The Trolls

The Trolls Warrior PS
The Trolls, left to right: Richard “Speedy” Gonzales, Phil Head, Monty “Denny” Baker in back, and Doug “Digger” Rymerson

The Trolls Ruff 45 That's the Way My Love IsOf the three (or more) ‘Trolls’ who recorded in the ’60s, my favorite is this group from Pueblo, Colorado. They had an interesting history I’d like to know more about, releasing two excellent 45s. Their first was “That’s the Way My Love Is” a great original with a tough sound typical of Ray Ruff’s productions of the time. The flip is a ballad, “Into My Arms”.

Their second record came out on Chan Romero’s Warrior label and features an energetic but tinny cover of the Stones’ “Stupid Girl”. Much better is the flip, Rich Gonzales’ original “I Don’t Recall”, a wild and very catchy song with repetitive tweeting organ notes, great fuzz guitar and bass, wonderful drumming and excellent vocals. Plus, it was released with a bizarre and goofy picture sleeve. For more info on the Warrior label see my entry here.

Members at the time of recording were:

Richard Gonzales – lead vocals, guitar
Doug Rymerson – lead guitar
Fred Brescher – Farfisa organ
Monty Baker – bass, vocals
Phil Head – drums

The Trolls Warrior 45 I Don't RecallA now-defunct website on Colorado groups, mountainmusic.net had the fullest description of the group I could find:

A very “English” band from Pueblo they covered Stones and Kinks songs. They started with Gonzales, Head, Brescher and one/two additional players in 1964 and made what proved to be a worthless trip to Los Angeles in the winter of that year.

They retooled the band with the addition of Rymerson and Baker from the visiting Radiants from southern Minnesota. Unhappy with the Radiants the pair jumped ship and into the “New” Trolls. This lineup traveled to Amarillo, Texas to record for Ray Ruff and his new Ruff record label, already having regional (KOMA radio) success with the Blue Things.

The first single “That’s The Way My Love Is” / “Into My Arms” featured both sides penned by the organist, Fred Breschler and while anywhere from four to ten additional tracks may have been recorded. All masters where lost when Ruff’s facility in Amarillo burned in 1968. This includes an unreleased track with the interesting title: “Trash Talk”.

The Trolls Warrior 45 Stupid Girl

The next recording session was in Clovis, New Mexico with Norman Petty in late 1965 or early in 1966. The resulting single “Stupid Girl” / “I Don’t Recall” was packaged in a picture sleeve which omitted a member (Fred B.?) because he was in the hospital. It was released on the Warrior label (see this post for more info on that label).

One additional local recording session produced what Richard described as “all cymbals!” and resulting unhappiness with the master scuttled plans to release it as a disc.

The departure of Monty Baker in the fall of 1966 was the end of band, he left to join the Colorado Springs band, The New World Blues Dictionary [a major fixture on the area’s live scene]. Richard stopped performing and moved to Orange County in Southern California for a few years, only to join in his drummer brother Leroy in White Lightning in 1968. During 1967 I believe Doug Rymerson and Phil Head worked with bands called The Chosen Few and the Rubber Band. Fred Breschers’s post-Trolls work is unknown.

In addition to this description, there is more info from the liner notes of the Big Beat CD Now Hear This! Garage and Beat from the Norman Petty Vaults: after returning from L.A. the band was managed by Tony Spicola who brought them down to Clovis to record at Petty’s studio. Also, Fred Brescher does not appear on the sleeve photo due to having just been fired for excessive drug use. He was, however, impossible to replace and the band broke up in 1967.

Tom from The Denver Eye tells me of a rumor that one fan would record their shows on reel-to-reel tape. If true, I’d love to hear them.

John Grove wrote in with the following remembrance of the band and identified the members in the photos:

My name is John Grove, also from Pueblo. Have been through about 30 bands locally, started playing in 1964, now of the classic rock band “Dr. Fine”. For bio and pictures, go to bobyeazel.com.

There were three hot semi-pro [Pueblo] bands in the mid-sixties. The Teardrops who did great top 40, the Chandells who did great R&B, and the Trolls….They were the “guy’s” band, and they were bad-asses – super cool, very English! As you stated they did Beatles, “Run for Your Life” I remember. Lots of Stones, Kinks, they even did “Take Five” by Dave Brubeck.

They all had nicknames, Richard Gonzales was “Speedy”, Fred Brescher was “Brush”, Phil Head was “Flip”, Monty Baker was “Denny”, Doug Rymerson was “Digger”.

Phil had played earlier with a band called the Cobras which featured Donny and Richard Bussey. Donny was the one who gave me my first guitar lessons. I believe Speedy, Phil Head and Fred Brescher were in a band called The Pueblo Beatles. They joined forces with Digger and Denny and formed The Trolls. Denny was the brains and the organizer and business guy of the band.

The Trolls photo
left to right, Fred, Speedy, Digger, Phil, and Denny
They were in fact managed by the Southern Colorado legend Tony Spicola, originally from Trinidad, Colorado. Tony also managed Chan Romero who wrote “The Hippy Hippy Shake”. Tony was a close friend of Ray Ruff, thus the connection on Ruff Records. Tony was also a major concert promoter in Southern Colorado, and did acts such as the Young Rascals, Buffalo Springfield, Everly Brothers and many many more. His story is another whole book by itself. A true legend.

Denny and Digger used real English Vox AC 50 amps (“Super Beatle” style that were tube. Not the solid state Thomas organ American made stuff), Speedy used a “black face” Fender Super Reverb, Fred had a red Farfisa Combo Compact organ, Phil used Premier Drums. Guitars consisted of Digger using a Fender Jazzmaster, Denny used a Fender Jazz Bass, Speedy used a “dot neck” Gibson 335.

All of their equiptment was hauled around in a Corvair van painted a custom metal flake mustard yellow with “Troll Rock n’ Roll” painted on the side, on the front, it said “Here comes Troll”. In Pueblo, they were big time. Beatle boots, vests, blazes, in other words no matching uniforms.

Fred did leave, don’t remember or know why, and they continued as four-piece. The rest of the stuff about where the members went to after The Trolls is as far as I can remember is accurate. Digger did join another cool band called Century Fox which evolved into Justice. I stay in contact with Denny, he is back in his native Iowa and retired as a registered respiratory therapist which he had made his career since the early 70’s. Speedy is in Pueblo, and the last I heard was a barber, Phil is in Los Angeles, Fred passed in the late eighties or early nineties. He was a great guy, as was all of them. They were a tremendous influence on all of young musicians. Hope this helps.

John Grove

Doug Rymerson and Phil Head played with Baby Magic during ’67 and ’68., and Phil Head drummed with a group called the Frantics, that had relocated from Billings, Montana and Santa Fe.

I’ve read Fred Brescher passed away in February, 2003.

Thank you to Jeff Lemlich for supplying the scan of the Trolls PS.

Trolls Warrior PS back
back of the Warrior sleeve

Them

First UK EP showing lineup after November, 1964. From left: Alan Henderson, Pat McAuley, Van Morrison, Billy Harrison and Jackie McAuley
First UK EP showing lineup January 1965. From left: Alan Henderson, Pat McAuley, Van Morrison, Billy Harrison and Jackie McAuley

Van Morrison (harmonica, saxophone, vocals)
Alan Henderson (bass)
Billy Harrison (lead guitar)
Eric Wrixon (keyboards)
Ronnie Millings (drums)

1963

The group is formed in Belfast, Northern Ireland by Henderson (b. 26 November 1944, Belfast, N. Ireland), Harrison (b. 14 October 1942, Belfast, N. Ireland) and Millings (or Mellings), who have previously played in a local three-piece outfit, The Gamblers. The trio adds keyboard player Eric Wrixon (b. 29 June 1947, Belfast, N. Ireland) and a short while later completes the original line up with singer Morrison (b. George Ivan, 31 August 1945, Belfast, N. Ireland) from local band The Monarchs. Wrixon names the band after a 1950s B horror film.

1964

April (10) According to an article in Belfast weekly, Cityweek, dated 22 September 1966, Them had played their first ever gig at the Maritime Hotel in College Square North as a trio of Harrison, Henderson and Millings as Van Morrison was playing at the Plaza and had give two weeks’ notice. The trio played in the break for The College Boys.

(17) One of the first R&B/beat group’s in the province, the Morrison fronted Them quickly build a reputation as a strong live act holding down a residency at the Maritime Hotel. The group’s repertoire includes a blistering 15-minute version of Bobby Bland’s “Turn On Your Love Light”, and a 20-minute improvisation of Morrison’s celebration of teenage lust, “Gloria”. (Although Morrison is credited for the song’s lyrics, Harrison and Henderson have contributed significantly on the musical side.)

(24) Them return for a show at the Maritime Hotel in Belfast.

May The band attracts the attention of manager Phil Solomon (currently working with Irish pop trio The Bachelors), who is greatly impressed by the band’s live performances (and Morrison in particular). Solomon encourages Decca’s Dick Rowe to see the band perform at the Maritime, and Rowe in turn arranges a session in London. (According to Cityweek‘s 22 September 1966 issue, the group had already recorded a three-track demo for local producer Peter Lloyd comprising “Stormy Monday”, “I Got My Mojo Working” and “Don’t Start Crying Now”.)

(1) Them play at the Martime Hotel, Belfast.

(8) The group appears at the Maritime Hotel, Belfast.

(15) Another show takes place at the Maritime Hotel, Belfast.

(22) The group returns for a show at the Maritime Hotel, Belfast.

(29) Them appear at the Martime Hotel, Belfast.

June Them relocate to London and a hotel in Portobello Road, where they hang out with their label mates The Poets.

French EP showing original drummer Ronnie Millings (with shades)
French EP showing original drummer Ronnie Millings (with shades)

July (5) The group enters Decca’s West Hampstead, London studios to begin recording, but the three-hour session is a stressful affair and Rowe decides to employ session musicians Arthur Greenslade (organ) and Bobby Graham (drums) to “fill out” the sound. Them records Slim Harpo’s “Don’t Come Crying Now” and Van Morrison’s “Gloria”, “One Two Brown Eyes” and “Philosophy”, which are all released over the next year. The band also records covers of “Groovin’”, “Turn On your Love Light” and “You Can’t Judge A Book By Its Cover” which are shelved. After the recordings, Wrixon is forced to leave (in part because his father objects to a disproportionate royalty split between the management and the group and in part because he is still at school and has ‘A’ levels to complete). Pat McAuley (b. 17 March 1944, Coleraine, N.Ireland) takes over the keyboard position.

September (4) The group’s debut single, “Don’t Start Crying Now” backed by “One Two Brown Eyes” is released but fails to chart.

October The group returns to the studio to record an electrifying version of Big Joe Williams’s blues classic “Baby Please Don’t Go”. Session guitarist Jimmy Page adds rhythm guitar to the recording (and does not play lead as some sources suggest).

(15) Them are billed to perform at the Zeeta House, Putney, Surrey.  However, there is another west London band with this name who soon become Themselves to avoid confusion with Van Morrison’s band so this may be that group.

November (6) “Baby Please Don’t Go” backed by Morrison’s “Gloria” is released. Millings leaves and Pat McAuley moves onto drums.

December The short-lived (yet well photographed) new line-up appears on the popular TV show Ready Steady Go!

1965

January Pat’s brother Jackie (aka John) (b. 14 December 1946, Coleraine, N. Ireland) is added on keyboards as the group begins work on its next single, a recording of their new producer, Bert Berns’s “Here Comes The Night”. Some sources maintain that organ player Phil Coulter and drummer Alan White are brought in to play the McAuley brothers’ parts, but this is disputed by the band members. (Berns, an American producer working in the UK is impressed with Morrison as a vocalist and will continue to work with the group over the next few months.)

Photo: Cityweek

February Aided by TV appearances, “Baby Please Don’t Go” hits UK #10, while “Gloria” quickly becomes an anthem for the emerging US garage band generation. Decca releases an EP featuring both sides of Them’s debut single, the recent hit and Morrison’s “Philosophy” recorded during the July sessions.

(10) Western Scene lists the band playing at Bristol Corn Exchange.

(13) The Kilmarnock Standard lists the band playing at the Community Centre, Auchinleck, Scotland with The Blue Chekkers.

(15) Western Scene lists the band playing at Bath Pavilion.

(18) According to the Worthing Herald, the band appears at the Pier Pavilion in Worthing, West Sussex.

(20) Them appear at the Club Noreik, Tottenham, north London.

(22) The Warrington Guardian lists the group at the YOR Club, Parr Hall, Warrington, Cheshire with The Clayton Squares.

(25) The band performs at Swindon’s Locarno Ballroom with The Knives and Forks.

(26) Them plays at Woolwich Polytechnic in southeast London.

(27) The band appears at Manchester University.

March “Here Comes The Night” hits UK #2 and is the group’s most successful release. The band begins work on its debut album, but sessions are once again plagued with problems. Some sources suggest that the group’s three producers Bert Berns, Dick Rowe and Tommy Scott supplement the band with session players, although this is disputed by band members.

(1) The Dorset Evening Echo lists Them at the Pavilion Ballroom, Weymouth, Dorset with The Soundsmen and The Silhouttes.

(2) The band plays at Wallington Public Hall in Wallington, Surrey.

(3) Them perform at Stourbridge Town Hall in Worcestershire.

(4) The group appears at Kidderminster Town Hall in Worcestershire.

(9) The Yorkshire Evening Post lists the group performing at the Three Coins in Leeds, West Yorkshire.

(13) The Stockport County Express says Them appear at the Manor Lounge in Stockport with The Mersey Squares.

(14) The Birmingham Evening Mail reports that the band plays at the Brum Kavern Club, Small Heath, West Midlands with The King Bees.

(16) The Southern Echo lists the band playing at the Empire Hall, Totton with Gary Young & The Deacons.

(19) The Ruislip & Northwood Gazette lists the group playing at Botwell House, Hayes, Middlesex.

(20) The Grantham Journal has Them playing at Drill Hall, Grantham, Lincolnshire with The Delcounts.

(21) Them perform at the Pigalle in central London.

(22) The group plays at the Adelphi in West Bromwich, West Midlands with the Uglys.

(23) The Woking Herald lists the band at Walton Playhouse.

(24-28) Them takes part in a short tour of Scotland, according to Beat Instrumental.

(25) During the Scottish tour, the band appears at the Two Red Shoes in Elgin.

(29) Music Echo from Liverpool reports that Them appear at Silver Blades in Liverpool.

(30) Them play at the Floral Hall in Gorston-on-Sea, Norfolk.

April (1) The band returns to perform at the Manor Lounge, Stockport, Greater Manchester with The Mersey Squares.

Photo: Melody Maker, 3 April 1965

(4) Them appear at the Ritz in Birmingham.

Photo: Cityweek

(9) The group plays at Leamington Town Hall in Warwickshire. On the same day, Billy Harrison responded to the band’s critics in an article entitled “‘Them’ Hit Back” in the Belfast publication Cityweek.

(10) Them performs at Dudley Town Hall in the West Midlands.

(11) Them perform at the New Musical Express Poll Winners Concert at the Empire Pool, Wembley, west London with many others. Beat Instrumental also has the band appearing at the Co-Op in Gravesend, Kent earlier during the day. It is not clear whether this happens as the Sussex Evening Express also lists the band appearing at the Whitehall in East Grinstead, West Sussex with The Hounds.

(13) The Southern Echo lists the band at Haymarket Theatre, Basingstoke, Hampshire with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, The Evil Eyes and The Trinity.

(14) The Birmingham Evening Mail reports that Them appear at the Mackadown, Kitts Green, West Midlands with The Tombstones.

Gloria reaches #1 on KRLA, April 14, 1965
Gloria reaches #1 on KRLA, April 14, 1965
early mention for band in KRLA's Beat, May 19, 1965
Early US mention for band in KRLA’s Beat, May 19, 1965

(17) Beat Instrumental reports the band performing at the Market Hall in Redhill, Surrey.

(18) Beat Instrumental lists Them at the Oasis, Manchester.

(22) The Western Gazette advertises the group appearing at the Liberal Hall, Yeovil, Somerset with The Bo-Peeps.

(23) Beat Instrumental reports that the band is performing another show in Gravesend, Kent but this is unlikely.

(24) Beat Instrumental lists Them playing in Kirkcaldy, Scotland but this is unlikely as the band headed back to Northern Ireland around this time. Unhappy with the band’s direction and his personal treatment, Jackie McAuley leaves after a show at St Columbana’s Parish Church in Ballyhome, Northern Ireland and is replaced by ex-Cheynes member Peter Bardens (b. 19 June 1944, Westminster, London, England; d. 22 January 2002).

Them's first UK LP, The Angry Young Them, Peter Bardens in pink shirt next to Van
Them’s first UK LP, The Angry Young Them, Peter Bardens in pink shirt next to Van
First U.S. issue, featuring "Here Comes the Night"
First U.S. issue, featuring “Here Comes the Night”
Second U.S. cover to capitalize on "Gloria"
Second U.S. cover to capitalize on “Gloria”

May “Gloria” charts for a week at US #93, selling mostly in California where it hits Top 10 in some major cities.

(1) The Walthamstow Guardian reports that Them play at Walthamstow Assembly Hall, Walthamstow, north London.

(7) Belfast publication, Cityweek reports that Them have been recording a lot in the past few days with new organist Peter Bardens.

(9) Them perform at the Winter Gardens in Margate, Kent with Wayne Fontana & The Mindbenders, The Nashville Teens and The Fourmost.

(11) The band appears at Bristol Chinese R&B Club, Corn Exchange, Bristol, according to the Western Scene.

Photo: Surrey Mirror, 14 May 1965

(14) The Streatham News reports that Them appear Wimbledon Palais, southwest London.

Photo: Boyfriend magazine, 15 May 1965

(17) The Enfield Gazette & Observer reports that Them perform at the Potter’s Bar Ritz in north London with The Zephyrs, Screaming Lord Sutch & The Savages and The Mark Four.

(20) The Worthing Herald lists the band playing at Worthing Assembly Hall.

(25) Them appear at the Assembly Hall, Wallington, near Croydon, south London.

(26) The band performs at Stourbridge Town Hall in Worcestershire.

(28) Them play at Winchester Town Hall in Hampshire.

(29The band appears at the Rhodes Centre in Bishop’s Stortford in Hertfordshire.

(30) The band plays at Elm Park in Hornchurch, east London.

June (1) Them begin a UK tour at Tunbridge Wells Public Hall. (The tour will end on 21 June at the Beachcombers, Leigh and Bolton). During this period, Pat McAuley is briefly replaced by former drummer Ronnie Millings before rejoining the group.

(2) Western Scene lists the band playing at Bristol Corn Exchange.

(5) The Cornish Guardian notes the band will play at the Par Stadium in St Austell before later appearing at the Riveria Lido in the evening.

(7) The Gloucester Citizen reports the band appearing at the Top Spot, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire with The Saxons.

(11) The Morrison-penned “One More Time” fails to chart. Them’s debut album (The Angry Young) Them is released in the UK to coincide with the single but is another chart failure.

Thanks to Andy Neill for the photo

(17) Them perform at the Ritz Club, Skewen, south Wales with The Jay Birds and The Eyes of Blue.

(18) Belfast publication Cityweek reports that Jackie McAuley is back home and is helping to reform The Yaks. McAuley, however, soon moves to Dublin and learns to play guitar. He will rejoin his brother in a rival Them in late December 1965.

(19) Them play at Dudley Town Hall in the West Midlands.

(21) The band appears at the Beachcomber in Leigh.

(24) Them perform at Leeds University.

(25) The group appears at the Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Rodgers Lodgers.

(26) “Here Comes The Night” hits US #24. On the same day, the Lincolnshire Standard reports that Them play at the Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Lincolnshire with Mike Sheridan & The Nightriders and Rodgers Lodgers.

July Original Them member, Eric Wrixon completes his studies.

(3)  The Lancashire Evening Post reports that Them appear at Public Hall, Preston, Lancashire with Bob Johnson & The Bobcats and The Wildcats.

Photo: Cityweek

(9)  Harrison responds to rumours that Them are breaking up in an article in Cityweek. In the article, entitled “We are not breaking up”, he insists the group has no intention of splitting.

(15) Them perform at Salisbury City Hall, Salisbury, Wiltshire. Around his time Billy Harrison is sacked and replaced by Scottish guitarist Joe Baldi (b. Joseph Baldi, 16 March 1943, La Spezia Italy), who has played with Bardens in Hamilton King’s Blues Messengers. Harrison will briefly return in mid-October.

Photo: Richard Gleave

(17)  Them appear at Clacton Town Hall, Clacton, Essex with The Vaqueros and The Blue-Berries.

(18)  The new line-up plays the Whitehall in East Grinstead, West Sussex backed by Johnny Fine & The Ramblers, according to the Sussex Evening Express.

(19)  The Belfast Telegraph reports that Pat McAuley was sacked today. He is subsequently replaced by Englishman Terry Noon, who has previously worked with Gene Vincent.

(21) The Littlehampton Gazette lists the band at the Top Hat in Littlehampton, West Sussex, possibly marking Noon’s debut.

Photo: Cityweek

(23)  Cityweek reports that Them now contains only Van Morrison and Alan Henderson in an article entitled “…And then there were two”. Peter Bardens, however, does remain with the band. The Belfast publication also notes that Pat McAuley resigned from the band rather than was sacked.

(26-27) Them’s new line up appears at the Queen’s Ballroom, Cleveleys, Lancashire with two supporting groups after playing in Scarborough on the 25th July.

(28) The Bolton Evening News says the band performs at the Beachcomber, Bolton, Greater Manchester.

(29) Beat Instrumental reports that Them are appearing at the Pavilion Ballroom on the Isle of Man.

August A second Berns song, “(It Won’t Hurt) Half As Much” is released but doesn’t chart. In the US the single’s b-side “I’m Gonna Dress In Black”, written by producer Tommy Scott under the pseudonym ‘Gillon’, is released instead but is not a success.

(3) Them play at the Mexican Hat, Worthing, West Sussex, according to the Worthing Gazette.

(4)  The Camberley News reports that Them play at the Agincourt Ballroom in Camberley, Surrey.

(15) The Western Gazette advertises the group appearing at the Gaumont, Bournemouth, Dorset with The Byrds, Unit 4 Plus 2, Charles Dickens & The Artwoods, Johnny B Great & The Quotations, Sue Holloway and Jerry Stevens .

(23) The Cambridge News reports that Them play at the Dorothy Ballroom in Cambridge.

(28) The Lancashire Evening Post lists the band appearing in the Marquee in the grounds of Clitheroe Castle, Burnley, Lancashire with The Fortune Tellers.

(30) The Cambridge News advertises the group appearing at Bigmore Hall in Cambridge.

(31) The Eastern Evening News reports that Them appear at the Gala Ballroom in Norwich with Pentad.

September (1) Former members Billy Harrison and Pat McAuley (now on keyboards) announce their own version of Them in London on this day, which contains singer Nick Wymer (ex-Pink Faires), drummer Skip Alan (ex-Donovan) and bass player Mark Scott (ex-Adam Faith). The group is initially dubbed “Some of Them”.

(4) The Bolton Evening News reports that Van Morrison’s Them play at Bury Palais De Danse, Bury, Greater Manchester. Soon afterwards, Baldi returns to Scotland. Bardens also departs and forms The Shotgun Express. He later moves into session work, records two solo albums for Transatlantic Records and then forms 1970s progressive/rock outfit, Camel. Terry Noon also leaves but will return briefly in mid-October.

Back in Belfast, Morrison and Henderson have formed a new version of Them with lead guitarist Jim Armstrong (b. 24 July 1944, Belfast, N. Ireland) from The Melotones and keyboard/sax, flute player and vibes player Ray Elliott (b. 23 January 1944, Belfast, N. Ireland; d. June 1993, Toronto) from The Broadways. Apparently, original keyboard player Eric Wrixon fills in briefly but soon leaves to rejoin Portadown band, The People before Elliott joins. The new version of Them is completed with new drummer John Wilson (b. 6 November 1947, Belfast, N. Ireland) from The Misfits. The band rehearses at the Martime for two weeks before making its live debut in Lisburn on 24 September (see below). Belfast’s publication Cityweek had reported in its 23 September issue that Morrison  rehearsed with Wilson’s band The Misfits as a potential new version of Them for three days before the new line up was agreed.

Photo: Cityweek

(24) Morrison’s new version of Them make their debut at the Top Hat club, Lisburn, Northern Ireland where they perform a 40-minute set. Shortly after a show at the Flamingo in Ballymena, Morrison’s band returns to London and resumes work on its second album. The group’s debut album is released in the US as Them and hits #54.

Photo: Cityweek

(30) Cityweek‘s 30 September issue features an article on the new formation entitled “The return of Them”.

October (11) Morrison’s Them play at the Thorngate, Gosport, Hants.

Photo: Melody Maker

(15) Van Morrison’s Them play at Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London.

Rare French EP showing short-lived line up from November 1965, from left: Billy Harrison, Alan Henderson, Van Morrison, Ray Elliott and Terry Noon
Rare French EP showing short-lived line up from October 1965, from left: Billy Harrison, Alan Henderson, Van Morrison, Ray Elliott and Terry Noon

(16) Them are billed to play at Big Daddy’s in Halifax, West Yorkshire with The Blues Set. Around this time, Jim Armstrong is forced to pull out of the band at short notice. Billy Harrison is drafted in to play some UK dates before joining the group for French and (in December) Scandinavian dates (see later).

Photo: Cityweek

(19) Them (with Billy Harrison) appear at the Olympia in Paris, France with Bo Diddley. The gig is reported in Cityweek‘s 21 October issue. John Wilson, who is considered to be too young to travel, is replaced by former member Terry Noon. The group then travels to Scandinavia for more live dates (although this may be later in the year). Back in England later this month, Noon makes way for a returning John Wilson and joins The Yum Yum Band before moving into rock management, working initially with Honeybus.

(21)  Belfast publication, Cityweek reports that John Wilson’s former band, reduced to a trio since he left, is moving to London.

(22) Streatham News reports that Them play at the Wimbledon Palais in southwest London. However, it is not clear whether this is the rival Them or Morrison’s group after returning from Paris.

(31) The Eastern Evening News reports that Them appear at the Royal Hotel in Lowestoft, Suffolk with The Easi-beats.

November Early in the month, Skip Alan leaves the Harrison/McAuley Them to replace Viv Prince in The Pretty Things, who soon takes up Skip Alan’s place for a few weeks.  Harrison, who has briefly returned to the rival Them after Jim Armstrong resumes his place,  departs when Skip Alan lands the job with The Pretty Things.  Harrison does session work for producer Joe Meek.

(4) Pat McAuley’s rival Them registers the Them name. By now the group contains a new guitarist, known as Don, who has replaced Billy Harrison.

(25) The Western Gazette advertises the band (but not clear which version) appearing at Liberal Hall, Yeovil, Somerset with The Fortunes and Screaming Lord Sutch & The Savages.

December (2) When Viv Prince leaves Pat McAuley’s rival Them, his place is taken by Ken McLeod.

(4) “Mystic Eyes” fares better in the States where it reaches #33. On the same day, Boyfriend magazine notes that Them appear at Leeds College.

Photo: Cityweek

(9) Cityweek reports that Billy Harrison has joined The Pretty Things and is currently touring with that band in Holland. He also plays with The Pretty Things on a Scandinavian tour in early December. At the turn of the year, he also covers for Jim Armstrong in Them for their first Scandinavian shows. Harrison quits the music business in mid-1966 after playing with The Pretty Things in the Isle of Wight during March and joins the GPO. Original Them keyboard player Eric Wrixon meanwhile had joined The Kings showband in late November before re-joining The People, according to Cityweek.

(10) The Gloucester Citizen  reports that Them appear at Lydney Town Hall, Lydney, Gloucestershire, which might be a gig by the rival version of Them.

(17) The Southend Standard lists Them appearing at the Cricketers Inn, Westcliff, Southend, Essex with The Orioles.

Photo: Evening Sentinel. Wymer’s final gig with the rival Them

(19) Wymer leaves the rival Them after a gig in Stoke-on-Trent (this is Mr Smith’s in Hanley with The Beatroots). Soon afterwards, he is replaced by Pat’s brother Jackie McAuley on keyboards/vocals, who has been living in Dublin. Pat moves on to drums and Ken McLeod takes over guitar from Don who leaves in mid-January. On the same day, Van Morrison’s Them play at the nearby Majestic Ballroom in Shropshire. Around this time, the group plays in Liverpool and after the show Armstrong collapses with a suspected perforated appendix. He spends Christmas in the emergency ward at Liverpool’s Southern Hospital, according to Cityweek‘s 6 January 1966 issue.

Photo: Cityweek

(23)  Cityweek notes that John Wilson left Them last weekend but no replacement has been announced. The article entitled “Them rush-release second album for States” also profiles the forthcoming Them Again LP. Wilson rejoins The Misfits (until April 1967) and then works with Belfast groups, Derek & The Sounds and Cheese. In the late 1960s, he joins guitarist Rory Gallagher in Taste before forming Stud in the early 1970s.

Photo: Cityweek, 6 January 1966

(29) Cityweek‘s 6 January 1966 issue reports that Alan Henderson and Ray Elliott have flown to Stockholm to join the other Them members (Van Morrison and Billy Harrison) for two shows at the weekend of 31-December-2 January. The group is still without a permanent replacement for John Wilson. However, David Harvey (b. David Tufrey 29 July 1943, Bude, Cornwall, England) takes his place on the drums in January after the group use a succession of temporary fill ins.

(31) Boyfriend magazine reports that Them play at the Fender Club in Kenton, northwest London but it’s not clear which version this is. However, it is most likely the Pat McAuley version considering Morrison’s version play in Stockholm this weekend.

1966

January Them’s second album Them Again fails to chart in the UK. It contains two of Morrison’s best songs: “Hey Girl” and “My Lonely Sad Eyes”, as well as an edited version of Bobby Bland’s “Turn On Your Love Light”. Original Them member Eric Wrixon leaves The People, who have relocated to Blackpool, and joins another expatriate Belfast band, The Wheels in February, who record two singles for Columbia.

Photo: Cityweek, 6 January 1966

(1) Jackie McAuley makes his debut with the rival Them in Peckham, southeast London. On the same day, Cityweek reports that Them make their first trip to Scandinavia this weekend, even though Armstrong hasn’t fully recovered from his hernia operation in late December. Billy Harrison takes Armstrong’s place.

(3) Van Morrison’s Them appear at the Shoreline club in Bognor Regis, West Sussex with new drummer David Harvey.

(4) Morrison’s Them play at the Assembly Hall, Aylesbury, Bucks.

(6) Cityweek reports that Them will return to Paris’ Olympia next week and are also resident in the Club Locomotive for three days.

(10) Them appear at the Labour Hall, Bletchley, Bucks.

(11) Morrison’s latest line up play at the Hut, Westcott, Surrey.

(22) The Coulsdon & Purley Advertiser reports that Them play at the Club Nevada, West Croydon, south London.

(27) Them appear at the Whitehall, East Grinstead, West Sussex. On the same day, Cityweek reports on the legal row over who is Them. Van Morrison’s version are currently on tour in Wales.

(30) The North Herts Herald reports that Them perform at Newbury Plaza Ballroom in Berkshire with The Just Men.

February (4) The McAuley brothers’ Them record three tracks at a demo session: a cover of Graham Bond’s “I Want You”, a cover of Bob Dylan’s “It’s All Over Now Baby Blue” and Jackie McAuley’s “Movin’ Free”.

(11) The Luton News reports that Them appear at Parkside Ampthill, Bedfordshire with The Sneakers but it is not clear which version this is.

(15) The Coulsdon & Purley Advertiser reports that Van Morrison’s Them appear at Club Nevada, West Croydon, south London.

(16) Melody Maker lists the band playing at the Last Chance on Oxford Street, central London.

(18) The rival Them perform at the KB Hall, Copenhagen, Denmark with The Pretty Things.

(19) Van Morrison’s version appears at Floral Hall, Southport, Lancashire with The Cryin Shames.

Photo: Melody Maker

(21) According to Melody Maker, The Van Morrison version of Them play at the Club Continental in Eastbourne.

(22) Chris Groom’s book Rockin’ and around Croydon lists Van Morrison’s Them at the Gun Tavern in Croydon, south London.

March Morrison’s version of Them’s cover of producer Tommy Scott’s “Call My Name” fails to chart.

(5) The Malvern Gazette reports that Them perform at the Malvern Winter Gardens in Worcestershire with Lighting Blues but it is not clear which version this is.

Photo: Melody Maker

(7) The McAuley brothers’ Them appear at the Club Continental, Eastbourne.

Photo: Eastbourne Herald Chronicle

(9) The rival Them lose their court case and change name to “Some of Them”.

Photo: Melody Maker

(11) Van Morrison’s version play at Tiles on Oxford Street, central London with Steve Darbyshire and The Yum Yum Band.

Photo: Melody Maker

(28) Van’s version returns to Tiles for another show with The Quiet Five in support.

April Morrison’s Them’s final session produces a cover of Paul Simon’s “Richard Cory” and Morrison’s “Mighty Like A Rose”. “Gloria” is re-issued and climbs to US #71.

(2) The Nelson Leader reports that Them (possibly with Dave Harvey on drums) appear at the Imperial, Nelson, Lancashire with Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers and Sounds Incorporated.

(9) Van Morrison’s version of Them appear at Torquay Town Hall in Devon with The Hunters and The Javelins, according to the Herald Express.

(16) The Shadows Of Knight’s version of “Gloria” hits US #10. On the same day, the Grantham Journal has Them playing at Drill Hall, Grantham, Lincolnshire with The Beathovens and The Nemkons.

From KRLA's Beat, April 30, 1966. From left to right: Ray Elliott, John Wilson, Jim Armstrong, Van Morrison and Alan Henderson
From KRLA’s Beat, April 30, 1966. From left to right: Ray Elliott, John Wilson, Jim Armstrong, Van Morrison and Alan Henderson

Them Again US Parrot LP

Them Decca 45 Call My Name

KRLA's Beat, April 23, 1966
KRLA’s Beat, April 23, 1966

May Paul Simon’s “Richard Cory” is the group’s last official single but is not a success. Morrison is particularly annoyed by its release, preferring his own song “Mighty Like A Rose” as a prospective single. In the US, Tommy Scott’s “I Can Only Give You Everything” is released as a final single and is quickly adopted by US garage bands like The MC5 as a punk anthem. Them Again reaches US #138.

(2) The Coulsdon & Purley Advertiser reports that Them perform at the Star Hotel in Croydon, south London.

(7) The Luton News reports that Them appear at Harpenden Public Hall, Harpenden, Herts with The Fuzz Bugs but it is not clear which version this is.

(14) Them perform at Decca Entertainment Centre, Ashton-under-Lyne, Greater Manchester.

(21) The Malvern Gazette reports that Them perform at the Malvern Winter Gardens in Worcestershire with Group 66 but it is not clear which version this is. In late May, PACE magazine reports that Van Morrison’s version play at Crayford Town Hall in southeast London. Soon afterwards, Morrison’s version flies out to New York to begin its debut US tour, with the first show in Arizona.

(27) Some of Them record two tracks with Kim Fowley – “Gloria’s Dream” and “Secret Police”. On the same day, Van Morrison’s Them appear at the Rollarena, San Leandro, California.

(30) Some of Them perform in Blackpool, Lancashire. On the same day, Van Morrison’s Them begins a residency at the Whisky-A-Go Go, West Hollywood, California.

May (31)June (17) Morrison’s Them performs at the Whisky-A-Go-Go, West Hollywood, California, where they are sometimes supported by The Doors.

June (3) The rival version of Them performs at the Cricketers Inn, Westcliff, Southend, Essex with the Orioles, according to the Southend Standard.

(13 & 15) Some of Them record further tracks in London.

(18) On the last night at the Whisky, The Doors’ vocalist Jim Morrison joins Van Morrison’s group on stage for a 20-minute improvisation of “Gloria”.

(19) The band discovers that the club has been willing to pay the group $10,000 per week. However, due to their management deal with Phil Solomon (whereby they have agreed to play for $2,000 a week minus a 35% management fee and a guarantee), Them have received considerably less than they think they should. This causes a lot of bitterness between the group and Solomon, and as a result Them inform promoter Bill Graham that they will only play at their forthcoming Fillmore concert if they are paid in advance.

Photo: Cherwell

(21) Some of Them (billed as Them) appear at Balliol College, Oxford University alongside The Kinks, The Fortunes, The Alan Price Set, Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band, The Caribbean All-Steer Band and Bunny Thompson.

(23) Morrison’s Them appear at San Francisco’s Fillmore Auditorium with The New Tweedy Brothers. After their performance, Morrison meets his future wife Janet Planet who accompanies the band on the rest of the tour. (She will be the inspiration for Morrison’s Astral Weeks.)

KRLA's Beat, June 25, 1966
KRLA’s Beat, June 25, 1966

(26) Morrison’s group is supported by The Association at the Oakland Auditorium, Oakland, California.

(27-29) Some of Them move to Denmark where they perform as Them. The group performs three shows in Copenhagen and finish their final recordings. Over the next five months, the band gigs in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. In the last week of July, the band is briefly joined by former Them member Peter Bardens on keyboards, allowing Jackie McAuley to come up front as lead singer.

July (1-2) Morrison’s Them perform at the “Beat On The Beach”, Santa Monica, California with The New Generation.

(8-9) Them appear at the Waikiki Shell, Kapiolani Park, Honolulu, Hawaii.

(23) The band performs at the Strand Theater, Modesto, California.

(28) Morrison’s group is supported by The Doors and The Count Five at the Starlight Ballroom, Oxnard and (in the evening) the Earl Warren Showgrounds, Santa Barbara, California.

(29-30) Morrison’s Them is supported by The Sons Of Champlin at the Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco.

August (9) The McAuley brothers’ Them play at the Complain-LA-Tour jazz festival in Belgium.

(19-21) Morrison’s group performs at the Losers North, San Jose, California.

(23-28) A further set of dates take place at the Losers North.

The Wheels with Eric Wrixon, September 1966

September (1) Belfast publication Cityweek reports that The Wheels are back in the city. The band will split soon after, however. In 1967, Eric Wrixon will move to West Germany with The Never Never Band and plays regularly at Hamburg’s Star club, supporting soul acts like Sam & Dave.

KRLA's Beat, September 24, 1966
KRLA’s Beat, September 24, 1966

(2-3) Them performs at the Longshoreman’s Hall, San Francisco.

(8) Cityweek reports that Van Morrison, Alan Henderson and Jim Armstrong arrived home from America last week so it’s not clear whether the September US dates took place despite being advertised.

Photo: Cityweek

(9) They are billed to appear in Fresno, California. However, Morrison and Henderson may have already returned to London to sort out business matters with Solomon.  Morrison continues to work on some new songs that will later comprise his masterpiece Astral Weeks.

The Belfast Gypsies, released as Them
The Belfast Gypsies, released as Them
Rare French EP with Belfast Gypsies listed
Rare French EP with Belfast Gypsies listed

(17) The McAuley brothers’ group, now dubbed The Belfast Gypsies score a minor US hit when “Gloria’s Dream” hits #124.

(22) Morrison and Henderson are profiled in Cityweek‘s 22 September issue in an article entitled ‘Van and Co. back to “square one”‘.

Photo: Cityweek

(29) Cityweek reports that Ray Elliott flew in to Belfast last week.

October (2) The Weston Mercury reports that Them appear at the Winter Gardens, Weston-Super-Mare, Somerset. This would have been the McAuley brothers’ version. In Belfast, Morrison soon returns to occasional live work in a new outfit dubbed, Van Morrison and “Them Again”, which features former Castaways and Unit guitarist Eric Bell alongside former Alleykatz members Joe Hanratty (drums) and Mike Brown (bass). Alan Henderson doubles up on second bass.

Photo: Cityweek. Eric Bell (top right)

(13) Cityweek reports that Jim Armstrong has left Them to play with The Federals. Ray Elliott will also briefly join this outfit, according to the paper, a short while later.

Photo: Cityweek

(28) The Belfast Telegraph reports that Van Morrison and Them  play (their debut show) at the Square One Discotheque in Belfast with The Blue Angels.

Photo: Cityweek

November (4) Cityweek‘s 3 November issue reports that Them appear at Carrickfergus Town Hall today with The Carpetbaggers and The Fugitives.

Photo: Cityweek

(5) The McAuley brothers’ Them play their final date in Stockholm.

(10) The Belfast Telegraph reports that Van Morrison & Them perform at Sammy Houston’s Jazz Club. When Eric Bell leaves immediately after the Queen’s University rag ball gig, the band implodes.  Van Morrison concentrates on a solo career. Bell meanwhile moves to Glasgow and plays with The Bluebeats for two years.

Cityweek profile October 1965

December Armstrong, Elliott, Harvey and Henderson decide to carry on with Them’s name, now that Morrison has abandoned the name and is pursuing a solo career. The group recruits a new vocalist Ken McDowell (b. 21 December 1944, Belfast, N. Ireland), previously a member of Belfast group The Mad Lads, who have recorded a number of singles for Decca Records, as well as a lone release “I Went Out With My Baby” as Moses K. & The Prophets. The new version of Them writes to Carol Deck, Californian editor of Flip magazine (who had given the band some encouraging reviews during its US tour) asking for help, and she in turn introduces them to Texan producer Ray Ruff, who has his own indie label, Ruff Records. The new version of Them moves out to Amarillo, Texas in June 1967.

1967

January Major Minor Records releases “Gloria”, backed by another Morrison song, the acoustic “Friday’s Child” as a UK single. The McAuley brothers’ Them implodes and Jackie McAuley returns to Dublin and forms Cult with singer/songwriter and guitarist Paul Brady.

March A second Major Minor single “The Story Of Them” is released. Morrison signs a solo contract with Bert Berns and travels to New York to record for his Bang label. This will result in an immediate US hit “Brown Eyed Girl”, which makes #10. After Berns’ death in December 1967, Morrison will sign with Warner Brothers and record the classic Astral Weeks, which proves to be the beginning of an illustrious career.

Photo: Cityweek

(4) The Belfast Telegraph reports that Van Morrison is one of the opening acts for The Stormsville Shakers at Queen’s University’s student union in Belfast together with The Interns.

June (30) The US-based Them appear at the Purple Onion Teen Club, Wichita Falls, Texas.

Them in Checkmate Studios, Amarillo, 1967, from left: Ray Elliott, Alan Henderson, Dave Harvey, Ken McDowell and Jim Armstrong. Photo from the collection of Tom McCarty
Them in Checkmate Studios, Amarillo, 1967, from left: Ray Elliott, Alan Henderson, Dave Harvey, Ken McDowell and Jim Armstrong. Photo from the collection of Tom McCarty

July (12) According to the Childress Index, Them appears at Fair Park Auditorium, Childress, Texas. The next day they also play a gig in Farmington, New Mexico. The newspaper says they will tour for five months and play 20 times in Texas.

KRLA's Beat, May 6, 1967
KRLA’s Beat, May 6, 1967
The McAuley brother's group
The McAuley brother’s group

August Nearly year after the band’s final performance, the McAuley brothers’ group The Belfast Gypsies have a belated album release on the Swedish label Sonet as Them Belfast Gypsies. Having relocated to Amarillo, Texas, Henderson’s Them release their debut single without Morrison, a cover of Tom Lane’s “Dirty Old Man (At The Age Of Sixteen)” / “Square Room” on Sully Records before a nation-wide distribution deal is struck with Tower Records.

(10) The Evening Sentinel reports that Eric Wrixon’s latest group, The Never Never Band appear at the Golden Torch in Tunstall, Staffordshire.

Them Sully 45 Dirty Old Man
Above and below, first record by the Amarillo, Texas based Them

Them Sully 45 Square Room

September Starting off in Amarillo, Henderson’s group kicks off a major tour. The gruelling 61-date tour takes the musicians across the US Midwest and then to Los Angeles, where Them begin work on its first album without Morrison. Santa Rosa, California-based newspaper, the Press Democrat notes in its 1 January 1968 issue that the LP is recorded in studios in Texas, Oklahoma and Hollywood, California.

November Henderson’s Them release a second 45, the band composition “Walking In The Queens Garden” b/w “I Happen to Love You” on Ruff Records.

December Tower issues two singles, one includes newly recorded versions of “Dirty Old Man (At The Age Of Sixteen)” and “Square Room” and the second reissues the Ruff 45.

(8-10) The band appears at the Whisky-A-Go-Go, West Hollywood, California with Love and Blue Cheer. Santa Rosa paper the Press Democrat, says they play at the Vets Building in Santa Rosa, California over the Christmas weekend.

Poster from Amarillo, 1967, from left: Jim Armstrong, Dave Harvey, Ken McDowell, Ray Elliott and Alan Henderson. Poster from the collection of Tom McCarty
Poster from Amarillo, 1967, from left: Jim Armstrong, Dave Harvey, Ken McDowell, Ray Elliott and Alan Henderson. Poster from the collection of Tom McCarty

Them Tower LP Now and Them1968

January A new album, Now And Them is released featuring Them’s reply to the Doors’ “The End”, the extended raga piece “Square Room”.

February Tower reissues the Ruff 45 of “Walking In The Queens Gardens” but its success is limited to the West Coast.

March (24) The Hamilton Spectator’s 22 March issue, page 30, notes Them are playing in Toronto and will appear at Carl’s in Hamilton, Ontario on this date with David Clayton-Thomas and Combine. The group’s incessant touring prompts Elliott to quit the band while Them are in New York. He returns to Belfast briefly before working with an Irish showband in Leeds alongside guitarist Eric Bell from “Them Again”. Bell soon returns to Belfast to replace guitarist Gary Moore in The Shades of Blue before working with the Dublin-based The Dream showband.

April “But It’s Alright”, an out-take from the album is released as a single but doesn’t sell.

(11) According to the Odessa American newspaper, Them plays at Ector County Coliseum, Odessa, Texas.

May (24-25) Henderson’s Them appear alongside The Incredible String Band at the Kaleidoscope, Hollywood, California.

July The title track from their forthcoming album Time Out For Time In is released but is not a success.

August (14-15) The band plays with Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention at the Electric Theatre, Chicago. Them also performs at the Baton Rouge Festival on a bill that features Freddie King.

November Them’s second album Time Out Time In For Them is released. It has been recorded at Los Angeles’ Gold Star studios in the wake of Elliott’s departure and features session drummer John Guerin on a number of tracks. A single “Waltz Of The Flies” is extracted but fails to chart.

1969

March Them’s final single, a cover of the traditional Corinna is released but fails to chart. Unhappy with Ruff’s management and production, Armstrong and McDowell leave and return to Belfast where they put together Sk’Boo with Ricky McCutcheon and Colm Connolly. Henderson, meanwhile, remains with Ruff in L.A. and continues with the Them name; using guitarist Jim Parker and drummer John Stark from Amarillo band, The Kitchen Cinq, he produces two further albums: Them (1969) and In Reality (1970) for the Chicago label Happy Tiger. David Harvey also stays behind in California but will leave the music business.

June After working briskly throughout Ireland and the British mainland, Armstrong and McDowell shelve Sk’Boo (after a farewell gig in Wolverhampton) and return to the US later that year. Based in Chicago, the duo recruit an American rhythm section comprising bassist Curt Bachman (ex-The Buckinghams) and drummer Reno Smith formerly of Baby Huey and The Babysitters in a new group called Truth, which becomes house band at Beavers. The Chicago Tribune‘s 2 November 1969 issue runs a spread on the newly formed group. The band tours extensively around the Chicago area for the next 18 months, and also contributes several songs to the soundtrack for Pat Mulcahy’s film Cum Laude Fraud (later released as College For Fun And Profit), before being offered a recording deal with Epic Records. Ex-Them member Ray Elliott rejoins the band during its lifespan but subsequently leaves after contributing to some recordings and returns to England.

July (26) Them and Truth* both appear at the Eugene Pop Festival, Hayward Field, University of Oregon, Eugene alongside Alice Cooper, The Doors and others.

* Neal Skok and I have been trying to find out for some time now what “Them” this was — there is a slim chance it was the Tower Records ensemble. But the “Truth” that is listed for this gig is most definitely not the Chicago-based Truth comprised of the ex-Them gents (whose CD Neal and I put out on his “Epilogue” label in ’94). This “Truth” was a NW teen rock band – and of course there were several Christian bands that used that name in the ’60s and later.
– John Berg

October Having returned from Germany and joined The Trixons showband, original Them member Eric Wrixon joins guitarist Eric Bell from the short-lived “Them Again” in the original Thin Lizzy. He leaves in early 1970 and returns to Germany to play with Junior Walker, Junior Wells and Buddy Guy among others.

1970

January (21) Truth play at the New Cellar, Chicago alongside The Mauds.

March Having moved to Beirut in Lebanon with The League of Gentlemen the previous year, former Them member Jackie McAuley returns to England and forms Trader Horne with Judy Dyble, who has previously worked with the original Fairport Convention. The duo release the album, Morning Way, which features contributions from former Them member Ray Elliott. When Trader Horne split later in the year, McAuley forms the short-lived One with Rosko Gee and Adam Marsh before starting on a solo album.

Japanese sleeve with Alan Henderson's Them
Japanese sleeve with Alan Henderson’s Them

Them Tower LP Time Out! Time In for ThemThem Happy Tiger LP

Them In Reality LP

1971

February Truth return to Belfast for a working holiday before sessions in London begin later that month. Unfortunately, Epic Records undergoes a change in management and following a communication problem, Truth’s band members fall apart before they have a chance to enter the studio. Elliott subsequently moves to Canada (where he dies in June 1993 in Toronto), while Bachman and Smith return to the US. Armstrong and McDowell move back to Belfast where Armstrong joins the Civil Service and McDowell becomes a member of The College Boys. (Truth’s private recordings and studio sessions from Chicago are later released by Epilogue Records as The Truth Of Them And Other Tales in 1995.)

March Jackie McAuley releases his eponymous debut solo album on the small Dawn label, before later working with bands Wand and Mackeral Sky. He also spends four years working with Lonnie Donegan. Jackie’s brother Pat (who turns down an offer to play with Marc Bolan), sadly dies in a drowning accident in Donegal on 11 August 1984.

1972

August Compilation album Them Featuring Van Morrison hits US #154.

1973

After working with cabaret singer Roly Stewart, Jim Armstrong has rejoined Ken McDowell in The College Boys in the early 1970s. The pair then join Reunion before working with another former Them member John Wilson in Bronco. The pair also form the band Spike, which works at the Pound club in Belfast. Wilson subsequently becomes Northern Ireland’s top session drummer.

Truth of Them and Other Tales

Deram double LP repackages their first two U.S. LPs minus two tracks each.
Deram double LP repackages their first two U.S. LPs minus two tracks each.

1974 Backtrackin’ released only in the U.S., featured obscure b-sides and songs not previously available in the U.S.: “Richard Cory”, “I Put a Spell on You”, “Just a Little Bit”, “I Gave My Love a Diamond”, “Half as Much”, “Baby Please Don’t Go”, “Hey Girl”, “Don’t Start Crying Now”, “All for Myself” and “Mighty Like a Rose”. All the tracks except the last, however, were in simulated stereo.

1978

Armstrong leaves Spike and forms his own band Light, who record an eponymous album on the small Mint label in Ireland only.

1979

Billy Harrison reforms Them with original keyboard player Eric Wrixon. Initially, Harrison intended to complete the group with John Wilson, who’d played drums on Them Again album, together with bass player Jackie Flavelle and singer Mel Austin but Wilson and Flavelle drop out prompting him to bring in drummer Billy Bell. He also brings back Henderson, who has spent several years working on his Connecticut farm. Them move to Germany where they hold down a residency in Hamburg. While there the group records the album Shut Your Mouth for Teldec/Decca before Jim Armstrong and Brian Scott from Light replace Harrison and Wrixon. However, after a brief tour of Germany the group splinters. Armstrong reunites with Ken McDowell in a new version of Sk’Boo, who release one single “It’s A Hard Road” for the small Cuecomber label.

From left: Joe Baldi, Terry Noon, Peter Bardens, Van Morrison and Alan Henderson from summer of 1965. London LP Backtrackin'
From left: Joe Baldi, Terry Noon, Peter Bardens, Van Morrison and Alan Henderson from summer of 1965

1980

Harrison emerges with the solo album Billy Who? on the German Vagabond label. He then abandons a music career and become a marine electrician. Jackie McAuley spends most of the 1980s and 1990s working with Poor Mouth, who release a number of albums, including Gael Force. In 1982, he co-writes “Dear John”, which is a hit for Status Quo.

1989

Original member Eric Wrixon forms The Belfast Blues Band with another former Them member, John Wilson.

1994

Jackie McAuley emerges with a new solo album, Headspin. Guitarist Jim Armstrong meanwhile has formed The Belfast Blues Band with original Them member Eric Wrixon. His former band mate, Ken McDowell has continued to work with Sk’Boo and then plays with Hens Teeth before forming The Kenny McDowell/Ronnie Greer Band in the early 2000s.

1998

Jackie McAuley releases another solo release, Shadowboxing.

2000

Jackie McAuley puts out another solo release, Bad Day At Black Rock. McAuley subsequently joins The Harbour Band, who release the album Live In The Spirit Tour in 2003.

2003

The Ken McDowell/Ronnie Greer Band release the album, Live At The Island. Jim Armstrong leaves The Belfast Blues Band and reforms The Jim Armstrong Band.

Sources:

Clayson, Alan. Call Up The Groups – The Golden Age Of British Beat,

Blandford Press, 1985, pages 168-170.

Doggett, Peter. “Them”, Record Collector # 149, January 1992, pages 112-116

Du Noyer, Paul. “Heart & Soul Of Van Morrison”, Mojo Magazine, November 1993, page 84.

Gray, Michael. Mother – The Frank Zappa Story, Plexus, 1993.

Grushkin, Paul D. Art Of Rock – Posters From Presley To Punk, Artabras, Cross River Press Ltd, 1987.

Harper, Colin. Sleeve notes to CD Belfast Beat, 1998.

Harper, Colin and Hodgett, Trevor. Irish Folk, Trad & Blues – A Secret History, Cherry Red Books, 2004.

Hodgett, Trevor. “Them After Van Morrison”, Record Collector #89, pages 52-57.

Hogg, Brian. “Van Morrison & Them”, Strange Things Are Happening, Vol 1, #4, Sep/Oct 1988, Bam-Caruso Books, pages 6-14 and 20.

Housden, David Peter. The Castle, Love #9, December 1995, page 28 and 57.

Housden, David Peter. The Castle, Love #10, 1996, pages 6-7.

Rees, Dafydd and Crampton, Luke. Guinness Book Of Rock Stars, 2nd Edition, Guinness Publishing, 1991, page 528.

Rogan, Johnny. CSN&Y – The Visual Documentary, Omnibus Press, 1996, page 10.

Shaw, Greg. The Doors On The Road, Omnibus Press, 1997, pages 14 and 172.

Turner, Steve. Van Morrison – Too Late To Stop Now, Bloomsbury, 1993, pages 49 and 60.

Unterberger, Richie. “Belfast Gypsies” article in Ugly Things issue 23.

Whitburn, Joel. Bubbling Under Hot 100 1959-1985, Billboard Researchers Inc, 1985.

Sleeve notes to the Deram Anthology The Story Of Them – Featuring Van Morrison, 1997.

Sleeve notes to Epilogue CD, The Truth Of Them And Other Tales, 1995.

Melody Maker, March 5, 1966, page 13.

News clippings from KRLA Beat.

Gigs from Beat Instrumental and Melody Maker.

Thank you to John Warburg, Simon Gee, Nigel Norman. Tom McCarty and Mike Markesich.

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author.

Email: Warchive@aol.com

Japanese sleeve with wrong photo showing the Scottish group, the Poets
Japanese sleeve with photo incorrectly showing the Scottish group, the Poets

78s Party on WFMU – Sunday May 16

Henry Townsend Columbia 14491-D Mistreated Blues
I don’t own this one, nope
This afternoon I’ll be joining Phast Phreddie to spin 78s on Gaylord Field’s radio show on WFMU, from 5:00-700 PM Eastern. I’ll be one of several DJs, playing r&b, country, jazz, gospel, rockabilly and who knows what else.

78s were obsolete well before the ‘garage’ era, though I’ve heard Beatles 78s were pressed in India – maybe something garage-like exists on 78? Wish I had Link Wray’s “Rumble” to spin.

I’ve had 78s in the back corner of a closet for years and never had a chance to play them out before. This music really sounds great played loud and live on its original format.

Postscript:

Well, it was a blast! Thanks Phreddie, Ted and especially Gaylord for having us on his show!

Now that the show’s over, hear it on the WFMU archives.

Here’s what I played from my tiny 78 collection:

Miff Mole and the Little Molars – Feelin’ No Pain (Okeh)
Howlin’ Wolf – Forty-Four (Chess)
Sonny Boy Williamson (John Lee Williamson) – Polly Put the Kettle On (RCA Victor)
Little Walter – Juke (Checker)
Alfredito and His Orchestra – Round World Mambo #2 (Rainbow)
Shirley & Lee – Let the Good Times Roll (Aladdin)
Webb Pierce with the Wilburn Brothers – Sparkling Brown Eyes (Decca)
Fairfield Four – You’ve Got to Move (Bullet)
Clara Ward – How I Got Over (Gotham)
The Blue Sky Boys – Sake Hands with Your Mother Today (RCA Victor)

Rollie Anderson – The Early Years of a Rock and Roll Dreamer

Rollie Anderson with Dust at the Broadway Skateland, January 1969
Rollie Anderson with Dust at the Broadway Skateland, January 1969
“Gretsch Chet Atkins, Nehru jacket, striped pants, Beatle boots and cossack hat. All I was lacking was talent.”

The Early Years of a Rock and Roll Dreamer

My name is Rollie Anderson. I was born and raised in Dallas, Texas. Oak Cliff, to be exact. For the first thirteen years of my life I was a typical youngster who occupied himself with riding his bike alongside his pseudo-hoodlum neighborhood pals, cursing the fact that he was woefully inept at playing baseball and contemplating the shrouded mystery of pretty girls. I was also wholly addicted to music. All kinds. I used to sneak into my older sister’s bedroom when she was away and listen to her 45s of Elvis, Fats Domino, Fabian, Chuck Berry, Paul Anka and Neil Sedaka; and I would listen religiously to Russ “The Weird Beard” Knight on KLIF on my cigarette pack-sized transistor radio way past my bedtime but that was the extent of my participation in music. I had no innate talent to play an instrument. I was not a gifted prodigy. I was an avid listener, nothing more.

However, once I witnessed the phenomenon that was The Beatles when they performed on The Ed Sullivan Show in February of 1964 I became an “altered” boy. Up till then I had harbored dreams of becoming popular and making a name for myself as a star athlete or at least as an admired member of the prestigious school cheerleading squad. In the case of the former I was too much of a runt and nowhere near being dedicated enough to bulk up by working out. As for the latter I was just not equipped with the necessary charisma or stunning good looks to qualify. Nonetheless, my inner desire to be envied or, at least, accepted continued on unabated.

As mentioned earlier, I’d always enjoyed playing records on the phonograph and would sometimes imitate guitar players by strapping on a tennis racket or acting as if I was conducting an orchestra by standing on a chair in the middle of the living room with Schubert’s “Unfinished Symphony” blaring through the family’s cheap stereo. My mother’s well-intentioned attempt to lure me into becoming a pianist at the young age of eight years old was a failure simply because my overwhelming preference at that stage of development was to be outside playing with my buddies, not practicing scales. However, she was persistent and the lessons she paid good money for lasted about a year before she finally realized that she might as well have flushed her cash down the toilet. In retrospect she did me a huge favor because it gave me a fundamental understanding of music that I would not have gotten otherwise. (Thanks, Mom)

But, like I said, everything changed after the Fab Four shook their mop-tops and sang “She Loves You” on television. Rock & Roll had me hooked like a marlin and wasn’t about to let go. There, in gorgeous black and white, was my salvation. The answer to my prayers. My ticket to fulfillment. The purpose for my being born. It became crystal clear to me that I was conceived in order to be a famous bass guitarist just like Paul McCartney.

What my parents’ immediate reaction to this epiphany was I can’t recall. If anything, I’m sure they thought it was nothing more than another fad that they would live through in much the same way they lived through my sister’s Elvis infatuation. I would most likely become enthralled and obsessed for a while, then return to the path they had carefully laid out for me that would lead to college and a career, most likely in some respected field like architecture or engineering.

They had no way of knowing that my next sixteen years would be spent in relentless pursuit of my dreams of musical fame and fortune not unlike what I observed happening to the four talented lads from Liverpool.

The fact that I couldn’t put together two notes of music on a guitar that made any sense didn’t present a problem in my mind. I was able to pick out a few chords on the upright piano thanks to the aforementioned lessons but nothing that actually sounded like a song. Nonetheless, I soon found out that other teenage boys like the friends I hung out with at Kiestwood Baptist Church had also been instantly afflicted with the same “Mersey Beat” fever that I had contracted. We realized that we had the necessary four members for a combo and, in quick order, assigned each other the various positions we were going to occupy.

This level of naiveté can only be likened to the time when, in the 5th grade, my school pal Ernie and I decided that we’d wow the crowd by building a weather balloon for a science fair project. Easy. I told him all we had to do was construct a sturdy box out of spare plywood, put a battery inside it, attach it to a balloon and let it fly. The same logic was being employed concerning the start-up of my rock and roll outfit.

Gene Fowler was going to be Ringo Starr. Randy Davis would be our George Harrison. Phil Webster would take the spot held by John Lennon and I was to portray Paul, of course. That being settled, we now had to get our hands on the necessary hardware to perform with. All of us agreed to pester our parents without mercy until we had acquired the musical instruments we needed to fulfill our individual obligations to the group.

I’m not sure what reaction the other three got from their respective parental units to their expensive requests but, in my case, I got a very frosty reception from my mother in particular. Perhaps that is stating it too mildly. Martha Anderson had no intention of supplying her only son with the demonic key that unlocked the gates to Hell. If I was going to procure a bass guitar any time in the current millennium it appeared that my own blood, sweat and tears would have to be put into use to raise the money. Having no income beyond a weekly pittance of an allowance presented a genuine problem, so I proposed a deal they couldn’t refuse. My parents reluctantly agreed to finance a bass and an amplifier if I could miraculously manage to stay on the B honor roll throughout my 9th grade school year. Not being the most astute or brilliant student in town, this was a huge undertaking on my part and my folks reasoned that the upside vastly outweighed the negative aspects of the bargain. Plus, they probably thought I had a better chance at discovering the whereabouts of the lost Ark of the Covenant than bringing home decent grades. But, for me, now there was at least a road, however rocky it may have been, to get to the promise land.

Up to that point in my short life I had never wanted anything as much as I yearned for that guitar. I was serious. I was focused. I figured that if the power of positive thinking could any have any effect on improving my odds then I was on board. I began utilizing that subliminal force by including the phrase “I want a bass” in the daily journal I started making notes in as of January 1965. It appeared in every entry. Every day. Without fail. (I have proof.)

Meanwhile, our imaginary combo had yet to come up with the most important ingredient for success. We had to have a cool name. Our moniker was probably more vital than having instruments or talent. “Rollie and the Roundmen,” “The Roundabouts,” “The Rondells,” “The Landells,” “The Shastas,” “The Shastells,” “The Shondells” and “The Hubbubs” were the impressive front-runners early on. So as not to further worry our deeply concerned parents, we even drew up an agreement between us wherein we solemnly swore on the holy word of God that there would be no profanity, no drinking, no smoking or getting into trouble with the law in our band. We promised zero tolerance for any kind of shenanigans. We wanted to assure our elders that the decent Christian upbringing they had been so diligent in providing for us was not going to be carelessly discarded when we became huge stars cruising around in limousines (a fate we had no doubt whatsoever was destined to happen).

Soon Randy and Phil had inexpensive but functional acoustic guitars, courtesy of their nicer and more accommodating parents. Gene and I were running into a lot more resistance on that front and our inner simmering resentment rose accordingly. I started trying to wear my hair combed down over my forehead but my Dad wouldn’t have anything to do with that radical style and made me comb it to the side like normal young men did. But it was like trying to dam up a river. I didn’t want to be clean-cut anymore. My course was charted to sail into rebellious and unconventional waters and nothing my parents said or did could change that fact. It was the beginning of a long and tenuous war of wills.

After almost giving myself an ulcer for nine drama-filled months I proudly presented my final report card to Ollie and Martha, the one confirming that I had fulfilled my end of the bargain by maintaining a B grade average for my entire high school freshman year. Their amazed silence was deafening. My folks were stunned in their shock because it was definitely a good news/bad news outcome and, considering my underachieving nature, one that they really didn’t think possible this side of heaven.

Following a hasty huddle held in private, they solemnly informed me that, due to unforeseen financial difficulties, they wouldn’t be immediately able to buy the bass guitar and amp as promised. However, they could scrape together enough loose change to afford a nice Silvertone electric guitar from Sears & Roebuck.

At first I was highly indignant and outraged. But once I calmed myself down I had to admit that a standard electric guitar and amplifier was better than nothing and I shouldn’t look a gift horse in the mouth. Mom and Dad said that if I continued to be dissatisfied with the six-string perhaps they could swing a deal to get me a bass guitar come Christmas. I accepted their offer.

On June 21, 1965 I got my first electric guitar, a double pickup black and white Silvertone solid body model that cost $54.95 plus tax. A few days later my Dad took me downtown to The Melody Shop and bought me a low-powered Kent amplifier. Words cannot describe the feeling of accomplishment and excitement that washed over me. I was now equipped to take on the rock and roll universe. All I had to do was learn how to play the dern thing.

I had seen various bands at school dances and sock hops like Seab Meador’s The Gentlemen and Jimmie Vaughan’s The Pendulums, but in that Summer of ‘65 I finally saw my first professional group. The Night Caps of “Wine, Wine, Wine” fame played a concert inside the Lancaster-Kiest shopping center and all of my wide-eyed comrades and would-be band members took in the show. I knew from the first song that I wouldn’t be satisfied until it was me performing up there on the stage.

It soon became apparent that Phil and Randy weren’t nearly as anxious as Gene and I were to get the ball rolling on the combo-that-conquered-the-world thing. Gene’s cousin, Glenn Fowler, already owned an electric guitar and was eager to acquire a bass ASAP. But we weren’t ready to give up on the original foursome just yet. We were nothing if not loyal to the cause.

I had started hanging out a lot more with another school and church-mate, Gene Banks, who also had a guitar and amp. Not only was his equipment vastly superior to mine (a red Gibson guitar and a Fender amp), Banks could really play! He taught me more than any professional guitar teacher could have in half the time and for a price that couldn’t be beat. Free. (All the guys I knew who paid for formal lessons were being taught useless old folk songs and campfire sing-along ditties so I never had the desire to go that route. I was only interested in learning the rock and roll tunes I heard on the radio.) I picked up loads of clues and pointers by watching Gene play and by observing guitarists like Ray Davies and Keith Richards on TV shows like “Shindig” and “Hullabaloo.” The Mel Bay chord book I purchased at Watkins’ music store became my bible and I learned how to make bar chords by studying the picture of David Crosby on the back of the first Byrds album.

Before you could say Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tish, Gene Banks was a member of our fledgling band, replacing Randy Davis (who had incredibly managed to lose interest in being an adored rock star). Banks’ father had been crippled for some time and he invited his son’s new combo to perform for his Wheelchair Bowler’s Association Convention at the Bronco Bowl. Keep in mind, this was before Gene Fowler even had a set of drums to flail away on. Yet a job was a job and we weren’t about to let the opportunity pass us by just because we weren’t ready for it. I figured the Lord would provide.

When the day of the much-anticipated gig finally arrived on September 19th Fowler still didn’t have his drums yet (so much for a heavenly hand) so Gene Banks and I enlisted the untested services of our friend and classmate Mike Stephens to play his dinky snare and high-hat set behind us. We only performed three songs in the small meeting room but the young girls who crowded their way into the doors and made a noisy fuss over us gave us boatloads of confidence. (In my mind, the whole thing was working as advertised: Play music, meet girls.) We were so ecstatic with the response that we half expected a lucrative record deal to be coming our way any day. It also marked the only time in my life where I was the lead (and only) vocalist.

But you can’t keep a good man down. Gene Banks was so talented on guitar that he was constantly being recruited by several other more promising Oak Cliff bands and couldn’t fully commit to just being in our little makeshift group. Out of sheer earnestness and compassion he continued to show up from time to time and practice with us but we knew he was too much in demand to wait for us to catch up to his level of proficiency. We were astute enough to realize that we shouldn’t count on him being around in the long run.

Our church buddy and fellow dreamer Phil Webster got wise and fell to the wayside, too, and by March of 1966 our struggling combo consisted of Gene and Glenn Fowler and myself. Gene had finally gotten his sparkling red trap set of drums and was taking lessons at McCord’s Music shop by then. He was a quick learner and it didn’t take long for us to see that he had a real flair for laying down a hard, steady beat without losing the tempo. In later years I would discover that many drummers were flashier than Gene but none were any better at keeping time and driving the band forward. And, in the final analysis, that’s more important than anything else. A band is only as good as its drummer.

The 3rd Generation practicing in my living room, April 23, 1966 - me and the Fowler cousins, Glenn and Gene.
The 3rd Generation practicing in my living room, April 23, 1966 – me and the Fowler cousins, Glenn and Gene. Notice that despite barely being able to play guitar myself, I’m busy telling them what to do. Bossy, huh?

We were still searching for a name, considering catchy jewels like “This Little Bunch,” “The Funatics” and “The V.I.P’s.” Each one would have its day in the sun until what we considered to be a better one popped into our heads. We entered and lost the talent show at Glenn’s high school in DeSoto but that setback just made us more determined to do better next time. (It wasn’t our fault that the stuck-up judges were tone deaf and unfairly-biased idiots!) It was at this juncture that we decided “The Third Generation” would be the set-firmly-in-stone name of our band. It didn’t mean anything, it just sounded good to us.

That Spring of ‘66 I got my first real job as a walking trash scooper at the amusement park Six Flags Over Texas, laboring for the steep wage of $1.15 per hour. It was humbling, tiring and hot work but the income allowed me to save up and purchase a Fender Deluxe amplifier, a definite improvement over the puny little Kent that couldn’t be heard in the next room of a cheap motel. At first it was exciting to be employed at an amusement park but the thrill was short-lived and eventually I got weary of dealing with management’s constant nit-picky criticisms and demands for me to work double shifts. I got fired late in July for goofing off on the job (my crime was sitting down for a brief rest on a 100-degree day) but I think my Mom and Dad were much more upset about it than I was. The whole experience left me convinced that working for someone else sucked raw eggs.

The band’s scarce bookings consisted mainly of playing for private living room and garage parties, Jaycee fairs and community-center dances. We were fortunate if we gigged twice a month and luckier still to make $5 per man when we did. We struggled along with me trading singing chores with Glenn until Gene met a guy named Jim Dawson (who said he could sing) and invited him to come to a practice. It was obvious from the first note that he could sing circles around Glenn and me so, on August 5th, Jim joined the group. We were back to a quartet.

My first “real” band, The Com'n Generation, in my living room after playing for my sister's party on August 13, 1966. Gene Fowler, Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Gene Banks and Rollie Anderson
My first “real” band, The Com’n Generation, in my living room after playing for my sister’s party on August 13, 1966. Gene Fowler, Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Gene Banks and me in front

The Com'n Generation, August 13, 1966. From left: Gene & Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Rollie and Gene Banks
The Com’n Generation, August 13, 1966.
From left: Gene & Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Rollie and Gene Banks
Jim had a smooth but powerful voice that was versatile enough to effortlessly handle the three-chord blues and pop songs that we were able to play. He also possessed an adventurous spirit for discovering different kinds of music that fit right in with our somewhat eclectic tastes and preferences. Right off the bat he suggested we make a slight alteration and go under the name of “The Com’n Generation” and I think we flip-flopped on that issue a few times after that. Banks still sat in with the band from time to time but we couldn’t depend on him because he had commitments with another combo that wasn’t a non-profit organization. Yet he offered encouragement, was a fine mentor and we greatly appreciated his patience with us.

A real milestone was reached in October ‘66 when Glenn finally got his bass guitar. Up until then he had been using a standard electric guitar and just playing the “big strings.” Within weeks Glenn had mastered the bass and he soon became amazingly good on the instrument. He was a natural.

The whole confounded naming-the-band thing reared its ugly head once more as dissatisfaction set in and strange moniker suggestions started flying around like a swarm of flies on roadkill. “The Rare Breed,” “The East Side,” “The Assortment,” “The Living IN,” and the ever-controversial “EVOL” (Love spelled backwards) were just a few of the memorable gems considered. Finally one night Gene was perusing his family’s limited library of books while he and I were talking on the phone and he came across one tome entitled “Excuse my Dust.” “Hey, how about Dust?” he mumbled. It was pure genius. In that moment a garage band was finally named at long last. We were “Dust” and we were “everywhere.”

 ROTC Ball at the South Oak Cliff HS gym, from left: Rollie, Jim, Rick Cramer, Gene, Glenn
ROTC Ball at the South Oak Cliff HS gym, from left: Rollie, Jim, Rick Cramer, Gene, Glenn
A permanent replacement for Banks arrived when Jim introduced the group to his friend, Rick Cramer. We had recently competed in an amateur Battle of the Bands contest on the back of a flat-bed truck trailer in the parking lot of Gipson’s department store on Ledbetter and got beaten badly by Kempy and the Guardians. We knew we needed to produce a bigger, better sound pronto if we wanted to compete with guys like that and that meant adding personnel. Rick began working with us as the second guitarist but he was trained on keyboards and planned to buy an electric organ in the very near future. Our first gig with Cramer was performed standing in the freezing cold out in front of the Wynnewood Theater on December 2nd, playing for the chilled customers as they hurriedly purchased their tickets and ran inside the movie house to view “Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine.”

1967 started off promisingly enough on a personal finance level with my gaining employment at a One Hour Martinizing dry cleaners on Davis Street. My brief stint at Six Flags had taught me that working for a living was a terrible way to spend my time but, on the other hand, having a steady income was a source of power and freedom from having to grovel for favors from my stingy parents.Another grand event and a huge step forward for the group was the occurrence of Rick getting himself an electric organ. And if that wasn’t enough, the real surprise came when we heard Cramer play it. He was not an inexperienced keyboard man at all. He had a very fluid style much like that of his hero Ray Manzarek of The Doors in that he knew how to tastefully fill a lead break and when to lay down a full carpet of sound behind the guitars and drums. And he kept on getting better and better as the months rolled on.

The long practices in living rooms and garages were starting to pay off. We now had an ever-growing roster of songs we could perform with some degree of proficiency and our equipment quality had risen to semi-professional standards. Now it was a matter of finding higher quality gigs to play.

In February we played for the Valentine’s Dance at Browne Jr. High and for the ROTC Military Ball at South Oak Cliff. Both were great boosts to our confidence. The constant need (and insatiable desire) for more power and volume possessed all of us and, with the paychecks rolling in from putting in my hours at the dry cleaners, I traded up once again to get a Fender Bassman amplifier at Arnold & Morgan Music in far away Garland. In those days it wasn’t unusual for two or three of us to spend an entire day at that famous music store, looking at and sampling all the guitars and new gadgets and talking shop with the other musicians who were doing the very same thing.Our first experience in a professional recording studio took place on April 26, 1967 when we responded to a newspaper ad and traveled west to Ft. Worth to audition for Delta Studios. The deal was that the owners got to hear lots of bands, looking for that diamond in the rough that would make them rich, and the groups got a free demo tape of the two songs they recorded. We had no idea what we would record when we arrived but we came away with passable demos of “Signed D.C.” with Jim Dawson singing and “Doctor Robert”.

Dust – Signed D.C.

“Signed D.C.” was such a starkly honest song by Arthur Lee that I’m not sure we even performed it live. We just thought that first Love LP was amazing.

Dust in the summer of '67 - a very rare group photo of the original lineup, from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene, Rick and Jim
Dust in the summer of ’67 – a very rare group photo of the original lineup, from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene, Rick and Jim
Needless to say, we failed to get an offer to cut an album from the fat cats at Delta but we had our tape, by golly. A week later we broke into our piggy banks and paid to have the songs pressed on a handful of 45 rpm records. Say what you will but we had ourselves a bonafide single that we could play on any phono and that was nothing to scoff at! Neither tune sounded very good but it was the beginning of a personal love affair with the studio that would stay with me for decades to come. The very idea of working on a song until it sounded right seemed like an excellent way to create unique art.

A Presbyterian Church located near South Oak Cliff would become a very important factor in the maturing process of Dust. It was one of many churches throughout the DFW Metroplex that started sponsoring weekend dances so underage kids in the area would have a safe place to hang out and socialize with their peers. For bands like ours it was literally a God-sent blessing. Theirs was called The Flare because on Friday and Saturday nights the church activity organizers would post a blazing red flare out by the street to mark the “happening.”

Every group that performed in that converted meeting hall tried to out-dazzle their competition and we were not immune to the lure of one-upsmanship. We would construct homemade strobe lights by cutting a circle in a round wheel that spun on a fan motor in front of a floodlight. We would mount black lights around the stage and draw designs on our army surplus jackets and pants with florescent paint so we would glow. We would harvest huge sunflowers that grew in the wild behind the church and place them strategically among the equipment and drums. It was truly a psychedelic experience to go hear Dust.

By the summer of ‘67 all our parents had grown quite weary of hosting boisterous band practices so we began to rehearse at Mr. Fowler’s warehouse on Industrial where he stored and showcased his commercial washers and dryers. It was great for us because we could now make as much racket as we wanted without inviting complaints.

About that time I upgraded my axe by financing a bright orange Gretsch Chet Atkins model (after securing a loan co-signed grudgingly by my still-reluctant folks) that I had been eyeing for weeks. The slick salesman at Arnold & Morgan, Dan Haubrick, told me that it used to belong to the singer for Kit and the Outlaws. That group had scored a regional hit with their cover of “In the Midnight Hour” so I hoped that it possessed some special mojo that might bring me some luck in the music business. That made my Silvertone guitar expendable and I followed in the footsteps of one of my idols, Pete Townsend of The Who, when I bashed it to pieces one night on stage at The Flare for the radical theatrical effect and overall shock value it would surely arouse in the audience. During the scripted-in-my-imagination process that led up to this wanton destructive act I unwisely placed my left ear directly against the speaker cloth of my amplifier during a feedback frenzy and caused ear damage that I live with to this day. My hearing on that side has never been the same. I also regret purposely tearing up that innocent musical instrument. I would love to have it back.

Speaking of The Who, I attended a concert that July that featured them and The Blues Magoos opening for Herman’s Hermits at Dallas Memorial Auditorium. The Blues Magoos were certainly cool enough with their psychedelic outfits that glowed in the dark and made them look like skeletons but life as I knew it changed forever when Pete, Roger, Keith and John took over the arena. I was familiar with their music to an extent but I had never experienced anything like the explosive set they performed that night before my bedazzled, awestruck eyes. They were so amazing, so relentless, so confident in themselves that many in the stunned audience left during Peter Noone & Company’s lightweight show that followed, including my date and myself. No act in the world could have followed The Who. Not on that evening, at least.

A problem with Glenn was that sometimes when he would meet someone who played guitar he would invite that person to join the band in order to impress them. Unfortunately, he would do this without consulting anyone in the group, especially me. Before Jim and Rick came along there was a guy named Chuck Pangburn that showed up for a while before drifting away. Then in August of ‘67 a lead guitarist named Mike Stroud appeared at our practices for a week. At some point we set Glenn straight by informing him that I was, indeed, the only lead guitarist that Dust needed and he curbed his habit of inducting new members on the spot immediately.

All of the members of the band were obsessed with two things in particular. Rock & Roll and girls. Every chance I got I’d escort a young lady to The Studio Club in Preston Center to dance to and hear the best of the local Dallas combo scene. I heard bands like Kenny and the Kasuals (a band I would later be a 12 year member of two decades down the road), The Novas, The Sensations, The Jackals, The Blues Bag and The Orphans just to name a few.

Speaking of the opposite sex, most of us were content to just have a steady girlfriend but Gene took it a big step further when he married a girl named Cindy in September and moved into an apartment of their own in North Oak Cliff. We were surprised and more than a little worried because of their young age but we adjusted to her constant presence after a while. She was no Yoko Ono.

An opportunity to gain wider exposure came along for the group in October when we got to perform twice at “The Action Spot” at the State Fair of Texas. We even got our name listed in the newspaper along with about 200 other combos but it still felt special to see our name in print.

Dallas Times Herald, Oct. '67 list of bands at the Action Spot at the State Fair: Shows the amount of competition all garage bands of that day had to deal with. And these are just the lucky ones who got to perform!
Dallas Times Herald, Oct. ’67 list of bands at the Action Spot at the State Fair: Shows the amount of competition all garage bands of that day had to deal with. And these are just the lucky ones who got to perform!

Dust at the DeSoto Community Center, December 14, 1967 from left: Gene, Jim, Rollie and Glenn
Dust at the DeSoto Community Center, December 14, 1967
from left: Gene, Jim, Rollie and Glenn
By the end of 1967 Dust was finally starting to earn a reputation for being a dependable dance band that could competently play the hits of the day without causing embarrassing or offensive incidents. Rock music was exploding into totally new areas with songs from Sgt. Pepper, The Doors, Fresh Cream and Are You Experienced?reverberating all around us. It was all we could do to try to keep up with the changing social climates but we were having the time of our lives doing it.

With the new year came further upgrades in the band’s equipment. Glenn, Rick and I all bought big black Kustom rolled-and-pleated amplifiers in February, making us look better and a whole lot louder. Gigs were still hard to come by but at least we had a much more impressive stage presence when we did perform.

That same month I went to see Jimi Hendrix, Soft Machine and Clouds perform in concert at the State Fair Music Hall and came away a very humbled guitarist. It was a show I’ll never forget. Local boys The Chessmen opened.

 From left: Jim, Rick, Gene and Rollie
From left: Jim, Rick, Gene and Rollie
In March ‘68 we all realized why Gene and Cindy had gotten married in such a rush when Sarah Hope Fowler was born. It was hard to think of our drummer and running buddy as actually being a Daddy.

Meanwhile, Candy’s Flare had become so popular that it was forced to move into a cavernous National Guard Armory near Red Bird Airport to accommodate the large crowds of kids that had discovered it. They now had two bands booked each Friday and Saturday night to trade one-hour sets from opposite ends of the echo-prone building. Glen Oaks Presbyterian Church off of Polk Street also started holding teen dances and that provided yet another outlet for Dust to gig at.

At some point in that March some kind of problem arose between the band and Jim Dawson. Unfortunately, a lack of detailed notes and my declining memory have erased any recollections about what brought about Jim’s sudden departure from Dust. Obviously something was amiss and causing the majority of the group to doubt his commitment to the cause. I don’t recall any kind of blow up or confrontation. For whatever reason, the band jettisoned a very talented and charismatic singer/frontman and I lost touch with a good friend. (Decades later I would happily reconnect with Jim and he informed me that he found out about his dismissal when he called my house and my mother told him I was at practice, which was news to him. He drove to where we rehearsed and watched from his car as we auditioned a new singer. He said he just drove away in disgust and never looked back. That was a cowardly, callous way for us to treat Jim and for my part in that I’m forever sorry. He deserved better.)

Frank Lee, a classmate of mine at Kimball High and a vocalist/guitarist that had been performing with various Oak Cliff combos was brought into the band as a replacement on April 3rd. He was nothing like Jim. Frank had a growling, husky singing voice and a very energetic, sometimes frantic stage persona that took some getting used to. But his easy-going and friendly mannerisms made the transition a smooth one.

Dust in the Fowler warehouse where we rehearsed circa summer of '68. Frank Lee, Gene, Rick, Rollie and Glenn
Dust in the Fowler warehouse where we rehearsed circa summer of ’68. Frank Lee, Gene, Rick, Rollie and Glenn
One of the first positive things that occurred after Frank joined the band was Dust landing a successful audition at the legendary and popular LouAnn’s nightclub located at Lover’s Lane and Greenville. In 1968 it was still the only building of note near that corner and was considered to be on the outskirts of town. It later went up in flames and had to be rebuilt on a much smaller scale. But at that time it was nothing less than holy Mecca for young rock bands trying to make a name for themselves in Dallas. Dust performed there on April 20th and the following Monday I was besieged by classmates that couldn’t believe they saw skinny little Rollie playing in the band at LouAnn’s last Saturday night. I had purposely maintained a very low profile in school in order to keep my hair as long as I could and very few of my classmates even knew I was a musician. They just thought I was a scrawny nerd. Needless to say, the cat was out of the bag after that weekend and suddenly I had rebel status at Kimball.

It was around this time that Rick discovered a stage image that he liked. He somehow acquired a WWI-era leather pilot’s helmet and a pair of large amber goggles that he wore at every gig thereafter. He also began to come out from behind the organ during our extended rendition of “Break on Through” by The Doors and deliver a long, abrasive soliloquy to the audience that no one could understand. We once played at a Catholic school dance and he did a stellar job of scaring the nuns with his maniacal shouting. To my knowledge not one of us ever questioned him about why he chose to do this and he never volunteered an explanation. We just let him do it.

A milkman who was an acquaintance of Frank’s named Terry Willis heard us, liked us and offered to be our manager/booking agent. His route took him to various schools in the area and he promised us work through his contacts. I think he envisioned himself as a young Brian Epstein but Dust had a few miles to go before we would even be good enough to shine John Lennon’s shoes. However, thanks to the gigs Terry procured for us I was able to quit my demeaning job at the dry cleaners before summer began.

Our first real road trip came in May when Terry booked us for a dance in Childress, Texas. An Explorer troop had offered to let us stay at their meeting house overnight but when we saw the less-than-hospitable condition it was in (it reminded us of the Our Gang clubhouse) we opted to make the long drive back to Dallas that night. My lasting impression of that trip is of us stopping at a diner on the outskirts of Wichita Falls around dawn. None of us had slept a wink and we were worn out. I had never liked coffee before but on that morning it tasted amazing to me. At that moment I finally understood why God had placed it on this earth for us humans to imbibe and I was a confirmed java drinker from that day on.

 Dust at Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster circa late 1968 - Gene, Rollie and Rick
Dust at Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster circa late 1968 – Gene, Rollie and Rick

On the scholastic front, after I maintained a B average in my freshman year and got my guitar as the reward, my grades dropped steadily into the C and sometimes D range for the rest of my high school years. With that in mind, when I was asked to stand at the Senior Luncheon held at Riverlake Country Club to be recognized for graduating with honors no one was as surprised as me. I wasn’t particularly proud of the distinction as I felt it diminished my image as the smug, egregious rock and roll musician that I fancied myself to be. I’m still not sure they crunched those numbers correctly but it made my Mom and Dad proud, at least.

Due to the fact that the selective service was drafting every able-bodied eighteen-year-old male who could count to five for duty in scenic Vietnam at the time, I started attending classes at nearby Dallas Baptist College less than a week after graduation. This allowed me to claim II-S status as being student-deferred and, therefore, ineligible for the terrifying draft. My career plans didn’t have the Armed Services in them at all. Guitars beat guns every time.

No band of merit in Oak Cliff was without their very own funeral hearse and this is the one Frank Lee bought for Dust to cruise Kiest Park and haul the equipment around in. Had a nifty 4-track inside, too.
No band of merit in Oak Cliff was without their very own funeral hearse and this is the one Frank Lee bought for Dust to cruise Kiest Park and haul the equipment around in. Had a nifty 4-track inside, too.
The summer of ‘68 was one of liberation for most of the band members. Now that we had escaped the drudgery of high school we thought of ourselves as adults, ready to explore and conquer the world. Concerts were still relatively cheap so I was able to see touring bands like Cream, The Doors, Vanilla Fudge and Canned Heat for about $6 a ticket. Our gigs were numerous now with repeated appearances at Candy’s Flare in Oak Cliff and the new one in Decatur, various private parties and several performances at the Shamrock Roller Rink in Lancaster.

Many groups like The Chessmen and Kempy and the Guardians had second-hand Cadillac hearses to transport their equipment around in. In late August Frank purchased a black ‘58 hearse so we could be as cool. In old English lettering we stenciled our “DUST… is everywhere” logo on the back door. Once we installed a four-track cassette player in it we were ready to join the parade every Sunday afternoon at Kiest Park with Cream’s Disraeli Gears and the Beatles’ White Album blaring for the duly impressed masses and would-be groupies.

By the fall Terry had us booked solid on most weekends and we were sailing right along. Rick had started taking classes at Baylor University in Waco so rehearsals were much more infrequent. But he would drive back home every weekend so it never interfered with our gig scheduling.

In November Dust successfully auditioned for a new talent agency called “Studio VII” that was located in a recording studio complex just west of downtown Dallas. Being pretty much full of ourselves at this juncture, we felt that Terry Willis had taken us about as far as he could and it was time to try and get better representation. It fell upon Frank and me to inform Terry that we no longer needed his services. Terry had done wonders for us and it was not an easy task to fire him.

One of the perks of being under the wing of Studio VII was the fact that they offered free studio time to their bands. To me, that was akin to getting a lifetime pass to Disneyland. It did involve signing a contract with the agency so in December we all had to get our fathers to meet at Frank’s house to sign on the dotted line for us since we were all under 21. It seemed like a really big deal. We felt we were now definitely on our way to riches and fame.

Recorded at Studio VII in late 1968 with Frank Lee on vocals, “Vicious Delusion” is a hybrid of two different tunes that I had written but the lyrics were penned by Ron, the staff engineer at Studio VII.

Dust – Vicious Delusion

Dust, Studio VII Prod. business cardRon took a liking to me and would often invite me to come sit in the control room while he produced a demo session for one of the other groups. On one memorable occasion the band in the studio was Felicity, a fine combo from East Texas that featured a talented singing drummer named Don Henley. Don went on to be in a little group called the Eagles. I remember being very impressed by their professionalism and their workman-like approach to recording. They knew what they were doing. Dust didn’t.

We ended 1968 with a New Year’s Eve gig at the brand new “Candy’s Flare – Pleasant Grove” in the National Guard Armory located there. It had been an eventful year for all of us and we felt that we had taken enormous steps toward becoming the rock stars we had always envisioned ourselves as being destined to be.

Dust with hair a flyin' at Broadway Skateland, Mesquite, January 4, 1969 - Frank, Gene and Rick We're playing Hendrix's “Manic Depression” because Rick would come out front and play cymbal on it. Not sure why.
Dust with hair a flyin’ at Broadway Skateland, Mesquite, January 4, 1969 – Frank, Gene and Rick
We’re playing Hendrix’s “Manic Depression” because Rick would come out front and play cymbal on it. Not sure why.

 Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, Glenn and Frank
Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, Glenn and Frank

1969 started right where the previous year had left off with Dust continuing to play gigs at the area roller rinks and Candy’s Flare. We had managed to add Club Menagerie in Commerce, the Broadway Skateland and the Twilight Skating Palace to our list of venues. I traded in my orange Gretsch for a used Fender Telecaster. I think the real reason was that it just looked better on stage and was easier to play. I was still a terrible lead guitarist that should have spent a lot more time practicing his instrument. The studio and live tapes that exist from those days prove it.

In February we started having all-night recording sessions with Ron (his last name escapes me) in an attempt to compose and cut that million-dollar hit single. I contributed several amateurish songs with titles like “Eating Petunias,” “Brown-haired Woman,” and “When you were down I loved you more.” We also bravely attempted a few of Ron’s songs like “All Strung Out” and “Vicious Delusion.” We never recorded anything resembling great rock and roll but the experience of being in a professional studio again was invaluable. I found that I absolutely loved the process of recording. For me there was no place I’d rather have been than inside a studio and I spent every spare hour I had there soaking up all the protocol I could.

Dust at Candy's Flare, 1969 from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene and Rick
Dust at Candy’s Flare, 1969
from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene and Rick
One of the drawbacks of having an old hearse for an equipment truck was the fact that it was constantly in need of repair. One incident could have ended my rock and roll future (and earthly existence in general) permanently. At some point the band started holding our practices at a warehouse in southeast Dallas that was owned by Gene’s father. One afternoon Frank and I were tooling along on our way to rehearsal, driving east on Ledbetter approaching the intersection with Lancaster Avenue. When Frank went to apply the brakes he realized that nothing was happening to slow the heavy hearse as we sped toward the red light. Fortunately there was an unoccupied lane ahead. Frank quickly changed lanes and we barreled right through the intersection at about fifty miles per hour, barely missing a Lincoln Continental that was coming north on Lancaster. When we rolled to a stop about a quarter of a mile later the irate driver of the car (that had to slam on his brakes to avoid a collision) pulled up behind, got out and yelled at us for several minutes. Both Frank and I stayed in the hearse as we both noticed that the furious and rather large African-American man had a pistol tucked into the waist of his pants. Evidently Frank’s explanation of brake failure satisfied the steaming mad driver and we managed to escape without being shot. Had we hit anything at all as we flew through the busy intersection we probably would have been killed on the spot or maimed for life. As I recall we still drove the hearse to practice. Slowly.

Early in March the band experienced our first drug bust. Well, sorta. We played a dance at the DeSoto Community Center and throughout the night we noticed that we were being closely watched by several uniformed police officers. After the gig Rick was changing clothes in the tiny restroom when detectives literally burst in the door and confiscated a bottle of what they were sure was some kind of illicit contraband that Rick had on him. They actually drove him over to the station and made him wait while they rousted the town pharmacist out of bed to come and identify the pills in question. They were sure that a musician wearing a leather skullcap and goggles had to be tripping on some kind of weird hallucinogenic substance and was, therefore, a menace to the citizenry. When the expert declared that the capsules held nothing more psychedelic than ordinary cold medicine Rick was released and told to never come back to the metropolis of DeSoto. No formal apology was forthcoming, either.

 Rollie Anderson with Dust at Candy's Flare, early 1969
Rollie Anderson with Dust at Candy’s Flare, early 1969
I met many musicians at Dallas Baptist College who were doing the same thing I was in that they were taking full advantage of the student deferment loophole to avoid military conscription. One of them was Alfred Brown from Plano. I would end up in two different bands with him in the 70s and he and I started a friendship that spring that would last for decades to come. By meeting him and others like Bob Lincoln of “The Poppy Box” I started to expand my circle of musician friends to include those from other parts of North Texas. Both Alfred and Bob graciously showed me new guitar techniques that made me a much better player. They most likely took pity on me due to my lack of talent on the instrument.

Frank and I saw Jimi Hendrix perform at Dallas Memorial Auditorium that April (with Chicago Transit Authority as the opening act) and he was fantastic once again. Little did we know that he would be dead about a year and a half later.

Late in May the hearse was broken into and most of the equipment inside it stolen. It had been parked in front of Frank’s apartment and the thieves took the P.A. system and the amplifier for my speakers. It was a devastating financial blow but I somehow scraped up enough to buy another Kustom amplifier and tall column from a friend. I now had a humongous setup of five 15” speakers and a brassy horn in two cabinets. I could barely stand to be in front of it at times because of the volume.

In June of ‘69 I found myself on a break from school for the first time in a long while. I took a job with the city park department as a playground activity leader and swim teacher at Pecan Grove near Kiest and Westmoreland. It was my first 8 to 5 Monday-Friday job and it left even less time for band practice and other activities. The group was still playing the same old gigs and the momentum we had carried into the new year with Studio VII had tapered off considerably when our recordings failed to impress anyone at the agency. They had moved on to other, more promising bands.

Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, from left: Glenn, Rick, Gene and Frank Rick would step out from behind his organ once every show to give his 'Lizard King' soliloquy
Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, from left: Glenn, Rick, Gene and Frank
Rick would step out from behind his organ once every show to give his ‘Lizard King’ soliloquy

On June 29th Rick Cramer announced that he was quitting Dust and getting married in August. That pretty much brought the band to a screeching halt. There was no actual day to designate when it happened. Dust just ended with a whimper rather than a bang.

For the rest of the summer Glenn and I tried to find other musicians who wanted to start up a new combo with us but several noisy jam sessions produced nothing promising. Gene was trying to provide for his wife and young daughter and Frank had started working full time, as well. The loss of his P.A. system in May was something that he couldn’t replace easily and we couldn’t rely on him to be able to carry on.

On my 20th birthday in early September I got a call from Richard Theisen of the Pleasant Grove-based “Love Street Journal” band inviting me to audition for their group. I became their guitarist on September 14th and the next six years of my life were spent with various versions of the band that became “Daniel.”

Unfortunately I eventually fell out of contact with most of those musicians I spent my teen years with. I’d visit Gene and Cindy from time to time in the early 70s but before long I lost track of them, as well. When I met up with Gene again in the late 90s he sadly informed me that Glenn had passed away about a year earlier. It made me reminisce all the good times I spent with the Fowler cousins as we would fantasize about how famous and wealthy we were going to be as rock stars. Glenn especially was a true friend to me throughout those years and I regret that I never got to see him again after that summer of ‘69.

Love Street Journal at the Flare, Pleasant Grove from left: Billy King, Tommy Jones, Robert "Noah" Hazlewood and Rollie Anderson
Love Street Journal at the Flare, Pleasant Grove
from left: Billy King, Tommy Jones, Robert “Noah” Hazlewood and Rollie Anderson
When I look back on those youthful, formative years I treasure the wonderful moments that will stay with me forever. As we made our way through our teenage years we doggedly pursued our rock & roll dreams while other boys who picked up instruments following the British Invasion of the mid 60s put them aside after a few months of lessons or finding out that steel guitar strings really hurt the fingertips. For us it was a way to release our energy and passion and to express ourselves in ways that others could relate to. We were all doing the best we could during the topsy-turvy events of that revolutionary decade, looking for our own individual path that would lead us into adulthood. Rock & Roll was our pressure valve and our muse. We constantly turned one another on to new music and different ways of thinking. We helped each other to expand our horizons of what was possible. And the fraternity that was the band became the glue that held us together. The band was what we could depend on to be there when the rest of the world let us down or presented us with problems that seemed insurmountable.

It was, indeed, a golden age and I’m so thankful that Gene, Glenn, Jim, Rick and Frank were there to go through it with me. We made some beautiful music and joyful noises together and they helped to make my teen years very special to me.

Rollie Anderson, May 2010

Performances

1965

September 19 – Wheelchair Bowler’s Association meeting, Bronco Bowl
October 17 – Wheelchair Bowler’s Association meeting, Bronco Bowl
October 24 – Church social, Gail Watkin’s house
December 31 – New Year’s Eve Party, Glen Fowler’s house

1966

March 1 – Audition for DeSoto High School talent show
March 4 – DeSoto talent show, DeSoto Elementary
April 9 – Hobby Shop, DeSoto
May 20 – Private Party, DeSoto
June 3 – Private Party, DeSoto
June 25 – Private Party, DeSoto
July 8 – JayCee dance, DeSoto
July 15 – Lion’s Club Carnival, DeSoto
August 13 – My sister Marlene’s Park Party, Anderson house
November 4 – South Oak Cliff High School Spanish Club, Cedar Canyon Club
November 5 – Battle of the Bands, Gipson’s Department Store, Oak Cliff
December 2 – Wynnewood Movie Theatre lobby

1967

January 14 – JayCee Dance, DeSoto
February 10 – T. W. Browne Jr. High School dance
February 18 – South Oak Cliff High School ROTC Military Ball
March 4 – Private Party, Kiest Park, Oak Cliff
March 25 – Audition, Presbyterian Church, Oak Cliff
April 14 – Private Party, Riverlake Country Club, Oak Cliff
April 26 – Audition and session at Delta Studios, Fort Worth
April 29 – Audition for “The Flare” club
May 13 – Junior High School party, Weiss Park gym, Oak Cliff
May 20 – The Flare
May 27 – South Oak Cliff High School Senior Pizza Party
June 1 – Audition for “LouAnn’s” club
June 24 – The Flare
July 2 – Audition for “The Pirate’s Nook” club
August 5 – The Flare
August 9 – Audition for booking agency
September 23 – The Flare
October 7 – “The Action Spot” at State Fair of Texas
October 8 – Audition for the “Club Texas”
October 15 – “The Action Spot” at State Fair of Texas
October 21 – The Flare
October 28 – The Flare
November 26 – Audition at the “Three Thieves” club
December 15 – Community Center Dance, DeSoto
December 29 – JayCee Dance, DeSoto

1968

January 12 & 26, February 9 – Glen Oaks Methodist Church, Oak Cliff
February 10 – Oak Cliff YMCA
February 17 – Candy’s Flare
March 15 – Glen Oaks Methodist Church
March 30 – Candy’s Flare (Last performance with Jim Dawson)
April 20 – LouAnn’s
April 27 – The Lyon’s Den
April 28 – Irving CYO Dance
May 4 – Decatur, Texas Roller Rink
May 11 – North Texas State University fraternity party, Lewisville
May 18 – Bonehead Explorer’s Post, Childress
May 24 – Atwell Junior High School dance
June 1 – Candy’s Flare
June 2 – Irving CYO Dance
June 14 & 15 – Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster
June 21 – Audition at “Phantasmagoria” Club
June 29 – Jolly Time Skating Rink, Fort Worth
July 27 – Candy’s Flare, Decatur
July 28 – Candy’s Flare
August 2 & 3 – Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster
August 16 – Candy’s Flare, Decatur
August 17 – Private Party, Fort Worth
August 18 – Irving CYO Party
September 7 – Candy’s Flare
September 14 – Candy’s Flare, Nacogdoches
September 20 & 21 – Shamrock Roller Rink
September 29 – Bishop Dunne High School dance
October 5 – Irving YMCA dance
October 11 & 12 – Shamrock Roller Rink
October 13 – St. Elizabeth CYO dance
October 26 – Private Party, Knights of Columbus, Grand Prairie
November 1, 2, 22, 23 – Shamrock Roller Rink
November 24 – Audition at Studio VII agency
December 7 – Candy’s Flare
December 14 – Broadway Roller Rink, Mesquite
December 27 – Texas A&M Hometown Club, Forest Hollow
December 31 – Candy’s Flare, Pleasant Grove

1969

January 4 – Broadway Roller Rink
January 11 & 12 – Club Menagerie, Commerce
January 17 – Twilight Roller Rink, Pleasant Grove
January 18 – Candy’s Flare
January 24 – Club Menagerie, Commerce
January 25 – Broadway Roller Rink
February 7 – American Legion “Teen-a-go-go” in Mesquite
February 8 – Club Menagerie
February 14 – Apartment Private Party
February 15 – NTSU fraternity party, Arlington
February 21 & 22 – Twilight Roller Rink
March 7 – Community Center dance, DeSoto
March 14 – Shamrock Roller Rink
March 15 – East Texas State University fraternity party, Honeygrove
March 22 – Broadway Roller Rink
March 30 – Club Menagerie
April 12 – Broadway Roller Rink
April 19 – Candy’s Flare
April 25 – Irving “Teen Scene” at armory
May 2 – Shamrock Roller Rink
May 3 – ETSU sorority party, Wylie’s Dude Ranch, Lewisville
May 9 – Commerce High School Dance
May 17 – Broadway Roller Rink
May 28 – Adamson High School senior pizza party
May 30 – Irving “Teen Scene”
May 31 – Rocket Roller Rink, Cockrell Hill
June 3 – ETSU summer school dance
June 14 – Broadway Roller Rink
June 28 – Candy’s Flare (final performance of DUST)

Los Beatniks – La Barra de Chocolate

Los Beatniks CBS 7" RebeldeArgentina had a strong rock n’ roll scene dating back to the ’50s, for years largely imitative of U.S. sounds, with records sung in English. The explosion of British Invasion sounds came through the hugely influential Los Shakers, from nearby Montevideo, Uruguay, and later from Los Mockers and Los Bulldogs, also Uruguayan bands.

By the mid-’60s groups like Los Gatos Salvajes started singing in Spanish. Another was Los Beatniks, who had been playing in the basement club La Cueva on Pueyrredón Avenue. They recorded their only single “Rebelde” / “No finjas más” (CBS 21574) on June 2, 1966. “Rebelde” is credited as the first Argentine garage song sung in Spanish. The song starts with a great bass and drum line and has fine organ fills, but the coolest parts are the opening scream and the ghoulish echo of the vocals during the chorus.

They pulled some publicity stunts – supposedly playing naked in a fountain and spending three days in prison for it. There’s a short, silent b&w clip of the band playing in the back of trucks around Buenos Aires. The stunts got them some media coverage, but didn’t help their single – it sold only 200 copies out of the 600 pressed and they soon broke up. (Note: there were unrelated groups from Brazil, Chile and Mexico that also had the name Beatniks.)

Their singer Pajarito Zaguri made a single as El Cuarto Pajarito with other musicians he knew from La Cueva and an all-night pizza shop, La Perla del Once. He then joined Los Náufragos for their debut LP before forming La Barra de Chocolate with guitarist Nacho Smilari, Jorge “Yoryo” Mercury on organ, Miguel Monti on bass and Quique Sapia on drums.

La Barra de Chocolate Music Hall 7" El MaleconLa Barra de Chocolate released four singles and and LP on the Music Hall label. Stylistically they range from pop with horns and strings to psychedelia of “Proyectos de un ladrón prisionero” (hear it on the compilation Obsession on Bully Records) and “El divagante” to the extended jamming of “Viste”. My favorite tracks are the garage sound of “Buenos Aires Beat” from their LP and the b-side to their third single “El Malecon”, which has a scuzzy funk quality that really sets it apart.

Their LP and singles have been reissued on CD (from master tapes I believe), though it’s not easily available. The CD includes the b-side to Los Beatniks single, “No finjas más”, plus another song not released at the time, “El Soldado” (but not “Rebelde” for some reason), and both sides of the rare El Cuarto Pajarito single.

Thanks to Borja for the scan of the Los Beatniks single. The Magic Land is a great source of info on rock from Argentina and Uruguay.

The Beagles

The Beatles, 1964, from left: Bill Suddith, Lonnie McLane, Russ Jordan, Wayne DeWitt and Donnie Turner

Beagles Empires 45 All I Need Is YouThe Beagles “All I Need Is You” is a crude garage number very reminiscent at times of “Can’t Buy Me Love”. There are a couple good shouts and a decent guitar break. It’s backed by the goofy “Him and Her”, a song about the two dogs at the White House getting in LBJ’s way.

The band was from Lynchburg, Virginia, with song writing by John William Suddith and Wayne DeWitt, published with Gary Simpson who owned the Beagles name (thanks to Mop Top Mike for the info).

The band members were:

Bill Suddith – lead guitar and vocals
Lonnie McLane – guitar and lead vocals
Russ Jordan – bass and vocals
Wayne DeWitt – sax and vocals
Donald Turner – drums

Released on the Empire label in the spring of 1964, this 45 was pressed at the Southern Plastics plant in Nashville, using Nashville Matrix to master and plate.

No relation to the Beagles cartoon which had some great tracks like “I Feel Like Humpty Dumpty”.

The Zoo – “Drums Under The Sun”

The Zoo, circa January 1966, Paul Velletri, George Alexander, Nick Jameson, Johnny Carr
The Zoo, circa January 1966, left to right: Paul Velletri (rhythm guitar, later bass), George Alexander (lead guitar, later keyboards), Nick Jameson (bass, later lead guitar), Johnny Carr (drums)

What follows are fifteen excerpts from “Drums Under The Sun,” an account of how rock and roll got transplanted to Greece in the early and mid-1960s, and the short but turbulent career of The Zoo, a British-American outfit that left its mark on the budding scene.

Johnny Carr, drummer of The Zoo

1

For years I wished I knew the name of Peppino di Capri’s drummer. He explodes into action in the intro to the Italian pop singer’s 1962 hit “Daniela,” thudding rim shots and tom beats into an ostinato 12/8 pattern for four bars in a classic twist, blending flawlessly into the body of the song: “Oh, Daniela, tu sei la piu bella…” The drum pattern perfectly bridges the transition from jazz to rock, combining the artistry of the former with the exuberance of the latter.

When, much later, the internet entered our lives, an initial search for the drummer’s identity turned up nothing. The closest I could get was a tiny, grainy photo on the back cover of the extended-play 45rpm disc, “Peppino By Night,” where he stands with the other band members. His face is half hidden by the bouffant hairdo of a dancer contorting herself in the foreground. Then a received an e-mail from a Peppino fan in Italy telling me that the drummer was Bebe Falconieri, and that he was retired and living in Capri. May he enjoy his retirement in peace. He doesn’t know that a long time ago those four bars of his changed my young life.

My mother bought the record (also featuring the better known “Saint Tropez Twist”) in a Rome store around Christmas of 1962. The glossy, full-colour sleeve shows Peppino di Capri pounding a piano and singing into a microphone over a sea of admiring dancers in some summer nightclub. It was about the time he was making the transition from nasal Neapolitan warbler into Italy’s version of Buddy Holly, decked out in black shirt and black horn-rimmed glasses and with a goofy smile to match. When my mother placed the record on the turntable, it was the drums that grabbed me.

In his memoir of The Shadows (“Rock ‘n’ Roll: I Gave You The Best Years of My Life,” London 1989), guitarist Bruce Welch describes with touching simplicity the first time he heard the echoing, knife-edge lead guitar intro to Buddy Holly’s inimitable “That’ll Be The Day.” His spine is still tingling from it. That’s how I felt with the slam-bam opening of “Daniela.” I was fourteen years old.

2

Johnny Carr in Hydra
Johnny Carr in Hydra
I had been on holiday in Greece twice before. This time, thanks to a continuing turbulent family life, this third Greek holiday promised to be rather a long one. In fact, it was the start of a confused and unsettled period which saw me enrolled first in the American School of Athens and then, when the stiff fees could no longer be met, in the Third Boys’ High School, a free state school in Athens, with the intention of my learning better Greek.

This was the situation in June 1962 when my mother got a job in the wardrobe department on the set of “Summer Holiday,” where Cliff Richard gets into his red London RT bus and drives all the way to Greece, with The Shadows and flouncy-skirted girls in tow. I got to meet the great man himself while he was rehearsing a dance act under the Washingtonia robusta palms of Athens’ National Garden. He was wearing a white string vest – the very one in which he is seen as singing “The Next Time” with the sunlit Acropolis in the background – and his hand was slightly sweaty when I shook it. It was a hot day and he’d been jumping around a lot.

There was an old mansion on Amalias Street (now long since replaced by a concrete monster) where the wardrobe department was being run by the cheerily efficient Rebecca Breed. I’d sometimes pop in to see how Mum was doing. One afternoon I found the door locked. I peeped through the keyhole and a curious sight met my eye. A group of men were changing into what looked like Greek evzone gear – the pleated tunic skirts, white leggings and pom-pom shoes of the elite Greek palace guard. I moved away from the door and strolled the hundred metres or so to Syntagma Square, where the red bus was parked (to the Athenians’ enduring fascination) and shooting was in progress. Mum and Rebecca Breed were busy with their tasks and so I hung around on the sidelines. Shortly afterwards a group of what looked like evzones emerged from a minibus. They held bouzoukia, the twangy traditional Greek stringed instrument, and lined up in front of the camera. One of them was wearing thick horn-rimmed specs. It was The Shadows! They’d just changed into their ethnic gear and were being shepherded up for a publicity shoot. I wandered in front of Hank Marvin, to be shooed out of camera range by Mum. If I’d been a Cliff Richard and Shadows fan before, I was doubly so now.

By July “Summer Holiday” had wound up, but 1962 hadn’t finished with me. Mum decided not to return to Britain but to stay on in the sunny land of her birth by working on another film. This was a frothy Hollywood holiday-romance idyll called “Island of Love,” with rugged Robert Preston and foppish Tony Randall in the lead roles, and Italian starlet Georgia Moll as the romantic foil. Thus in July I found myself living the carefree life on the island of Hydra, already the home of the likes of Leonard Cohen and gaining fame (or notoriety) as a trendy artists’ colony.

Mum and I were ensconced in a spartan but clean room in one of the rickety houses climbing the bare slope above the waterfront. The owner of the house was an old widow forever lamenting the death of her royalist husband in the political turmoil of the 1920s. She lived with what I believe was her mother, a bedridden and blind wreck hidden in a corner downstairs, the glimpse of which made me shudder.

I shuddered because sun-drenched Hydra was about life, and abundant young life at that. Every day was drenched in sun. On days when Mum wasn’t needed on the set we’d walk over the crags to a beach, philosophizing about life, in the varied company of perhaps a Swiss air hostess or a family of Oxford dons with peeling red faces. The blessed Greek summer air would caress our bare limbs. One day I obtained my first-ever employment as an extra a waterfront crowd scene, with 30 drachmas and a tub of the most delicious Russian salad I have ever eaten as my daily wage. Thirty drachmas corresponded exactly to one US dollar, which for a fourteen-year-old in 1962, and in Greece at that, wasn’t bad money at all. Especially after a couple of weeks of such scenes.

In Island of Love there’s a bit where a Greek professor boasts of the sexual capacities of island men even into old age. One morning I wandered down to the waterfront where they were doing a scene in front of a small white church. As the camera rolled, a bride and groom emerged. The groom looked to be about seventy and his bride about half a century younger. The actress-bride looked very familiar… Good lord, it was Mum! The scene was over in a moment. Mum doffed her wedding dress prop and laughed about it. Still, it felt weird.

With her shapely body and dark compact hair, my mother certainly looked as if she had just stepped out of some Italian film set. She was a favourite among the boisterous Italians who made up most of the camera crew, and was promptly taken under the wing of one of the older technicians, Elio, who took a fatherly care for her welfare. The others called him “Uncle Elio,” though he can barely have been past forty.

Sex, of course, was never far from the surface in a place like Hydra in the summer. Not that I had even a slight taste of it. Mentally I was still in damp and repressed England. One morning a Greek model in a skimpy bikini was hired to slink provocatively along the waterfront past the yachts for a certain scene. Before the camera rolled, a makeup man daubed pink cream over her shoulders and perfectly-formed breasts. My eyes widened as the man’s fingers invaded the model’s bikini-top, rubbing the stuff almost down to the nipples. She gave no sign even of noticing his existence. It was all a burst of life as I had never known before. There’s a photo somewhere of Mum and me with a bunch of Italian cameramen seated at the old dark red-fronted Skouna fish taverna where Franco, the fattest and funniest, has just shown the cooks how to make proper spaghetti. Our faces are sun-browned and smiling. And I’m growing up.

3

In September 1962 the drums hit me again. While the weather was still warm Major Joe Lepczyk, the American assistant military attaché, and his family took me to the American School for an amateur show night. After the Shakespearean skits and halting classical piano recitals, the last act was a school combo called The Black Cats. They were: Jeff Aston (guitar), Harry Anestos (guitar), Dave Brewster (guitar), Dickie Barham (bass) and Manos Kayopoulos (drums).

Sticking in my memory is an instrumental called “Ramrod,” clearly modelled on The Rockin’ Rebels’ “Wild Weekend,” bursting with sawing chords and pounding bass lines. In the school’s tiny first-floor auditorium the buttoned-down audience of mostly US State Department and military parents clapped and stamped and cheered. In a total trance I kept my eyes glued to drummer Manos Kayopoulos. In technical terms he was a mere time-keeper, playing simple off-beats. More impressive was his dazzling white drum kit. The beats may have been basic, but to me they were mighty hammer-strokes of power. What he had, I wanted, and everything connected with it. The drums were the sound of power and strength – things I had always conspicuously lacked.

A few months later Bebe Falconieri’s thumping intro to “Daniela” hooked me once and for all. A critical mass had been reached. In early 1963, as my days were spent in the grit and classics of the Third Boys’ High School, I grabbed every drummy record I could afford, from Sandy Nelson’s seminal classic “Let There Be Drums” to Cliff Richard’s “It’ll Be Me,” where I first heard the unique driving beat of Brian Bennett and became a dedicated fan for life. Costas and Nick Daperis, a pair of Greek-Canadian brothers who lived nearby and went to the same school, shared my enthusiasms, as did the Lepczyk girls. In our semi-basement flat behind the American Embassy, where the Attic sun streamed in on weekend mornings, I’d put the records on the turntable, pick up a couple of pencils, and whack away, oblivious.

The rock gospel was spreading. On my mother’s side I had a cousin, Ismene, a year or two younger than me, who took to Western rock in a big way. She made sure to attend every party in the neighbourhood where there was a portable record player. She had a friend named Hara, a saucy young thing in a grey skirt, cheeky breasts pointing outwards through her sweater, in whose room we would all grind and twist away for hours at a time. All, that is, except me, sitting most of the time tuned intensely into the drums, imagining myself producing that hypnotic beat. Even then, I didn’t want to merely dance to the music – I wanted to be it.

It was at once such session at Ismene’s house at one such session where I first heard “Let There Be Drums” and became totally oblivious to everything else around me, having ears only for that superb sixteen bars towards the end where Nelson unadornedly hammers it home with a hefty echo and bass to underpin the message.

The summer of 1963 was an idyll. When school broke up Mum and I would join Ismene, the Daperis boys and Elpida, a tall, bob-haired girl of whom I was becoming anxiously fond, and crowd onto the sweltering number 89 bus to Vouliagmeni beach – a half-hour jolting ride with all the windows open. Between dipping in the blue sea and lounging on a towel on the sand, I’d play Sandy Nelson riffs in my head, unable to wait to get home to play the records again.

That was the time in which the American political, military and cultural influence in Greece reached its apogee. It’s not too much of an exaggeration to say that Greece, a key member of Nato with communist states on its northern borders, was essentially an American protectorate. It was the height of the early Cold War, a mere fifteen years after the failure of a bloody communist-led attempt to seize power. Conservative Greek governments and King Paul (to be succeeded by his son Constantine II in early 1964) clung to American protection and aid. Not that there was much opposition to this state of affairs; the period of America-bashing was yet to come. Most Athenians, settling into modern and airy apartment buildings after migrating into the city from the impoverished and war-torn islands and villages in search of jobs and stability, were glad of a chance to enjoy something resembling a Western middle-class life in an enviable climate providing free scope for an outdoor night life, with movies and bars and restaurants and, for a fortunate few, private cars. It was common at the time to see enormous finned Chevrolet Impalas and Ford Edsels in the grey livery of Athens taxis. The term Amerikaniko, applied to anything from vacuum cleaners and refrigerators to fountain pens, was a source of pride for the possessor.

In Athens the Americans maintained a large military, diplomatic and business community. The centres of physical power were the American embassy on Vassilissis Sophias Avenue, abutting the smart Kolonaki district (of which much more later) and the US Air Force base next to Athens International Airport by the sea at Hellenikon. This military base, of all places, had an incalculable influence on the birth of rock and roll in Greece.

The offspring of the vast majority of Americans and other non-Greeks attended the expensive college-prep American Community School where I had sat entranced by the Black Cats a year earlier. The Daperis brothers and I, keeping up a close friendship with the Lepczyks, managed to get decked out in Levi’s blue jeans with white stars sewn on the back pockets, plaid shirts and US Keds sneakers bought for us at the Americans’ PX. The rest of the boys in the Third could only gaze enviously at us.

I had long since lost my north-country English accent, to blend in with the Daperis’ Canadian twang. Often the Lepczyks would take us driving in their immense white open Chevrolet Impala convertible, sometimes to the leafy suburb of Kifissia, sometimes to a movie in the Hellenikon base. I absorbed their polished East Coast accents, too. I have always been a linguistic chameleon, unthinkingly slipping into the intonations of my interlocutor, whether it’s my Aunt Christine in Staffordshire, a London news executive or a Texas farm boy. Less than three years after leaving England’s shores, to all intents and purposes I had become transmogrified into an American.

4

Johnny Carr (far left) with school orchestra in Bridagoon, March 1965. Marshall Dahneke conducting far right.
“Hi, John. Have a seat.” The American School’s academic counsellor, Philip Pappas, exuded the welcome informality of a Hollywood sitcom. Barely into his thirties himself, he was into the Buddy Holly look with fashionable black specs and unruly hair. His office was small and untidy enough not to arouse foreboding.

It was a hot day towards the end of August 1964. I had got off the X bus at its terminus at the newly-renamed Platia Kennedy in Halandri and trudged a few hundred yards up the potholed tarmac ribbon of Aghias Pareskevis Street to the school for my “placement” interview. I was going back to the American School.

After working out my eleventh-grade curriculum schedule, he handed me a sheet of paper marked “Electives.” These were courses, I was amazed to learn, that you could actually choose! Four items on the list leapt out at me straightaway: Band I, Band II, Band III, Varsity Band. The very words set my pulse quickening.

“Er,” I began, hardly believing my luck, “I think I’d rather like to try Band I, Mr Pappas.” Band I sounded just about right for drumming lessons, and who knows, someday I might even move up to Band II!

“Mm-hm,” the counsellor remarked casually. “Do you play an instrument?”

“I play the drums.”

People who know me say I’m not given to overstatement or hyperbole of any kind. Rather the opposite. My audacious claim to be a drummer, without having yet lifted a stick or sat on a drum stool, was an act of sheer gall that I have never since approached. Yet inside myself I knew it was true. Up to that point my “playing” had been limited to hours of air drums, tapping books and pots with pencils and knitting needles, as well-worn 45s of The Shadows and my all-time idol, Sandy Nelson, trundled on the turntable. But I had done a lot of it. In my mind I was already up there with the best.

“You do?” Mr Pappas replied airily, one eyebrow raised. “Okay, then I’ll put you in Varsity Band.”

If I had been told that I had just landed a contract to record with The Beatles, I could not have been more whacked. I floated rather than walked out of the counsellor’s office and down the hot and dusty road to the X bus terminus, dreaming of future glories just handed to me on a platter. The very term Varsity Band had an incredible pizzazz about it. It conjured up a slick, college-type ensemble of teenage jazz geniuses — and there I would be, at the top of the pyramid on the glittering drums! It was just two years since my experiences on the set of “Summer Holiday.” And now here I was, up there with Brian Bennett!

I could hardly bear to sit through the first day of classes; my suspense mounted until the three o’clock bell heralding the last class of the day — Varsity Band! Then reality struck. No glittering drum kit awaited me. The music teacher and band conductor, Marshall Dahneke, assigned me the most junior of percussionist roles, that of bass drum. Oh, it was that kind of band! The hulking dark blue instrument, mounted on a folding stand and almost as tall as I was, was to be my musical companion for the next six months.

In between studying the American Civil War – which was to have a weirdly obsessive effect on the rest of my life – and getting round quadratic equations, I was inducted into Southern California-style beach parties at Glyfada and Asteria, burger and hot dog barbecues in stylish gardens in Psychiko and Kifissia and even the occasional open-air cinema date with the American girls in their flouncy, pastel-coloured dresses and impeccably permed hair that looked as if they’d just stepped out of the ads in Life magazine.

Most of Varsity Bands’s repertoire was march music, with some mainstream jazz pieces for variety. The discipline of learning to read drum music did me good. Manhandling the bass drum beater was humbling and healthy. For an occasional diversion Mr Dahneke would switch me to the cymbals, teaching me how to glance them off each other for the most satisfying crash, as the horns and woodwinds blared away in front. I especially liked forging the great shimmers of sound in the band’s big majestic classic, Modest Mussorgsky’s “The Great Gates Of Kiev.”

From my lowly position in the Varsity Band, I became acutely aware of the other teen drummers kicking around the American School. One in particular I regarded with awe. Perry Mackereth, a Canadian, was the band’s “first drummer,” meaning that he monopolized the lead snare drum, a magnificent dark blue eight-inch-deep Ludwig that gave out the kind of full-bodied sound you heard in surf music of the time.

To my immeasurable envy, Perry had a complete champagne-glitter Premier set of his own. One afternoon after practice, as I was heading for the school bus, the piercing echo of a Fender Telecaster guitar filled the auditorium. I looked in to see a twelfth-grader up on the stage practicing the immortal reverberating opening riff to The Ventures’ “Out Of Limits.” Perry was setting up his kit. They were preparing for one of those “hops” that Americans still called their high school dances in those days. Living a long way away and having homework to catch up on, I couldn’t stay. But that particular riff wasn’t finished with me.

On weekends I left the American youth environment and entered the Greek. I was already fragmented enough for it not to be a problem. I drank in British, American, Greek and Italian musical culture in one long, continuous draught. I absorbed The Rolling Stones and The Ventures, The Beatles and Buck Owens, Mussorgsky and Mina, The Animals and Adriano Celentano, even the hypnotic 5/8 and 7/8 time signatures of the Greek bouzouki hits of the time. I found nothing incongruous in becoming nostalgic over the Liverpool accents emanating from my transistor on a sun-baked Mediterranean balcony, followed perhaps by the visceral punch of Celentano’s “Ciao Ragazzi.”

My Greek friends, plus cousin Ismene who by now had developed into a serious rock fan, were all concentrated in upscale Kolonaki, a district of quality apartment blocks and dignified neoclassical mansions clinging to the eastern and southern slopes of Lykavittos Hill, the conical sentinel that rises out of the city centre. Kolonaki was the birthplace of indigenous Greek rock. The early 1960s were a time in which young urban Greeks began to take to Western rock in a big way. Electric guitars and drums in saleable quantities began to appear in music shop windows. But in the Greece of that time only the offspring of the well-to-do could afford such things. One of them was the thirteen-year-old son of a centrist parliamentary deputy living near Kolonaki Square. Yianni Kiurktsoglou was a cousin of the Daperis brothers, a dedicated fan of the AFRS American air base station that, it is no exaggeration to say, was the midwife of Greek rock.

“I’m going to get an electric guitar,” Yianni said out of the blue one evening after an afternoon of gluing our ears to AFRS.

It was a warm autumn weekend. Yianni, Nick Daperis and I were on our way to an outdoor cinema.

“Why not form a band?” Nick said. The fact that he couldn’t play anything somehow didn’t seem to matter.

For the next few months that’s as far as it went. Schoolwork left little time for extracurricular activities. I thought no more of the band idea, but hadn’t counted on Yianni’s determination. Of proud Asia Minor Greek stock, fairly well off, with his father in politics, Yianni Kiurktsoglou was well-placed to eventually grow into one of Greece’s acclaimed rock ballad composers. Just thirteen but with a seriousness beyond his years, he set about musicalizing himself.

5

My maiden public performance on a percussion instrument of any kind was at a basketball game in one of the air base hangars on 20 October 1964. The teams were the school versus USAF air police and postal personnel. To get the cheerleaders going, Perry Mackereth whacked out the deathless syncopated opening sequence of The Rooters’ “Let’s Go” while I backed him up with a steady boom. Later I tucked into massive 25-cent hamburgers at Cokes at the base cafeteria – out of bounds to Greeks who wouldn’t get Big Macs and Cokes for another quarter of a century. On 3 November my bass drumming prowess was called upon again, for a basketball game in the school auditorium. The school team was playing a US Navy lineup from a visiting warship.

Perry was about the best drummer who had ever gone through the school, and he knew it. His forearms could sweep around a drum set with astounding ease. With his talent, understandably Varsity Band wasn’t sexy enough. He soon formed his own rock band and became a supercool figure at school, tall and wide-shouldered, with Ricky Nelsonesque slicked back hair, skin-tight dungarees, Beatle boots and college windjammers with big numbers on them. He began to skip Varsity Band rehearsals. When he failed to show up for our next air base basketball gig on 15 November, his neglect became my chance. I stood in for Perry as “first drummer” and remained in that exalted post for the rest of the school year. Yet it was typical of Perry that he took his demotion in stride, with Canadian unflappability. In the months to come he and I would be the school’s main drumming rivals. But it never dented our friendship. He was just not into competitive mode.

November 1964 saw the first cross-pollination between the American and Greek rock scenes. The young Americans lived in their own upscale world of sleek Buicks and Oldsmobiles under bougainvillea-shaded driveways, iced beer and Cokes on demand, summer barbecues ad infinitum, Beach Boys albums and Archie comics, and for entertainment, the air base cinema. For Athenian kids wanting to form a band the conditions were hugely different. They were mostly crammed into flats in Kolonaki and other inner-city districts, having to share living space with an extended family that often included old yiayia from the village. It wasn’t quite the ideal environment for letting fly with electric guitars and drums, assuming any room could be found for them. And only the better-off could afford such instruments at all. Yet in those tightly-massed flats something was being born. And on 1 November I believe I helped in the birth.

It was a warmish Sunday afternoon. Yianni, Nick and I gathered at Nick’s house to test our yet-untried musical skills. Nick had bought a second-hand acoustic guitar and was mastering elementary chords. For my benefit Yianni had borrowed a couple of tatty drums and a bent little cymbal whose sound compared unfavourably with a dustbin lid. Nick flicked the switch on his new Grundig tape recorder, and we were off. With Yianni doing some creditable riffs we ranged through a good deal of the Beatles and Rolling Stones repertoire of the time, plus Dave Clark Five and a sprinkling of Shadows. I was in rock heaven, hammering and rolling away. Then came playback time…

We were so excited we couldn’t stay indoors. We walked down Deinokratous Street and downhill through the thickening maze of new apartment blocks and into lively Kolonaki Square. Threading our way through the packed pavement cafes and brightly-lit kiosks laden with cigarettes, chocolate bars and magazines, we turned into Tskalof Street heading for Mitso’s cheese pie shop.

Most of the talk on the way down was what we would call ourselves. We were a band. We needed a name. We wanted something that smacked of top groups and big time, so by the time we descended the few steps into Mitso’s pie shop we had tentatively settled on The Rolling Beatle Three. It didn’t take many mouthfuls of Mitso’s succulent feta pies newly emerged from the oven to convince us that for originality we rated a zero. For our embryonic period we remained nameless.

Three more weekends passed before we had time for another session. On Sunday 21 November a few wide-eyed Athenian lads joined us in Nick’s room. Out of them Yianni had picked our fourth member, a shy and gangling boy with a lopsided grin named Dimitris Katakouzinos, or Mimis for short. Judging by his name, he would well have been a descendant of the Byzantine imperial line of Cantacuzenus. Of more importance to us, he could play basic guitar chords reasonably well. Nick was switched to rudimentary bass.

Yianni got himself a cheap cherry-red electric guitar. Some electrician friend had made him a crude “amplifier” about the size of a large shoebox, with all the tubes and wiring sticking out unprotected from the top. It needed treating with extreme respect. I never went within three yards of it. Mimis Katakouzinos played safe and stuck to his acoustic. And that’s about the time Yianni and Nick came up with the name Raving Rhythms.

In the early spring of 1965, like mushrooms after a rain, Athenian rock bands began to sprout in appreciable numbers. They were not terribly competent. Their raucous efforts in murdered English were hilarious.

The earliest known Greek rock band of any importance was The Juniors, assembled in 1962. They enjoyed a three-year career until a car crash killed its lead singer in October 1965. The Idols and The Forminx (named after an ancient Greek stringed instrument) emerged in early 1964. Their music had an organ-heavy sound, not surprising as their first keyboardist was Vangelis. The Idols’ slavish attempt to mimic The Animals was more than faintly ludicrous. The flaws, real and exaggerated, of these ensembles were a spur to Yianni Kiurktsoglou, Nick Daperis and other Kolonaki kids to do better.

Early Greek rock was edging towards the soft melodic French and Italian style. Because Greek pop music had no “black” experience comparable to the West, and had yet to achieve the artistic and technical excellence of the Italians, its output was too often unimaginative and twee. Outfits such as The Charms, The Idols and The Olympians stuck largely to plodding, formulaic material.

The Raving Rhythms attempted to breach this invisible cultural frontier. All of us remained faithful devotees of AFRS. My British and Nick’s Canadian origins came out in our music. Nick had been playing rhythm guitar for less than a year, but already his strumming wrist was trained into that subtle easy accenting technique, especially on the upstroke, that marks a good rhythm guitarist, and which Greek guitarists seemed to have a hard time developing.

We were finally let loose on an unsuspecting Athenian public on the evening of 27 February 1965, the height of the carnival season. Mimis, who alternated on rhythm and bass guitar, threw a party at his and his parents’ ground-floor flat near Alexandras Avenue. It was cold and the rain was coming down in windswept sheets. Mimis, the resourceful descendant of the emperors, had fitted a pick-up onto his acoustic guitar and wired it into the family radio, which thus became a second amplifier. I sat behind my snare drum and tinny cymbal, all I had at the time.

Tuned up and ready, we waited for the guests to arrive. Eyes popped when they saw a live band waiting for them. Yianni started us on a few slow warm-up instrumentals such as “Peace Pipe” and “Theme For Young Lovers,” until the house was full. Then, when all attention was concentrated on us, he swung round to me and called for “The Savage.”

This tight, nervy Shadows instrumental was considered to be our best number. It was also a drummer’s challenge, with its demanding two-bar intro on the floor tom and snappy pace. Handling it with a single snare drum and cymbal turned out to be my baptism of fire. My hands were shaking as countless pairs of eyes locked on to me. It was after I had banged out the intro and settled into the regular beat that I found confidence returning. I carried off the concluding snare drum breaks as if I’d been playing for years.

In those months I spent more time in and around Kolonaki than in any other place except school. We could stroll down to the music and record shops, where we could sit in a soundproofed booth listening to a newly-released hit before deciding (or not) to buy it. After that, we would saunter back uphill to Kolonaki Square and buy our souvlakia at a hole in the wall called Themis. At a mere two drachmas each, these would be bursting with gyro, wrapped in grease paper with the top of the coiled pitta and the meat and tomato and tzatziki peeping temptingly out of the top. Many are the Themis souvlakia that provided the energy for my early drumming. Besides, a film of souvlaki grease on the grip of my unvarnished plain-wood Meazzi drumsticks lubricated the finger action…

Such was our exalted opinion of ourselves that we believed we had already crossed the boundary from amateur to semi-professional. Yianni, ever the most serious of us, was already dreaming of real nightclub gigs. Among us, we probably had the combined talent to bring it off. But once Yianni communicated his desire to his conservative parents, they promptly pulled the plug, figuratively speaking, on his amplifier. They had set high goals for their undoubtedly intelligent and capable son and they did not include a career as a strumming club junkie at an early age (he was all of fourteen years old). So on the evening of 7 April Nick telephoned me to tell me that the band had broken up.

6

On 7 May Varsity Band was finally let loose onto the Greek rural environment. On a Saturday morning as we piled into a couple of buses for the ninety-kilometre trip to Kiato, a placid little town on the Gulf of Corinth. Our driver, picking his way out of the city, regarded us in his rear-view mirror with some curiosity. We weren’t the usual bumptious school lot. “Why are these paidia so quiet?” he asked a teacher sitting up front.

“They’re musicians,” the teacher replied, “members of the school band.”

The driver rolled his eyes in admiration. “Ah,” he said, smiling into the mirror. “Calm spirits.”

He might have changed his mind had he known who was riding in the bus with us. Pete Lazides, a Greek-American twelfth-grader with a sizeable chip on his shoulder and a trademark sneer, revelled in his role as school rebel. Sometimes after school hours he would weave recklessly through the central Athens traffic on a red Honda bike, his blond hair streaming back like an early Katzenjammer Kids cartoon, a scowl darkening his features. Oddly enough he belonged to the school choir that was coming along with us.

The trip’s main purpose was to deliver an American aid package to a primary school in Sikyon, a poor inland Peloponnesian village, and add to America’s prestige by providing entertainment afterwards. In classical times it had been a thriving city-state; now it was a squalid little village with nothing except a few mules and donkeys, and not even a paved road – a powerful lesson in the rise and fall of civilizations.

An astonishing sight greeted us as we drove into Sikyon. Lining both sides of the main street up to the schoolhouse were schoolchildren decked out in their best blue tunics. As we filed off the bus and walked up the street, the children began to clap and wave. Ahead walked school staff carrying packages of notebooks, paper and pencils for the school. As we proceeded we noticed that the children were holding out their hands to us. The next minute they were throwing little fistfuls of rose petals into our path and over us. (I picked up a few petals and have them still.)

Ambling up front, even gritty Pete Lazides was awed into silence. But one of his cronies, unable to stay serious, gave a whoop and kicked a few of the petals with his boot. Lazides turned on him, glaring. “What the f— do you think you’re doing?” he snarled, in a voice loud enough for everyone to hear. “Where do you think you are? Back in Manhattan? This ain’t Manhattan. Show some respect for these poor kids, you f—er!” The children, oblivious to the import of the exchange, smiled up at them and showered more petals in their path.

To the awed locals we were The Americans in the flesh, cocky, youthful representatives of the munificent great power. This was the Cold War front. Varsity Band, though we hardly realized it, was in the front line of a campaign by Washington to cultivate hearts and minds.

We got to Kiato late in the afternoon. The small town by the sea seemed to be still having its siesta under a leaden sky. We unloaded our gear in a small tree-lined square by the sea, ringed on three sides by humble houses and tavernas. That’s where we were scheduled to play.

As it got dark, the little coast town came to life. We took our places, arranged in a semicircle facing the sea. The lights around the square shone on hundreds of expectant faces. Our bass drummer, a twelve-year-old prodigy named Pat Longo Jr., was an object of especial interest. Barely as tall as the bass drum itself, he confidently gave the great thing a few expert test beats, drawing ahhs from the spectators immediately behind the percussion row.

Little Pat came into his own in the percussion intros to our marching numbers, where bass drum and snare drums and cymbals in smashing unison hammered out the two-bar intro from the 20th Century Fox opening piece: Boom-boom, boom-boom, brrrr-brrrr, boom-boom! It was the bold, aggressive sound of us, the young gods.

Yet the clouds were gathering. Bob Thornton, Varsity Band’s lead trumpeter, couldn’t have known it, but the dark angel’s wings were already hovering over him; in a few years he would be killed in Vietnam. The same fate, I am told (but cannot confirm), awaited Pete Lazides. The shadow of Vietnam was beginning to cast its ominous pall. The local PX, for example, refused to carry Barry McGuire’s “Eve Of Destruction,” which was also banned on AFRS, much to the disgust of some of my American friends who simply asked me and others to get the record for them from downtown Athens.

In March 1965, when the Raving Rhythms were still riding high in Kolonaki, I was given the drum part in a school musical, Lerner and Loewe’s “Brigadoon.” Made up mostly of band personnel, the orchestra was stiffened by professionals from the Greek State Radio Orchestra.

On the two performance nights I sat behind the Varsity Band bass drum, two snare drums including the deep Ludwig, and one of a pair of marching band cymbals hanging very precariously by its strap from a makeshift stand. A determined smash would likely have sent it flying, so I had to be careful.

The percussion part for “Brigadoon” required no exceptional skills – except in one place, the entr’acte, consisting of a five-minute bagpipes-and-drums duet. And that’s all. The specific drum part was a series of continuous dotted and syncopated triplets with a nine-stroke roll rounding off every bar. (Only drummers need understand this; it reads worse than it sounds.) Playing the bagpipes was an American of Scottish descent, Andrew Sinclair, who sported the whole Scots kit and caboodle — Black Watch kilt, silver-buttoned doublet, horsehair sporran and all the rest of it. I tried to keep up the dotted triplets as best as I could. It required tight stick control, and my wrists were aching at the end. But I couldn’t help sharing in the awe, and enjoying a secret bit of British pride, at the stirring sounds of the highlands. You didn’t get too much of that in Athens.

I didn’t know it at the time, but two members of the audience were scrutinizing my every note. They were Paul Velletri and Jim Motz, the latter in my class, the former a year younger, both sons of American diplomats. They had a band of their own called The Auroras. On 10 April, a Saturday, I tuned into the AFRS Stateside Top 15: Del Shannon’s “Keep Searchin'”, The Beatles’ “Eight Days A Week”, Jan and Dean’s “Sidewalk Surfing,” and a whole lot of other songs that have since become a permanent part of me. The phone rang. It was Paul Velletri. He was in the middle of a practice with The Auroras, and hey, hadn’t I said the other day that the Raving Rhythms were history? How about if I came to their practice? Right now?

A confident-sounding voice came on the line. “Hi, John, George Alexander here.” I knew him, but not well. Our contacts had been confined to the school corridors between classes, where he was almost always in the company of Paul. I knew him as a gangling, slightly effete chap in expensive clothes. When he talked to you he would squint keenly at you through thick-lensed glasses. Now, in brisk and businesslike tones George was giving me the directions to his home in Psychiko. “Don’t worry about finding the house,” he said, “you’ll hear us.” I put on my jacket, grabbed a pair of sticks and caught the 38 bus into the city and then the 47 to Old Psychiko.

The rattling, exhaust-belching blue and cream Mercedes bus threaded its way through the leafy suburb before turning into Diamantidou Street, a straight tree-lined uphill thoroughfare. I got off the 47 at the stop George had mentioned. Clutching my well-worn Meazzi drumsticks, I looked up and down the deserted street. The strident sound of an electric guitar sawed the tranquil air. I at once recognized the riff — it was the haunting three-note intro to The Ventures’ “Out Of Limits.” Then it stopped, gave way to a few ragged chords… It wasn’t a record; it was a band, and it sounded like a good one at that! I located the house it was coming from, bounded up the front steps and pressed the doorbell.

A maid opened the door and directed me to a semi-basement practice room, the door of which seemed about to fly from its hinges owing to the sheer pressure of sound within. After a couple of polite knocks, which no-one inside could possibly have heard, I opened the door and walked in, to be greeted by a collective yell of recognition. George Alexander, an electric guitar hanging from his shoulders, extended his hand. Somehow I never had been able to imagine this geeky type capable of producing a competent twang. That outward impression, though, masked a formidable intellect and artistic ability that emerged in his tight Pittsburgh accents and purposeful manner of speech beyond his years. Paul Velletri, also bespectacled, was altogether more bohemian, or aspired to be. At the time he cultivated a classic early-Beatles pudding basin haircut, sorely testing the school’s tonsorial rules. Paul’s way of masking his own mental acuity was to play the benevolent rebel with a touch of the clown to ease tensions. Jim Motz, closer to my age, was an adopted boy, and suffered from the emotional hang-ups of that state. Diffident yet eager to make friends, he was prone to moodiness. At nearly six feet, Jim Motz was the tallest of us. He kept his black hair slicked back Elvis style, with a lock dangling over his forehead. He could, moreover, do a remarkable Elvis imitation.

That day we practiced for four hours. Our repertoire was almost completely instrumental, Shadows and Ventures and the like. There was only one break when the maid opened the door bearing a tray laden high with thick peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and lemonade in tall glasses. George and Paul seemed to like what I was doing. As I sat on the drum stool munching a sandwich, George turned to me. “Well, John,” he began in the slight excess of formality that was his personality trademark, “we’d be very glad if you’d be our drummer.” I eagerly snapped up the invitation. Yianni and Nick were already history. The massed flats of Kolonaki and the Greek rock scene were forgotten as I immersed myself in Little America again.

As soon as I became an Aurora, I realized with a thrill that three of us bore the Beatles’ names! If that wasn’t an omen, what was? In fact, The Zoo had just been born.

The Auroras (later Zoo) at Asteria Beach, June 1965 -- l to r: Jim Motz (bass), Paul Velletri (rhythm guitar), George Alexander (lead guitar), Johnny Carr (drums).
The Auroras (later Zoo) at Asteria Beach, June 1965 — l to r: Jim Motz (bass), Paul Velletri (rhythm guitar), George Alexander (lead guitar), Johnny Carr (drums).

7

There is something masochistic about a drum. It invites violence. To be hit is its purpose in the world. It’s the only musical instrument that has to be beaten into submission. No doubt there is a lot to explore in the psyche of a young drummer. The phallic symbolism of a drumstick might seem to be one obvious starting-point. More convincing would be a theory of accumulated repressed aggression. As I never was much of a “jock” in the classic sense, such disguised aggression had its role.

The Auroras’ first performance took place on 14 April 1965 at the Athens USO. Those who have seen the World War II Hollywood patriotic classic “USO” will have some idea of the atmosphere inside the cramped first-floor premises over a clothes shop near central Omonia Square.

“Hey, guys!” The American service policeman at the USO door took one look at bass drum I was carrying and raised a shout through the crowded club. “What’s this, a rock band?”

We began setting up our equipment in a space cleared for us near the window. As we did, Sixth Fleet sailors in dark blue and Marines in impeccably-pressed olive drab with black insignia and the occasional Vietnam ribbon formed a half-circle around us.

“They’re from the local American school,” I heard one say.

“No shit!” All doubts about our youth were removed. If we were from the American school, we were the right stuff.

Outside, the pavements of Panepistimiou Street were packed with Friday evening strollers enjoying the bright lights and shop windows. The U.S. Sixth Fleet was ashore in force, with trios of grim-jawed service police marching in leisurely lockstep among the crowds, swinging their billy clubs discreetly behind their backs on the lookout for inebriated swabbies and leathernecks, not to mention promising specimens of Athenian maidenhood.

Helping out at the USO was a bevy of Greek girl volunteers in flared dresses. As in the classic film, they were available also for dancing and mild flirtation at an acceptable level of decency. The servicemen were of every type and colour, from loud and towering Texan marines to shy, bespectacled navy clerks blinking at the girls and us. As I already considered myself a veteran, I wasn’t nervous. The same couldn’t be said for the other three.

When we were set up, the cards were stacked and put away, and by the time we were ready for action a sizeable portion of the United States Navy was standing around us, waiting.

We started out with the piercing “Out Of Limits,” the riff which, like the biblical pillar of flame, had guided me along that quiet street in Psychiko. At the conclusion of the number there was a smattering of applause. On we proceeded with a few more instrumentals. Half an hour into the performance, the fleet was still standing there, gawking at us. But no-one was dancing.

So, Custer to the rescue! Like all bands, The Auroras had their roadies. One of them was a classmate named Pete Custer. Pete, a professor’s son, had lived in Greece long enough to spout Greek like a cab driver, though you’d never know it by looking at him; his slicked-back blond hair and PX clothing marked him as an obvious American. He sprang to his feet, grabbed an astonished volunteer girl and began wild gyrations in the middle of the floor. It was as if he’d pulled the pin on a grenade. Sailors and marines grabbed feminine waists and exploded from all sides. This fired us up to hammer out some sizzling slabs of rock and roll. Here came the first intimations of stardom. A couple of sailors unravelled yards of strobe light cable and began to film us. Flash bulbs went off in our faces. The showbiz addiction was beginning.

Of course, in a three-hour performance there were the bungled bits. When George started out fingering the “James Bond Theme” (yes, we did things like that then) we glanced at one another in puzzlement. It sounded weird but not unpleasant, a bit avant-garde maybe. Only at the end did George realize he’d actually been playing the theme a half-tone too high. And there was the moment when the others strummed the final chord to “Road Runner” but I, eyes glued to the skins, bashed on oblivious. I’d thought the chord was the signal for a brilliant drum break. A collective shout made me realize my mistake.

Carlo Maletti, the Italian air attache’s son, was a cheery chap and Auroras fan. Ten days after the USO gig, he threw a party. No question about who should play! There was an added inducement: 50 drachmas each ($1.60 at the exchange rate of the time). Our first money. We were becoming pros already.

Our equipment was evolving. George had replaced his locally-made guitar with a sleek red Hofner sporting a surprisingly long fingerboard, complemented by a Fenton-Weill amplifier and a foot-powered echo and reverb unit. I’d just acquired a moderately-priced cream pearl finish Hollywood Meazzi set that I was eager to show off.

The Maletti house stood on a street corner in the suburb of Psychiko, opposite a church. We began playing while it was still light, following a formula of slow instrumentals followed by a few ballads sung by Jim Motz, then warming up to some steaming fast numbers as the evening proceeded. The night was warm and the windows were open. It was after midnight when we took a break and strolled out onto the front porch, to be confronted with a disconcerting sight.

In the courtyard of the church, about fifty yards away on the other side of the intersection, stood a crowd of people led by a black-robed priest, all staring in our direction. Some of them were gesticulating, some shouting. It was George who first realized what was happening. It was Greek Orthodox Easter Saturday, and our amplified row must have cut through the Resurrection service liturgy. Religious mores were pretty strict in Greece, and a heathen rock band had just drowned out the holiest mass in the Greek religious calendar. As the congregation dispersed, muttering, the bearded priest suddenly turned and flung out his black-robed arm in our direction, uttering something loud but unintelligible. “Man, he’s put a curse on us,” George chuckled. Paul, a Catholic, wasn’t quite so amused.

Between the end of May and early July the Auroras played ten gigs. Six were upper-crust American kids’ pool parties, where each of us was paid 100 drachmas ($3.30). Two were appearances at American teen clubs, and that’s where the “priest’s curse” took its first crack at us.

The first occasion was on 5 June at the Base Teen Club where a few indifferent kids showed up and then promptly left. Paul’s guitar inexplicably dropped out of tune. We slunk out early, unnoticed and unlamented. Some air force officer was kind enough to detail a staff car to take us back to Psychiko.

The second time the curse struck was at a poolside gig at the American Youth Association on the hot evening of 23 June. The humidity was overpowering, with hordes of mosquitoes. Trying to beat the zinging little horrors from my face I badly bungled the drum intro to “Road Runner.” This unnerved George who started the number on the wrong note. We actually had to stop and begin again. (We did earn $2 each, though, as well as faces and arms covered with mosquito bites.)

By the end of May, though, about the time Perry and I led the Varsity Band drum corps around the Athens College track, we were school celebrities. A tall, blonde eleventh-grade girl named Jani Dales, invited us one hot Sunday to a beach party at Glyfada. The four of us showed up very rock star-like, in sunglasses and sandals and eccentric tee shirts, noses in the air. The memorable part came at the end of the day. As the shadows lengthened, we walked over the sand to Jani’s house nearby. While there, some of the gang reported hearing electric guitar sounds on the other side of the coast road. Crossing the road to investigate, we found a three-member combo playing in the small terrace of the Sivilla Hotel.

The musicians turned out to be Americans, two guitarists and a stand-up drummer with a couple of drums. Until then they hadn’t had much of an audience, so their spirits perked when a horde of high-schoolers descended on them. During a break George asked them if we could have a go.

“Sure,” one of the guitarists replied, smiling his condescension, and retired with his mates to the hotel bar.

There was no bass guitar, so unfortunately Jim couldn’t join in. George, Paul and I started off with a few medium-tempo instrumentals like “Surf Rider”. In the crowd Jim overheard admiring comments. “Boy, I didn’t know that punk Velletri could play like that…” was a typical one. After a half dozen or so numbers we politely handed back over to the American trio who had meanwhile returned from the bar and were keenly observing us, beers in hand. The guitarist shook his head. “Boys, you’re great,” he said. “Keep playing till you’re tired.” The sentiment may have been genuine. Or they may merely have been lazy. We didn’t care — we let it rip.

I charged off with what by now was my trademark, the adrenalin-pumping intro to “The Savage.” It was a combination of USO and Surf Beach. The kids paired off and within seconds the small hotel terrace was jam-packed with a writhing mass of bodies. Traffic on the Apollo Coast at Glyfada came to a halt as people driving home from the beach stopped to see what the excitement was about. I even saw Nick Daperis, ex-Raving Rhythms, in the crowd, grinning and waving at me. Everybody who was anybody, it seemed, had spent that day at Glyfada Beach. Cars were backed up for hundreds of yards. We jacked up the volume to overcome the jets screaming over our heads to land at the adjacent airport. For two hours we gave it all we had. My fingers were sore and peeling from the sweaty and none-too-clean drumsticks I had to handle, so I spent the last half hour holding the right stick claw-like, between my first two fingers. Jim, so he wouldn’t feel left out, managed to get in a few vocals. When we decided to call it quits the man who had told us to keep playing till we were tired came up to us. I remember these words:

“Guys, I never imagined you’d be that good. Your instrumental skills are outstanding. If you continue, if you really are serious about music, then you’ll reach the top.” It was good being a young god under the Greek sun.

But the priest’s curse hadn’t finished with me. One morning I woke up with a sharp pain in my genitals to find to my horror that I had been stung by a centipede. A doctor gave me such a huge shot of antihistamine that I made my way to school in a semi-conscious state. How I avoided getting knocked down was a miracle. Staggering into school, I sat through the final classes –- it was the last day of school – like a zombie, pupils dilated, head lolling.

At the exclusive Asteria Beach a few days later, I was back in top form. It was understood that if we were really good we might be offered a weekly gig there. As we played, happy holiday sounds filled the warm air. Of course there were some American school kids there as well. During our break a few came up to us, breathless. “Hey, guess who’s here!” one said.

“Who?” George said.

“Keith Richard!” We almost dropped our bottles of Tam Tam.

“He’s down by the water, over there!” one girl gasped, pointing away over the mass of baking bodies. “It’s him, I’m sure it’s him.” They ran off to get Keith Richard’s autograph.

We decided to do “The Last Time” for Keith Richard to hear. Within minutes our friends were back, looking crestfallen. “I walked up to him as he was lying there,” a girl said, her features contorted by bitterness, “and I asked him for his autograph, and you know what he said?”

“What?”

“That if we didn’t go away he’d spit in our little faces!

We were deemed too young to get a weekly gig at Asteria Beach. But that venue hadn’t seen the last of us. The scorching hot day of 5 July was a fitting finale for The Auroras. The American Embassy and Air Base decided to hold their Fourth of July Independence Day bash at Asteria, and we were picked to do the musical honours. So crowded was the tiny dancing space in front of the grandstand that bikini-clad flesh kept bumping my cymbals. More than once did I have to prod a gyrating bottom with a drumstick to keep it away.

I didn’t know it, but once more my playing was being keenly watched. Standing by the bandstand and slightly behind me was a black boy of not more than about seven, and not much taller than my floor tom. He was taking in every single sticking I made. When I got up to take a break I felt a tug on my jeans. It was the black kid, with an imploring look on his face. “Hey, man,” he pleaded, “kin ah play?”

I looked down at this diminutive Lionel Hampton. “Can you play the drums?” I asked.

The boy glared at me. “Ah kin play cooool drums, man!” he replied with passion. I was willing to let him have a go, but his parents intervened and he was led away. I’m sure he grew up to be a cooool drummer.

At the end of the gig our tambourine was passed around the beach for contributions to the band. When it got back to us it contained the amazing sum of $56. As darkness fell a strange sadness took hold of me. In a few days I would leave Greece to join my mother in Rome. Very likely I might not see any of these friends – even the band – again.

Five days later an Alitalia Caravelle with me in it lifted off from Athens airport. As the plane banked over the shoreline, and the golden expanse of Asteria Beach stretched away under the port wing, I thought back to the day before, when I’d walked out of George’s front door. “Man,” he concluded as we said goodbye, “it was a blast!” The “blast,” it turned out, was only just beginning.

A flyer accompanying the Feb 1966 release of The Zoo's "I Cry" and "Go." The Greek text reads: "Now in Greece too [!] -- ask for them in all the shops."
A flyer accompanying the Feb 1966 release of “I Cry” and “Go.” The Greek text reads: “Now in Greece too [!] — ask for them in all the shops.”

8

Five months later I found myself back in Athens and ready to rejoin the old crowd at the American school. What I had left as The Auroras I came back to find as The Zoo.

The name was the brainchild of our new member, Nick Jameson. Of American-British parentage, Nick was a lanky, nervy and pimply chap whose wavy blond tresses curled over his forehead and ears. He had the keenest of musical ears and was au courant with everything going on.

Jim Motz was still with the band, but George saw him as an anachronism with his Elvisesque looks and sound. During my absence he had handled the drums. Now he had nothing to do. I felt for Jim Motz. Like him, I would have been blissfully happy playing Beach Boys, Elvis and old rock. I cared for neither overlong hair nor kinky clothes, neither subversive lyrics nor anything to do with drugs. I kept my hair decent and my politics conservative. When others lost themselves in Norwegian woods, I hankered after the California sun. When others turned left, I turned right.

In almost all music ensembles, from duets to symphony orchestras, a leader figure inevitably emerges. Some kind of defining, agenda-setting voice must sooner or later come out. I call it the Lennon Figure. He is the band member whose musical tastes, drive and sheer ego end up shaping the band’s final identity and determining its fate. The Zoo’s Lennon Figure was George Alexander.

Buoyed by early musical success, George had begun to cast his net wider. His father bought him a Farfisa portable organ, as keyboards had by now become part of a group’s necessary hardware. Nick Jameson chafed at being a mere bass player, so he was given the chance to curl a few riffs on his shiny new red Gibson. The more accommodating Paul was gradually relegated to bass.

As for me, I had to grapple with a perennially accident-prone drum set that set its snares (pun intended) for me at every turn. The priest’s curse was turning into a scourge. My first performance with The Zoo was a college dance in the auditorium of the Hellenic American Union in Athens on 18 December 1965. That afternoon the snare head on my drum had split and all the shops were closed, so I couldn’t get a new one. I stretched swathes of sticky tape over the six-inch gash, hoping it would remedy the problem. It didn’t. Miserably I began to play, knowing that I was not exactly making the best of impressions. Worse was to come.

Midway through the dance, George whirled round to me and yelled: “Hullaballoo!” A jolt of horror ran through me. “Hullaballoo” was a fast twelve-bar instrumental that George and Paul had lifted from The Hullaballoos, a British band. It had a long and involved drum solo in it.

“No way, man!” I tried to yell back. But George had already turned round and was spitting out the opening guitar riffs.

During my solo I tried every trick in the book to reduce the horrible clonking effect, mainly with rim shots. Sixteen, thirty-two bars, I got them out of the way quick. Sweating, I retreated thankfully into the cascade of guitar sound — and heard myself applauded! Some people just don’t know bad music when they hear it.

If my snare drum was in poor shape, my snare drum stand was even worse. Without warning, in the middle of a fast number it buckled and collapsed, sending the drum rolling across the stage like a wheel after a movie car crash. In full view of the amused audience, I got up and lunged after it, only just stopping it from careering over the edge and into the dancers below. I sensed rather than saw George, Paul, Nick and Jim doubled up. For the rest of the dance I kept the snare drum tightly gripped between my knees. That cramped my bass drum style to no small degree. Every last cent of what I received that night was especially well-earned.

That was Jim’s final fling with the band. Tensions with Nick Jameson came to a head soon afterwards. It was Nick who was the “in” figure now. He was a very good lead guitarist in the rhythm and blues style, and claimed to be a better R&B singer than Jim.

The year 1966 opened on me playing at the American Youth Association in Kefalari, north of Athens, cramped in a corner of a tiny bandstand and belting out “I Wanna Be Your Man.” (Naturally, I was getting the Ringo vocals!) Instruments and amps and mikes and cymbals were choked in streamers.

On 4 January I unexpectedly heard from Yianni Kiurktsoglou and Nick Daperis. In tune with the changing times they had rechristened themselves The Loubogg (from “loo” and “bog,” British vernacular synonyms for toilet). Yianni had his eyes on a certain Kolonaki girl who was throwing a birthday party, so with remarkable chivalry he offered his band’s services for free. Upon which Renos Gossevitch, his Yugoslav drummer, threw a fit and went on strike. Ever eager for a bash, and glad to help out old friends, I took over — the Raving Rhythms momentarily revived. Yianni was actually so good as to pay me a symbolic 100 drachmas ($3.30) after asking his hosts for “transportation costs.”

The following morning, 5 January, saw a quantum leap in The Zoo’s career.

Resting at Nick Daperis’s home the following morning, I dialled George’s number. His mother picked up the phone. George wasn’t at home, she said; he was downtown signing a record deal! I put down the phone and immediately took the 47 bus to Old Psychiko. When I got there George had returned from signing the contract with the Philips record label and was already deep into a songwriting session with Nick.

A record deal! For this we had to thank a fellow twelfth-grader, a Dutch boy named Ben Kooistra who was a Zoo fan and occasional roadie. His father was a Philips electrical appliance executive stationed in Athens. It seems he had enough corporate clout within the Philips conglomerate to penetrate to its music division, represented in Greece by a company called Helladisc. Ben’s descriptions of our prowess must have been glowing indeed.

The Zoo Philips 45 I CryWe had just eight days to come up with two sides of a single. George and Nick worked on a moderate-tempo original called “I Cry,” with a slow, teary ballad, “Forget Today,” for the B side.

Where any of us found time for our schoolwork is a mystery. George was, in fact, a brilliant student, and would later distinguish himself in the academic world. I was doing reasonably well and could hope to finish the American school in the top quarter of my class. Much as rock dominated our lives, neither we nor our parents seriously considered it as our future life’s work. But that didn’t register with us then. Being young meant that the sense of limited time had yet to get its clammy hold around our throats. Mortality was a fiction. Life was vast and limitless enough for postponing decisions. There was more than enough energy to go round for music and study and romance and growing up and whatever.

In the morning of 13 January we set up our equipment in the new wing of Columbia Studios, in the working-class suburb of Perissos. But if I thought the day would pass without the usual drum jinx, I was wrong. During a warm-up my snare drum throw-off disintegrated. The only thing I could do was stick the snares to the snare head with tape.

Maybe that’s what gives “I Cry” its rolling, driving beat, overlaid by lashings of ride cymbal from a heavy 40cm Zanchi I’d bought in Rome. Ben Kooistra — by now our manager — waved us up to the control room to hear the instrumental playback before tracking over the vocal. The engineer flipped the switch and we were in rock heaven. Man, we couldn’t be that good! Roll over, Beatles. We did four instrumental takes of “I Cry” and five of “Forget Today.” Then came the vocal tracking. Nick soloed on both. His breathy, lost-boy voice came over well.

The Zoo Philips 45 Forget TodayThree hours later, with both songs in the can, we looked for a place to eat. The Perissos district in those days was a scene of fallow fields and small factories interspersed with humble workers’ dwellings. A short walk in the drizzle brought us to a dilapidated little taverna. “Oh, God, I can’t eat this!” gasped Paul, gazing in disbelief at the oily contents of the food vats on display under a grimy clear plastic counter.

“I’m just having chips,” Nick said. “At least they look clean.” He tried to ignore the snickers of amusement that his hair was provoking among the grizzled factory workers sitting at the few tables. Chips and bread, in fact, it was for all of us, bunched up at a little corner table and washing it all down with Fix beer.

A week later came the first of our publicity shows to fuel hoped-for record sales. This was at the Whisky-a-Gogo, an Athens nightspot on the edge of the Areos park. Our school following was there in force, plus a few proud parents, my mother among them. By now I was becoming used to my perennial percussion problems, but it didn’t help my performance when my bass drum developed a severe case of the creeps. The club floor was highly polished, and the drum spurs couldn’t grip. With each beat of the pedal the drum would skid forward by at least an inch. That meant that every minute or so my bass drum leg would be stretched out taut, so I was always momentarily interrupting my stickwork to yank the drum back to its place. But that was nothing compared to a more serious problem — Nick.

He hadn’t looked well all evening, and during the final numbers he seemed to be getting sicker. We closed on a painfully long rendition of “Gates Of Eden.” Throughout the song he sat motionless, his eyes closed, plunking the bass strings like an automaton. At its conclusion he didn’t move but remained seated, guitar in hand, semi-conscious. His parents were called. When they arrived Nick had revived but his eyes were open wide and he was babbling.

No-one quite knew what was wrong. His parents called it sinus trouble, though I’m inclined to think he may been experimenting with some substance. (I was going to ask him about it when we met up again in 1997, but couldn’t bring myself to.)

Nick Jameson, in fact, was an unhappy boy in the wrong country. Whenever he took a walk in the neighbourhood he would have to put up with snide remarks and giggles about his effeminate hair, as in the taverna at Perissos. “Bitlies, Bitlies,” they would chuckle as he walked by. It was a corruption of Beatles, then the generic name the Greeks had for any long-haired foreign type. One day he sat down and wrote a poem, appropriately titled Bitlies. His crie de coeur began something like this:

They point, they stare, they laugh
“Bitlies, Bitlies!”
How ignorant, how petty they are…

The Zoo publicity pic in Vendeta magazine of 15 May 1966. Left to right: George, Nick, John (with tambourine) and Paul
Publicity pic in Vendeta magazine of 15 May 1966. Left to right: George, Nick, John (with tambourine) and Paul

9

So we were “Bitlies” and local recording stars. Where would it go from here? Helladisc, like any record company, wanted to spend the least money for the most gain. We were easily manipulable. We did promotional gigs for free. Our heads got appreciably larger when we were asked to type up or bios for the local media. I had the thrill of hearing “I Cry” on the same transistor radio on which I’d listened to all my idols.

A second Whisky-a-Gogo stunt was scheduled for 10 February. The club was twice as full as before. The school crowd, of course, was there, and spirits were high. Before we made our acclaimed entrance Jacques Menahem, an ex-classical guitarist and jazz record collector who was Helladisc’s public relations manager at the time, walked in. In his hands was the first promo copy of “I Cry/Forget Today.” We mobbed him, drooling at the sight of the magic black disc.

A glittering avenue was opening up to us if we cared to take it. But the more serious side of maturity also beckoned. All four of us expected to go on to university after school. So what would it be? We were too young to face that question squarely, but subconsciously it festered. The tension came out in various ways. During one practice George flew into a monster rage at some percussive sin I had committed. Yet within a few minutes he was laughing and friendly again. A Lennon Figure could do that and get away with it.

In February we got a contract to play for four nights at an exclusive Kolonaki Square club, the AA64. On the first night, natty in Beatle boots, corduroys and lengthening hair, we clowned very rockstar-like around downtown Athens before going on. It proved to be a disastrous waste of energy. Our performance was execrable. I had to keep the percussion low, as the space was small and the amplification weak. Paul wavered off-key in too many vocals. George abounded in sour keyboard chords. Small wonder that we got seriously on the nerves of some of the customers, who wanted bouzouki stuff to calm them down. We didn’t do bouzouki stuff, so we called it a night. In George’s nasal Pittsburgh twang: “We laid an egg.”

The following night an awful feedback popped out from somebody’s amp and wouldn’t go away whichever way we turned the mikes. Nerves frayed again. On the third day I’d napped in the afternoon to be fresh for the night. But not a single customer stepped through the doors. We sat around for two hours eating and getting drunk, and toddled off home. For our fourth and final AA64 gig, people showed up in satisfactory numbers. We played the midnight-to-3am set with few glitches, and even had some on-site record sales. Most satisfactorily, each of us went home with 2,185 drachmas (about $73) in his pocket. For our ages and the time and place, it was wealth indeed.

Three days later, on 22 February, we were back in Columbia Studios to forge our second single. George and Nick had worked out a moderate-beat little number called “Go.” The flip side featured my own songwriting debut in E minor, “Six Miles From The Cage.” Its main motif was frankly lifted from Rita Pavone’s “Lui.” Paul shared the songwriting credits with me and I did the singing.The session lasted more than six hours, winding up at about three in the morning. Around midnight Paul developed a sudden inability to play the guitar intro to “Six Miles From The Cage.” George had to take over on the keyboard. Then the tracking was interrupted by a shout from Ben in the control room: “John, what’s happening?”

I couldn’t see either Ben or the recording engineers, as I was almost completely enclosed in portable sound baffles. “What are you talking about?” I shot back, dog-tired and wanting to go home.

“You’re out of beat!” Ben’s voice echoed through the cavernous studio. I heard some faint comments by the engineers in the background. “Okay, take it from the top.”

Wearily, I waited for the others to get through the intro and began playing, very carefully. Almost at once the buzzer sounded. “John!” Ben shouted. “You’re doing it again! What the hell’s the matter with you?”

“Shit, doing what again?” I cried, my patience thinning.

“You’re still out of beat, that’s what!”

I wanted to hurl my sticks across the studio. I looked at George, Paul and Nick, visible through an opening in the cubicle. They looked puzzled and tired. We’d done seventeen takes of the instrumental track to my precious song and it still wasn’t right. And I appeared to be the culprit.

“Take eighteen,” came Ben’s weary voice. “Er — hold it, wait…”

A technician entered the studio and began to manhandle the baffles, pulling them away until they splayed outwards, giving me a fuller view of the other band members and the control room. What had happened was that the baffles had isolated me from the amplifiers, with the result that my beats had lagged a half-second behind everyone else. The take went perfectly.

By the end of February 1966 The Zoo had settled into a musical routine straddling the American expat community and Greek society in about equal measure. That month we were billed as a “special attraction” at the Rex theatre in downtown Athens, along with an Italian group, I Grilli, and a Spanish outfit whose name I have forgotten. First on were a motley collection of Greek groups, whose abysmal showing had to be seen and heard to be disbelieved. The gig was the first of several, replete with screaming kids and blinding lights, we would play in that same venue. Hardly a week would pass without some glowing review in a Greek newspaper or magazine.

For some time Menahem had been talking of promoting us outside the Athens area. Apart from the Athens-Piraeus conurbation, there was only one other major city in Greece able to sustain its own cultural scene, and that was Thessaloniki in the north. We were billed to open a matinee rock concert at the city’s Avlaia theatre on Sunday, 6 March, for two Greek bands, The Bluebirds and The Olympians, which we correctly suspected were higher in the company’s priorities, as their records were notching up higher sales.

The Bluebirds were already ensconced in the back of the coach when it drew up outside the Alexander home to take us on the overnight trip to Thessaloniki. We (including Ben, our manager, and my mother, who unlike most parents never failed to encourage my musical efforts) and our equipment took some fitting in, but in the end we made it. George’s parents took the overnight sleeper train. The bus droned on through the night, but none of us felt like sleeping. Paul and I sat together, singing off-key Beach Boys songs.

The Avlaia takes up one wing of the ornate, Moorish-style YMCA building behind the White Tower in Thessaloniki. We got there next afternoon to find The Olympians in the middle of their rehearsal. After our own run-through, the cabbie who drove us back to our hotel paid us the ultimate compliment of recognizing us. The publicity machine, it seemed, was doing its job.

On the Sunday morning of the show, spruce in corduroy jackets and ties, we took up our positions behind the Avlaia curtain. The noise of the vast unseen audience pouring in sounded like Niagara Falls and set my heart pounding. I heard the emcee step across the stage and commence his patter. Seated at the drums, adrenalin surging, I was well on the way to a stage fright attack when George looked round and nodded for the opening number, a cover of The Animals’ “Ain’t That Just Like Me.” Paul stepped up to his mike and mouthed the slow intro: “Mary had a little lamb…” The kids screamed, the birthing cry of Balkan Beatlemania. As always, fear soon vanished, to be replaced by that top-of-the-world exhilaration common to concert performers and perhaps astronauts.

One song the Greeks loved was The Rolling Stones’ slam-bam classic “Satisfaction.” A thunderous, foot-stamping, collective scream accompanied our rendition of this until, right at the start of my first two-bar drum break, the amps whined away to silence, leaving just the drums echoing emptily. At the same time the theatre was plunged into utter darkness. The poor old fuses couldn’t stand up to a rock concert’s demand for juice.

For a few moments there was a stunned silence. Then a cacophony of protests rippled through the blackness, punctuated by the occasional cry of “solo drums!” But how could I do a solo when I couldn’t even see the tips of my drumsticks? Some of the more impatient characters lobbed plastic lemonade bottles in the general direction of the stage; one of them bounced off my floor tom with a startling boom. Tony Jameson, Nick’s younger brother who acted as our amateur photographer, somehow found his way to me and let go with a flashbulb in my face, almost giving me heart failure. (The photo shows me slumped glumly on my stool, cradling my sticks in my hands, waiting for light.)

Minutes later the power came on again. What more natural than to complete “Satisfaction” where we left off? “Hey, hey, heeeyyy…” Nick and Paul yelled, and the audience went wild. We wound up our set with a long and involved instrumental with the now-obligatory drum solo.

George felt, with some justice, that The Zoo deserved better than to open for bands that were, in our honest judgement, musically inferior. But it was more than just Anglo-American snobbishness. It was becoming obvious that Helladisc was doing more to promote its Greek groups than us. On language grounds alone, they had a bigger local market. Fronting The Olympians was singer Paschalis, taking the first steps towards the later pop prominence he would achieve.

Another Greek band was The Forminx, whose quirky 1965 hit “Geronimo Yanka” racked up huge sales. The chief claim to fame of this band is that it was the springboard for keyboardist/composer Vangelis. Spruce in a Beatles hairdo and goatee, Vangelis would stand deadpan and motionless behind his Hammond organ while the others did their thing.

There might be as many as a dozen garage bands pounding away in any given district of Athens. The few who managed to see the inside of a recording studio sported names such as The Knacks, The Crowns, The Vikings, Phoenix and Uptight. All of them had dedicated followings. As few rural Greeks understood English, Greek lyrics were considered indispensable for Greek bands. Our Greek-speaking competition had the market edge at the outset. As for a bunch of young foreigners such as The Zoo, why buy their records when genuine British and American hits were flooding the market?

The Zoo featured in Proto magazine, 15 April 1966. Left to right: Nick Jameson, George Alexander, Johnny Carr, Paul Velletri.
The Zoo featured in Proto magazine, 15 April 1966. Left to right: Nick Jameson, George Alexander, Johnny Carr, Paul Velletri.

None of this was, of course, apparent to us as we made our way out of the Avlaia theatre, pushing our way through legions of wide-eyed fans. We scrawled countless autographs. George and Paul had to pull me from the clutches of a gaggle of girls who were trying to tear strips off my new olive green Italian corduroy jacket.I’d bought that jacket at Rome’s big department store, La Rinascente. It was immensely fashionable for the time, with its twin vents at the back, which is why I saved it for special occasions such as prestige performances. My old Italian class in the Overseas School of Rome, in fact, has just sent me a manila envelope full of fan mail. I read the letters with more than a touch of nostalgia. One came with a sketch of two lips filled in with red ink. It was from Judith Franks, a dark-haired beauty I’d often admired from afar. I’d no inkling she actually felt anything for me. Ah, well, it was too late now. The class wanted a copy of “I Cry,” which I duly mailed off. I often wonder who got to keep it.

The Zoo at a school gig, spring 1966. From left to right: Paul Velletri, George Alexander, Johnny Carr and Nick Jameson
The Zoo at a school gig, spring 1966.
From left to right: Paul Velletri, George Alexander, Johnny Carr and Nick Jameson

The Zoo Philips 45 Go10

The adulation in Thessaloniki was the pinnacle, the topmost point that could have been expected from a group of talented schoolboys-in-exile, in a small market and in many ways alien cultural environment. Where could we go from here? Short of being transplanted to Britain or the United States, The Zoo would remain essentially a hobby. True, we were making records, but the sales were nothing to get excited about. After our return from Thessaloniki a strange ennui set in. The first symptom was a serious squabble over finances.

During a practice Nick’s amp speaker gave out with an awful crackle. Nick threw down his guitar.

“Man, I’m sick of this piece of shit!” he groaned, blinking in double time. “I’ve been telling you, George, I need a new amp!”

George cleared his throat, lawyer-like. He, for his part, felt uncomfortable relying on his well-to-do father to automatically replace worn equipment. It had been different back in the days of The Auroras, when our youthful enthusiasms had been contagious. Now we were settling into serious music-making. From now on The Zoo would have to finance its own acquisitions.

The Zoo Philips 45 Six Miles from the CageI knew what was coming next. “What if we all pitched in for a new one?” George said. I had been depending on the Zoo gigs not only for spending money but also to accumulate some capital for college. This prospect seemed to be going up in the smoke of the burned-out speaker. George briskly picked up his guitar. “Okay, that’s settled. Now, let’s run through ‘Get Off My Cloud’ again, and by the way, John, you’re crapping around with too many drum rolls.” Our Lennon Figure had spoken.

On 12 March we played a dance at the Omonia Hotel organized by the American School of Classical Studies. The event was deader than a chunk of Parthenon marble. Few people bothered to show up. As for me, knowing that two-thirds of my pay would be docked for Nick’s new amp speaker didn’t give me much of a will to play. I wasn’t proud of my sound that night.

In the spring of 1966 an unspoken cold war seemed to be splitting The Zoo down the middle: Paul and myself versus George and Nick, who had assumed a joint dominant role. My worsening mood was reflected in silly pranks at school. One morning I got kicked out of German class for what I thought were rock star high jinks but was simply infantilism writ large. And inevitably, The Zoo’s popularity had triggered an anti-Zoo reaction. We were panned in the latest edition of the school paper. That evening Paul and I tried writing a few new songs. We soon gave up, sunk in despondency.

The next evening witnessed an amazing change. Playing at the private party of a wealthy American girl, we hammered away in top form. Three days later we played a packed two-hour matinee at the Terpsithea cinema in Piraeus, and, with no chance to rest, did an afternoon spot at the Coronet club in the King’s Palace Hotel. Before March was out our second single, “Go”/”Six Miles From the Cage,” was released on the Philips label.

Helladisc signed us up matinee shows for meagre pay. The main point of the exercise appeared to be to spice up the indifferent local band output with an “American special attraction,” as the posters inevitably put it. We only had one job during April, on the third of the month at the Rex theatre, as a “special attraction” (as if we were dancing bears or something) to elevate the execrable quality of the local lineups. We were the bait to get the unlistenable listened to.

The weekly native garage rock concerts at the Rex theatre, a neon-lit art deco edifice on power Panepistimiou Street, developed into a major national institution. Hordes of screaming teens crowded the theatre and the pavement on Sunday afternoons. The Greek media called them “Yeh-Yeh” concerts.

We didn’t neglect the American school community which had initially nurtured us. We played at the American Youth Centre where we scored a hit with what I believe was the first use of the fuzzbox in Greece. George had bought one, an early foot-operated model, on a trip to London. On 11 June we had an exhausting, night-long job at the American Navy base at Nea Makri, where we seized the opportunity to stuff ourselves with hard-to-find American burgers and frankfurters, and received $15 each for our pains.

Johnny Carr, graduation pic, June 1966.
My graduation pic, June 1966.
It was a portentous time for me. The previous evening, I had graduated from school in full cap and gown. The school yearbook for 1966 left no doubt about the symbolic importance of the occasion. It was even explicitly likened to a death of sorts. One yearbook section was whimsically titled “Murmurs From The Elysian Fields.” In it, employing the bell-tolling language of a last will and testament, each of us graduates willed something to those we left behind. My bequest was a few arcane guitar chords to George, Paul and Nick.

Other talent had been emerging at school. One of the class of ’66 was Stan Oberst, a quick-witted native of Missouri who had been the only one on the school bus when I boarded on the first day of school in September 1964, and hence had become my very first school friend. To say that Stan was an Elvis Presley fanatic would be a dire understatement. He lived and breathed Elvis – as he still does! (He’s the author of Elvis Presley: Rockin’ Across Texas, Follow That Dream Records/BMG, 2005.)

Stan had a good Presleyesque baritone which eventually came to the attention of Mimis Plessas, a leading Greek composer and jazzman. Plessas penned for him two sides of a 45, “Why, Tell Me Why”/”Miracles Can Happen,” with lyrics by Stan’s sister Diane. The songs are smooth, slick night-clubby numbers with what would now be considered excessive reverb. The record was released on the Lyra label, and remains a sought-after rarity. (The following year Stan joined Loubogg briefly to record a cover of Cliff Richard’s “Blue Turns to Grey,” and seemed set on a youthful music career. He remained in Greece for a few years more, got married and returned to America. He now lives in Waco, Texas.)

In June to our frank surprise, given our indifferent record sales, we were booked into Columbia Studios again. Probably it was the frenzied fans at the Rex, and the lavish praise in the music sections of the Monday papers that convinced Jacques Menahem that we still had some market potential left in us. On 16 June we recorded four tracks for two new singles: “Who’s Who”/”Let’s Make It Baby”, and “You’re Crazy Man”/”Something’s Got Ahold On Me.” “You’re Crazy Man” was essentially an extended frantic drum solo to boost my flagging morale.

During the recording session we abounded in mistakes. Take after take was scrapped before something listenable emerged. After my hurried drum solo in “You’re Crazy Man” I picked up my sticks without bothering to listen to the playback and walked the short distance to Perissos station to get the downtown train.

Twenty-four hours later we lined up on the spacious patio of a wealthy American to provide the entertainment for a lavish party. We clambered off our hired van sweaty and unwashed. One of the few instrumental numbers that had lingered in our repertoire was The Ventures’ “Slaughter On Tenth Avenue.” It almost slaughtered our reputation. I had just started the drum intro when my cymbal stand suddenly veered over and collapsed with a tremendous crash. Panicking, I fumbled the intro and speeded up the tempo, which in turn made Nick screw up his opening guitar riff.

“You’re makin’ me look like a lousy guitarist, man!” he snarled at me, desperately picking at his strings.

“Don’t blame me!” I shouted above the amp noise. “I’m paying for your equipment, while my own’s falling to bits!”

“Butthole!”

“Pinko twit!”

Then Nick’s new speaker, for which I had sacrificed hard-won cash, gave up the ghost. There was no point in continuing to play. We quit early and slunk out like thieves.

The following evening, 18 June, the US Navy at Nea Makri again employed our services. With the broken joint on my cymbal held together with wire, and Nick’s amp speaker somehow back in shape again, we managed another gig. But we were getting tired. Foul chords and harmonies abounded. George and Paul, convulsed with laughter, staggered about the stage. Had burnout arrived?

In the early hours we were driven back to Athens. As the old Navy bus wound up the narrow mountain road above Nea Makri, a breathtaking dawn broke over the Bay of Marathon. The morning sky was that brilliant blend of light blue and orange that occurs only in Greece. Collapsing near-naked onto my bed as the hot sun rose in the Athenian sky, I reflected that there is nothing like the warm summer air of Greece, which envelops your body like an amniotic fluid, wrapping you in a comforting yet liberating layer of warmth. Perhaps, I thought as I drifted into sleep, I might take up The Loubogg’s offer to play on an island. The chance came unexpectedly quickly.

Johnny Carr rehearsing with The Loubogg, Blueberry Hill, Spetses, July 1966
Rehearsing with The Loubogg, Blueberry Hill, Spetses, July 1966
11

Hours after I got home in the early hours from the Nea Makri base gig, Nick Daperis stopped by. Though our paths had diverged, we had stayed in touch. He and Yianni Kiurktsoglou, the creators of The Loubogg, had been progressing in the Kolonaki garage rock scene.

“We’ve just made a record, actually,” Nick said with a self-effacing, snag-toothed smile which, together with his lean face, gave him a passing resemblance to George Harrison. “She’s Cool” (Music Box label) was, in fact, a Harrisonesque number dominated by Nick’s infectious rhythm guitar and plain, unadorned vocal.

“We’ve got an offer to go to Spetses, long-term,” Nick said. “And we’d like you on drums.” The Loubogg’s drummer, Renos Gossevich of Yugoslavia, was temporarily out of action, having to study for college entrance exams.

Spetses! In the mid-sixties the Greek islands were just beginning to attract big-time jetsetting attention. I remembered my own modest movie debut on Hydra four years before, and looked forward to another island showbiz stint. I needed no prompting.

So just after dawn on 1 July The Loubogg loaded ourselves and our equipment onto a slow passenger boat at Piraeus, along with a new keyboardist named Niko Roumbos. We’d rented a Japanese orange-sparkle drum set. The voyage to Spetses took an excruciating five hours. Ashore, we climbed into two decrepit horse-drawn carriages which sped us along the narrow, crooked strip of concrete that served as the main waterfront road. Perched precariously on the rickety seat next to the driver, I hung on as the horse clattered and slipped on the smooth-worn concrete at deadly speed around house corners and past crumbling, oleander-covered orchard walls. Our destination was the Blueberry Hill, an open-air club overlooking the sea on a bluff about a mile west of the town.

The word “club,” we saw, was a gross overstatement. A cracked circle of dusty cement was supposed to be the dance floor. A raised platform at one end, made up of weather-beaten planks with a coat of paint slapped on them, would be our bandstand. Alongside this stood a clapboard hut that would house the bar. And that was it.

Across the road, which by now had become a gravel track, and up the hill among the sheep droppings and the scrawny pines, stood a tiny shepherd’s hovel. Out of this waddled a fat and porcine individual with a permanently sour expression – the club operator. After grunting his acknowledgement of our arrival he pointed to some cans of black and silver paint standing in the yard.

“Hm, good, you’re here just in time,” he said, yawning and scratching himself. “The place still needs a bit of work, as you see.”

We didn’t immediately get the point.

“Is there a place to store our equipment till tomorrow,?” Yianni asked. Club opening night was twenty-four hours away.

Our employer regarded Yianni through puffy eyebrows. “There isn’t going to be a tomorrow, mate, unless you help out a bit,” he drawled. “Those bar stools need a coat of paint for one thing, and then there’s the tables…”

Our bass player, a tall, russet-haired Athenian boy quick of temper named Niko Yannoulopoulos, bristled. “But sir, we’re here to play, not to–” The man cut him off, tossing a cigarette butt on the hot gravel. “You want this job or don’t you?” he growled. “You came here to work, or am I mistaken? Now, like I said, you’d better get to it.”

“Shitface,” Nick said under his breath.

“Let’s quit this and go home,” Niko the bass player muttered.

Yianni shook his head. “No. We came here to play and we’ll play. Think of the money we’ll make and the fun we’ll have.” He surveyed the unpainted stools and tables. “There are six of us, after all. We can get the painting done pretty quick. Let’s not ruin our summer just for this.” I got silver paint on my new sunglasses and holiday shirt. It never came off.

On 2 July we opened our nightly gigs. From the first night the Blueberry Hill was packed. Out in front, microphone in hand, stood our vocalist Laki Papadakis, a good-natured chap with a bubbling sense of humour. Yianni on lead guitar, Nick on rhythm guitar and Niko on bass made up the front line. Behind were me and keyboardist Niko Roumbos. Roumbos was an intense, portly fellow who not only had a high regard for Japanese musical instruments, but a veritable mania for everything Japanese. One morning, while he was still asleep, Niko the bass player removed the name tag from Roumbos’s suitcase and replaced it with a slip of paper with fake Japanese characters on it. Another of Roumbos’s nicknames was “Old Porn,” as he had a habit of ostentatiously ogling every female on the dance floor.

In the mornings we would sleep late in our camp beds in the crumbling, disused vermin-infested ex-telephone exchange which our rat of a manager had secured for us. Such was the state of the building that any moderate earth tremor would have brought it down. I would inevitably be the early riser, slipping out first, to sip a refreshing cold coffee frappe at the Dapia waterfront and watch the yachts of the rich and famous bobbing at anchor offshore.

Early in July who would show up but Nick Jameson, bewitched by the proto-hippy character of life on Spetses. He stood in for Yianni a couple of times when Yianni was absent in Athens. At crowded weekend nights the waterfront at the Dapia would rival Times Square. One Saturday evening I saw a vaguely familiar lumbering figure in tight white denims stroll into the Blueberry Hill. Perry Mackereth sauntered up to the bandstand and waved. “Heard you were doing good stuff out here, and came to have a look,” he said. He introduced his girlfriend, a saucy blonde American girl. “The kids from school, everybody’s saying Spetses is the place to be,” Perry said. His girlfriend was looking at my orange glitter drum set with a calculating expression. The place was filling up fast. Perry gave me a thumbs-up and took a low table near the bar.

It was a typical evening, repertoire-wise. We’d start off with several slow Italian numbers, the specialty of our vocalist Lakis. His Italian was less than perfect, though I had to admit he could do a flawless imitation of Peppino di Capri — as long as you didn’t try to decipher what he was saying. Later, to raise the revs, I’d swing round to the floor tom to start the famous jack-hammer intro to “Wipe Out.” After an instrumental interlude Nick Daperis would step up to the mike and began his Beatles and Rolling Stones vocals. Even now, whenever I hear the plaintive sevenths in the guitar intro to “The Last Time,” I’m carried back to those carefree, moonlit, dancing nights. There was rarely a night when the dance floor was not crammed to the very edge of the bluff over the sea.

Though I had set sail for Spetses in the hope of some sexual as well as musical success, the former eluded me. There was no lack of available female flesh on Spetses, some of it flaunted in our faces very provocatively. Perry, for one, was absolutely convinced that I and every member of The Loubogg were having it off almost nightly with the most obvious specimens. I honestly don’t know about the others, though I suspect Nick and Yianni might have been as chaste as I.

The dance floor was full, the dancers happy. But was I? Our employment conditions were far from ideal. We knew we were getting nothing like the portion of the club’s nightly take that we had been promised. Yianni’s relations with the club operator were often frosty. But there was no way any of us could check the takings or prove any deception. Night after night, the long playing hours began to tell. Early one morning I had to be carried back to my camp bed doubled up with severe abdominal pain that turned out to have no apparent cause.

One morning I joined Perry at the Dapia cafe. “Want a job?” I said. “You can have mine.”

Perry’s eyebrows shot up, which was about the limit of his displays of emotion. I’d decided to quit. My relations with Yianni were coming under strain. I wasn’t really cut out for night after night of hammering away for peanuts. Perry drained his frappe. “Sure, man,” he said. His girlfriend could barely suppress a smile of triumph. My job was now his.

I was happy for Nick and the others. Sales of “She’s Cool” were racking up. But I’d been playing almost without interruption for nearly eight months. I needed a breather. On the last evening of July I played my set, handed over the sticks to Perry and sat at a cafe for the rest of the night drinking beer with Laki and Niko, my folded-up camp bed and bag at my feet. When the Piraeus boat drew in at dawn I fell asleep on the deck.

The first thing I did at home was call my old buddy Stan Oberst. I took my well-used Di Angelo guitar and we hit the benches in the downtown National Park strumming and singing Elvis songs. Passers-by stopped to watch while Stan fantasized he was in an Elvis movie.

“O to live on Sugar Mountain,” Neil Young sang back in 1972, in a plaintive lament for fleeting youth. Blueberry Hill had been my own Sugar Mountain. But like all mountains, it had a summit after which you must go back down. On the slow boat to Piraeus I left my teenage innocence behind. I didn’t realize it at the time, but my dissatisfaction had been an inward call for me to grow up. Decisions were looming. Studies and adulthood lay just ahead.

But how to grow up, in a country that positively discouraged one from doing so? I spent August in the grandiose fir-clad mountains of northwest Greece. They were a true balm after the noise and madness of Spetses. With my books and a battered old guitar I’d sit under the fir trees and gaze down the river valleys for miles and miles, picking songs and thinking thoughts.

Not yet eighteen, I couldn’t bear the thought of going back to dank and drizzly England. Why should I leave Sugar Mountain? George Alexander and Paul Velletri were planning to re-start The Zoo in September, when the pair of singles we had recorded in June were due for release. I decided to stay on.

12

For several years the University of Maryland had been raising the educational level of America’s far-flung military establishment by operating branches at overseas military bases. One of them was located at Hellenikon US Air Force base, the home of the seminal AFRS radio station. In September 1966, after scraping together the fees for the first term, I registered for classes.

I walked into my first course to find Stan Oberst sitting in a back row. The course was taught by a grizzled, card-carrying Democrat, Mr Darby. This man had something of a fearsome reputation in the University of Maryland after administering one test to a group of USAF officers in South Korea and receiving shocking results. “If the Russians knew,” he had said through clenched teeth, “how many idiots wore the uniform of the United States Air Force they’d attack at dawn!”

The Zoo was about to start anew, but record sales were turning out to be a laugh. Three months of royalties from “Six Miles From The Cage” rendered me precisely 174 drachmas ($5.75). Nick Jameson had gone, but the tangled financial issue of his speaker still hung over the band like a bad dream. I believed I was owed money that I urgently needed for tuition. Acrimonious arguments arose again. And before September was out I decided to go on strike.

The night that I telephoned my decision in curt terms to George, he couldn’t sleep. His mother, in her dressing gown, tried to comfort him.

“How has this friendship come to an end like this?” he agonized. “John and I have been such great buddies, I mean, why should he be doing this over a lousy speaker?”

The Zoo Philips 45 Who's WhoThe next thing I heard, The Zoo had a new drummer, a fellow named Lyle Miller. I telephoned George to demand an explanation, and to stress that I was on strike, I hadn’t quit. During the explosive exchange that followed, though, the distinction became academic. The release of our third single, “Who’s Who”/”Let’s Make It Baby,” didn’t help my morale. I thought it sounded lousy and told everybody. Lyle Miller, though, got his baptism of the “yeh-yeh” festivals and his face in a couple of magazines. Then “You’re Crazy, Man!”/”Something’s Got Ahold On Me” was released. People who heard the A side said it wasn’t bad.

My tough stance eventually paid off. On the evening of 2 November my doorbell rang. I opened the door to find George and a chap I hadn’t seen before. George had contorted his features into what he called his “trapezoid face” — a grotesque combination of cross eyes and protruding lower teeth — so I knew he was coming with an olive branch. Putting a normal face back on, he extended his hand in his old expansive manner as if nothing had happened.

I put down my political science notes and pulled out a couple of chairs.

“This is Willie Parquette,” George said, “our new lead guitarist.” Willie was a likeable and unassuming blond Connecticut lad.

I was wondering when the vexed issue of the speaker would come in when George sheepishly admitted that none of us had handled the matter very well and he was willing to forget the whole thing. “I’d like to start afresh, so we’d appreciate it if you came back to the band. Let bygones be bygones, you know.”

“But you’ve got a drummer,” I said, staying deliberately nonchalant. “That Miller guy.”

George made a disparaging motion. “We, er, let him go. He’s not up to it.” George, I was willing to bet, hadn’t found that hard at all.

“You know what my financial situation is,” I said. “If you can guarantee that there will be no more collective equipment purchases–”

“Done!” George said.

I hate holding grudges for very long. So I agreed to return to Zoo. We celebrated the event with glasses of Tam Tam, the sugary local cola.

The Zoo Philips 45 Let's Make It BabyChecking the meagre inflow of record royalties that month, I found to my horror that the band had a $21 debt hanging over its head. George, it transpired, had a box of unsold discs forgotten somewhere in his house, and Helladisc was charging us for them. Luckily, I located the box and took it back, but there was still $3.50 unaccounted for. George had taken a few discs out and framed them…

Willie Parquette turned out to be a highly competent guitarist for his age. His fingers were some of the swiftest I have ever seen and could master rhythm and blues and country with Chet Atkins-like dexterity. Regular playing resumed on Saturday 12 November at the American Youth Association. Willie was an instant hit with the school crowd. My diary records the night as a success, with $7.70 going into my pocket. That night I spent sleepless on George’s living room couch, devoured by what must have been the last of the year’s mosquitoes. The following morning we had two matinee performances scheduled.

The Zoo Philips 45 You're Crazy ManThe Splendid was an old, peeling cinema fronting Pasalimani, the crescent-shaped yachting port of Piraeus. Under a leaden sky we jumped off our hired truck and looked around us. The street and waterfront were totally deserted. The cinema itself was shuttered. At length someone appeared and showed us to the rear entrance. To get ourselves and our equipment onto what passed for a stage we had to crawl through a tiny hole knocked into the back wall. The “stage” was barely three feet wide, so there could be only one playing formation — stretched out in a line. My bass drum supports pushed right up against the edge. The audience, when it did turn up, consisted of not more than a couple of dozen of what looked like burly young dockworkers in boots and turtleneck sweaters.

After a forty-five-minute set we piled back into the truck for our next job — a matinee in the working-class suburb of Aigaleo, about five miles away. The Adams cinema stood on the Sacred Way, the road over which the Eleusinian mystery religion processions moved in classical times. But there was nothing religious about our reception. We pulled up at the Adams to find a small crowd around the entrance. In the middle was a man with a heavy dark moustache striding back and forth, cursing and gesticulating. This man, it turned out, was the cinema manager. His barely-coherent roars told us we were more than an hour late. Obviously, whoever organized this double bill had blundered somewhere. The manager was not the only irate person in the cinema. As we walked inside, equipment in hand, the fury of at least five hundred unsatisfied rock fans on the verge of a riot assailed our ears.

The Zoo Philips 45 Something's Got a Hold On Me“Hey — had trouble getting up?” one yob shouted amid a cacophony of disrespectful noises. Some of the audience folded their programmes into paper rockets and hurled them at us. As I nervously lugged my bass drum down the aisle I glanced at Willie; this was the clean-cut New England lad’s first taste of Balkan turmoil, and he was taking it well. From the rear rows arose a chant: “Ta lefta mas piso! Ta lefta mas piso!” (We want our money back!) taken up by boy and girl voices in gleeful unison.

The uproar gradually faded as we self-consciously set up on stage. When we began to play, the audience’s mood changed dramatically and we soon had the place in thrall. It must have been the first time that any of those kids in the working-class Athens neighbourhoods had the opportunity to hear a good rock band live, especially laced with Willie’s amazing guitar riffs.

This was the era of the Athenian rock matinees, where hopeful local ensembles could test their mettle and Mick Jagger wannabees could try out their dubious skills on stage. The yeyedes were becoming a social phenomenon and a lot of small-time impresarios were making a lot of money out of them.

Even the unlikeliest districts had to have their yeye concerts. On the cold and blustery morning of 8 January 1967 we climbed into George’s family car and, with the equipment truck following, clanked onto a ferry for the short crossing to the island of Salamis, the site of the famous naval battle of antiquity. We were billed to play at the Saronis cinema, one of the few on the island. Four posters flanking its entrance proclaimed our coming. We played two solid hours before a packed auditorium for a paltry $8 each, the rest, of course, going to the larcenous organizer. For other revenue, we had an agreement with the American Youth Association, which ran the teen club in Kefalari, to receive one-quarter of any night’s take.

The Zoo was not exactly enriching itself for its pains. All four of us were coming to practices with longer and longer faces. Some of us at times would be just too lazy, and stay away on the flimsiest of pretexts. Record sales were down the coal mine; only about five copies a month — mainly “I Cry” and “You’re Crazy, Man!” (I like to think for its slapdash drum solo). An embarrassing moment occurred at the British ambassador’s residence, where Simon Murray, the ambassador’s son and a Zoo fan, had invited us all to a party. In my pocket I had our royalties for the first quarter of 1967. Suffice it to say than when Paul got the few paltry coins (not notes) in his hand, he held them up for all to see, laughing. I laughed, too, but inside I was miserable.

Pieces of equipment would break down and we wouldn’t bother to get them repaired. Too often we would borrow items such as whole amplifiers from The Loubogg, which had by now become our main rival on the Athenian scene. By mid-April I was itching to expand my own personal musical horizons. But none of us was prepared for the blow that fell from a most unexpected quarter.

The Zoo at the Whiskey a Go Go, Athens, late January 1966 From left: Nick Jameson, George Alexander, Paul Velletri, Johnny Carr. The blonde girl seen vaguely on the left is probably Jane Steen.
The Zoo at the Whiskey a Go Go, Athens, late January 1966
From left: Nick Jameson, George Alexander, Paul Velletri, Johnny Carr. The blonde girl seen vaguely on the left is probably Jane Steen.

13

Some had seen it coming for months, but the chattering classes didn’t believe it could happen. The sixties were a decade of high political passions dating from the Civil War era. We teenagers, especially those behind the protective walls of expat society, hadn’t really been exposed to the sometimes quite extraordinary bitterness that those passions could arouse.

At the height of the Cold War Greece was thoroughly dependent for its survival on American aid and military support. The conservative establishment knew this, and was becoming alarmed at the electoral advances made by the left. So it was only a matter of time before a short and stocky artillery colonel named George Papadopoulos decided that his hour had come to save the nation from the red menace. In the early hours of 21 April 1967 he pulled off a coup d’etat that was impressive by its very bloodlessness and speed. The insouciant and sunny Greece we all thought we knew changed quite literally overnight.

That day dawned warm and sunny. After hearing the news of the coup on the radio, I walked through the streets behind the American Embassy. People looked stunned. Roads and pavements were a mass of confused pedestrians trying to get things done before a nightfall curfew after which, we were all solemnly assured by new and unfamiliar stentorian voices on the radio, anyone outdoors would be “shot on sight.”

At one intersection I came on the lanky figure of Simon Murray, the British ambassador’s son, stuck in traffic in his Land Rover. I called out to him but he seemed neither to hear nor see me. No doubt he, like me, was out to assess the situation. Simon was gripping the wheel, scanning the honking traffic for a gap through which he could escape. My mind went back to one night just a few weeks before, when assorted Zoo and Loubogg members had piled into Simon’s battered jeep. We had careered madly around the streets of Psychiko, bawling out the harmonics from “Land Of A Thousand Dances” in utter and carefree abandon. Already that seemed an age ago. I realized we wouldn’t be doing anything like that again for some time, if ever.

In the northern suburb of Kalogreza Willie Parquette ventured out of his front door to find himself staring into the muzzle of an assault weapon and the face of a nervous soldier. Back into the house he went, and stayed there. His parents had been prisoners in the hands of the Japanese during World War Two and weren’t taking any chances.

It was a strange and unsettling feeling that night to look out of the window at the eerily quiet streets, knowing that to step out of your own front door could be inviting a bullet. Families gathered around the only source of information they had, the radio. Not that you could learn very much from it. In between patriotic speeches were Greek folk music and stirring marches telling us about Leonidas and his 300 at Themopylae. This went on uninterruptedly for hours. No-one could call anyone because the phones had been cut.

After the first few anxious days the new regime relaxed its initial harsh measures. You could go to the cinema or a taverna again, but gatherings of more than five people were theoretically banned. Telephone service was reinstated, but expats and anyone with the slightest reputation of not being a one hundred percent patriot had to assume that their phones were being tapped. All mail was censored. Nonetheless, a good many Americans in Greece received the news of the coup with relief. At last all those pesky lefties and commies were being rounded up and packed off to island prison camps. I, too, was at first sympathetic to the Colonels’ regime, believing that a dose of law and order would give the country a new spurt of much-needed development.

It has been claimed that the junta banned rock and roll, but it’s not true. Bands could and did flourish as long as their lyrics steered clear of anything that could be construed by the paranoid censors as even vaguely political.

In May the ban on assembly was rescinded, and the yeye matinees could go on as before, as long as you could ignore the platoons of grey-uniformed police flanking the theatre doors. You could still buy practically any record you wanted in the shops, except works by blackballed Greek leftist artists such as Mikis Theodorakis of “Zorba the Greek” fame. As we waited for the concerts to resume, I decided to set in motion an idea I’d been toying with for some time. I longed to record my own drum solos like my all-time idol, Sandy Nelson. The other Zoo members shook their heads. Sandy Nelson might be out, but a Sandy Nelson I yet wanted to be.

In an indirect way the Colonels’ regime helped me achieve my goal. On 9 May, less than three weeks after the coup, I got the green light from Helladisc to record a drum solo single on the Zoo contract for the Philips label. Giving the project a powerful push in the right direction was that as a politically harmless instrumental it wouldn’t have to go through the censorship process before recording!

When I first had the idea of “Drums On The Road” little could I know how apt the title would be to the circumstances attending its birth. Slavishly keeping to the old Sandy Nelson formula, I kept the basic guitar part to an absolute minimum, based on a 12/8 blues E progression that any moderately competent guitarist could handle. The bulk of the drum solo I pretty much left to the studio inspiration of the moment. George, Paul and Willie began rehearsing, and then the producer’s wife decided to have a baby. The recording session was postponed eight days, to 26 May. By this time, George and Paul had gone away on trips, so I had just two days in which to find a rhythm guitarist and bass player! Jim Jackson, a quiet Greek-Australian from the American school, agreed to the former, and none other than Yianni Kiurktsoglou promised to do the honours on bass. Though he tried not to show it, playing bass for me was a bit of a come-down for him. I couldn’t really blame him. Mere weeks before, he and Nick Daperis had achieved the supreme recognition of opening for The Rolling Stones’ first Athens concert.

Never have the Greek fates – or was it that old priest’s curse? – so conspired against me as on the day of my first solo recording. I’d borrowed a lovely $600 set of Ludwigs for the occasion. I stuffed them in an ancient taxi together with Yianni and Jim. Following behind was a small white Fiat containing Wille and his dad, with the speakers tied to the roof by a bungee. I knew of only one recording studio, and that of course was Columbia where The Zoo had recorded before. In the early afternoon the two cars swerved smartly into the Columbia parking lot. I bounded up the front steps to a waiting security guard, breezily announcing that I had a recording session.

The guard consulted his register. After perusing the page several times, he looked up and shook his head. “Nope,” he said, “we’ve got nobody named Johnny Carr doing any recording here today.”

A cold wind blew through me. “But that’s not possible,” I stammered. “Helladisc — the record company, you know — they’ve booked the studio for this afternoon. For me.” I had a flash of hope. “What about Zoo? Maybe it’s under Zoo. Look again.”

The guard scanned the register again. “Zoo…Zoo… Sorry, no Zoo either,” he said. He fingered his toothbrush moustache, eyeing me with the beginnings of distrust.

Stunned, I slunk down the front steps wondering what to tell the others who were waiting to unload. For weeks I’d been looking forward to this day.

“Wait,” came the guard’s voice. I turned round. The guard spread his hands in the classic Greek gesture of sympathy. “There’s obviously been a misunderstanding,” he said. “You’re probably booked at Alpha Studio. Why not try there?” I’d never heard of the place. The guard pointed north. “Up in Melissia,” he said. “Don’t worry, your cab driver will know the way.”

Melissia! That was at least six miles away. But, if I was going to make my coveted drum solo record, then Melissia it would have to be. During the trip, I tried not to listen to the taxi meter clicking relentlessly away. Alpha Studio was a large, barn-like edifice surrounded by open fields on the lower slopes of Mount Pendeli, the triangular height that overlooks Athens from the north. My spirits sank anew as my enquiry at the front office resulted in more blank looks.

“Who told you to come here?” one chap asked me. “This is a film, not a recording studio.” Oh, no. I wanted to cry in sheer frustration. What could I tell the others waiting outside? My ambition to be a Sandy Nelson, a Gene Krupa, was disintegrating in this mad, sultry Athenian afternoon.

“You say you’re a rock act?” another man asked. I nodded dumbly. “And you’re not booked at Columbia.” I shook my head. He opened what looked like a small and grubby directory. “There’s only one other recording studio I can think of,” he mused, flipping through the pages. “You know,” he said, addressing a colleague, “where we get our soundtracks done…”

“You mean Sifis Siganos?” the other man said.

“That’s the one,” the first man said. He put a finger on a scrawled line. “Here it is.” He dialled a number. He flinched as he listened. “They say you should have been there an hour ago,” he whispered to me, covering the mouthpiece.

“Give me the phone,” I said. It was a good thing my producer, Spiro Rallis, was a patient and easygoing man. He had, of course, fully explained to me about the studio arrangements, but I’d had my head in the clouds with dreams of fame, and no time for mundane details. My record was again within the realm of possibility. But now my big concern was the taxi bill, which by now had gone well over the pair of grubby red 100 drachma notes I had scrunched up in my pocket. “You’ll have to pay for my taxi!” I heard myself blurting into the phone.

“Yes, yes, Johnny, I’ll pay the taxi,” Rallis said soothingly. “Just get down here.”

Johnny Carr and His Group Philips 45 Drums on the Road“Down here” involved an eight-mile trip from Melissia back into the centre of Athens. Sifis Siganos studio was located in a cul-de-sac off Patission Street opposite the National Archaeological Museum. I, the band and the drums had travelled at least twenty miles to get to our destination which turned out to be barely three miles from home! Drums on the road indeed. With what energy I had left, while Rallis settled accounts with the bemused cabbie, I set up the Ludwigs while the excellent and uncomplaining Willie Parquette wired up the guitars and amps. I must have appeared a complete nitwit.

Fatigued or no, there were two percussion tracks to record. I don’t remember a great deal about the session, except that Willie did a more than creditable job on lead guitar. As the guitar part was wholly his, I gave him a co-writing credit. The drum part itself came out as a melange of Sandy Nelson, Cozy Cole and Gene Krupa techniques. By the seventh take it was in the can.

Johnny Carr and His Group Philips 45 Four Point LandingThe flip side, “Four Point Landing,” was more awkward to put together. It was essentially an experiment in building an extended solo on a slow 4/4 tempo. As an experiment, I believe it failed. Either the tempo was inherently unsuited to solo percussion work or I just hadn’t yet acquired the degree of competence to make one credible. A very basic three-note guitar solo adorns the beginning and end. The first couple of takes didn’t satisfy me; they sounded vacant and contrived. But Rallis was looking at the studio clock. He naturally wanted to wind up as soon as possible; my absent-mindedness had already overburdened his production budget. During the playback of the final take Rallis kept talking to me to divert my attention from all the flaws in the track.

Nonetheless, a particularly clumsy sequence made me wince. Jim Jackson stifled a giggle. “I’ve got to do another take,” I said. But Rallis had had severely enough of my monotonous snare-tom poundings. He paternalistically patted me on the back. “Er, no, John, I don’t think so,” he said. “It’s only the B side. And we’re out of time, anyway.”

“Drums On The Road”/”Four Point Landing” (Philips label) by Johnny Carr (hoo boy!) was released to the world a couple of weeks later. It didn’t do very well. I wasn’t surprised. As for The Zoo, it still had some fight left in it.

14

The Zoo invitationThe Zoo invitation backIt didn’t take long for the Colonels’ regime to conclude that panem et circenses, in the time-honoured formula, would be enough to keep the masses contented and apolitical. Rock bands were viewed as harmless diversions rather than exercises in subversion, while a business and consumer boom enabled many ordinary Greeks to buy such things as cars and television sets for the first time.

The Zoo resumed rehearsals on 9 September 1967. After a year with us, including his inimitable contribution to “Drums On The Road,” Willie Parquette had returned to America. Jim Jackson, the taciturn rhythm guitarist on the track, was the natural choice to take his place. But psychedelia and “inner space” were breaking full upon us, bands were becoming bigger, their music more complex. George brought in a vocalist frontman, Rick Cocorelis, a Greek-American school wit with an infectious laugh.

George was soaring. He continued to be an effortless overachiever and was well on the way to becoming class valedictorian, making his way ruthlessly through a succession of girlfriends and gaining weight. In his spare time he took up the bouzouki and saxophone. In any school activity, even in amateur dramatics, he was the star.

On Saturday nights it was the American schoolkids crowding the AYA club in Kefalari in their lengthening hair, floral shirts and bell bottoms. On Sunday mornings it was the Greek kids with their lengthening hair, mini skirts, boots and bell-bottoms in a variety of working-class suburbs. Colonels or no, they were valiantly trying to keep up with the trends. As far as The Zoo was concerned, it meant that we would have to update our repertoire. We moved beyond material from The Beatles’ “Rubber Soul” album and began to mimic such ensembles as The Lovin’ Spoonful and some black blues acts.

I used every performance to hone my own percussive skills. One Sunday morning at the Neraida cinema in Kallithea I was seized by an irresistible temptation to show off. I was now a drum solo artist in my own right, remember? My glance fell on a couple of lads in the front row keenly observing my playing. Okay, I said to myself, show them what an ace you are. My chance came during “Satisfaction,” an old standard we had decided to keep. What were supposed to have been Charlie Watts’ simple two-bar drum breaks before the hey-hey-heys became terribly avant-garde permutations of toms, snare rim shots and cymbal smashes. I slammed the sticks everywhere I could. “Crappin’ around,” Nick Jameson would have called it, but no-one was complaining now. Open-mouthed, those boys would wait for each multi-drum roll and cymbal smash, and when I duly provided it, they would spring almost to their feet, arms raised and eyes popping, and then fall back into their seats as if dazed. I often wonder if either of them later became drummers.

In November my much-worn Hollyood Meazzi Italian drum set, never very robust to begin with, began showing serious signs of decay. In nearly three years of almost continuous playing it had been knocked about in countless vans, car boots and backstage areas. It was during a dance at the air base that my bass drum pedal developed an appalling squeak that sounded like I was treading on Mickey Mouse’s tail. The squeak persisted, no matter how much oil I applied. My hi-hat sounded like a pair of dustbin lids. Drum heads were wearing out. And so were other things.

Jim Jackson had become a resolute foe of the Greek junta, and never shrank from showing it. This was brave of him, if somewhat naive. On our way back from the air base performance with the squeaky bass drum pedal, our van drove past the Royal Palace on Herod Atticus Street where the skirted evzone guards stood stiffly before the gates. Before we realized what he was doing, Jim wound down the van window and roared “Dimokratia!” (“Democracy!”) at the startled evzones. George and I shushed him into silence, looking nervously back. As far as we know, no-one took down the van number.

King Constantine II, just twenty-seven years old, was in a quandary. He despised the colonels but had too few loyal military units to try and unseat them. As The Zoo practiced literally across the road, the king and Colonel Joe Lepczyk of the US Embassy would huddle in the colonel’s study out of earshot (or so they thought) and decide the fate of a country. Lepczyk tried to talk the king out of his counter-coup plan, on 13 December Constantine launched his attempt anyway. The colonels were too quick and smart for him. The king’s own few loyal units quickly disintegrated and he was forced to flee Greece with his family, ending up in Rome. Never again would he sit on the Greek throne.

For a few days it was April all over again. Armoured personnel carriers rumbled through the streets full of trigger-happy soldiers in their new American-supplied helmets. Radio commentators aired their endless patriotic harangues again. But life soon got back to normal. The colonels, now with the last vestige of opposition dealt with, confidently doffed their uniforms and became benevolent civilian dictators.

And the Sunday matinees resumed. After one of them at the Terpsithea cinema in Piraeus, while the audience was filing out, George’s impish younger brother Victor showered publicity leaflets down from the balcony. This angered a cleaning woman who brandished her broom at Victor. George saw it and exploded. “You will not lay a finger on my little brother — do you hear?” he roared so that the entire cinema could hear, wagging a furious finger in the cleaning woman’s face.

The mood in the American School, too, had changed a lot since the innocent Auroras days. Students facing graduation came to the weekend dances with tense, worried looks. The Vietnam War was heating up and sucking more young Americans into its hell. The draft was the terror of every graduation-age boy. As if to compensate, some clung frenziedly to flower-power adolescence before having to go back to America and possibly worse. A few elected to do what I did — stay in the Greek playground as long as possible thanks to the facilities offered by the University of Maryland. Stan Oberst, the Presleyesque singer, was one of them.

A saxophonist in the school band called Aris Taflambas had the idea of organizing an elaborate school event called the “Four-Ring Circus” on 6 January 1968. The main attraction, the climactic event, was to be “The Battle Of The Bands.” By now The Zoo had a formidable rival called Blues Period, made up of younger boys more into the purple haze style than we were. There was also the John Gertos Ragtime Band. Gertos, it will be recalled, was the trumpeter who made the acid comment about my noisy walk to the timpani across the auditorium stage nearly three years before. The Zoo would go on last, and then the audience would vote for the best band.

We hadn’t played for a month, partly because of the crisis following the abortive royal coup. Nonetheless, George saw The Battle Of The Bands as a chance to renew our flagging zest and reputation. Rick Cocorelis, with the enthusiasm of the newcomer, had polished his vocal act. Jim, too, was willing enough, but Paul and I felt jaded. The two of us loitered at the back of the crowd as the two competing bands did their bits on stage. The Gertos band was good, but the kids of 1968 simply weren’t turned on to Dixieland and ragtime. We threw all our energy into our own hour-long set. The psychedelic age was here. A projector cast swirling, kaleidoscopic images onto the wall behind us. About an hour before midnight, The Zoo hit its last chord.

None of us stayed around to hear the results of the vote. George believed we had it all sewn up, anyway. And we had, getting almost three times the number of votes that either of the other bands earned. George seemed to be right — we still had a school following. But I profoundly didn’t care. I was in my second year of college and entering the twentieth year of my life. What, I asked myself, was I doing with these kids? You can’t be twenty on Sugar Mountain, Neil Young sang.

There was, as far as I can recall, no specific moment when The Zoo decided to disband. After the Battle Of The Bands, we merely downed our instruments for a break of indefinite duration. New music was in vogue now, hippiedom was invading youth culture. Politicized music was waiting around the corner. I had never been either a hippie or a politicized musician, and wasn’t about to become one now.

George and Paul would finish school in a few months. Their parents had already lined up choice stateside universities for them; mentally, they were already half across the Atlantic. Like any organism, our band had grown, matured and declined. From the distant strains of “Outer Limits” echoing down the deserted street in Psychiko to the crashing finale of the Battle Of The Bands, The Zoo had given a lot to each of us. The financial rewards had been meagre, but the less tangible rewards of human growth and self-actualization had been immense.

The Zoo’s career spanned a key period in the growth of Greece’s own society and rock music scene. I like to think we influenced early Greek rockers by our example. No doubt some of those teenagers who cheered us in the suburban cinemas grew up to become worthy performers in their own right. I’m glad that in some small measure I helped showed them the way.

"Your hair's gettin' longer..." Johnny Carr in the later Zoo.
“Your hair’s gettin’ longer…” Johnny Carr in the later Zoo.

15

We are the music makers,
We are the dreamers of dreams…

— Arthur O’Shaughnessy

So what happened to everybody afterwards?

While The Zoo wound down, its main Athenian rival Loubogg, continued to flourish. Yianni Kiurktsoglou and Nick Daperis took their budding career seriously. After two singles issued in 1966 (one with Stan Oberst), Loubogg took on new talent, subtly changing direction along with the times. By about 1970 they had mutated into Peloma Bokiou, a seven-man lineup that bid fair to becoming Greece’s version of Santana, replete with conga drums, flowing hair, headbands and beads and all the rest of the post-Woodstock imagery and paraphernalia.

Around 1973, after producing an acclaimed album (still available on CD: Lyra records 0644), Peloma Bokiou broke up. Yianni had been the first to leave, turned off by the hard drug habit of a leading member who he claimed tried to steal his songs. Some years later Yianni composed and produced an album for Yovana, a middle-of-the-road balladeuse. The following decade he was asked to do a solo album which did not do well. Thereafter he abandoned professional music to take on a job as computer science teacher at Deree College, an American-run institution of higher learning in Athens, where he still is.

Nick Daperis after Peloma Bokiou relocated to London. He took a computer course, married and settled down to suburban life in South Woodford. He now develops software projects. At least two of his grown children are following in his musical footsteps.

George Alexander’s later career mirrored his mercurial character. He went to college in Amherst, Massachusetts, and of course did brilliantly. We met up for a few months in spring 1973, when I was in Athens doing work for ABC Radio News. We formed a trio with his younger brother Victor on lead guitar – the short-lived Zoo II – for a few college gigs, with Victor’s phenomenal ability on lead guitar. Sporting a beard and moustache, George had morphed into the archetypal shaggy campus activist. Then he started postgraduate study at London University in the Modern Greek History department and published his doctoral dissertation as a book.

But it seems George could not be satisfied with any routine for long. He abruptly wearied of the impecunious academic life and returned to America. There was a wife somewhere, plus children. One day around 1980 Rick Cocorelis was walking down a New York street when he heard someone calling his name. He turned to see the familiar slight stoop, the wavy hair, the glasses. George was waving at him from the other side of the street. They greeted each other like the long-lost band members they were. George said he’d become a salesman for Amway.

Then around the end of the 1990s when we all got clicked onto the Internet and started looking for old friends, I relocated George. He was in New York doing word processing for a law firm. Through 2000 and into 2001 we exchanged e-mails, but then the e-mails started bouncing back and I haven’t heard from him since.

Paul Velletri, after graduating with George in 1968, returned to America to study at Carleton College. Later his unconventional mind became interested in the effects of drugs on the human organism. Graduating in pharmacology, he much later rose to a senior position in the United States federal health sector. He lives with his family in Bethesda, Maryland.

“Whenever I go and see him,” says Rick Cocorelis, who has evolved as a sort of Zoo connecting link, “we just get out the guitars and go crazy.”

Nick Jameson in Athens in September 1997, listing to his Zoo riffs.
Nick Jameson in Athens in September 1997, listing to his Zoo riffs.
One day early in 1997 I received a fax with a bold letterhead that jumped out at me. Nick Jameson! The “Bitlie” was alive and well. He had come across a byline of mine in Billboard and had traced me from that. Nick was in California — it was hard to imagine him anywhere else — making a living as an actor, voice-over specialist and occasional musician. In the early summer of that year he flew over to Athens for a few days.

I met him at a Metro station in Maroussi, near the Olympic Stadium. He was still beanpole-thin, though a bit more gaunt and stooped. His hair was still about the same length, though the acne was gone. I took him home for tea and played the old Zoo 45s. Nick just sat there shaking his head slowly in disbelief. He related how he had done some playing around America, including a stint in the band Foghat, before ending up in California as an entertainment effects specialist. Nick Jameson maintains an active website.

Willie Parquette lives in his native Connecticut with a grown-up family. A computer networking specialist, he continues to play and compose in his spare time.

Jim Jackson decided against going back to his native Australia and enrolled in the Athens University medical school. He then moved to New York for postgraduate study, specializing in psychiatry. He now has a thriving psychoanalytic practice in Athens in the suburb of Halandri, just a couple of miles from the American school. When I told him that “Drums On The Road” had been reissued on CD he just smiled. I think he preferred it kept in the past. “They were good days in a way, but I wouldn’t want to go back to them,” Jim told me over a beer. “All those youthful hangups and insecurities.”

Keeping my hand in, Athens May 2007.
Keeping my hand in, Athens May 2007.
As for myself, after university I started a career in international journalism and broadcasting, which included writing for Billboard, to keep my hand in the music. I was thus present at the unveiling of digitally-recorded music and the birth of the compact disc at the Billboard Music Industry Convention in Athens in May 1982, themed “Audio Strikes Back.” A few hundred of us gathered in one of the halls of the Astir Palace Hotel to hear the new secret weapon. I gazed out of the windows at the winding Attica coastline. Beyond those green and ochre hills lay Asteria Beach, memories of The Auroras, twanging chords, Martha…

Jan Timmer, a Dutchman and head of Philips, walked confidently up to the rostrum. “What you are about to hear,” Timmer announced, his bald pate shiny under the lights, “is a digital recording, the purest sound that technology can devise.” What came blasting out of the speakers was Abba’s “One Of Us,” heavy on bass and synthesizer effects. I had been commissioned to write a glowing account of the whole conference, but not for ten more years did I actually acquire a CD player. My trusty Shadows vinyl LPs are still my main solace, especially now in my semi-retirement.

It feels good to know that the sounds of The Zoo are still out there – especially the older you get. You still need to live with music, perhaps join a church choir or strum a few chords in a pub or at a party (“Oh God, is he carting that guitar of his here again? He’s becoming a bit of a bore with those mouldy oldies, isn’t he? Keeps forgetting the words, as well.”)

Nick Hornby, reminiscing about the 1960s, recently wrote: “I’m talking about the energy, the wistful yearning, the inexplicable exhilaration, the sporadic sense of invincibility, the hope that stings like chlorine… I run the risk of being seen as yet another nostalgic old codger…” And then you get a phone call. Rick Cocorelis has been browsing in a CD store. By the way, he says matter-of-factly, in the cut-price oldies section there’s a compilation with your recording — and your name — on it. This happened to me in March 2003. I leapt into my car and ran yellow lights all the way to the store. The bored young salesgirl in jeans two sizes too small and a bulging midriff led me to the oldie compilations section. There at the front of the stack was a Greek-produced CD titled Ilektrika Oneira (Electric Dreams.) And on the back, Track 15: “Drums On The Road” by Johnny Carr! My heart gave a great bump.

I could dramatize the moment and say that I mentally thrust my fist into the air at having left some enduring monument, however small, to my earthly existence. Trying to hide my glee I paid the cashier the €6.50 for the remaindered disc, thus contributing infinitesimally to my total composer’s royalty payment of some €50 that no-one would ever have told me about if Rick, bless him, hadn’t made his lucky discovery.

Ilektrika Oneira, I saw, had been issued as early as 1995. I trawled the web and discovered that Polygram in 1996 had issued another oldie compilation with no fewer than five Zoo tracks on it! I also found two clearly pirate collections featuring other Zoo material, including “I Cry” and “Six Miles From The Cage.” I purchased both over the Internet at grossly inflated prices. One CD called “Shakin’ In Athens” had a post office box number in Evanston, Illinois, printed on the artwork. I wrote to the address; my letter came back. Pirates cover their tracks.

Michalis Nezis, a Greek rock history researcher, assured me in 2004 that pirated tapes with Zoo material on them circulated among a select circle of aficionados throughout the 1970s and 1980s. He himself trawled garage sales and the Athens flea market for our old 45s. “I Cry,” he claimed, had actually become a cult song. He’d liked “Four Point Landing” — what I considered my failed drum solo B-side — so much that he formed a band called Point Four in my honour! As I said before, some people just don’t know bad music when they hear it. And on it goes.

I still have and use my old white pearl drum set that has seen me through The Zoo and beyond. With their repairs and additions, they’re the same old trusty tubs, and they appreciate getting out once in a while to make their music.

Johnny Carr, 2010

Zoology:

Vinyl singles:
I Cry / Forget Today (Philips 6066, 1966, view A / B)
Go / Six Miles From The Cage (Philips 6072, 1966, view A / B)
Who’s Who / Let’s Make It Baby (Philips 6102, 1966, view A / B)
You’re Crazy Man / Something’s Got a Hold On Me (Philips 6103, 1966, view A / B)
Drums On The Road / Four Point Landing (Artist: Johnny Carr and his group, Philips 6163, 1967, view A / B)

CDs:
Greek Rock Scene No. 2 (Elliniki Rock Skini No. 2), (Polygram 1996) Five Zoo tracks
Electric Dreams (Ilektrika Oneira), (Polygram 1995) Johnny Carr’s “Drums On The Road”
Shakin’ In Athens (Sound Stories, undated) Two Zoo tracks.

Other Zoo tracks can be found on Nos. 20, 27, 29, 31 and 36 of the “Moderni Rythmi” compilations series issued in 2009 by Music Box.

Thanks to Erik Meinen for the scans of “I Cry” / “Forget Today”.

I highly recommend Johnny Carr’s CD Zoo Drummer, available through www.studio52.gr.

The Volcanoes and Freddie & the Freeloaders

Freddie and the Freeloaders, from left: Jamie Montana, Bobby Dennis, Fred Prue, Al Roberts, and Dennis Broadbelt
The Volcanoes, Fred Prue at right, the others are unidentified

Updated March, 2022

Left-handed guitarist Fred Prue came from Newport, Vermont, the eldest of thirteen children. His father Frederick Adelbert Prue was also a guitarist, with a record as Fred Prue with Roy Baxter & His Combo – “Don’t Wink at Me” / “Lookin for Joe” (both songs by Prue & George Zorich) on Arctic 45-100 in 1957.

Fred Prue started the Volcanoes, but I am not sure who was in the early lineups of the band. Al Roberts, who had been with the Thunderbolts from Plattsburgh, NY joined sometime around 1964. Prue and Roberts would be constants in the lineups of Freddie & the Freeloaders over the next couple years.

Volcanos B and J 45 Someone Like YouThe 1965 lineup of the Volcanoes or Freddie & the Freeloaders seems to have included:

Fred Prue – guitar and vocals
Al Roberts – organ
Bob Dennis – guitar
Joe Seta – bass
Dennis Broadbelt – drums

Volcanoes B&J 45 Someone Like YouThe Volcanoes met Johnny Baylor, probably in New York City while touring. The Volcanoes were among Baylor’s first record productions, their single released on his B&J Records 100 in early 1965.

“Two of a Kind” is a slow weeper with a long dramatic introduction. I prefer the flip, “Someone Like You”, a rocker with swirling organ, a couple good shouts, decent guitar solo and a solid rhythm section. Frederick C. Prue wrote both songs, though Amy Prue told me her grandfather wrote the original version of “Someone Like You”. The red-label stock copy has a different logo at top, and oddly, a second vocal track on “Someone Like You”.

Also in early 1965, the Volcanoes changed their name to Freddie and the Freeloaders, based out of Burlington, VT, but touring constantly. They made another single with Johnny Baylor producing, “Shindig Dance” (Betty Newsome, Eddie Silvers) b/w “Two of a Kind” (written by Fred C. Prue), arranged & conducted by Eddie Silvers.

The only other artist Baylor produced on B and J Records and Baylor Records was Little Dooley and the Fabulous Tears. Baylor would relocate his operations to Memphis, Tennessee, where he started the Koko label in 1966, and would eventually become involved with Stax Records.

Willie Mitchell’s band with Freddie and the Freeloaders in Memphis, circa 1966. From left (kneeling): Willie Mitchell, unidentified, Freddie Prue, and Don Bryant. Top row from left: James Mitchell, six unidentified people, Dennis Broadbelt, and unidentified

The connection with Baylor may have brought Freddie & the Freeloaders to Memphis, where they would cut their next single at Sun Studios. The rockin’ “Patty” is credited to Fred Prue and Gene Simmons, Arkmil Pub. Co., and “The Octopus Song” is by James Mitchell & John Franzese. The initial release was on Crossroad 103/4 out of West Memphis, Arkansas in March, 1966.

Laurie Records immediately picked it up for national distribution as Laurie LR 3334. The single even saw release in Germany on Ariola 18 880 AT.

Freddie and the Freeloaders promotional photo
Freddie and the Freeloaders, from left: Jamie Montana, Bobby Dennis, Fred Prue, Al Roberts, and Dennis Broadbelt

An article in the Nashua Telegraph (Nashua, New Hampshire, not far from Boston) on December 31, 1966 lists the members as:

Fred Prue – lead guitar
Al Roberts – rhythm guitar
Joe Seta – bass
Robert Allen – organ
Bob Bennet – drums

Freddie and the Freeloaders from Burlington, VT … have made many records such as “The Octopus Song” and “That’s the Kind of Man I Am.” They were recording in Memphis, Tenn for Laurie Records and came from there [via] the Fred Petty Agency.

Some of their college dates have been at Tufts, Rensselaer and Princeton.

Ranging in age from 20 to 23, the boys, Fred Prue, lead guitar; Al Robert, rhythm guitar; Joe Seta, base guitar; Robert Allen, organ and Bob Bennet, drums, have a style of Rock and Roll combined with rhythm and blues … very much their own.

Freddie and the Freeloaders later promotional photo
I could use help identifying the musicians in this photo. Fred Pruce is center.
Ad for an engagement at Pal Joey’s Lounge in Somerville, MA, Feb. 13-25, 1967, the band includes Fred Prue, Al Roberts, Joe Seta and Dennis Broadbelt, with an unidentified drummer

A photo from an ad for February, 1967 shows in Somerville, MA includes:

Fred Prue – lead guitar
Al Roberts – rhythm guitar
Joe Seta – bass
Dennis Broadbelt – drums
unknown – ?

I am not sure when Freddie & the Freeloaders split up. Fred Prue continued playing music, including Prues Blues. He passed away on February 15, 2020.

Thank you to Amy Prue for the photos & information on her father’s bands.

Thanks also to James for the scan of “Someone Like You”.

Sources include: The Story Of The Thunderbolts by Will Shade.

There were most certainly not the Volcanoes from Canada, who made “Sympathize” / “Listen to the Clouds” on Sound Inc (and picked up by Sparton in Canada), two songs written by Ron Allan Neilson & Harry Olsen and produced by Getz-Powers.

Also, there were three other Freddie and the Freeloaders acts with records. None of these are related to Fred Prue’s group:

Freddie and the Freeloaders with Fred Halls from Danville, Illinois who recorded on Redd Hedd.

Freddie and the Freeloaders – “Say It” (Freddie W.) / Little Prince & the Freeloaders – “Nursery Love” on M and M 1263 in 1963

Freddie and The Freeloaders from the Baltimore area – “Little One” / “You’re Gone” on Dome SR 4014

1967 lineup, from bottom right: Dennis Broadbelt, Fred Prue, Al Roberts, Joe Seta, and unidentified
Freddie and the Freeloaders color photo
Fred Prue at left