The Malemen

 The Malemen from left: Bill Avera, Ed Bacon, Larry Bacon and Randy Bushee
The Malemen from left: Bill Avera, Ed Bacon, Larry Bacon and Randy Bushee

Updated April 2011

Malemen Pine Hills 45 My Little GirlI really like this 45. “My Little Girl” has rockabilly-style guitar with a light touch and drumming to match. “She Means All the World to Me” is the ballad side, and a great one if you can dig the slowness.

The T4KM- prefix in the coding signifies a RCA custom press from the first half of 1966. This predates other 45s I know of on the Pine Hills (PH) label. Don Gore ran the studio in the Pine Hills neighborhood, just west of downtown Orlando. H.F. Gore may have been the same person, or a relative, but he’s credited with producing this 45. H.F. Gore also had a country 45 backed by the Undertakers.

Jeff Lemlich’s Savage Lost mentions that the Malemen backed Sue Pennie on her Dunmar 45 “Ghost Town” / “He’s Everything I Need”, which I’ve never heard or seen. They also covered “Norweigan Wood” for the rare Bee Jay Booking Agency LP 12 Groovy Hits, 12 Florida Bands on Tener.

I couldn’t find much concrete info on the Malemen until guitarist Randy Bushee contacted me.

I played in a couple of good bands in Orlando during the ’60s … The Malemen and Oxford Blue. Also the Brass Opera at the Citizen’s Nation Bank building, downtown Orlando.

The Malemen during my time was Bill Avera on guitar, Ed Bacon on bass, his brother Larry Bacon on drums. Larry and I would switch off sets, I’d play drums a set while Larry played guitar, then we’d switch off. We played Beatles, James Brown tunes and I did a few ballads too.

I just met up with the drummer from Covington Tower (another group from Orlando). He gave me an old newspaper clipping about Don Gore. It has a picture of The Malemen while I was in the band. I don’t remember recording but the picture is of me and them and the story is about his recording place in Pine Hills. I was with the Malemen before or after those recordings.

Oxford Blue was a “soul band,” we had a horn section. We did several of the Blood Sweat & Tears hits as well as the James Brown type of stuff. I was pleased to see that old Orlando Youth Center Schedule with our name on it [see the State of Mind entry].

I wrote “Alice in Wonderland” in 12th grade. It was about my then girlfriend, Alice. I sang it at my 12th grade talent show, I won it too. The other side of the record was a cover of Carole King’s “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow”. We were a band with horn section and put our own touch to it. I did a lot of work with Eric Schaubacher at BeeJay in Oxford Blue. Eric went on to a successful career. You can see him at Winter Wood studios in the Ozark mountains where he has a resort style recording studio with many gold records hanging on the wall. Oxford Blue got together a while back for a reunion.

Larry is a retired sheriff now playing music with Patty Mann in Colorado. Eddie, Larry’s brother is a retired US Marine. Not sure what Bill is doing yet. I am trying to find those guys. My emails to them keep bouncing so they must have new ones. I just moved back to FL after being gone almost 30 years. I am still pretty active playing in bands even at the young age of 62!

Randy Bushee

Randy sent this profile of Don Gore and the Malemen from, I believe, the Orlando Evening-Star. It discusses the start of Pine Hills Recording in detail, saying that Don Gore put over $12,000 into buying Ampex decks, a Gates mixing board, a Fisher Eco-Reverb and a Rekokut dub cutter. He started the studio as much out of interest in recording engineering as in turning a profit. “‘Kids used to use my place to practice,’ he said. ‘There wasn’t any place in the area to record.'” Pine Hills had only a few small hits around the Orlando area, but Don’s legacy will include all the good music he recorded.

The article also mentions upcoming releases – a country disc by Jerry Morris & John Lindy’s String Band and a rock group called the Thunders. I’m not sure if these ever saw release. Jeff Lemlich tells me “The Thunders were probably the Fabulous Thunder. They were from the Orlando area, and were booked by Bee Jay (the guys behind the Tener label). The only 45 of theirs I know is ‘So Hold Me Tight’/’Jealous Of You’, on Tight 3606 from January 1966”.

Profile of Pine HIlls Recording Company's Don Gore and the Malemen, Orlando Evening-Star
Profile of Pine HIlls Recording Company’s Don Gore and the Malemen, Orlando Evening-Star

11 thoughts on “The Malemen”

  1. Does anyone know what happened to Ken Jones he also recorded at the Pine Hill Studio’s with Don Gore on his CD he went by the stage name “Ken Gore” anyone??

    1. I remember Ken Jones. I have one 45 on Round-Up Records, True Love will move Mountains/Quarreling. He moved to California with a friend.

  2. I am living in Melbourne FL, I am retired from Harris Corporation. We had a local band reunion at the Orlando Youth Center, on April 13, 2002. Jerry Salter, Perry Strazis, Steve Hoeltke, Bobby Fuller of the Flaming Tempos was there along Big Dave and the Come Ons, it was a great time. All the members of the Malemen were there except for Randy Bushee, who was living in California at the time. I sold all my band equipment, about three years ago. I’m flying control line model airplanes at the Nationals Championship. That keeps me busy full-time on top of raising my granddaughter by myself full time.

    1. The Recording studio also was a building in front of a property and another building was a repair shop. My Dad would operate both businesses alternating between the two. They were not the same building. This is now a vacant lot where the 1st west exit of the east west expressway was before it was extended. To the right facing away from HW 50 is a 2 story building I believe part of a church but was a restaurant back then. Groups also include the Lovin’ Spoonful- summer in the city, Buddy McKnight and the Soul Brothers- The Undertakers and others. He said it was difficult getting payed by record companies. The State using eminent domain laws forced the sale of a block of property below market value.

  3. I just uploaded to youtube a radio interview done in Orlando by The Mailmen back in 65 recorded by my dad back then on reel tape. Just search The mailmen or Pine hills recording studio. My dad really just enjoyed writing and making music and being involved with music and did this at night while operating his own business during the day. He never made any money just did it for the music.

  4. I have Sue Pennie – Ghost town and some others I plan to upload to youtube. This is from a reel tape so you will be able to hear it. I digitized about 40 reel tapes most short, the rest was lost to fire by a young person in a fit of rage. My dad got his revenge by writing a song about him. He is proud to have gotten thru life and in spite of being provoked never killing them.

  5. This is Ironic. My name is Wally Geller and I was the lead singer for The Malemen from Fort Wayne, Indiana 1965 to 1966. We were a high school garage band. We played all over the Fort Wayne area. We ended up the house band for a show like Where The Action Is on Channel 21 WPTA every Saturday. We were on every week and we had guest local bands and singers. It was alot of fun especially being on TV. The band had to break up when or lead guitar player got drafted. I did not know there was another band in Orlando, Florida with the same name as ours.

  6. Not sure if this is the best place to post but does anyone know anything about a country artist named Johnny Moore that recorded on the Pine Hills label? He released a single titled “Your Kind of Fun” but the flip side “Captain Astronaut” is a great novelty country bopper. I discovered the record years ago at an antique store and its really what sparked my interest in record collecting. I would love to know what happened to the guy and appreciate any info. Thanks!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.