Cure of Ares 45 Sunshine

Cure of Ares from St. Cloud: “Oval Portrait” and “Sunshine”

Cure of Ares came from St. Cloud, Minnesota and cut two excellent singles in 1969, but I’m surprised to find very little information on the group, and had to draw on many sources to assemble this post.

Cure of Ares 45 Oval PortraitMembers included:

Duane Korte – lead vocals
Reynold Philipsek – lead guitar
John Waverek- bass
Mark Wenner – drums
Steve Hoffman – original drummer

and possibly:

Doug Nelson – bass
Michael McGlynn – organ (?)

Their first 45 from May included “Oval Portrait” an original by Reynold Philipsek and Michael McGlynn according to a Library of Congress copyright registration in March, 1969, although not credited on the label. On the flip is “Stepping Stone”, not the hit song but a cut from Steve Miller Band album Children of the Future.

Cure of Ares 45 SunshinePeter Steinberg produced Cure of Ares’ second release which included the excellent original song “Sunshine”, featuring plenty of wah-wah, vocal harmonies, stops and starts, and even cowbell.

No song writing credits appear on the label for “Sunshine”, but I found a July 1969 registration for “Sunshine Road” with words and music by Reynold Philipsek and music by Michael McGlynn. Registered at the same time was another song, “What About the People?” which may have not been recorded.

On the flip was a version of “Twenty Years Ago (in Speedy’s Kitchen)”, a song recently done by T.C. Atlantic and written by Steinberg with Barry Goldberg, Gary Paulak and Dale Menten. All of those writers were active in the Minneapolis music scene: Dale Menten had been in the Gestures and wrote “Run, Run, Run”, and produced the C.A. Quintet’s single on Falcon, “Mickey’s Monkey” / “I Want You to Love Me Girl”. Peter Steinberg had engineered at Dove Recording Studios in Minneapolis.

Cure of Ares recorded both records at Audiotek Studios in Minneapolis. Audiotek Systems Inc went out of business in 1979, but in 2016 the contents of the studio were offered for sale, including hundreds of records and master tapes. I do not know what became of the tapes, or if they included any Cure of Ares material.

Neither single had a label name, but “Oval Portrait” shows release number 69-99 while “Sunshine” has CPO-106.

Reynold Philipsek’s Wikipedia page continues,

Oval Portrait received enough mid-west regional radio airplay to garner an invitation to perform on the ABC Television show THE HAPPENING ’69, produced by Dick Clark Productions … Cure of Ares taped on Sunday, April 20, 1969, for the Season 2, Episode 24 installment, which aired on May 17, 1969. The telecast included performances by Three Dog Night, and The Peppermint Rainbow.

In 1970, Cure of Ares was chosen from over 15,000 entries as one of 50 semi-finalists in a national music competition, “Iced Tea’s Big Search for the New Sound”[5] presented by the Tea Council of the U.S.A., Billboard Magazine and over 200 radio stations.

The Wiki page has a link to a letter from Dick Clark to Tom Roman, who may have been the Cure of Ares’ manager.

After the Cure of Ares broke up, Philipsek made a 1973 single I haven’t heard under the name “reynold”: “Change (Not the Same)” / “Wordless Wonder” both original songs, produced by S. Gasner and Philipsek. His solo career continues to this day. Reynold Philipsek’s website is https://reynold.com/.

6 thoughts on “Cure of Ares from St. Cloud: “Oval Portrait” and “Sunshine””

  1. Reynold is an old friend of my brothers. This is very cool, i’ll have to run this by him… Back in the early 90’s “Reynolds Remarkable Rhythm Cattle” were a fun band to see.

  2. Mark Wenner on drums and John Waverek originally on bass…also original drummer was Steve Hoffman…all of us from St Cloud, Minnesota. Being in the group was truly one of the best experiences in my life and I stlll consider all my group mates as brothers. We experienced a lot of success and a lot of good times over the 6 years we were together including a trip to Hollywood to appear on Happening ’69 a Paul Revere and the Raider’s band competition show produced by Dick Clark Productions in March 1969 which aired in May 1969. We placed 2nd in the competition and we were only sophmores and juniors in High School at the time competing against groups that were considerably older with much more experience.

  3. So proud of my brother Duane and his group. They were a big hit then and still are for those of us who remember……love, j

  4. Still have brother Duane’s records and a poster with all the guys on it. Great memories listening to their music. Still love listening to him.

  5. Michael McGlynn was the original and only organ/keyboard player in the Cure of Ares. Fond memories of all my band buddies and we always had a great time being together.

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