The Wild Prophets came from Ames, Iowa, about 35 miles north of Des Moines. They recorded one single on Kustom Records, Ltd ARS-1001, an energetic version of the Last Word’s “Can’t Stop Loving You” backed with “Do I Have to Come Right Out and Say It”, a Neil Young original with the Buffalo Springfield.
The lineup at the time of the record was:
Ted Nunemaker – vocals
Keane Bonath – sax
Ken Wood – guitar
Roy Aasen – keyboard
Larry Kelley – bass and vocals
Andy Gielbelstein – drums
Mark Miller signed the label of the record, but he replaced Ken Wood on guitar after the record was made.
Earlier members included Jacque Furman and Ralph Stevens on drums, Ray West on keys.
Later members included Ron Arends on keys and Scott Erickson.
Larry Kelly wrote to me:
I had a few groups in high school. My first band I joined was the Mystics – the first combo at Boone High School. I left that group and started my own band called the Tel-Stars. In ’65 I left that band and got married.
In ’66 I started organizing a new band and we came up with the name The Wild Prophets – Ken Wood, Ray West, Jacque Furman and I. We did things like play guitar/bass behind our heads, lay down on the floor playing, etc. That’s where the ‘wild’ came from in the name. We went thru various other musicians when Ray left. Jacque left and Ralph Stevens played drums. He left in time and Andy took over. When Andy left, Randy Stultz took over on drums.
The recording came about with Ken, Keane Bonath, Ted Nunemaker (both Keane and Ted were ISU students at the time), Andy on drums, and Roy Aaesen played keys. We found the two songs we wanted to do and Ted sang lead on the slow song, me on “Can’t Stop Loving You” which was a Buffalo Springfield flip-side song from their hit, “For What It’s Worth”. But “Can’t Stop” was too slow so we sped it up a bit!
We had a school bus we fixed up to travel in along with the name of the band on each side in big letters. In ’69, we bought over $10,000 worth of new band equipment which today would be more like $80-100k. So many stories, too numerous to tell.
The Wild Prophets recorded at Audiosonic Recording Studio in Ames, and the record saw release in 1969.
According to the informative Boone Rock website, the band played “in Mason City. The Cellar in Ames was a favorite with a good crowd in attendance every time. Other venues they performed at include the Starlite in Carroll, the Pla-Mor in Fort Dodge, the Dance-Mor in Swisher, RJ’s Lounge in Marion.”
The Wild Prophets broke up in 1973. Jacque Furman continued in music, but I have few details other than playing with Cris Williamson and Glen Yarborough.
Ted Nunemaker died on Dec. 14, 2008.
Thank you to Larry Kelley for correcting the spelling of names.
Some information from http://members.iowatelecom.net/thx1136/pages/prophets.html (currently offline).
I can find a few other Audiosonic Recording Studio credits, such as:
Ted Hart – “Down in the Mine” / “I Don’t Need You Anymore” (both by Don Taft and J.T. Schreiner), produced by J.T. Schreiner on Leslie LR 72068 from 1968.
Syndrum of Soul - “Lost and Found” (Gary French, Floyd Brown) / “Do You Care” on SOS 100, produced by M. Harper, from 1970.
Correction on the names in the band:
Mark Miller
Hi Larry,
I played with Jacqueline Furman in the San Francisco soul band “Cold Blood with Lydia Pense” in 1968. Albert King wanted to hire her to go on the road with him, but she stayed with “Cold Blood” preferring a horn oriented soul band to traditional blues. We then played together in a band called “Pure Love and Pleasure” with, guitarist, Bob Bohanna from the San Francisco band “Mourning Glory” and John Allair, keyboardist. (John currently plays with Van Morrison at the ripe old age of 83!) Jacque then played with New Miss Alice Stone Ladies Society Orchestra, Holly Near, and Cris Williamson, and was eventually seen by Alex Hassilev of the Limeliters. He hired her for Glen Yarborough and the Limeliters, but she was never quite as happy as she was playing funk and soul. Hope you’ll find this of interest. By the way, do you happen to know what High School the Wild Prophets went to?
Andy Gielbelstein
Scott Erickson
Roy Aasen is the correct spelling.
Also, Ron Arends played keys for a while in the band.
Ken Wood played on the record, not Mark Miller. Not sure why Mark signed the record.
Thanks for the corrections and additions Larry, I’ve made changes to the article above.
Ken Wood was the guitarist on the record.
Hey Chris, Wanted you to know I appreciate you adding the info on the Wild Prophets. I’m in the process of updating Garage to include the additional info. Larry had not mentioned the 45 when I interviewed him so that was a cool thing to learn about. The website is still active at: BooneRock.net
Hope all is well.
Ted was my older brother. I wonder if any copies still exist?
What happened to Jacque Furman?
Ted was my father, and I found this website after searching The Wild Prophets. Thanks for taking the time to put this together!!!
Can we make a spelling correction though? Change Ted Noonamaker to Ted Nunemaker? 🙂
Also, do you know if there are copies available of the recorded songs? Thanks!