
The Misfits, 1966.
| The Lost and Found came out of Houston, and originally called themselves the Misfits. Members were Peter Black guitar and vocals, Jimmy Frost lead guitar and James Harrell on bass. John Kearney of the Spades played with them for a short while after the Spades had split up in 1965, and they went through a succession of drummers, first Norman Blythe, then Mickey Bishop, and finally Steve Webb.
The Misfits played shows at Love Street and La Maison, where, according to Jimmy Frost, they met the 13th Floor Elevators for the first time. The Elevators would have a huge influence on their sound, and their friendship with Roky Erickson and Stacy Sutherland would eventually lead to an introduction to the International Artists label. At the start of a six month residency at Scott Holtzman's Living Eye in Houston, they became the first Texas group busted for LSD. Jimmy Frost remembers Peter, James and Mickey facing charges, and that one of the reasons the band signed with International Artists was because its owners, Bill Dillard and Noble Ginther, were lawyers who could help them with the bust. Supposedly the charges were dismissed because the drug was not yet illegal! However, the notoriety of the bust led to the name change to the Lost and Found, appropriate in any case for the increasingly psychedelic direction of their music. George Banks, a friend of the band who took over management of the Misfits, remembers this time differently:
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() La Maison, second location, 319 McGowan at Bagby |
![]() The Lost and Found at the Living Eye |
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Their first 45, Everybody's Here / Forever Lasting Plastic Words shows the lighter side of their repertoire, and the band complained that IA actually toned down their sound. The engineer was Frank Davis who worked with other IA bands, like the Elevators and the Golden Dawn. Though at times sounding like the Elevators, their LP has many good songs such as 'I Realize' and 'There Would Be No Doubt'. George Banks did the cover art for their LP as well as the covers of the Elevators' Easter Everywhere and Golden Dawn's Power Plant. By the time they recorded their second and last 45 in '68, their sound was totally original and psychedelic. Professor Black is supposed to be about Pete Black, it was written by him, James Harrell and George Banks. When Will You Come Through is just as good, with searing guitar work. There were other songs recorded around this time for a second lp, but before that could come to pass, International Artists booked them on a tour of Texas, Louisiana and Alabama with the Music Machine. Jimmy Frost: "When we got back International Artists said we owed them money and that just finished the band off, we didn't see any money from the tour, and we were all so broke that the band just split up." A demo tape of two songs exists. '25 MPH' showed up on Epitaph for a Legend, the other, 'Girl with a One Track Mind' I haven't heard. Still under contract from IA, Pete Black and James Harrell reluctantly played about a dozen dates with Stacy Sutherland and Danny Thomas in a ersatz version of the 13th Floor Elevators after the release of the fake "Live" album in July of '68. Pete Black joined Endle St. Cloud. Steve Webb played drums with Potter St. Cloud and Euphoria. He passed away a few years ago. George Banks continues on the connections between the Lost and Found, Endle St. Cloud and Euphoria:
This 45 was produced by Fred Carroll, an interesting figure in Texas garage history. Fred Carroll (real name Fred Courtney, Jr) founded International Artists in October of '65, but sold it soon after, then returned as a producer after Lelan Rogers left. He also started the Solar label and managed the Coastliners. He passed away in late June this year. Lost and Found - Professor Black Sources include: Interview with Jimmy Frost in Not Fade Away #4, Paul Drummond's Eye Mind, and my correspondence with George Banks. Photos by their manager, Gary Iwers. Misfits business card from the collection of Andrew Brown. La Maison photo courtesy of Nancy Kuehl. |
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"When Will You Come Through"
"When Will You Come Through" is easily one of my all-time favorite garage-punk-psych 45s. That guitar work is really loud and searing, as you say it. I like it much better than the other one they did. This one's a real classic! Just thought I'd say so.