Randy Fuller

Randy Fuller Show Town PS It's Love Come What May

Randy Fuller Show Town 45 1,000 Miles Into Space

Randy Fuller Show Town 45 Revelation

Randy Fuller with New Buffalo Springfield, Spring 1969. Clockwise from top: Dewey Martin, Bob Jones, David Price and Randy Fuller
Randy Fuller with New Buffalo Springfield, Spring 1969. Clockwise from top: Dewey Martin, Bob Jones, David Price and Randy Fuller
When Texan rock legend Bobby Fuller was found dead in his car on 18 July 1966 in suspicious circumstances, those nearest and dearest were devastated, not least his younger brother Randy, who had also been bass player in the aptly named, Bobby Fuller Four. From the early 1960s up until his brother’s untimely, and yet to be solved, death, Randy Fuller was Bobby’s closest collaborator and during those frenetic years of recording and touring witness to his brother’s extensive talents as a singer/songwriter, guitarist and skilled engineer and producer.

In the first few months following his brother’s death, Randy Fuller came close to jacking in the music career he had so cherished when Bobby was alive. “I came home to El Paso with no idea what I was going to do with my life,” says Fuller. “I felt like I was going to go insane because my mother was having such a hard time over Bobby.”

Later that autumn, however, Randy received a phone call from Bobby Fuller Four member DeWayne Bryant (aka Quirico) and Bob Keane, who ran Del-Fi studios, to return to Hollywood and form a new group with some musicians that Quirico had been playing gigs with in the intervening months. “Keane said that if I came back he could get us back in PJ’s nightclub,” remembers Fuller.

To stimulate some local interest in the new group, prior to it playing live, Keane financed some studio time to record a handful of tracks in late 1966. For these recordings, the studio band consisted of Randy Fuller on bass, rhythm guitar and lead vocals; DeWayne Quirico on drums; Howard Steele on bass; and Mike Ciccarelli on lead guitar and vocals.

“The musicians on all the songs were from El Paso, Texas but [they] never stayed together long enough to promote them [the singles],” explains Fuller, who points out the recordings were all laid down in the final days of the studio’s existence.

The first single to be released (under Randy’s name only on the obscure Mustang label) was the catchy “It’s Love, Come What May”. “[That] is the original track from Bobby Fuller Four recorded at Del-Fi,” says Fuller. “Bob Keane and I recorded my voice on a separate track and remixed it a little louder than Bobby’s in the final mix.”

An infectious folk-rocker, “It’s Love, Come What May” should have been a smash hit but mysteriously did not attract many sales. Unperturbed, Keane prepared a second single coupling Randy Fuller and Johnny Daniel’s “The Things You Do” with another collaboration “Now She’s Gone” but it appears the Mustang release never hit the shops.

Interestingly, Randy Fuller reveals that two of soul music’s heavy weights had a hand in the creative process. “[On] ‘The Things You Do’, Barry White and Dionne Warwick threw in a line or two.”

Events meanwhile were about to take a dark turn. When Del-Fi was forced to close in early 1967, Keane, unbeknown to Fuller, began to issue the recordings through the Show Town and President labels. “Del-Fi went under and Bob kept the masters in a vault,” explains Fuller. “I [later] found out he had been selling these [singles] over in the UK for years!”

Perhaps the most fascinating of these releases are the trippy, Buffalo Springfield-influenced, “1,000 Miles Into Space”, which features some tasty lead guitar work and superb lead vocal by Randy, and “Revelation”.

While Keane was busy releasing the tracks on the sly, Fuller and Quirico began working back at PJ’s joined by guitarists Jim Fonseca and Jimmy Smith. The line up played at the club for nearly two years and according to Fuller, “We probably would have had a hit or two, but as usual ego destroyed the band.”

Left without a band, Randy hooked up with Dewey Martin’s New Buffalo Springfield in February 1969 and toured with this group for the best part of the year, before it morphed into Blue Mountain Eagle. Fuller’s new band recorded an excellent album for Atco Records in 1970 with the bass player’s “Sweet Mama” providing one of the highlights.

Unlike Blue Mountain Eagle’s album, which has been released on CD, very few of The Randy Fuller Four recordings have reached a wider audience via compilation CDs. Perhaps now is the time to rediscover the magic of this material, especially “It’s Love, Come What May” and “1,000 Miles In Space”.

Blue Mountain Eagle, December 1969, Randy Fuller second from left.
Blue Mountain Eagle, December 1969, Randy Fuller second from left.

Solo releases:

It’s Love, Come What May (actually Bobby Fuller Four with Randy’s overdubbed vocals) c/w Wolfman (Mustang 3020) 1966 US (credited to Randy Fuller)
The Things You Do c/w Now She’s Gone (Mustang 3023) 1966 US (credited to Randy Fuller Four but not released)
It’s Love, Come What May c/w Revelation (Show Town 466) 1967 US (credited to Randy Fuller)
It’s Love, Come What May c/w The Things You Do (President PT 111) 1967 UK (credited to Randy Fuller)
1,000 Miles In Space c/w 1,000 Miles In Space (Show Town 482) 1967 US (credited to Randy Fuller)

Many thanks to Randy Fuller for his invaluable input into this story.

Transfer and scan of “1,000 Miles in Space” courtesy of Colin (Expo67), transfer of “Revelation” courtesy of Bård H., scan courtesy of Freddy Fortune. “Wolfman” scan and transfer courtesy of JP Coumans.

© Copyright, Nick Warburton, April 2009, All Rights Reserved

Visit: www.nickwarburton.com

The great b-side "Wolfman", a Bobby Fuller Four recording originally released as by the Shindigs on the flip of "Thunder Reef", Mustang 3003 and used again on Randy Fuller's first 45.
The great b-side “Wolfman”, a Bobby Fuller Four recording originally released as by the Shindigs on the flip of “Thunder Reef”, Mustang 3003 and used again on Randy Fuller’s first 45.

17 thoughts on “Randy Fuller”

  1. Fuller was murdered by the notoriously corrupt LAPD for reasons amounting to no more than their brief was to “kill rock stars”
    and get away with it.
    Randy Fuller was actually threatened by the same when trying to find out why the gasoline bottle was devoid of Bobby’s fingerprints by being told “you’ll keep quiet if you know what’s good for you”
    Their 2nd attempt to murder a rock star came unstuck when JIMMIE RODGERS survived.
    Today’s police won’t reopen the case because they were satisfied with the coroner’s report-the coroner had been “bought off” at the time with a years supply of cocaine.
    Thus a human life-and an important one as well- was worth no more than what went up some bastard’s nose.

    1. I believe that the police had a big hand in the cover up. But I don’t believe they did it. I was on stage at “It’s Boss” when management told us that Bobby was dead. I think that there were people around there that knew what happened. Those folks may be gone now, so it’s unlikely the case will ever be solved.

      Bobby was a real talent. I still listen to their music.

  2. I wrote a story about growing up in El Paso and seeing the Fuller brothers and others practicing their classic 60’s music in their garage. Another El Paso person, Sterling Brooks, whose family knew the Fullers, commented on my article. Both Dads worked at El Paso Natural Gas Co. There are still a lot of people who remember! We love you, Randy

    The article is here:
    http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1625137/classic_60s_rock_n_roll_i_was_supposed.html?cat=33

  3. I grew up on Rutherglen Street in El Paso, just a few blocks from where the Fuller’s lived on Album Street. My father and Lawson Fuller (father of Bobby and Randy) both worked for EPNG. My dad was a pilot for EPNG and if memory serves me correct, Mr. Fuller worked in the accounting or purchasing department. Mrs. Fuller (Loraine) was a friend of my mother and Loraine came to our house for afternoon coffee.

    In the early 60s (before Bobby and Randy exploded in the music scene) I made a few visits to their home. Inside there garage, they had a squirl they kept in a cage. The critter bit my finger (hurt like the devil) and I remember that one incident more so that guitars and instruments in the garage.

    Bobby once raced in a soap box derby in El Paso on the northeast side of town off of Dyer Street (where the actually had streets that had a good grade for these gravity racers. Bobby didn’t win his class and weeks later gave me his blue, plastic helmet he wore in that race. I suspect by then, he was becoming more interested in music and the soap-box racer probably started collecting dust.

    I recall the Fuller house was on the north side of Album Street and faced south. Album street runs east and west. I know the garage was on the west end of the house and I think their backyard had a slight slope.

    I’m wondering what ever became of Loraine and Lawson and Randy (for some reason I recall people calling Randy, “Randal.”

    I can be reached through my website, http://www.HighAboveTexas.com, if anyone has info.

    Thanks
    Sterling

  4. For me, too! In the early 70’s my mom took my sister and me to The Dodge Saloon in Norwalk, California, so my sister could compete in the Tuesday night talent contest. Randy played there with Billy Webb and DeWayne Bryant (Quirico) and I thought he was, well, gorgeous. Only vaguely do I remember a conversation I had with him about Bobby Fuller being his brother. Course, I was only about 13 or 14 years old at the time, so it didn’t immediately mean anything to me. Fun times, good memories.

  5. My dad Jack Reeves, opened Dodge Saloon and worked there I want to say 6 nights a week for a couple of years and then he quit to do some special appearances in Alaska and Hawaii instead of just a set down gig. I don’t know if you were ever there then. I do believe Billy Webb played my dads off night there on my dads day off. Later on I think Bootleg County started playing there.

  6. i know I am related to Bobby and Randy Fuller. My Grandmother was Minnie Fuller Burchfield. I never rally knew them, and I never knew about the whole story. I would love to know if Randy is still alive When Mom was a child she lived in Tennessee. I believe my uncles met both of the brothers. Their names are Jim, Spanky, Bill, Danny, and Smokey Burchfield.ju I know they shared their love of music. I hope you can help.

  7. I talked to Randy about 5-6 years ago. He was still making music in Southern California at that time.

  8. Hi Cole, My Dad played guitar with your Dad back in the day… one of his best memories 🙂 Was Dodge Saloon on Pioneer Blvd?

    1. I sent my book to Randy in California and he very nicely signed it and sent it back to me. You can look him up in on line white pages. I loved their music so much.

  9. Randy – If you are still here among the living – Please get in touch with me! I am still kicking and would like to hear from you. Damn, it has been a long time and my remembrances are still kicking around about our days a Allen Military Academy. You probably know that they turned that school into a State Prison.
    I now have a little 2 acre place outside of Sealy, Texas. Don’t owe much but we get by OK, My rental places around Houston and in Mississippi provide me with enough to get by on. I hope you are doing as well or even better.
    Drop me a line if you get this message – Robert Gross
    Also known as Bobby Gross to old friends.
    Hope to hear from you!

  10. Would anyone know what was the Country Club on the East Coast that Randy lit an M80 after a show and blew up the club’s porch?

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