightclub. “As sweet and down-to-earth as Dusty was, meeting someone who created the majority of your childhood soundtrack was the rush of a lifetime,” Dayton says. “Even though Dusty was like a Texas blues superhero, on par with Elvis to us, when I saw him backstage or wherever we were, he always made time to come over,
cracked a joke and put everyone at ease. Texas will never be the same.” Michael Sweet, frontman for Stryper, called it "a real eye opener to see so many peers leaving us recently and what seems to be so suddenly." Hill moved to Houston in the late '60s and formed ZZ Top with Gibbons and Beard. Together they released more than a dozen albums,
combining blues, rock and an unmistakable Texas groove. They scored early hits with "La Grange" and "Tush" but had their biggest success in the '80s, infusing their gritty sound with more polished pop production. Music videos for Gimme All Your Lovin'," "Sharp Dressed Man", and "Legs" became MTV staples. "We were strongly influenced by the
blues, especially from Texas and Memphis,” Hill told the Chronicle's Andrew Dansby in January while musing on the band's 50th anniversary. “But we also loved Cream. And that was part of the inspiration. We knew the original stuff that inspired them. And I remember thinking it was (expletive) that Americans weren’t doing anything with that same
power and the fresh approach. It took Eric Clapton and people like that, and thank God they did it. What they were doing, it was rock ’n’ roll, but it was also blues. "What we did was never traditional blues. But it is blues. It’s more rock than blues. But those English blues cats did us a huge favor. They got a whole new audience into the blues. And we
owe them a debt for that." Hill made several movie and TV appearances, including "Back to the Future Part III," "The Drew Carey Show" and "King of the Hill," where he played himself as Hank Hill's cousin. In 2004, ZZ Top was inducted into the Rock Hall of Fame. The band's last album was 2012's "La Futura," and they were working on new material
the last few years. A 50th-anniversary tour was canceled because of the ongoing pandemic. "Breaking in a band is so much fun," Hill told the Chronicle of his beginnings. "It was new and exciting to us. I'd played in a three-piece with my brother, and I loved playing with my brother, but everything was different with Billy. And Frank and I were
comfortable playing together. So we got tight pretty quick." Hill is survived by his wife Charleen “Chuck” Hill and daughter Charity Hill. No details have been released regarding funeral arrangements.
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