| The Oxfords came out of Louisville, Kentucky in 1964, led by drummer Jim Guest. At some point they were calling themselves the Rugbys, as a photo has turned up that features the early Oxfords lineup with Guest, but all in rugby shirts. That band continued as the Rugbys, but without Guest. Eventually Guest formed a whole new Oxfords band with members of the Spectres: Jay Petach on guitar and keyboards, Bill Tullis and Danny Marshall on guitars and Bill Turner on bass, and continued as the Oxfords.
Marshall and Turner left before this 45, to be replaced by Ronnie Brooks and Ray Barrickman on guitar and bass respectively. This lineup recorded the excellent song Time and Place, written by Tullis, Petach and Guest. The a-side was a cover of the Bacharach/David song There's Always Something There to Remind Me. Buzz Cason produced the record - he also produced the Us Four and ran the Rising Sons label. It was originally released on the Our Bag label in December, 1966, and soon picked up for national release by Mala. Their next 45 showed the band going in a totally different direction, making light pop influenced by psychedelia. Sun Flower Sun features flute and sitar while Chicago Woman is slightly bluesy, but the concessions to trends of the day didn't result in any chart action. Jim Guest left while the band continued in the pop vein, releasing an lp Flying Up Through the Sky with Jill DeMarco on vocals in 1970, and a novelty song Come On Back to Beer on the Paula label before breaking up in 1972. |
![]() ![]() |
Jerry Lister sent this history of the band written by Jay Petach:
|
|
The Oxfords
Jim Guest drummer
These songs are great! The drummer Jim Guest had a vision way ahead of his time....no telling how far they could have gone!
Jimmy Guest
Jimmy Guest was my first love and boyfriend. We actually became engaged at the ripe old age of 17. The club where the group opened for Frank Zappa was called Kaliedoscope and was owned by my mother, Thelma and Jimmy's mother. It was the first "undergroiund" nightclub in Louisville. I had the first smoke shop in the lower level of the club and Jimmy's brother Randy had a coffee house. My Mom moved our family to L.A. and we opened our own club on Sunset Blvd. Jimmy came out to Cali with a band and played one night at The Whisky on Sunset in Hollywood. My Mom would not let me go. I would very much like to make contact with Jimmy. If anyone knows how to contact him, my contact info is dparks@starpr.net. I am a publicist, promoter and booking agent now in the L.A. Orange County area of California.
Have you tried to contact
Have you tried to contact Marvin Maxwell at Mom's Music in Jefferson In? He may have keep up with Jimmy?
Jimmy Guest
Debbie
Jimmy is my Uncle- I just spent Thanksgiving with him, and he is here in Colorado visiting with my mom-his sister. We just got done talking about you trading an outfit with her, and how cool it made her feel :)
You can contact me if you like
stefthomas25@yahoo.com
Kaledoscope
I was the lead singer in The New York Free Public Library with Donnie Hale on drums and John Carby on lead guitar. We loved playing there as the head shop atmosphere really added to the experience. Yours was the only venue to provide a true psychodellic light show as we played. John still plays in Louisville with the King bees at Stevie Rays. I live in Athens Tn and sing karaoke on weekends.
The Original Oxfords and the revised version
I was in some "little known" garage band when these guys were packing them in. The could cover Beatle tunes like no other. Speaking from a musician's standpoint the group was never the same after the change. There was a reason for the breakup and it was a sad situation, but it's not for me to reveal that. If Steve McNicol cares to tell the story that's fine.
I had an opportunity to join help form a brand new four piece group in 1967. One fairly known guitar player and three unknowns (including myself). The reason I bring this up is at that time the Oxfords were working for the Jony Agency (Gene & Vi Snyder). Our guitar player had worked for them before so were were going to audition for the agency during the Oxfords breaks at a local teen club.
We'd been rehearsing for several months to get everything tight. I remembered that we had no extra money for clothing so we all wore jeans and yellow short sleeved sweatshirts with the name of the ban written in black magic marker on the front (real classy).
I remember when we stepped up on stage for that first 15 minute set. I was so nervous and we could hear some of the crowd laughing at the way we dressed. Anyway we played about 5 numbers and the crowd went wild.
The Oxfords were great at what they did, but this crowd wanted to dance and they didn't play a lot of top 40 ance music. Needless to say we signed with the agency and wound up on the circuit.
We thanked the Oxfords for allowing us to share the stage with them and apologized for all the commotion. They were great guys and understood because they had all been there before.
Anyway, if there are any of them out there, thanks again guys. It was a pleasure performing with you.
Duke Freeman
PS: Oh yeah. The name of our band . . . . . . . US FOUR.
Jim Guest & Oxfords
Guest was not a big fellow, BUT was maybe the BEST drummer/vocals I have ever seen. I followed the Oxfords thru their stages. First you had the "hey we all have on matching coats" stage. Great sound, possible hit.
Then came "dammit we are Cool" stage. They would book "dances" and plays Zappa. And it would be great, but the dancers had some trouble.
Then, Guest was gone, and Jay pretty much lead from there. The man was a musicial wizard, he could do and often did everything. Then word came about the LP "Flying Up Thru the Sky". I got to hear the LP LIVE at a college in Prestonsburg KY. It was fantastic. The LP though lacked the spark or live mix feel and while was very good,
just not what it had been live. As for Jill DeMarco, God what a voice and she was beautiful. Heard she ended up on the left coast.
If KY ever had a group with the originality and Petach, they should have made it.
Jim Guest & Oxfords
Jim was a great drummer and Petach was one of a kind. They sure didn't sound like anything that came out of Louisville, perhaps New York or California. Even though they were extremely talented, by 60's standards they weren't commercial enough. The music scene in the 60's demanded commercialism. Even original material wasn't enough. The Rugby's were a prime example of that. "You, I" was very commercial while the follow-up "Wendegahl the Warlock" wasn't and it tanked. Personally I loved it.
It's really too bad because there was a ton of talent not only in this group, but in many groups from Louisville.
Oxfords
Jay, I enjoyed reading your history of the Oxfords. I was at Westport
and was an aquaintance of Ronnie Brooks during the early Oxford days.
You played at many school functions including the Breakfast of my prom.
The Oxfords were the best band in Louisville at the time, I was in
the lesser known Eloyds, lots of bands playing in those years. Your
version of "Always Something There to Remind Me" is still one of my
favorite songs and I believe the best rendition of that song. I'm
glad you mention that Ronnie sang lead after Barrickman departure because
I remember him singing lead and playing bass and I know Barrickman
went to the Oxfords but I hadn't put the sequence together. I remember
you performing "She Loves You" in German at German club meeting
at Westport. My best memory of you as a musician was at one of the many
performances by the Oxfords in Westports Gym....the band took a break
and you sat down at the organ and did some solo dylan. It was great.
You were a great musician and I hope you still are successful in
all ventures. Thank you, Kent Guy Westport class of 67



This is ace. Top notch song.
This is ace. Top notch song. Up beat, screaming guitars...dizzy vocals.