Category Archives: Dallas

The Knights – from upstate New York to Dallas, Texas

Bob Sanders ran the Knight and Spectra labels, among others, during the mid-’60s in Dallas, Texas.

The Knights 45 was completely unfamiliar to me until Brian Kirschenbaum wrote to me with the scan and transfers of the record. He was surprised to find a Texas 45 had made its way to upstate New York. It’s an interesting single, very much influenced by the British sounds of the time in changes and feel, especially on “I Know It Now”. Bob Kissell wrote both sides.

I had no information on the group until a couple comments were left (see below). As it turns out, this band made an unlikely journey from upstate New York to work in Dallas, Texas. In Watertown they were known as Dick and the Knights.

I’ll repeat most of Dick Kissell’s comment here:

The group consisted of Chuck Martuzas, bass (now deceased); Bob Lawlor, drums; Bob Kissell, lead guitar; and myself on rhythm guitar. The vocals were done by Bob and myself.

On a whim, we went to Dallas in the fall of 1964 because we had a friend down there who said he might be able to help us find some local clubs needing bands. We started out at a place called The Haunted House Club then moved on to the Disc-A Go Go and eventually LouAnns. We became house band at LouAnns.

Lewis Lindsey played the organ part on the “Stay” side. A guy named Bill Petty was friends with Lewis Lindsey and was also part owner in the Haunted House club; that’s how we got the recording deal. Only 300 copies were pressed. Later the following year, we became friends with The 5 Americans and played around Dallas for awhile until returning home.

Dick Kissell added in an email to me:

The single “Only You Hold The Answer” was a regional hit for us around 1967. My brother Bob Kissell wrote the melody while I wrote the lyrics. He plays (blues) around the Daytona Florida area in the winter, and then comes home and plays here (Watertown, NY) summers.

The Knights second single, “Only You Hold the Answer” b/w “Walkin’ The Streets” may have been their own production with no involvement from Bob Sanders of Knight Records in Dallas. The labels credit their last name as Kisslle (sic). The single had publishing by Pinent Music, BMI and the band recorded it at Dayson Studio in East Syracuse, NY.

Many thanks to Brian Kirschenbaum for alerting me to the Knights 45 and to retrogirl86 for the info in her comment.

List of bands at the Texas State Fair in Dallas, October 1967

Times-Herald, Oct. ’67 list of bands at the Action Spot

The above clipping was sent to me by Rollie Anderson of Dust, showing close to 60 bands that competed at the October, 1967 Texas State Fair in Dallas. Not all the bands were from Dallas or Fort Worth, though I suspect most of them were.

I think it’s worth listing all these groups to see how many we know anything about – I only know about a handful of these groups. To see photos of the Action Spot stage, see the article on the Mind’s Eye.

If anyone can help with info on any of these, please write to me at chas_kit@hotmail.com or leave a comment below.

Blue Green
Blue Moon
Brand “X”
– There was a Brand X from El Paso that featured Ken Prichard of Danny & the Counts. However, Ken told me they didn’t play this event.
The Caretakers
The Coachmen
– likely the group from Ft. Worth who recorded the instrumental “Splash Day” for Spotlight, though it could be the Coachmen from New Mexico who recorded “Grapes of Wrath” / “Summer Should Bring Happiness” for Sea-Ell. The Coachmen from Abilene had broken up by this time.
The Colonists
Dust
– see Rollie’s article on this site.
The Destinations
Don and the Demons
– according to a comment below, Don & the Demons came from McKinney, TX and recorded a version of “Walking the Dog” on the the Gibson label which I haven’t heard.
Execution of Time
Joey Farr and the Orbitors
– As Tommy “Rockin’ Bones” points out in a comment below, this is probably a later band of Little Joey Farr who had releases on the Houston label Kangaroo and the Colorado label Band Box.
5th Amendment
John Foster’s Group
The Gentle Rebellion
The Gents
– from either Dallas/Ft. Worth or as far away as Abilene – 45 on E.V.E. label in 1966
Gingerbread Blues
The Henchmen
– definitely not this New Mexico band
The Herd
Hillsboro Group
HMS Blues
Hunters of Time
Images
The Jazz Informers
The Kaces
Kempy and the Guardians
– Oak Cliff group named after vocalist Gary “Kempy” Rawlings, they recorded the legendary “Love For A Price” / “Never”. Larry Samford may have been another member
The Kicks
Killeen String Band
The Kolumn
– from Lancaster, TX – see comment below
Lunatic Fringe
Main Street Prophets
The Merchants
Mind’s Eye
– not listed in the article but see photos of the band onstage at the Action Spot
New World
Night Creepers
Noise Inc.
The Off Beats
– There was an Offbeats who cut “Drenda Ann” / “Chaos” (both by John Brodie) on the Cherokee label from Arlington, but I don’t know the year for that. Another possibility is Jimmy & the Offbeats who recorded for Bofuz. Less likely is James De Fore, a San Antonio artist who cut 45s as Jimmy Dee & the Off Beats in the late ’50s.
Owsley
The Pagans
– from Carrollton, NW of Dallas, according to a cousin of three of the members
The Playboys Five
Prisoners of Love
The Reasons Why
– possibly the Temple group who recorded the excellent “Don’t Be That Way” for the Sound Track label. John Schwertner went into the Lavender Express.
The Reflections
Reining Daze
Satin and the Soul Men
The Sensations
– see the article on this site.
The Shade – see the article on this site.
Sound in Motion – aka the Sounds in Motion – see Howard and Steve’s comments below.
Don Sperry Quartet
Starlight Group
The Tyme Keepers
The Unclaimed Freight
The Untamed
U.S. Bonds
U.S. Britons
– (U.S. Brittons) Dallas group featuring fifteen-year-old Mike Jones. They cut two original songs “Come On” and “I’ll Show You a Man” that exist on demo acetate as far as I can tell. Both songs were highlights of Green Crystal Ties vol. 3. The band played throughout Dallas, including at the Studio Club. The band included Larry McNeny, Larry Meletio (drums), Herman Drees (guitar), Joe Cree (bass) and Mike Jones (guitar). See below for more info.
Walter Vaughn
The Westminsters
The Young Texans
– likely from Grand Prairie, with Jim Koof (Kopf?), vocals; Dennis Stark, lead guitar; Don Booker, lead and rhythm guitar; Bobby Head, bass; Jerry Head, drums. See this clipping

Larry McNeny wrote to me about the U.S. Britons:

I had heard about that compilation but never heard the record. I started the band with Larry Meletio in Jr. High. Mike Jones was in a band with Joe Cree (Rowe’s little brother) and [both] eventually joined us. Mike was a fluent songwriter. He’d call me several times a week and play me a new song he’d just written for us. He also had a great 442!

Oddly enough I remember that State Fair gig. Also I noticed a pre-US Britons band of mine on a newspaper ad for a show for Jas. K Wilson (a clothing store) where we played with 5 of a Kind, The Galaxies & the Rogues. We were called the Roamers! I honestly don’t know where we came up with these names!

Larry McNeny

Thanks to Mike Markesich for the info on the Gents and for reminding me of the U.S. Britons.

Rollie Anderson – The Early Years of a Rock and Roll Dreamer

Rollie Anderson with Dust at the Broadway Skateland, January 1969
Rollie Anderson with Dust at the Broadway Skateland, January 1969
“Gretsch Chet Atkins, Nehru jacket, striped pants, Beatle boots and cossack hat. All I was lacking was talent.”

The Early Years of a Rock and Roll Dreamer

My name is Rollie Anderson. I was born and raised in Dallas, Texas. Oak Cliff, to be exact. For the first thirteen years of my life I was a typical youngster who occupied himself with riding his bike alongside his pseudo-hoodlum neighborhood pals, cursing the fact that he was woefully inept at playing baseball and contemplating the shrouded mystery of pretty girls. I was also wholly addicted to music. All kinds. I used to sneak into my older sister’s bedroom when she was away and listen to her 45s of Elvis, Fats Domino, Fabian, Chuck Berry, Paul Anka and Neil Sedaka; and I would listen religiously to Russ “The Weird Beard” Knight on KLIF on my cigarette pack-sized transistor radio way past my bedtime but that was the extent of my participation in music. I had no innate talent to play an instrument. I was not a gifted prodigy. I was an avid listener, nothing more.

However, once I witnessed the phenomenon that was The Beatles when they performed on The Ed Sullivan Show in February of 1964 I became an “altered” boy. Up till then I had harbored dreams of becoming popular and making a name for myself as a star athlete or at least as an admired member of the prestigious school cheerleading squad. In the case of the former I was too much of a runt and nowhere near being dedicated enough to bulk up by working out. As for the latter I was just not equipped with the necessary charisma or stunning good looks to qualify. Nonetheless, my inner desire to be envied or, at least, accepted continued on unabated.

As mentioned earlier, I’d always enjoyed playing records on the phonograph and would sometimes imitate guitar players by strapping on a tennis racket or acting as if I was conducting an orchestra by standing on a chair in the middle of the living room with Schubert’s “Unfinished Symphony” blaring through the family’s cheap stereo. My mother’s well-intentioned attempt to lure me into becoming a pianist at the young age of eight years old was a failure simply because my overwhelming preference at that stage of development was to be outside playing with my buddies, not practicing scales. However, she was persistent and the lessons she paid good money for lasted about a year before she finally realized that she might as well have flushed her cash down the toilet. In retrospect she did me a huge favor because it gave me a fundamental understanding of music that I would not have gotten otherwise. (Thanks, Mom)

But, like I said, everything changed after the Fab Four shook their mop-tops and sang “She Loves You” on television. Rock & Roll had me hooked like a marlin and wasn’t about to let go. There, in gorgeous black and white, was my salvation. The answer to my prayers. My ticket to fulfillment. The purpose for my being born. It became crystal clear to me that I was conceived in order to be a famous bass guitarist just like Paul McCartney.

What my parents’ immediate reaction to this epiphany was I can’t recall. If anything, I’m sure they thought it was nothing more than another fad that they would live through in much the same way they lived through my sister’s Elvis infatuation. I would most likely become enthralled and obsessed for a while, then return to the path they had carefully laid out for me that would lead to college and a career, most likely in some respected field like architecture or engineering.

They had no way of knowing that my next sixteen years would be spent in relentless pursuit of my dreams of musical fame and fortune not unlike what I observed happening to the four talented lads from Liverpool.

The fact that I couldn’t put together two notes of music on a guitar that made any sense didn’t present a problem in my mind. I was able to pick out a few chords on the upright piano thanks to the aforementioned lessons but nothing that actually sounded like a song. Nonetheless, I soon found out that other teenage boys like the friends I hung out with at Kiestwood Baptist Church had also been instantly afflicted with the same “Mersey Beat” fever that I had contracted. We realized that we had the necessary four members for a combo and, in quick order, assigned each other the various positions we were going to occupy.

This level of naiveté can only be likened to the time when, in the 5th grade, my school pal Ernie and I decided that we’d wow the crowd by building a weather balloon for a science fair project. Easy. I told him all we had to do was construct a sturdy box out of spare plywood, put a battery inside it, attach it to a balloon and let it fly. The same logic was being employed concerning the start-up of my rock and roll outfit.

Gene Fowler was going to be Ringo Starr. Randy Davis would be our George Harrison. Phil Webster would take the spot held by John Lennon and I was to portray Paul, of course. That being settled, we now had to get our hands on the necessary hardware to perform with. All of us agreed to pester our parents without mercy until we had acquired the musical instruments we needed to fulfill our individual obligations to the group.

I’m not sure what reaction the other three got from their respective parental units to their expensive requests but, in my case, I got a very frosty reception from my mother in particular. Perhaps that is stating it too mildly. Martha Anderson had no intention of supplying her only son with the demonic key that unlocked the gates to Hell. If I was going to procure a bass guitar any time in the current millennium it appeared that my own blood, sweat and tears would have to be put into use to raise the money. Having no income beyond a weekly pittance of an allowance presented a genuine problem, so I proposed a deal they couldn’t refuse. My parents reluctantly agreed to finance a bass and an amplifier if I could miraculously manage to stay on the B honor roll throughout my 9th grade school year. Not being the most astute or brilliant student in town, this was a huge undertaking on my part and my folks reasoned that the upside vastly outweighed the negative aspects of the bargain. Plus, they probably thought I had a better chance at discovering the whereabouts of the lost Ark of the Covenant than bringing home decent grades. But, for me, now there was at least a road, however rocky it may have been, to get to the promise land.

Up to that point in my short life I had never wanted anything as much as I yearned for that guitar. I was serious. I was focused. I figured that if the power of positive thinking could any have any effect on improving my odds then I was on board. I began utilizing that subliminal force by including the phrase “I want a bass” in the daily journal I started making notes in as of January 1965. It appeared in every entry. Every day. Without fail. (I have proof.)

Meanwhile, our imaginary combo had yet to come up with the most important ingredient for success. We had to have a cool name. Our moniker was probably more vital than having instruments or talent. “Rollie and the Roundmen,” “The Roundabouts,” “The Rondells,” “The Landells,” “The Shastas,” “The Shastells,” “The Shondells” and “The Hubbubs” were the impressive front-runners early on. So as not to further worry our deeply concerned parents, we even drew up an agreement between us wherein we solemnly swore on the holy word of God that there would be no profanity, no drinking, no smoking or getting into trouble with the law in our band. We promised zero tolerance for any kind of shenanigans. We wanted to assure our elders that the decent Christian upbringing they had been so diligent in providing for us was not going to be carelessly discarded when we became huge stars cruising around in limousines (a fate we had no doubt whatsoever was destined to happen).

Soon Randy and Phil had inexpensive but functional acoustic guitars, courtesy of their nicer and more accommodating parents. Gene and I were running into a lot more resistance on that front and our inner simmering resentment rose accordingly. I started trying to wear my hair combed down over my forehead but my Dad wouldn’t have anything to do with that radical style and made me comb it to the side like normal young men did. But it was like trying to dam up a river. I didn’t want to be clean-cut anymore. My course was charted to sail into rebellious and unconventional waters and nothing my parents said or did could change that fact. It was the beginning of a long and tenuous war of wills.

After almost giving myself an ulcer for nine drama-filled months I proudly presented my final report card to Ollie and Martha, the one confirming that I had fulfilled my end of the bargain by maintaining a B grade average for my entire high school freshman year. Their amazed silence was deafening. My folks were stunned in their shock because it was definitely a good news/bad news outcome and, considering my underachieving nature, one that they really didn’t think possible this side of heaven.

Following a hasty huddle held in private, they solemnly informed me that, due to unforeseen financial difficulties, they wouldn’t be immediately able to buy the bass guitar and amp as promised. However, they could scrape together enough loose change to afford a nice Silvertone electric guitar from Sears & Roebuck.

At first I was highly indignant and outraged. But once I calmed myself down I had to admit that a standard electric guitar and amplifier was better than nothing and I shouldn’t look a gift horse in the mouth. Mom and Dad said that if I continued to be dissatisfied with the six-string perhaps they could swing a deal to get me a bass guitar come Christmas. I accepted their offer.

On June 21, 1965 I got my first electric guitar, a double pickup black and white Silvertone solid body model that cost $54.95 plus tax. A few days later my Dad took me downtown to The Melody Shop and bought me a low-powered Kent amplifier. Words cannot describe the feeling of accomplishment and excitement that washed over me. I was now equipped to take on the rock and roll universe. All I had to do was learn how to play the dern thing.

I had seen various bands at school dances and sock hops like Seab Meador’s The Gentlemen and Jimmie Vaughan’s The Pendulums, but in that Summer of ‘65 I finally saw my first professional group. The Night Caps of “Wine, Wine, Wine” fame played a concert inside the Lancaster-Kiest shopping center and all of my wide-eyed comrades and would-be band members took in the show. I knew from the first song that I wouldn’t be satisfied until it was me performing up there on the stage.

It soon became apparent that Phil and Randy weren’t nearly as anxious as Gene and I were to get the ball rolling on the combo-that-conquered-the-world thing. Gene’s cousin, Glenn Fowler, already owned an electric guitar and was eager to acquire a bass ASAP. But we weren’t ready to give up on the original foursome just yet. We were nothing if not loyal to the cause.

I had started hanging out a lot more with another school and church-mate, Gene Banks, who also had a guitar and amp. Not only was his equipment vastly superior to mine (a red Gibson guitar and a Fender amp), Banks could really play! He taught me more than any professional guitar teacher could have in half the time and for a price that couldn’t be beat. Free. (All the guys I knew who paid for formal lessons were being taught useless old folk songs and campfire sing-along ditties so I never had the desire to go that route. I was only interested in learning the rock and roll tunes I heard on the radio.) I picked up loads of clues and pointers by watching Gene play and by observing guitarists like Ray Davies and Keith Richards on TV shows like “Shindig” and “Hullabaloo.” The Mel Bay chord book I purchased at Watkins’ music store became my bible and I learned how to make bar chords by studying the picture of David Crosby on the back of the first Byrds album.

Before you could say Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tish, Gene Banks was a member of our fledgling band, replacing Randy Davis (who had incredibly managed to lose interest in being an adored rock star). Banks’ father had been crippled for some time and he invited his son’s new combo to perform for his Wheelchair Bowler’s Association Convention at the Bronco Bowl. Keep in mind, this was before Gene Fowler even had a set of drums to flail away on. Yet a job was a job and we weren’t about to let the opportunity pass us by just because we weren’t ready for it. I figured the Lord would provide.

When the day of the much-anticipated gig finally arrived on September 19th Fowler still didn’t have his drums yet (so much for a heavenly hand) so Gene Banks and I enlisted the untested services of our friend and classmate Mike Stephens to play his dinky snare and high-hat set behind us. We only performed three songs in the small meeting room but the young girls who crowded their way into the doors and made a noisy fuss over us gave us boatloads of confidence. (In my mind, the whole thing was working as advertised: Play music, meet girls.) We were so ecstatic with the response that we half expected a lucrative record deal to be coming our way any day. It also marked the only time in my life where I was the lead (and only) vocalist.

But you can’t keep a good man down. Gene Banks was so talented on guitar that he was constantly being recruited by several other more promising Oak Cliff bands and couldn’t fully commit to just being in our little makeshift group. Out of sheer earnestness and compassion he continued to show up from time to time and practice with us but we knew he was too much in demand to wait for us to catch up to his level of proficiency. We were astute enough to realize that we shouldn’t count on him being around in the long run.

Our church buddy and fellow dreamer Phil Webster got wise and fell to the wayside, too, and by March of 1966 our struggling combo consisted of Gene and Glenn Fowler and myself. Gene had finally gotten his sparkling red trap set of drums and was taking lessons at McCord’s Music shop by then. He was a quick learner and it didn’t take long for us to see that he had a real flair for laying down a hard, steady beat without losing the tempo. In later years I would discover that many drummers were flashier than Gene but none were any better at keeping time and driving the band forward. And, in the final analysis, that’s more important than anything else. A band is only as good as its drummer.

The 3rd Generation practicing in my living room, April 23, 1966 - me and the Fowler cousins, Glenn and Gene.
The 3rd Generation practicing in my living room, April 23, 1966 – me and the Fowler cousins, Glenn and Gene. Notice that despite barely being able to play guitar myself, I’m busy telling them what to do. Bossy, huh?

We were still searching for a name, considering catchy jewels like “This Little Bunch,” “The Funatics” and “The V.I.P’s.” Each one would have its day in the sun until what we considered to be a better one popped into our heads. We entered and lost the talent show at Glenn’s high school in DeSoto but that setback just made us more determined to do better next time. (It wasn’t our fault that the stuck-up judges were tone deaf and unfairly-biased idiots!) It was at this juncture that we decided “The Third Generation” would be the set-firmly-in-stone name of our band. It didn’t mean anything, it just sounded good to us.

That Spring of ‘66 I got my first real job as a walking trash scooper at the amusement park Six Flags Over Texas, laboring for the steep wage of $1.15 per hour. It was humbling, tiring and hot work but the income allowed me to save up and purchase a Fender Deluxe amplifier, a definite improvement over the puny little Kent that couldn’t be heard in the next room of a cheap motel. At first it was exciting to be employed at an amusement park but the thrill was short-lived and eventually I got weary of dealing with management’s constant nit-picky criticisms and demands for me to work double shifts. I got fired late in July for goofing off on the job (my crime was sitting down for a brief rest on a 100-degree day) but I think my Mom and Dad were much more upset about it than I was. The whole experience left me convinced that working for someone else sucked raw eggs.

The band’s scarce bookings consisted mainly of playing for private living room and garage parties, Jaycee fairs and community-center dances. We were fortunate if we gigged twice a month and luckier still to make $5 per man when we did. We struggled along with me trading singing chores with Glenn until Gene met a guy named Jim Dawson (who said he could sing) and invited him to come to a practice. It was obvious from the first note that he could sing circles around Glenn and me so, on August 5th, Jim joined the group. We were back to a quartet.

My first “real” band, The Com'n Generation, in my living room after playing for my sister's party on August 13, 1966. Gene Fowler, Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Gene Banks and Rollie Anderson
My first “real” band, The Com’n Generation, in my living room after playing for my sister’s party on August 13, 1966. Gene Fowler, Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Gene Banks and me in front

The Com'n Generation, August 13, 1966. From left: Gene & Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Rollie and Gene Banks
The Com’n Generation, August 13, 1966.
From left: Gene & Glenn Fowler, Jim Dawson, Rollie and Gene Banks
Jim had a smooth but powerful voice that was versatile enough to effortlessly handle the three-chord blues and pop songs that we were able to play. He also possessed an adventurous spirit for discovering different kinds of music that fit right in with our somewhat eclectic tastes and preferences. Right off the bat he suggested we make a slight alteration and go under the name of “The Com’n Generation” and I think we flip-flopped on that issue a few times after that. Banks still sat in with the band from time to time but we couldn’t depend on him because he had commitments with another combo that wasn’t a non-profit organization. Yet he offered encouragement, was a fine mentor and we greatly appreciated his patience with us.

A real milestone was reached in October ‘66 when Glenn finally got his bass guitar. Up until then he had been using a standard electric guitar and just playing the “big strings.” Within weeks Glenn had mastered the bass and he soon became amazingly good on the instrument. He was a natural.

The whole confounded naming-the-band thing reared its ugly head once more as dissatisfaction set in and strange moniker suggestions started flying around like a swarm of flies on roadkill. “The Rare Breed,” “The East Side,” “The Assortment,” “The Living IN,” and the ever-controversial “EVOL” (Love spelled backwards) were just a few of the memorable gems considered. Finally one night Gene was perusing his family’s limited library of books while he and I were talking on the phone and he came across one tome entitled “Excuse my Dust.” “Hey, how about Dust?” he mumbled. It was pure genius. In that moment a garage band was finally named at long last. We were “Dust” and we were “everywhere.”

 ROTC Ball at the South Oak Cliff HS gym, from left: Rollie, Jim, Rick Cramer, Gene, Glenn
ROTC Ball at the South Oak Cliff HS gym, from left: Rollie, Jim, Rick Cramer, Gene, Glenn
A permanent replacement for Banks arrived when Jim introduced the group to his friend, Rick Cramer. We had recently competed in an amateur Battle of the Bands contest on the back of a flat-bed truck trailer in the parking lot of Gipson’s department store on Ledbetter and got beaten badly by Kempy and the Guardians. We knew we needed to produce a bigger, better sound pronto if we wanted to compete with guys like that and that meant adding personnel. Rick began working with us as the second guitarist but he was trained on keyboards and planned to buy an electric organ in the very near future. Our first gig with Cramer was performed standing in the freezing cold out in front of the Wynnewood Theater on December 2nd, playing for the chilled customers as they hurriedly purchased their tickets and ran inside the movie house to view “Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine.”

1967 started off promisingly enough on a personal finance level with my gaining employment at a One Hour Martinizing dry cleaners on Davis Street. My brief stint at Six Flags had taught me that working for a living was a terrible way to spend my time but, on the other hand, having a steady income was a source of power and freedom from having to grovel for favors from my stingy parents.Another grand event and a huge step forward for the group was the occurrence of Rick getting himself an electric organ. And if that wasn’t enough, the real surprise came when we heard Cramer play it. He was not an inexperienced keyboard man at all. He had a very fluid style much like that of his hero Ray Manzarek of The Doors in that he knew how to tastefully fill a lead break and when to lay down a full carpet of sound behind the guitars and drums. And he kept on getting better and better as the months rolled on.

The long practices in living rooms and garages were starting to pay off. We now had an ever-growing roster of songs we could perform with some degree of proficiency and our equipment quality had risen to semi-professional standards. Now it was a matter of finding higher quality gigs to play.

In February we played for the Valentine’s Dance at Browne Jr. High and for the ROTC Military Ball at South Oak Cliff. Both were great boosts to our confidence. The constant need (and insatiable desire) for more power and volume possessed all of us and, with the paychecks rolling in from putting in my hours at the dry cleaners, I traded up once again to get a Fender Bassman amplifier at Arnold & Morgan Music in far away Garland. In those days it wasn’t unusual for two or three of us to spend an entire day at that famous music store, looking at and sampling all the guitars and new gadgets and talking shop with the other musicians who were doing the very same thing.Our first experience in a professional recording studio took place on April 26, 1967 when we responded to a newspaper ad and traveled west to Ft. Worth to audition for Delta Studios. The deal was that the owners got to hear lots of bands, looking for that diamond in the rough that would make them rich, and the groups got a free demo tape of the two songs they recorded. We had no idea what we would record when we arrived but we came away with passable demos of “Signed D.C.” with Jim Dawson singing and “Doctor Robert”.

Dust – Signed D.C.

“Signed D.C.” was such a starkly honest song by Arthur Lee that I’m not sure we even performed it live. We just thought that first Love LP was amazing.

Dust in the summer of '67 - a very rare group photo of the original lineup, from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene, Rick and Jim
Dust in the summer of ’67 – a very rare group photo of the original lineup, from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene, Rick and Jim
Needless to say, we failed to get an offer to cut an album from the fat cats at Delta but we had our tape, by golly. A week later we broke into our piggy banks and paid to have the songs pressed on a handful of 45 rpm records. Say what you will but we had ourselves a bonafide single that we could play on any phono and that was nothing to scoff at! Neither tune sounded very good but it was the beginning of a personal love affair with the studio that would stay with me for decades to come. The very idea of working on a song until it sounded right seemed like an excellent way to create unique art.

A Presbyterian Church located near South Oak Cliff would become a very important factor in the maturing process of Dust. It was one of many churches throughout the DFW Metroplex that started sponsoring weekend dances so underage kids in the area would have a safe place to hang out and socialize with their peers. For bands like ours it was literally a God-sent blessing. Theirs was called The Flare because on Friday and Saturday nights the church activity organizers would post a blazing red flare out by the street to mark the “happening.”

Every group that performed in that converted meeting hall tried to out-dazzle their competition and we were not immune to the lure of one-upsmanship. We would construct homemade strobe lights by cutting a circle in a round wheel that spun on a fan motor in front of a floodlight. We would mount black lights around the stage and draw designs on our army surplus jackets and pants with florescent paint so we would glow. We would harvest huge sunflowers that grew in the wild behind the church and place them strategically among the equipment and drums. It was truly a psychedelic experience to go hear Dust.

By the summer of ‘67 all our parents had grown quite weary of hosting boisterous band practices so we began to rehearse at Mr. Fowler’s warehouse on Industrial where he stored and showcased his commercial washers and dryers. It was great for us because we could now make as much racket as we wanted without inviting complaints.

About that time I upgraded my axe by financing a bright orange Gretsch Chet Atkins model (after securing a loan co-signed grudgingly by my still-reluctant folks) that I had been eyeing for weeks. The slick salesman at Arnold & Morgan, Dan Haubrick, told me that it used to belong to the singer for Kit and the Outlaws. That group had scored a regional hit with their cover of “In the Midnight Hour” so I hoped that it possessed some special mojo that might bring me some luck in the music business. That made my Silvertone guitar expendable and I followed in the footsteps of one of my idols, Pete Townsend of The Who, when I bashed it to pieces one night on stage at The Flare for the radical theatrical effect and overall shock value it would surely arouse in the audience. During the scripted-in-my-imagination process that led up to this wanton destructive act I unwisely placed my left ear directly against the speaker cloth of my amplifier during a feedback frenzy and caused ear damage that I live with to this day. My hearing on that side has never been the same. I also regret purposely tearing up that innocent musical instrument. I would love to have it back.

Speaking of The Who, I attended a concert that July that featured them and The Blues Magoos opening for Herman’s Hermits at Dallas Memorial Auditorium. The Blues Magoos were certainly cool enough with their psychedelic outfits that glowed in the dark and made them look like skeletons but life as I knew it changed forever when Pete, Roger, Keith and John took over the arena. I was familiar with their music to an extent but I had never experienced anything like the explosive set they performed that night before my bedazzled, awestruck eyes. They were so amazing, so relentless, so confident in themselves that many in the stunned audience left during Peter Noone & Company’s lightweight show that followed, including my date and myself. No act in the world could have followed The Who. Not on that evening, at least.

A problem with Glenn was that sometimes when he would meet someone who played guitar he would invite that person to join the band in order to impress them. Unfortunately, he would do this without consulting anyone in the group, especially me. Before Jim and Rick came along there was a guy named Chuck Pangburn that showed up for a while before drifting away. Then in August of ‘67 a lead guitarist named Mike Stroud appeared at our practices for a week. At some point we set Glenn straight by informing him that I was, indeed, the only lead guitarist that Dust needed and he curbed his habit of inducting new members on the spot immediately.

All of the members of the band were obsessed with two things in particular. Rock & Roll and girls. Every chance I got I’d escort a young lady to The Studio Club in Preston Center to dance to and hear the best of the local Dallas combo scene. I heard bands like Kenny and the Kasuals (a band I would later be a 12 year member of two decades down the road), The Novas, The Sensations, The Jackals, The Blues Bag and The Orphans just to name a few.

Speaking of the opposite sex, most of us were content to just have a steady girlfriend but Gene took it a big step further when he married a girl named Cindy in September and moved into an apartment of their own in North Oak Cliff. We were surprised and more than a little worried because of their young age but we adjusted to her constant presence after a while. She was no Yoko Ono.

An opportunity to gain wider exposure came along for the group in October when we got to perform twice at “The Action Spot” at the State Fair of Texas. We even got our name listed in the newspaper along with about 200 other combos but it still felt special to see our name in print.

Dallas Times Herald, Oct. '67 list of bands at the Action Spot at the State Fair: Shows the amount of competition all garage bands of that day had to deal with. And these are just the lucky ones who got to perform!
Dallas Times Herald, Oct. ’67 list of bands at the Action Spot at the State Fair: Shows the amount of competition all garage bands of that day had to deal with. And these are just the lucky ones who got to perform!

Dust at the DeSoto Community Center, December 14, 1967 from left: Gene, Jim, Rollie and Glenn
Dust at the DeSoto Community Center, December 14, 1967
from left: Gene, Jim, Rollie and Glenn
By the end of 1967 Dust was finally starting to earn a reputation for being a dependable dance band that could competently play the hits of the day without causing embarrassing or offensive incidents. Rock music was exploding into totally new areas with songs from Sgt. Pepper, The Doors, Fresh Cream and Are You Experienced?reverberating all around us. It was all we could do to try to keep up with the changing social climates but we were having the time of our lives doing it.

With the new year came further upgrades in the band’s equipment. Glenn, Rick and I all bought big black Kustom rolled-and-pleated amplifiers in February, making us look better and a whole lot louder. Gigs were still hard to come by but at least we had a much more impressive stage presence when we did perform.

That same month I went to see Jimi Hendrix, Soft Machine and Clouds perform in concert at the State Fair Music Hall and came away a very humbled guitarist. It was a show I’ll never forget. Local boys The Chessmen opened.

 From left: Jim, Rick, Gene and Rollie
From left: Jim, Rick, Gene and Rollie
In March ‘68 we all realized why Gene and Cindy had gotten married in such a rush when Sarah Hope Fowler was born. It was hard to think of our drummer and running buddy as actually being a Daddy.

Meanwhile, Candy’s Flare had become so popular that it was forced to move into a cavernous National Guard Armory near Red Bird Airport to accommodate the large crowds of kids that had discovered it. They now had two bands booked each Friday and Saturday night to trade one-hour sets from opposite ends of the echo-prone building. Glen Oaks Presbyterian Church off of Polk Street also started holding teen dances and that provided yet another outlet for Dust to gig at.

At some point in that March some kind of problem arose between the band and Jim Dawson. Unfortunately, a lack of detailed notes and my declining memory have erased any recollections about what brought about Jim’s sudden departure from Dust. Obviously something was amiss and causing the majority of the group to doubt his commitment to the cause. I don’t recall any kind of blow up or confrontation. For whatever reason, the band jettisoned a very talented and charismatic singer/frontman and I lost touch with a good friend. (Decades later I would happily reconnect with Jim and he informed me that he found out about his dismissal when he called my house and my mother told him I was at practice, which was news to him. He drove to where we rehearsed and watched from his car as we auditioned a new singer. He said he just drove away in disgust and never looked back. That was a cowardly, callous way for us to treat Jim and for my part in that I’m forever sorry. He deserved better.)

Frank Lee, a classmate of mine at Kimball High and a vocalist/guitarist that had been performing with various Oak Cliff combos was brought into the band as a replacement on April 3rd. He was nothing like Jim. Frank had a growling, husky singing voice and a very energetic, sometimes frantic stage persona that took some getting used to. But his easy-going and friendly mannerisms made the transition a smooth one.

Dust in the Fowler warehouse where we rehearsed circa summer of '68. Frank Lee, Gene, Rick, Rollie and Glenn
Dust in the Fowler warehouse where we rehearsed circa summer of ’68. Frank Lee, Gene, Rick, Rollie and Glenn
One of the first positive things that occurred after Frank joined the band was Dust landing a successful audition at the legendary and popular LouAnn’s nightclub located at Lover’s Lane and Greenville. In 1968 it was still the only building of note near that corner and was considered to be on the outskirts of town. It later went up in flames and had to be rebuilt on a much smaller scale. But at that time it was nothing less than holy Mecca for young rock bands trying to make a name for themselves in Dallas. Dust performed there on April 20th and the following Monday I was besieged by classmates that couldn’t believe they saw skinny little Rollie playing in the band at LouAnn’s last Saturday night. I had purposely maintained a very low profile in school in order to keep my hair as long as I could and very few of my classmates even knew I was a musician. They just thought I was a scrawny nerd. Needless to say, the cat was out of the bag after that weekend and suddenly I had rebel status at Kimball.

It was around this time that Rick discovered a stage image that he liked. He somehow acquired a WWI-era leather pilot’s helmet and a pair of large amber goggles that he wore at every gig thereafter. He also began to come out from behind the organ during our extended rendition of “Break on Through” by The Doors and deliver a long, abrasive soliloquy to the audience that no one could understand. We once played at a Catholic school dance and he did a stellar job of scaring the nuns with his maniacal shouting. To my knowledge not one of us ever questioned him about why he chose to do this and he never volunteered an explanation. We just let him do it.

A milkman who was an acquaintance of Frank’s named Terry Willis heard us, liked us and offered to be our manager/booking agent. His route took him to various schools in the area and he promised us work through his contacts. I think he envisioned himself as a young Brian Epstein but Dust had a few miles to go before we would even be good enough to shine John Lennon’s shoes. However, thanks to the gigs Terry procured for us I was able to quit my demeaning job at the dry cleaners before summer began.

Our first real road trip came in May when Terry booked us for a dance in Childress, Texas. An Explorer troop had offered to let us stay at their meeting house overnight but when we saw the less-than-hospitable condition it was in (it reminded us of the Our Gang clubhouse) we opted to make the long drive back to Dallas that night. My lasting impression of that trip is of us stopping at a diner on the outskirts of Wichita Falls around dawn. None of us had slept a wink and we were worn out. I had never liked coffee before but on that morning it tasted amazing to me. At that moment I finally understood why God had placed it on this earth for us humans to imbibe and I was a confirmed java drinker from that day on.

 Dust at Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster circa late 1968 - Gene, Rollie and Rick
Dust at Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster circa late 1968 – Gene, Rollie and Rick

On the scholastic front, after I maintained a B average in my freshman year and got my guitar as the reward, my grades dropped steadily into the C and sometimes D range for the rest of my high school years. With that in mind, when I was asked to stand at the Senior Luncheon held at Riverlake Country Club to be recognized for graduating with honors no one was as surprised as me. I wasn’t particularly proud of the distinction as I felt it diminished my image as the smug, egregious rock and roll musician that I fancied myself to be. I’m still not sure they crunched those numbers correctly but it made my Mom and Dad proud, at least.

Due to the fact that the selective service was drafting every able-bodied eighteen-year-old male who could count to five for duty in scenic Vietnam at the time, I started attending classes at nearby Dallas Baptist College less than a week after graduation. This allowed me to claim II-S status as being student-deferred and, therefore, ineligible for the terrifying draft. My career plans didn’t have the Armed Services in them at all. Guitars beat guns every time.

No band of merit in Oak Cliff was without their very own funeral hearse and this is the one Frank Lee bought for Dust to cruise Kiest Park and haul the equipment around in. Had a nifty 4-track inside, too.
No band of merit in Oak Cliff was without their very own funeral hearse and this is the one Frank Lee bought for Dust to cruise Kiest Park and haul the equipment around in. Had a nifty 4-track inside, too.
The summer of ‘68 was one of liberation for most of the band members. Now that we had escaped the drudgery of high school we thought of ourselves as adults, ready to explore and conquer the world. Concerts were still relatively cheap so I was able to see touring bands like Cream, The Doors, Vanilla Fudge and Canned Heat for about $6 a ticket. Our gigs were numerous now with repeated appearances at Candy’s Flare in Oak Cliff and the new one in Decatur, various private parties and several performances at the Shamrock Roller Rink in Lancaster.

Many groups like The Chessmen and Kempy and the Guardians had second-hand Cadillac hearses to transport their equipment around in. In late August Frank purchased a black ‘58 hearse so we could be as cool. In old English lettering we stenciled our “DUST… is everywhere” logo on the back door. Once we installed a four-track cassette player in it we were ready to join the parade every Sunday afternoon at Kiest Park with Cream’s Disraeli Gears and the Beatles’ White Album blaring for the duly impressed masses and would-be groupies.

By the fall Terry had us booked solid on most weekends and we were sailing right along. Rick had started taking classes at Baylor University in Waco so rehearsals were much more infrequent. But he would drive back home every weekend so it never interfered with our gig scheduling.

In November Dust successfully auditioned for a new talent agency called “Studio VII” that was located in a recording studio complex just west of downtown Dallas. Being pretty much full of ourselves at this juncture, we felt that Terry Willis had taken us about as far as he could and it was time to try and get better representation. It fell upon Frank and me to inform Terry that we no longer needed his services. Terry had done wonders for us and it was not an easy task to fire him.

One of the perks of being under the wing of Studio VII was the fact that they offered free studio time to their bands. To me, that was akin to getting a lifetime pass to Disneyland. It did involve signing a contract with the agency so in December we all had to get our fathers to meet at Frank’s house to sign on the dotted line for us since we were all under 21. It seemed like a really big deal. We felt we were now definitely on our way to riches and fame.

Recorded at Studio VII in late 1968 with Frank Lee on vocals, “Vicious Delusion” is a hybrid of two different tunes that I had written but the lyrics were penned by Ron, the staff engineer at Studio VII.

Dust – Vicious Delusion

Dust, Studio VII Prod. business cardRon took a liking to me and would often invite me to come sit in the control room while he produced a demo session for one of the other groups. On one memorable occasion the band in the studio was Felicity, a fine combo from East Texas that featured a talented singing drummer named Don Henley. Don went on to be in a little group called the Eagles. I remember being very impressed by their professionalism and their workman-like approach to recording. They knew what they were doing. Dust didn’t.

We ended 1968 with a New Year’s Eve gig at the brand new “Candy’s Flare – Pleasant Grove” in the National Guard Armory located there. It had been an eventful year for all of us and we felt that we had taken enormous steps toward becoming the rock stars we had always envisioned ourselves as being destined to be.

Dust with hair a flyin' at Broadway Skateland, Mesquite, January 4, 1969 - Frank, Gene and Rick We're playing Hendrix's “Manic Depression” because Rick would come out front and play cymbal on it. Not sure why.
Dust with hair a flyin’ at Broadway Skateland, Mesquite, January 4, 1969 – Frank, Gene and Rick
We’re playing Hendrix’s “Manic Depression” because Rick would come out front and play cymbal on it. Not sure why.

 Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, Glenn and Frank
Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, Glenn and Frank

1969 started right where the previous year had left off with Dust continuing to play gigs at the area roller rinks and Candy’s Flare. We had managed to add Club Menagerie in Commerce, the Broadway Skateland and the Twilight Skating Palace to our list of venues. I traded in my orange Gretsch for a used Fender Telecaster. I think the real reason was that it just looked better on stage and was easier to play. I was still a terrible lead guitarist that should have spent a lot more time practicing his instrument. The studio and live tapes that exist from those days prove it.

In February we started having all-night recording sessions with Ron (his last name escapes me) in an attempt to compose and cut that million-dollar hit single. I contributed several amateurish songs with titles like “Eating Petunias,” “Brown-haired Woman,” and “When you were down I loved you more.” We also bravely attempted a few of Ron’s songs like “All Strung Out” and “Vicious Delusion.” We never recorded anything resembling great rock and roll but the experience of being in a professional studio again was invaluable. I found that I absolutely loved the process of recording. For me there was no place I’d rather have been than inside a studio and I spent every spare hour I had there soaking up all the protocol I could.

Dust at Candy's Flare, 1969 from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene and Rick
Dust at Candy’s Flare, 1969
from left: Glenn, Rollie, Gene and Rick
One of the drawbacks of having an old hearse for an equipment truck was the fact that it was constantly in need of repair. One incident could have ended my rock and roll future (and earthly existence in general) permanently. At some point the band started holding our practices at a warehouse in southeast Dallas that was owned by Gene’s father. One afternoon Frank and I were tooling along on our way to rehearsal, driving east on Ledbetter approaching the intersection with Lancaster Avenue. When Frank went to apply the brakes he realized that nothing was happening to slow the heavy hearse as we sped toward the red light. Fortunately there was an unoccupied lane ahead. Frank quickly changed lanes and we barreled right through the intersection at about fifty miles per hour, barely missing a Lincoln Continental that was coming north on Lancaster. When we rolled to a stop about a quarter of a mile later the irate driver of the car (that had to slam on his brakes to avoid a collision) pulled up behind, got out and yelled at us for several minutes. Both Frank and I stayed in the hearse as we both noticed that the furious and rather large African-American man had a pistol tucked into the waist of his pants. Evidently Frank’s explanation of brake failure satisfied the steaming mad driver and we managed to escape without being shot. Had we hit anything at all as we flew through the busy intersection we probably would have been killed on the spot or maimed for life. As I recall we still drove the hearse to practice. Slowly.

Early in March the band experienced our first drug bust. Well, sorta. We played a dance at the DeSoto Community Center and throughout the night we noticed that we were being closely watched by several uniformed police officers. After the gig Rick was changing clothes in the tiny restroom when detectives literally burst in the door and confiscated a bottle of what they were sure was some kind of illicit contraband that Rick had on him. They actually drove him over to the station and made him wait while they rousted the town pharmacist out of bed to come and identify the pills in question. They were sure that a musician wearing a leather skullcap and goggles had to be tripping on some kind of weird hallucinogenic substance and was, therefore, a menace to the citizenry. When the expert declared that the capsules held nothing more psychedelic than ordinary cold medicine Rick was released and told to never come back to the metropolis of DeSoto. No formal apology was forthcoming, either.

 Rollie Anderson with Dust at Candy's Flare, early 1969
Rollie Anderson with Dust at Candy’s Flare, early 1969
I met many musicians at Dallas Baptist College who were doing the same thing I was in that they were taking full advantage of the student deferment loophole to avoid military conscription. One of them was Alfred Brown from Plano. I would end up in two different bands with him in the 70s and he and I started a friendship that spring that would last for decades to come. By meeting him and others like Bob Lincoln of “The Poppy Box” I started to expand my circle of musician friends to include those from other parts of North Texas. Both Alfred and Bob graciously showed me new guitar techniques that made me a much better player. They most likely took pity on me due to my lack of talent on the instrument.

Frank and I saw Jimi Hendrix perform at Dallas Memorial Auditorium that April (with Chicago Transit Authority as the opening act) and he was fantastic once again. Little did we know that he would be dead about a year and a half later.

Late in May the hearse was broken into and most of the equipment inside it stolen. It had been parked in front of Frank’s apartment and the thieves took the P.A. system and the amplifier for my speakers. It was a devastating financial blow but I somehow scraped up enough to buy another Kustom amplifier and tall column from a friend. I now had a humongous setup of five 15” speakers and a brassy horn in two cabinets. I could barely stand to be in front of it at times because of the volume.

In June of ‘69 I found myself on a break from school for the first time in a long while. I took a job with the city park department as a playground activity leader and swim teacher at Pecan Grove near Kiest and Westmoreland. It was my first 8 to 5 Monday-Friday job and it left even less time for band practice and other activities. The group was still playing the same old gigs and the momentum we had carried into the new year with Studio VII had tapered off considerably when our recordings failed to impress anyone at the agency. They had moved on to other, more promising bands.

Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, from left: Glenn, Rick, Gene and Frank Rick would step out from behind his organ once every show to give his 'Lizard King' soliloquy
Broadway Skateland, January 4, 1969, from left: Glenn, Rick, Gene and Frank
Rick would step out from behind his organ once every show to give his ‘Lizard King’ soliloquy

On June 29th Rick Cramer announced that he was quitting Dust and getting married in August. That pretty much brought the band to a screeching halt. There was no actual day to designate when it happened. Dust just ended with a whimper rather than a bang.

For the rest of the summer Glenn and I tried to find other musicians who wanted to start up a new combo with us but several noisy jam sessions produced nothing promising. Gene was trying to provide for his wife and young daughter and Frank had started working full time, as well. The loss of his P.A. system in May was something that he couldn’t replace easily and we couldn’t rely on him to be able to carry on.

On my 20th birthday in early September I got a call from Richard Theisen of the Pleasant Grove-based “Love Street Journal” band inviting me to audition for their group. I became their guitarist on September 14th and the next six years of my life were spent with various versions of the band that became “Daniel.”

Unfortunately I eventually fell out of contact with most of those musicians I spent my teen years with. I’d visit Gene and Cindy from time to time in the early 70s but before long I lost track of them, as well. When I met up with Gene again in the late 90s he sadly informed me that Glenn had passed away about a year earlier. It made me reminisce all the good times I spent with the Fowler cousins as we would fantasize about how famous and wealthy we were going to be as rock stars. Glenn especially was a true friend to me throughout those years and I regret that I never got to see him again after that summer of ‘69.

Love Street Journal at the Flare, Pleasant Grove from left: Billy King, Tommy Jones, Robert "Noah" Hazlewood and Rollie Anderson
Love Street Journal at the Flare, Pleasant Grove
from left: Billy King, Tommy Jones, Robert “Noah” Hazlewood and Rollie Anderson
When I look back on those youthful, formative years I treasure the wonderful moments that will stay with me forever. As we made our way through our teenage years we doggedly pursued our rock & roll dreams while other boys who picked up instruments following the British Invasion of the mid 60s put them aside after a few months of lessons or finding out that steel guitar strings really hurt the fingertips. For us it was a way to release our energy and passion and to express ourselves in ways that others could relate to. We were all doing the best we could during the topsy-turvy events of that revolutionary decade, looking for our own individual path that would lead us into adulthood. Rock & Roll was our pressure valve and our muse. We constantly turned one another on to new music and different ways of thinking. We helped each other to expand our horizons of what was possible. And the fraternity that was the band became the glue that held us together. The band was what we could depend on to be there when the rest of the world let us down or presented us with problems that seemed insurmountable.

It was, indeed, a golden age and I’m so thankful that Gene, Glenn, Jim, Rick and Frank were there to go through it with me. We made some beautiful music and joyful noises together and they helped to make my teen years very special to me.

Rollie Anderson, May 2010

Performances

1965

September 19 – Wheelchair Bowler’s Association meeting, Bronco Bowl
October 17 – Wheelchair Bowler’s Association meeting, Bronco Bowl
October 24 – Church social, Gail Watkin’s house
December 31 – New Year’s Eve Party, Glen Fowler’s house

1966

March 1 – Audition for DeSoto High School talent show
March 4 – DeSoto talent show, DeSoto Elementary
April 9 – Hobby Shop, DeSoto
May 20 – Private Party, DeSoto
June 3 – Private Party, DeSoto
June 25 – Private Party, DeSoto
July 8 – JayCee dance, DeSoto
July 15 – Lion’s Club Carnival, DeSoto
August 13 – My sister Marlene’s Park Party, Anderson house
November 4 – South Oak Cliff High School Spanish Club, Cedar Canyon Club
November 5 – Battle of the Bands, Gipson’s Department Store, Oak Cliff
December 2 – Wynnewood Movie Theatre lobby

1967

January 14 – JayCee Dance, DeSoto
February 10 – T. W. Browne Jr. High School dance
February 18 – South Oak Cliff High School ROTC Military Ball
March 4 – Private Party, Kiest Park, Oak Cliff
March 25 – Audition, Presbyterian Church, Oak Cliff
April 14 – Private Party, Riverlake Country Club, Oak Cliff
April 26 – Audition and session at Delta Studios, Fort Worth
April 29 – Audition for “The Flare” club
May 13 – Junior High School party, Weiss Park gym, Oak Cliff
May 20 – The Flare
May 27 – South Oak Cliff High School Senior Pizza Party
June 1 – Audition for “LouAnn’s” club
June 24 – The Flare
July 2 – Audition for “The Pirate’s Nook” club
August 5 – The Flare
August 9 – Audition for booking agency
September 23 – The Flare
October 7 – “The Action Spot” at State Fair of Texas
October 8 – Audition for the “Club Texas”
October 15 – “The Action Spot” at State Fair of Texas
October 21 – The Flare
October 28 – The Flare
November 26 – Audition at the “Three Thieves” club
December 15 – Community Center Dance, DeSoto
December 29 – JayCee Dance, DeSoto

1968

January 12 & 26, February 9 – Glen Oaks Methodist Church, Oak Cliff
February 10 – Oak Cliff YMCA
February 17 – Candy’s Flare
March 15 – Glen Oaks Methodist Church
March 30 – Candy’s Flare (Last performance with Jim Dawson)
April 20 – LouAnn’s
April 27 – The Lyon’s Den
April 28 – Irving CYO Dance
May 4 – Decatur, Texas Roller Rink
May 11 – North Texas State University fraternity party, Lewisville
May 18 – Bonehead Explorer’s Post, Childress
May 24 – Atwell Junior High School dance
June 1 – Candy’s Flare
June 2 – Irving CYO Dance
June 14 & 15 – Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster
June 21 – Audition at “Phantasmagoria” Club
June 29 – Jolly Time Skating Rink, Fort Worth
July 27 – Candy’s Flare, Decatur
July 28 – Candy’s Flare
August 2 & 3 – Shamrock Roller Rink, Lancaster
August 16 – Candy’s Flare, Decatur
August 17 – Private Party, Fort Worth
August 18 – Irving CYO Party
September 7 – Candy’s Flare
September 14 – Candy’s Flare, Nacogdoches
September 20 & 21 – Shamrock Roller Rink
September 29 – Bishop Dunne High School dance
October 5 – Irving YMCA dance
October 11 & 12 – Shamrock Roller Rink
October 13 – St. Elizabeth CYO dance
October 26 – Private Party, Knights of Columbus, Grand Prairie
November 1, 2, 22, 23 – Shamrock Roller Rink
November 24 – Audition at Studio VII agency
December 7 – Candy’s Flare
December 14 – Broadway Roller Rink, Mesquite
December 27 – Texas A&M Hometown Club, Forest Hollow
December 31 – Candy’s Flare, Pleasant Grove

1969

January 4 – Broadway Roller Rink
January 11 & 12 – Club Menagerie, Commerce
January 17 – Twilight Roller Rink, Pleasant Grove
January 18 – Candy’s Flare
January 24 – Club Menagerie, Commerce
January 25 – Broadway Roller Rink
February 7 – American Legion “Teen-a-go-go” in Mesquite
February 8 – Club Menagerie
February 14 – Apartment Private Party
February 15 – NTSU fraternity party, Arlington
February 21 & 22 – Twilight Roller Rink
March 7 – Community Center dance, DeSoto
March 14 – Shamrock Roller Rink
March 15 – East Texas State University fraternity party, Honeygrove
March 22 – Broadway Roller Rink
March 30 – Club Menagerie
April 12 – Broadway Roller Rink
April 19 – Candy’s Flare
April 25 – Irving “Teen Scene” at armory
May 2 – Shamrock Roller Rink
May 3 – ETSU sorority party, Wylie’s Dude Ranch, Lewisville
May 9 – Commerce High School Dance
May 17 – Broadway Roller Rink
May 28 – Adamson High School senior pizza party
May 30 – Irving “Teen Scene”
May 31 – Rocket Roller Rink, Cockrell Hill
June 3 – ETSU summer school dance
June 14 – Broadway Roller Rink
June 28 – Candy’s Flare (final performance of DUST)

Jimmy C. & the Chelsea Five, and Zero Records discography

Jimmy C. & the Chelsea Five Zero Records promotional photo
left to right, top row: Scotty Celsur and Mike Farr bottom row: Johnny Holbert (standing in for Randy Ridell), Jimmy Holbert and Sammy Simmons

Jimmy C. & the Chelsea Five Zero Records 45 Leave Me AloneScotty Celsur, lead guitarist and vocalist with the Chesea Five gives the story behind this Dallas group that recorded for Zero Records, the legendary label originally based in Austin that released the Spades 45s:

My first band, the Exclusives, was made up of my brother and my two best friends who liked to play for fun and entertainment of others on occasion. Sure was not the money at that point. However, after a couple of years of that I got down to business and started to put together a band that would go somewhere. I was in it for the big go.

My best friend, Mike Farr, was my guitar backup rhythm player starting out but finding a bass player was a challenge so after finding a good guitar player of rhythm Mike said he would change to bass to get this thing going. He wanted this bad like myself.

After a couple of months of searching out talent we started to put a show together and we put ourselves out there. After a few months of playing local gigs we just happened to be at the right place at the right time. Oddly enough we were at McCords Music Co. in downtown Dallas one Friday afternoon picking up a new PA system when a guy [Gary McCaskill of Zero Records] asked me if we were a working band and if so he wanted to talk. So we did and told him of a sock hop we were playing that night at a local school.

He said he would attend and about halfway thru the second set he and his wife showed up. He loved our version of “Play With Fire”, why I don’t know and he liked the “Leave Me Alone” song that I had written two years prior to that date. In two days he had us playing dates for a month on weekends. I liked this and then he wanted to start a recording company and he did, with us being his main band. He was a booking agent at the time for a couple of groups in Austin and did some with Kenny and the Kasuals. His mainstream focus was on us.

First he wanted to change the name to an English sort to go along with the fad of the times and that’s when The Chelsea Five brand came to be.

Jimmy Holbert – lead singer except on “Leave Me Alone”
Scotty Celsur – lead guitar, vocals and lead singer on “Leave Me Alone”
Randy Ridell – rhythm guitar
Mike Farr – bass
Sammy Simmons – drums

Funny thing, when we went to the Sherwood Forest complex over by Love Field airport to have pictures taken, Randy Ridell didn’t get there in time so with the evening darkness coming we opted to use Jimmy’s younger brother Bobby [sic – should be John Holbert] as the fifth person stand-in. By the way that is the only picture I have of our band. I have some slides somewhere or I think I do but I not sure where they have been stored at the present.

We were practicing four nights a week then playing on the weekends, mostly in Austin, he had contacts there and at the time bands from Dallas were a good draw for attendance. Pay was good and we were happy. Never considered us to be anything but a rock & roll band with a little edge.

Back then it seemed that everybody and their brother had a band of some kind so that in itself set up competition. Getting a gig could be a hard thing to do if you were looking in your own backyard. Many gigs would get canceled at the last minute just because someone knew someone that was a friend or whatever. That was the trick bag for us. Each one of us had a different group of friends. Strange in a way, but it worked and after we took on an out of town manager who was really in the loop of clubs around it made the whole world bigger.

Two weeks after we signed with Gary the Beach Boys were coming to town for a concert along with the Buckinghams and he asked if we would like to be the warm up band. Being in our home town I said no way. We had never played a venue of that size so the setup it self would be a guess and I didn’t want to take a chance and kill our sound and business by doing something stupid. As things happened Kenny and the Kasuals took the spot and in my opinion it was not good. Best decision I ever made because they suffered from what I feared for us. Poor sound quality but even the headliner bands didn’t sound good in that building [the Memorial Auditorium]. I went to a lot of concerts there and the building was perfectly round so the sound would bounce everywhere. I saw the Beatles there in ’64 and it was the worst concert ever, could not hear anything.

We were friends with a couple of other bands and in fact the Vaughan brothers dropped by for a couple of afternoon jams. Stevie Ray was very young, around 14 I think, but the kid was amazing and could play as good as his brother Jimmie.

One day in early May of ’67 Gary called me and said he had booked studio time at Sellers Recording in downtown Dallas for Saturday to cut a record. When we got there and after we set up he said he wanted to cut the “Play With Fire” song on the A side and my song, “Leave Me Alone” on the B side. I argued to cut the Otis Redding song “Respect”. We had a killer version of it and had request to play it a number of times a night at our gigs but he was paying and I lost the battle with him. This was two weeks before Aretha Franklin cut her song “Respect”, the rest is history and so are we.

Jimmy C. & the Chelsea Five Zero Records 45 Play With Fire5,000 copies were pressed but during the that time we added an organ player thus changing the name to the end result of Jimmy C and The Chelsea Five. There was no Jimmy C. it was actually Jimmy H. but that sounded bad so we used my last name letter C to fix that. We didn’t care we just wanted to play music, cut records and get paid. My manager gave me 500 and I don’t know what happened to the rest, now I only have around 25 left.

Didn’t work out to my way of thinking. I was the only one, other than Gary, who had a car that would go down the road every time. I was killing my car and not getting much in the money end of things for it. Sure, everyone would buy gas but tires and repairs, did those myself, were an expense for me and the others didn’t see it that way. I told them we need to rent a truck for all this, after all the organ was a Hammond with a Leslie speaker so it was no small item.

Other things started get in the way like girlfriends and some members smoking grass, I said no to that from the start. That was a sure way to ruin all we had worked for. I bid farewell to the band I put together and quit. Didn’t play for almost two years. They disbanded two months after I left and so goes the death of a rock and roll band. Gary asked me to form up an R&B group a few months after I had left and the band had vanished. I considered it just because Gary was such an up right guy and I had trust in him. I really liked to play blues more anyway but it just didn’t work in our area of play. Mike, my best friend and bass player soon surfaced and we set up a small band to play local and not very often at that.

I got married and started my family so I still think I did the right thing at the time. After all I did embark upon a career of auto racing for twenty five years and I traveled all over the USA, Canada, and a couple of trips to Mexico seeing things I would have never seen on my own so I don’t have any regrets.

I started the band when I was 14 and I was 17 when I recorded. I’m 60 now and have written over 200 songs of all kinds but they are in a box in my house along with the guitar and amp I bought new and used on the record, 1964 Fender Jaguar and Fender Bandmaster amp. I still play for my self satisfaction and friends on a rare occasion. I have not been in contact with any of the guys since 1973. Don’t have a clue where they are. I still miss them though.

Scotty Celsur

Zero discography:

10001 – The Spades – “I Need a Girl” / “Do You Want to Dance”
10002 – The Spades – “You’re Gonna Miss Me” / “We Sell Soul”
1003 – Jimmy C. & the Chelsea Five – “Play With Fire” / “Leave Me Alone”
1004 – Sammy Julian – “Lead Guitar Man” / “Is It True” (both by S. Julian and C. Kirk)
1005 – Curtis D. Hall and Cactus Café – “Diggin’ On Country Music”/ “I’ll Be Here Awhile” (1975)

Thanks to Gregor Kessler for sending the scan of the “Leave Me Alone” label, and for suggesting I contact Scotty.

Five of a Kind

Five of a Kind photo: Jay Vestal, Mike Magruder, Jimmy Reese, Phil Patterson and Wayne Taylor
Five of a Kind, from left: Jay Vestal, Mike Magruder, Jimmy Reese, Phil Patterson and Wayne Taylor

The Five of a Kind released one great double-sided 45: “Never Again” / “I Don’t Want to Find Another Girl”. For years collectors have listed the band as a Fort Worth group, but like their Vandan label-mates the Gentlemen, they were actually from Dallas, as their bassist Phil Patterson confirmed to me:

I was in Five of a Kind (1964-1967) in Dallas, Texas, I was the bass player.

The band members were:

Lead guitar and singer: Wayne Taylor (Rickenbacker 12 string and Vox 6 string)
Rhythm guitar and singer: Jimmy Reese (Vox)
Drums: Mike Magruder (Ludwig)
Sax: Jay Vestal
Bass: Phil Patterson (Fender Precision)

Rhythm Kings, from left: Jimmy Reese, Phil Patterson, James Parrish, and Wayne Taylor
Rhythm Kings, from left: Jimmy Reese, Phil Patterson, James Parrish, and Wayne Taylor
We went to Bryan Adams High School in Dallas along with Kenny and the Kasuals and others you have listed. Our first band, ‘the Rhythm Kings’ with Wayne Taylor, Jim Reese, and Phil Patterson along with our first drummer, James Parrish, before Mike Magruder joined us. The Rhythm Kings never recorded, but became ‘5 of a Kind’ with the addition of Jay on sax and Mike on drums. James Parrish died in 1966 racing his Corvette at a local quarter mile track. He had left the band about two years before I believe.

 Rhythm Kings, from left: Jimmy Reese, Phil Patterson, James Parrish, and Wayne Taylor
Rhythm Kings, from left: Jimmy Reese, Phil Patterson, James Parrish, and Wayne Taylor
The music we played was probably typical of the period. We played mainly the popular British Invasion music – Beatles, Stones, Yardbirds, Animals, Dave Clark 5, etc. as well as Young Rascals, Beach Boys, and we did a great version of Sonny and Chers’ “I’ve Got You Babe” (sorta campy version really). Also some of the soul standards and rhythm and blues we needed to play depending on the crowd that night.

The Mystics beat us out for the record contract they received and I believe that would have been at Broadway Skateland in Mesquite, Texas. There were sixteen bands in that battle-of-the-bands. Ronnie Blocker was also a bass player for Ricky and the Royals who was the house band there, and his dad owned the place.

We also played at Louanns, the Sumpin’ Else television dance show (with Ron Chapman as host) and Panther a Go Go television show in Ft. Worth where also on the bill that night were the Bill Black Combo, Peter and Gordon from England, and Johnny Green and the Green Men. We also played at La Maison in Houston and Gilley’s as well, when they added rock type music. We also played at Dewey Groom’s Long Horn Ballroom in Dallas when they added rock music to their usual country schedule.

We played at all the usual skating rinks in the area (Twilighters in Oak Cliff and Broadway in Mesquite come to mind); the Vaughan brothers would have played at Twilighters. Also high school sock hops and graduation dances. Small clubs and private parties all over the metroplex. Bill Ware’s Pirates Nook, the Amber Room where Lady Wilde and the Warlocks also played (Frank Beard and Dusty Hill’s older brother Rocky Hill); we played with the Marksmen (Boz Skaggs and Steve Miller at my uncle’s airport in Garland with sponser KBOX and Scotty McKay I believe. Hate to call those guys a garage band but they probably were at one time. We played many times at White Rock Lakes’ Winfrey Point for private parties, etc.

 Early photo of Five of a Kind
Early photo of Five of a Kind
I remember the night we played La Maison in Houston and were playing the Rascals song “Good Lovin'” when we were surprised by the actual Rascals coming on stage and finishing the song and announcing they would be playing there the next night. That was a thrill for us.

Some nights were not so great such as the time we were booked into the NCO club at Ft. Hood. We were double booked with a soul band. The club manager said we could battle it out to see who played and would be paid for the gig and let the audience decide. We played to luke warm response and the soul band clinched it with some James Brown and the two sax players they had doing a front somersault off the stage. The crowd went wild and we packed up to head back to Dallas that night.

We played all the time and had a good local following. All the band members were good musicians but Wayne wrote the original songs. Wayne was a typical lead singer/guitarist with lots of ego going on, but I think you have to be that way. The girls all loved Jay’s blonde surfer locks. I, as the bass player had a good music following because I played my Precision bass by finger picking and could play fast Yardbirds riffs. Then there were the groupies (thanks Sandy and Sherri and all the others), they were probably the real reason we all became musicians in the first place.

Five of a Kind Vandan 45 Never AgainWe released one 45 on the Vandan label (Tom Brown manager, and recorded at Summit Studios [Sumet Sound]). The ‘A’ side was called “Never Again” and the ‘B’ side was “I Don’t Want to Find Another Girl” [both] written by Wayne Taylor.

We sold almost a thousand records at 10 cents per record going to the band. I remember one check for $16.00 for each of us. Wow…

At one time we had a booking manager who said his name was Andy Presley and was a cousin of Elvis. The guy had the pompadour and the look. We later found out he was a Mexican guy and may not have been Elvis’ relative after all. We dropped him as he was also not booking many gigs for us.

I have not heard from Wayne, Mike or Jay since not long after the band broke up in ’67. I do know that Mike Magruder became a successful local DJ in Denton, Texas. Jimmy Reese worked all his life at the JC Penney company and lives in San Antonio, now retired I believe.

I’m now practicing commercial real estate sales in Plano, and was formerly an owner of the San Francisco Rose restaurant (still open after 32 years) with Scott Fickling and Larry Smith.

Phil Patterson, December 2009

Thanks to Phil for sending me the history of his group, and for the photos and scan of the 45. Thanks to Jay Vestal for the two flyers and the photo at the bottom of the page.

 Yearbook photo for a show with the Rafters, with band business card
Yearbook photo for a show with the Rafters, with band business card
Five of a Kind on stage photo: Wayne Taylor lead guitar, Jay Vestal on sax and Phil Patterson on the bass guitar he wishes he still had, and Mike Magruder drums.
from left: Wayne Taylor lead guitar, Jay Vestal on sax and Phil Patterson on the bass guitar he wishes he still had, and Mike Magruder drums.
(caption by Jay Vestal)

July 4, 1965 gig at a barbecue place in Dallas
July 4, 1965 gig at a barbecue place in Dallas

“I don’t remember, but I think we won. Anybody that was willing to play at 9:30 a.m. deserved to win!” – Jay Vestal

Kenny and the Kasuals – It’s All Right!

Kenny and the Kasuals Mark 45 It's All RightKenny and the Kasuals – a great band from Dallas with a long and complicated history I won’t try to tell here. Instead I’m featuring one of their lesser-known releases, but well worth a listen. This is their third 45 on Mark Lee’s ‘Mark’ label, “It’s All Right”, from 1966. It features what I believe is the original group:

Kenny Daniel (vocals and guitar)
Jerry Smith (lead guitar)
Tommy Nichols (harmonica)
Paul Roach (keyboards)
Lee Lightfoot (bass)
David Blackley (drums)

Richard Parker corrects this lineup in his comment below, which I’ll repeat here:

The first recording group (there were earlier members not featured on any recordings) was Kenny Daniel, Tommy Nichols (lead guitar) Paul Roach, David Blachley (with an “h” not a “k”) and Lee Lightfoot. The later recordings feature Jerry Smith on guitar, after Tommy Nichols went into the navy. I don’t think that Jerry is on this recording.

The top side is a hopped-up nugget of r&b, revving the Kinks song up a couple notches. With the early use of a fuzztone and Kenny’s accented vocals, you could say they Stones-ify the song. Backing it is the Zombies tune “You Make Me Feel Good”.

Like their first two records, this one wouldn’t make much headway on local charts, but their next two 45s, “Raindrops to Teardrops” and “Journey to Tyme” would change that.

The Upper Class “Help Me Find a Way” on Smash

The Upper Class included bass player John Broberg, Randy Shelton and drummer Neal St. John. Major Bill Smith’s Charay label signed them to record their two originals, “Help Me Find a Way” and “Can’t Wait.” David Norfleet of the Chants told me he went into the studio with them to help them record these songs.

“Help Me Find a Way” had hit potential from the strong vocal harmonies and upbeat production. The Charay 45 was picked up for national release by the Smash label, but didn’t chart in any market.

Beginning in 1969, John Broberg and Neal St. John played in the group “Quest” along with Chants vocalist Darrel Howard and guitarist Michael St. Romain.

The Rain Kings

The Rain Kings, December 1966
The Rain Kings, December 1966

If you go to see live music often, from time to time you will come across a kind of act that knows they’re bad, that emphasizes their deficiencies and makes their ineptness the center of the show. The Rain Kings from Dallas were such a band. Luckily for us they lived in a time when rock music was by its very nature amateur and obnoxious. Despite their best efforts to muck it up, they still managed to create listenable music, at least, listenable to my ears.

Rain Kings member Richard Parker gives all the details you could wish for, and more:

Steve Howard, Richard Parker and Steve Lowry
Steve Howard, Richard Parker and Steve Lowry

The Rain Kings 45 EP Lydia, I Know What You're Trying to Do

Richard Parker: Rebels Without Applause – The Rain Kings Story

The Rain Kings – a name that will live in anonymity. In 1964 our Dallas band began as The Imposters, a name that truly fit us, for our musical abilities were – at best – crude. We didn’t actually perform in person until 1965, after the name change to The Rain Kings, a name taken from a Saul Bellow novel – Henderson The Rain King.

We attended the same high school – Bryan Adams High – as Kenny and The Kasuals, Jimmy C and the Chelsea Five, members of The Chaparrals, Five of a Kind and many other pretty good bands that never recorded.

We simply weren’t as good as these bands so we made up for it by being stupid. Our stage acts were notoriously stupid, our original songs were downright dumb and yet our ability to draw a crowd was very good. We played at the standard affairs – high school dances, local teen clubs, private parties and so on. We actually hold the all-time attendance record at the famous Studio Club in Dallas outdrawing such bands as Kenny and the Kasuals, The Briks, The Chessmen and even The Yardbirds! (It’s true although I can offer no logical explanation.)

In 1965 after recording some truly dreadful demos in my living room, we headed for the well-known Sellers Studio downtown where everyone from Gene Vincent to Kenny and the Kasuals had recorded. We booked one hour, recorded four songs and ultimately released them on an extended-play 45. The results were pretty bad, but since our reputation was one of stupidity-with-a-beat, it didn’t matter. 100 copies were pressed and we sold them all.

In 1968 after another name change (to The Gretta Spoone Band) we released another 45 this time on the Pompeii label (internationally on the London label.) The record went nowhere fast and our band days ended. The record shows up regularly on Ebay, although it seems no one wants to buy it. I can’t blame them – I’ve heard it.

Richard Parker and Steve Lowry
Richard Parker and Steve Lowry

The Band:

Steve Howard – lead vocals, rhythm guitar
Richard Parker – harmonica, vocals, screechophone, piano, percussion
Steve Lowry – bass guitar, vocals
Doug Dossett – lead guitar, vocals
Vick Nuuttila – electric lead tambourine, electric klaghorn, electric vocals

Drummers included: Mike McIver, Johnny Smith, David Anderson and Barry Whistler.

Richard Parker and Steve Howard
Richard Parker and Steve Howard
Steve Howard and Richard Parker
Steve Howard and Richard Parker

The Rain Kings 45 EP Lewis, Lewis & Everybody Out of the PoolOther members heard on these recordings are Bobby Bassett (vocal: “I’m A Little Fat Boy”), Connie Collins (organ: “Blind Man”), Dennis Keys (guitar: “I Do Believe You’re Dreaming”, “Close Your Eyes”), Danny Porter (pedal steel guitar on “If You Really Want Me To” and “In My Life”).

Sometimes the number in the group would be four or five and other times it would swell to ten or twelve. We never knew how many of the group would show up, or which ones of us would be among the present. If we were playing at a birthday party or gas station grand opening or some other gala event, and four guys showed up, it would sometimes be just the bass player, the harmonica blower, the tambourine rattler and the guy who carried the amplifiers. We’d play anyway, and no one in the audience seemed to notice the eerie silence where the guitar breaks should have been or where the drum solo was supposed to go.

Nevertheless, we were among the musical elite in the area, being hailed as the “best band north of Garland Road and west of Peavy Road yet southeast of Rustic Circle, bounded by Sylvania Drive to the east and Timmy’s house on the southwest.” Quite an honor.

Recording – Simply Uncalled For

Knowing in our hearts that we were about to make musical history, we wanted to make sure that this legacy would live throughout the ages. The only way to do this of course was to make a record. So in 1965 we booked one solid hour in an upstairs, downtown recording studio, which was famous for recording on two tracks! This was the big time.

The hour that we booked included the time it took us to unpack the cars, load our equipment up the stairs, set up and tune up (man, I wish we had recorded that tune-up, as it was one of our very best.) In the same hour we also had to tear down the equipment and get it the heck out of the studio to make way for whoever had booked the following fifteen minutes of studio time.

That left us with about seventeen minutes of actual recording time for our four songs. This turned out to be more than enough and we spent the last five minutes smoking cigarettes and planning our Grammy acceptance speeches. In the session, four lasting musical memories were perpetrated: Lydia, Everybody Out of the Pool, Lewis Lewis and the tune which would inevitably become our signature song, I Know What You’re Trying To Do But You Can’t Get Away With It.

Lydia had lyrics that were so bad that even The Rain Kings were embarrassed by them (including the immortal line “If you should leave, my name is Steve.”)

We decided to go for broke and pressed one hundred copies of our record, and in six short months we had sold almost one-third of them for a clear profit of sixteen cents.

Richard Parker
Richard Parker

Richard on washboard, Jon Clifford shaking the antlers
Richard on washboard, Jon Clifford shaking the antlers
In Concert

The Rain Kings may have been the first “anti-band”. We set out to be weird and succeeded beyond our wildest expectations. Often our audiences didn’t have a clue as to what we were doing. Often we didn’t either. This sometimes ended up antagonizing rather than entertaining the audience. In The Rain Kings’ performances, we not only began to enjoy this audience confusion and sometimes anger, we courted it. After all, the only reputation we had was one of weirdness interrupted by occasional music, so we decided to maximize our public image and go for it all. We set our goal on “Stupid”. Our reasoning was that merely being bad was not enough to bring in the patrons, and being bad and weird was somehow even worse. But being “stupid”…now that had possibilities.

There’s logic in there somewhere. People will gather to watch the clean-up of a car wreck. They will stop at an empty field and say “Look, here’s where old Henderson’s barn used to be.” They will watch mimes perform. Therefore, if it is presented right, people will watch anything.

Crowds of curious and disappointed fans flocked in the high single digits to our Stupid Show. We played one song while laying on our backs. We sang a rock version of a radio commercial for pies. We sang a hillbilly ballad from the 1930s accompanied only by the sound of tire tools pounding on wooden objects. We sang our “hit” records, of course, since they were incredibly stupid even before we planned to be that way.

One touch that seemed to affect every song performed was “the standard Rain King ending”, which usually meant that the song went on way too long or crashed to a finale in a musical wreck of non-stop non-stopping.

The band often played songs with their backs to the audience or while laying down on the stage.

At one time the band included a performer whose entire function was to shake a pair of small deer antlers, which made no sound at all. We often – intentionally – sang in a key different from the musical instruments. We referred to this as “singing in the key of ‘R’”.

We planned to be stupid, even billing ourselves as the world’s worst band. And the people accepted us as just that. Success at last.

The Gretta Spoone Band - first lineup, 1967
The Gretta Spoone Band – first lineup, 1967

A Cabbage By Any Other Name

By our second year of playing I Know What You’re Trying To Do But You Can’t Get Away With It at various parties, fried chicken restaurants and parking lots, our reputation was solid and widespread. Therefore we could not get a job playing anywhere, not even if we paid them.

We solved this problem by changing the name of our band after each performance. Sometimes we would even change our name during a performance. Once we performed in an out-of-town high school gym as “Solid Jackson and the Catfish”. And by the time the word spread that you should never hire “Solid Jackson and the Catfish” for any reason, it was too late. We had already changed our band name and were stinking up the joint somewhere else as “Gretchen and The Japanese Luggage”, “Andy Bednigo and The Dippy-Dippy Strolls” or “Little Patty Ann Montgomery and Her Fat Friends”.

Eventually, while going over our list of potential band names for the week, we decided to make a demo recording at the same small walk-up recording studio downtown, where we had earlier inflicted four songs upon tape. This time we had several new songs, each worse than the others in its own special way. One song we recorded at the time was about a blind man who received a magic pie from an angelic vision that promised to restore his sight. However, all the eating of the pie did was to make him deaf too. It had a snappy beat and a cavernous organ lead that sounded like funeral music played at the wrong speed. It was a dandy song.

Another song we unleashed that day was either called Bird Droppings or Mother Cabbage Makes Good, we could never decide on the final title. We also recorded other songs that day such as I’m A Little Fat Boy and I Do Believe You’re Dreaming, the latter a story of a man who talks to birds.

In spite of the fact that the songs were dreadful, poorly conceived and badly executed, a local record company was delirious enough to think that something (God knows what) in the songs might accidentally catch on with some small portion of the great unwashed public. They were wrong.

We signed a recording contract, re-recorded the worst two of the songs to the dismay of a bored recording engineer at IRI Studios in Dallas in late ’67 or early ’68, and were soon holding in our sweaty hands some freshly pressed 45 rpm records of our crimes.

The record steadfastly avoided sales anywhere in the world. The songs would have been poorly received in a school for the deaf. We still hold the recording industry’s all-time record for the “Single Recording Most Quickly Pulled From Release and Forgotten”.

Gretta Spoone Band, early 1968
Gretta Spoone Band, early 1968

Gretta Spoone Band Pompeii 45 I Do Believe You're DreamingLuckily this horrible musical event did nothing more to besmirch the already lousy reputation of The Rain Kings. You see, we had recorded under the name of “The Gretta Spoone Band.” A name which will live in infamy.It would be great to say that the band was the vanguard of a new musical direction that grabbed the sensibilities of the world. But to say that would be an outright lie. The Rain Kings were a musical aberration, a misprinted footnote in the history of music. So be it.

The Rain Kings were never heard from again, and thank God for that!

Our main lead singer – Steve Howard – continued in music and as John Steven Howard released a CD last year. He lives in Red River New Mexico and for a while in the 70s – 80s took Ray Wylie Hubbard’s place in a folk group called Three Faces West. They recorded an album in the late 70s.

David Anderson – one of our drummers though not heard on the recordings – owns Zoo Music Stores in Texas selling instruments (mostly guitars). Paul Roach our occasional organist still performs with his “real band” Kenny and the Kasuals. Paul was also “Gator Shades” of The Gator Shades Blues Band (Train Kept a Rollin’). Another of our drummers, Barry Whistler, owns a respected art gallery in Dallas. The rest of us were hounded out of the business by music lovers.

The 1992 reunion featured the original five Rain Kings. The reunion was recorded and contains some really crappy wonderful moments including the only time we recorded “Gorilla”. We also re-recorded the original Imposters Living Room Tapes and after 27 years we still sounded like a train wreck.

Richard Parker

Thank you to Richard Parker for sharing his recordings, photos and history of the band.

Gretta Spoone Band, 1968 lineup
Gretta Spoone Band, 1968 lineup

The Gentlemen “It’s a Cry’n Shame”

The Gentlemen, l-r: Tommy Turner on keyboards, Tim Justice (kneeling) on drums, Mike Kelley on guitar and vocals on "Cry'n Shame", Bruce Bland on bass, and Seab Meador on lead guitar and vocals.
l-r: Tommy Turner on keyboards, Tim Justice (kneeling) on drums, Mike Kelley on guitar and vocals on “Cry’n Shame”, Bruce Bland on bass, and Seab Meador on lead guitar and vocals.

Seab with Vox Super Beatle amp
Seab with Vox Super Beatle amp
Tim Justice, drummer for the Gentlemen, gives the history of the band behind one of the most essential 45s of the 1960s, “It’s a Cry’n Shame”:”The Gentlemen played in and around Dallas, Texas from 1964 until 1968, always enjoying a booked in advance schedule and putting on energy packed shows. Originally started by guitarist Seab Meador and drummer Tim Justice, they were joined by bassist Lonnie Taylor and guitarist and singer Mike Kelley in early 1965. The band’s early musical direction was crafted by Meador whose guitar genius was recognized by all who came in contact with the group. Seab loved early Rolling Stones, Animals, Kinks and Yardbirds, concentrating heavily on the stylings of Jeff Beck.

Gentlemen Vandan 45 It's a Cry'n Shame“The band took on more of the rhythm and blues swagger of the Stones and Animals than the pop ballads of the Beatles and Dave Clark Five. Our original bass player was Lonnie Taylor, who lived in South Dallas and had a hard time making all the gigs. We found Jimmie Randall, or he found us, and slowly the transition took place. I do remember a few nights when he AND Lonnie showed up and we played with 2 bass players. Heavy.

“Jimmie also remembers something that I didn’t, that he played bass on our first and earliest recordings, ‘Beg Borrow and Steal’, and ‘Here I Cannot Stay’, both written by Seab Meador. Boy, were we young. Must have been 15 at the time. In the session, Seab was on guitar and singing, I was drumming, Jimmie Randall was on bass and Mike Kelly was on guitar. The later three sang backup. Seab penned both songs and as far as I know, there are only 2 copies of the acetate, one owned by me and the other by Jimmie Randall. Jimmie reminds me that these AND the later ‘It’s a Cry’n Shame’ sessions were recorded at Summit [Sumet] Studio, and the master acetates where made upstairs at Boyd Recording Service. [This first session] cost $150 that we split 4 ways. We just wanted to see what we sounded like and never tried to find a label.

“This unit played through 1965 with the addition of fellow Oak Cliff musician Jimmy Vaughan, later of the ‘Fabulous Thunderbirds’, creating a powerful duet with Meador during a several month stint. Meador and Vaughan forged a solid friendship during this time.

Tim: "A business card with no phone number on it….Doesn’t make a great deal to sense, but I’m thinking we thought it was cool at the time!"
Tim: “A business card with no phone number on it….Doesn’t make a great deal to sense, but I’m thinking we thought it was cool at the time!”
“In early 1966, the nucleus that would come to represent the band formed, including Meador, Kelley, Justice and new members Bruce Bland on bass and Tommy Turner on keyboards. This incarnation solidified into a driving rock band that always brought down the house. They played venues such as Louann’s Club and the Studio Club in Dallas and Panther A’ Go-Go and The Box in Ft. Worth. During ’66, The Gentlemen opened for James Brown at the Dallas Convention Center, Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels, and The Beau Brummels at Louann’s. They played along side Jerry Lee Lewis and Roy Orbison at Panther A’ Go-Go.

“Tom Brown, president of Vandan Records heard us play at LouAnn’s Club in Dallas, and wondered if we would do some writing with him and Gene Garretson, his arranger. After several weeks, we came up with a song called ‘You Can’t Be True’ and what was considered the B side, ‘It’s a Cry’n Shame’. We liked ‘Cry’n Shame’ better, but Gene spent a lot of time arranging violins and multiple tracks for ‘You Can’t Be True’ so that was the track they pushed. It took us nearly two weeks to record ‘You Can’t Be True’, and as a complete after-thought, 2 takes and probably 1 hour to slam down ‘It’s a Cry’n Shame’. Therein lies the genuine spontaneity that makes it pure straight ahead punk rock, I suppose.

“The result was what has now become a garage rock classic. ‘It’s a Cry’n Shame’ has been referred to by the G45 LEGENDS listings as: ‘One of the top 10 tracks to play to anyone you need to convert to 60s garageism. Absolute perfection in every respect, including barnstorming drumming, scorching fuzz guitar complete with ripping break, bass alternately swooping and thumping. Add to this the distinctive vocals which combine the best pop sensibilities with the classic Texas punk sneer, and simple yet effective backing vocals. Everything’s just perfect.’

“Bruce Bland, our bass player, was playing a no brand bass guitar that he picked up at a thrift shop for $50. He had a Fender for gigs but this thing was so funky-butt ugly and had a fuzzy thumping sound, perfect for Cry’n Shame.

Seab Meador, 1965
Seab Meador, 1965

Gentlemen Boyd Recording Service demo 45 Beg, Borrow, and Steal“Seab Meador had a gaping hole in the center of his Vox Super Beatle so that he could stick his guitar neck inside to get the Fuzz tone that is prevalent on ‘Cry’n Shame’. He was a big Yardbirds follower.”Mike Kelley, our singer and guitarist, stuck his finger in the master tape spool by accident when it was rewinding, causing the strange modulation during the final cord at the end of the record. Since the mix had been finalized, it stayed in….

“Brown then pressed 1 or 2 thousand of the dreadfully flat Vandan copies and sent them to his DJ cronies in Detroit, Philly and Boston for airplay.

Gentlemen appearing at showing of Help!, Palace at Interstates Downtown“A few weeks later when we were having the photograph [above] made at the Studio Club in Dallas, a triumphant Brown walked in with a copy, (Jan. 1967) of Record World Magazine. In the 4 Star Rating column of hits to watch were 3 songs, ‘For What It’s Worth’, by the Buffalo Springfield, ‘Somebody to Love’, by the Jefferson Airplane, and ‘It’s a Cry’n Shame’ by the Gentlemen. We wondered how that could be at the time, whether Tom Brown paid someone for that privilege, but now I think maybe that song got there on it’s own merit. After all, it was suppose to be the B side. Ha.

“I remember when that 45 came out, it was sent to KLIF and KNOK radio stations is Dallas and they began to play it. We, of course, were completely beside ourselves. We had accepted a job playing at a large auditorium ‘go-go’ show in south Dallas with several other bands, but our new song established us as the band to beat. The promoters arranged to have 2 off duty Dallas police cars intercept us a few blocks from the gig. Girls were lined up several deep wanting autographs and such, so we had to run through them to get to our room back stage. Once there, a guard was stationed by our door and we could see girls jumping up to look in the little opera window, yelling and screaming.

“Bands were rotating equipment so that there were always 2 setups on stage. A band called Mike and the Midnighters played before us, and then it was our turn. We typically dressed in collarless jackets (Nehru Jackets they were called at the time) with gold ascots, stovepipe black slacks and Beatle boots, of course. What a crowd reaction! Several hundred wild kids whooping it up! When we finished and started off stage, several girls ran through the equipment to get to us, knocking over the Midnighter’s drum kit. The bass drum rolled over and fell off stage. They were very mad, but we were very happy, as this was about as close to ‘That 60’s British Rock Star Magic’ as a bunch of 16 year old kids from Dallas would ever get.

“It was 2 takes for Cry’n Shame because Tom Brown was out of money. Shortly after he showed up with the magazine, we showed up at his home to find a for sale sign and no furniture. We would find our later that he was down to his last cash and skipped town to avoid creditors. We never saw him again, but read that he moved to Los Angeles to start over. He died there not long after.

“In 1967, Seab Meador left the Gentlemen to pursue his quest for guitar immortality, including stints with Dallas bands The Bridge and The Werewolves. Guitarist Danny Sanchez who later played with the Roy Head band took over lead duties, but the magic that surrounded the core group was partially lost with Seab’s departure. The Gentlemen disbanded in early 1968 as other goals became important. Like so many bands of this era, we had an incredible time playing music that we loved during a time when 16 to 18 year old high school kids were able to live lives far more mature than their ages implied. It was a unique time that will never be repeated. Texas is known for braggin’ rights, and I realize that this bio contains some strong bragging, but I was and still am so proud to have played with such a great bunch of guys. You can’t buy that kind of friendship and strong ties. Seab and Mike have passed away, but I am still in touch with Tommy and Bruce and since we all still play our given instruments, a Gentlemen musical reunion is being discussed down in Dallas later this year. We may be a lot older, but at heart, we’re still kids from Oak Cliff and we can still rock.”

Tim Justice
Drummer, The Gentlemen

Bruce Bland and Mike Kelley
Bruce Bland and Mike Kelley

I asked Tim a few questions regarding the band:

Q. Didn’t the band start in Ft. Worth?

Tim: The Gentlemen were always from Dallas. Yes, we did play gigs in Ft. Worth, which as you know, had a thriving music scene of it’s own in the 60’s, but the guys from Norton Records who put the “Ft. Worth Teen Scene” compilations together either assumed or were told that we lived there. Not so.

Q. A band from Florida, the Invaders also performed at a movie theatre showing the Beatles movie Help! Strange coincidence, or maybe it wasn’t uncommon to have bands at movie theaters then?

Gentlemen Boyd Recording Service demo 45 Here I Cannot StayTim: I noticed that the Invaders had a similar newspaper clipping regarding HELP! That is a coincidence. I know that they must have had as much fun as we did. We played in the foyer of the theater and got paid PLUS great seats to watch the show. Big stuff for 16 year old kids.

Q. That set list is incredible, I can’t believe a band could play that many songs in one evening.

Tim: The playlist was pretty normal for a 4 hour gig back in those days. We would start around 7:30 and end up around 11:30 with 15 minute breaks in between sets. Each set was tweaked as we learned new songs. There were always a few requests, too.

Gentlemen live set list

Jimmie Randall on the Gentlemen:

“My connection was my friendship with Seab Meador. He introduced me to Tim and the other guitar player was Mike Kelley. They all went to Kimball High School in Dallas, I was at Sunset til we moved to Duncanville. They seemed to like my playing and let me be a sort of honorary member.

“I played with Lonnie on guitar in The Squires maybe that’s how I met Seab who knows? Not me. Everybody was changing bands so often then. I think because we were all learning to play and searching for a style and sound. It was like you sort of ‘outgrew’ one band and went on to the next size up. I do always say that the Gentlemen was the first ‘real’ band I was in. They had a real song list and could actually play.

“My time with the Gentlemen was really never as the ‘official’ bass player. I filled in some and played on a recording and on the Panther Hall TV show on Channel 11 from Ft.Worth. We even played a gig at Oak Cliff Country Club with two bass players …with predictable results. But we were 15 and 16 years old what did we know besides it was fun.

“Anyway as far as the Gentlemen recording I don’t really remember what was up with that. I know we did it at Summit Studios [Sumet Sound Studio]. I have the original acetate. These 2 songs [‘Beg, Borrow and Steal’ & ‘Here I Cannot Stay’] really showed off Seab’s early guitar licks and writing capabilities.

“It was recorded for our appearance on the Ft. Worth TV show that was on Friday nights on channel 11 from Panther Hall … a club on Camp Bowie. My first TV appearance was there with The Gentlemen. Seab and I got my mom to drive us over in her old Ford station wagon. First ‘out of town gig.’ Lots of local bands were on that show. I remember the night we were there a group called the Warlocks played I think Dusty and Rocky Hill were in that band they had a girl singer and all dressed in black. Also Johnny Green and the Green Men a show band with horns. Sort of a Wayne Cochran deal except with Giant green pompadour hair, instead of giant white pompadours.

“That was the first time I played with Seab. Later we tried to form a couple of bands, one of which was called the Hurricanes in Houston with Brian Papageorge and Ron Barnett. That became the Werewolves when Ron and I left to rejoin Gary Myrick in his band Slip of the Wrist. Seab was a great friend I was at the hospital the night before he died. He taught me a lot. I miss him still.”

After the Gentlemen, Jimmie Randall went on to play with Dallas groups The Styks and Stonz and The Beefeaters before joining Jo Jo Gunne.

As an interesting sidenote, Seab Meador did a short tour as a member (along with two future members of ZZ Top) of a fake version of the Zombies, a story told with great candor and excellent photos by fellow guitarist Mark Ramsey (Ramseur) at I Was a Teenage Fake Zombie.

The early acetate:

The Gentlemen – Beg Borrow or Steal
The Gentlemen – Here I Cannot Stay

Incredible rehearsal tape of It’s a Cry’n Shame:

The Gentlemen – It’s a Cry’n Shame (rehearsal)

The Vandan 45:
The Gentlemen – It’s a Cry’n Shame
The Gentlemen – You Can’t Be True

Gentlemen test pressing 45 It's a Crying Shame alternate rehearsal versionI detect a similarity between the riff of “It’s a Cry’n Shame” and Hilton Valentine’s opening to the Animals’ “Baby Let Me Take You Home”. Not to take anything away from Seab Meador, his playing is incredible. The Briks also did a version of this song not long before the Gentlemen cut “It’s a Cry’n Shame”.

The mastering of the Vandan 45 gives it a somewhat distorted, flat sound. Interestingly, a test pressing surfaced with both songs in better sound quality. It was labeled “Crimson Records”, but no one seems to know the definite origin of this copy. The master stampers are different from the Vandan release, and the markings in the dead wax are also unique.

According to Mark Taylor, the Crimson test pressing has in small handwriting “CRIMSON 1006A” and “B”, then “3 ∆ I”. The Vandan has a handwritten “TK4M 8303 1.” Mop Top Mike adds, “Dead wax details allow me to relay that the Crimson pressing is definitely 60s. The triangle and the “I” signify a Capitol custom pressing from the Scranton, Pennsylvania plant. The likely scenario – a better sounding copy was remastered for a subsequent pressing – perhaps the major label, Capitol records showed some interest, and the go ahead was made to upgrade from the original lacquer / stamper done by RCA. A second scenario – I believe the Gentlemen 45 was the last if not the second to last issued by the Caprice / Vandan label. The operators packing in the label might have had something to do with the new pressing.”

The liner notes to Ft Worth Teen Scene vol. 3 state that the band recorded the song for release on their own label (hence the Crimson Records test press), and then gave it to Vandan when they struck a deal. Tim Justice states, “There is no Crimson Record label per se. The now legendary Crimson copy is just that, a single copy which we believe to be the original master to disc recorded after the Vandan studio sessions and before the several thousand Vandan pressings were made.”

Credits: Photo of Seab in 1965 from the BigD60s yahoo group. Transfers of the Gentlemen test press 45 courtesy of Mark Taylor. Some of Tim’s recollections first appeared on the G45 Central site and are reproduced with permission. Quotes from Jimmie Randall from my correspondence with him as well as the BigD60’s group.

Gentlemen Misty Lane Records EP
Gentlemen Misty Lane Records EP

The Briks of Denton and Dallas TX

The Briks, left-right: Mike Meroney, Cecil Cotten, Richard Borgens, Lee Hardesty and Steve Martin
The Briks, left-right: Mike Meroney, Cecil Cotten, Richard Borgens, Lee Hardesty and Steve Martin

The Briks came from a band called the Embers who formed at Texas Tech in Lubbock in 1965, with Richard Borgens on vocals and lead guitar, Lee Hardesty on guitar, Bobby Daniels, and Steve Martin on drums. The band relocated to Denton, outside Dallas, and Gainesville, TX, where some of them attended Cooke County Junior College, a “home for the academically ill” as one teacher put it. There they met Cecil Cotten, who became their lead singer, and bassist Mike Meroney and changed their name to the Briks.

An early photo of the Briks
An early photo of the Briks, l-r: Lee Hardesty, Richard Borgens, Cecil Cotten, Steve Martin on drums, and Mike Meroney

The Briks
Lee Hardesty wrote on the BigD60s site:

Some of the Briks lived at the Stella St. apartments for a while. Cecil, Steve, Reggie Lang (manager) and I had a place there and Tommy Carter was just down a few doors. Across the courtyard is where Bob Story and Johnny Hale lived and they were some wild and crazy guys! Just around the corner at the next complex is where “The Four Speeds” lived (later they became “Felicity”). That was a fun time for the most part but I think our apt. was a mess. Some of us were driving back and forth to CCJC in Gainesville at the time.

The Briks signed with the Bismark agency, run by George Rickrich, who also managed the Chessmen. Whit Snell of the Beefeaters remembers Rickrich this way:

George was the Godfather of the music scene in Denton. He and Charlie Hatchet from Austin controlled everything north of San Antonio all the way to the Oklahoma border. His so-called real job was Manager of the Campus Theater on the Denton square. Here, at the back and above the large dimly lit balcony, was George’s office, Bismark Agency, filled with movie posters, black and white photos of bands, food wrappers and heaps of clutter, scribbled phone numbers, scratched out and circled dollar figures. There, on his desk, were two or three black telephones, their rotary dials worn shinny silver from thousands of calls made by George’s stubby fingers.

Cecil Cotten at CCJC in 1966.
Cecil Cotten at CCJC in 1966.
Lee Hardesty adds: “George Rickrich started that laser light show in Forth Worth at the planetarium in the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History. At one point I helped him with some of the electronics and got a bunch of free passes to the movie theater as payment.”

Their first recordings were distributed on acetates only. Both “I’m Losing” and “It’s Your Choice” are classic garage numbers and it’s a shame these weren’t released on 45.

There are two versions of “It’s Your Choice”. One features a twelve-string guitar, and the band takes the song at a fast pace. The other has an altogether tougher sound. On this version Cecil’s vocals are nothing less than menacing. The band generates an ominous, intense sound with Mike Meroney’s repetitive bass line, the jangling guitar, drum fills and occasional harmonies. There’s a good, trebly guitar solo and a neat break with just bass, drums and handclaps.

The Briks – It’s Your Choice
The Briks – It’s Your Choice (12-string version)

Steve Martin slams out the beat on “I’m Losing,” which also features their first use of a distortion pedal on the guitar. The band’s harmonies add to Cecil’s lead vocal but his voice still cuts through. It’s a great sound.

The Briks – I’m Losing

The Briks at Cook County Junior College
The Briks at Cook County Junior College, clockwise from bottom left: Mike Meroney, Reggie Lang (manager), Cecil Cotten, Richard Borgens, Lee Hardesty and Steve Martin

The Briks, 1966

Lee Hardesty: I can’t speak for the differing versions. I remember recording them only once at Sellers (downtown Dallas). It was our first trip to the studio and I remember the engineer running out of the control room saying “There’s something wrong here! I’m hearing horrible distortion!!” We laughed because he had never heard a fuzztone before and didn’t know it was intentional. Actually he was probably right about the sound though. That was my original (homemade) fuzz box, built into a wooden English Leather box, and I imagine it probably did sound pretty horrible.

When we had finished recording we asked for a 45 and they cut us one right there on the spot (cutting lathe). We drove out to KBOX on flagpole hill (about midnight) and went around to the back of the building. I think the DJ was the only one there so we knocked on the window and he opened it to talk to us. We gave him the 45 and went back to our car and listened to it on the radio! What a thrill! Seems a little more difficult to get things on the radio these days.

The Briks at the Studio Club, 1966
At the Studio Club, 1966

The Briks Bismark 45 Foolish BabyThe Briks released their first 45, the poppy “Can You See Me?” on Bismark in ’66, though garage fans love the flip side, “Foolish Baby”. Both sides are originals by Richard Borgens and Cecil Cotten. Dot label picked it up for national distribution and to promote the record the Briks traveled to Houston for shows at the Catacombs, around November of 1966.

Lee Hardesty: It was a big thrill the first time we played there. We were given some real star treatment, ads on the radio stations, radio station interviews, a dinner I believe. I think they might have been a little underwhelmed though because that stuff ended after our first night. It was a cool place (glad we didn’t use pyrotechnics back then!!) but I liked the parties and other dance halls better where it wasn’t so much of a show thing. I liked playing when people were dancing more.

Mike Meroney: I also recall that the Dot record rep showed up and threw records to the audience. I also recall that we changed outfits between each set and broke a guitar or two. How nutty was that? We appeared on the Larry Kane show during one of those trips to Houston. I remember listening to the Catacombs promos on the radio as we approached Houston – that would pump us up.

 Lyrics to Foolish Baby
Lyrics to Foolish Baby
On one trip to the Catacombs they were overshadowed by the professionalism of Baton Rouge’s Greek Fountains.

Mike Meroney: We went back there several times with various versions of the band. The last gig there that I remember was a bit humbling. We were the headliners but they had another band that played during our breaks. All I remember was they were awesome, kind’a kicked our butts, and it was hard to get back up there and do a second set. They were some band from Louisiana and had real good players, PA, etc.

As I recall their name was the Greek Fountains or something like that. They were good. It seems like the most common technical challenges in those days were with PA systems. They never could seem to catch up with the rest of the stuff. As a bass player I felt techno disadvantaged as well. It was hard to keep up with the Hardesty. It was never loud enough or clear enough or punchy enough. The first set up that I felt even reasonably satisfied with was dual Kustom towers. This Louisiana band did have a good equipment setup including an awesome PA.

Another venue for the Briks was the legendary Louanns.

Cecil Cotten: We had to audition in order to play. The audition was done while Mrs. Bovis and her family were eating dinner. This was in 1966. There were two stages one on each end and another completely different room on the other side and yes a beer garden.

The Briks also played Sump N Else [local TV show hosted by Ron Chapman] and played two songs. “I’m A Man” (Yardbirds) and “Baby Let Me Take You Home” (Animals). I remember the window that allowed people to look in on the show while they were at the North Park Mall. It was like being in Hollywood for us. We were still in our late teens or early 20’s and felt invincible.

In a comment below which I’ll repeat here, Bud Buschardt writes:

The Briks appeared on the Sump’n Else show on October 10, 1966. The music log lists them playing a song called “Keep Down.” When a group appeared on the show, they also performed live for the pre-show warm up. Perhaps that is when they played the cover songs mentioned in the bio. Our music lists were often made out in a hurry before the show, so there could have possibly been a misunderstanding of the song title, especially if no one in the group remembers “Keep Down.”

What sounds like a studio version of “Baby Let Me Take You Home” exists, and it’s a great version with an intro that’s reminiscent of the riff to the Gentlemen’s “It’s a Cry’n’ Shame”, fine drumming, 12-string guitar and a rave-up ending. It’s likely the Briks recording came first – could it have influenced the Gentlemen’s legendary guitarist Seab Meador? In any case, I believe it was Animals’ guitarist Hilton Valentine who came up with that riff for “Baby Let Me Take You Home” in 1964.

The Briks at Taylor Ranch
At Taylor Ranch
from left: Mike Meroney, Lee Hardesty, Cecil Cotten
In August ’66 Cecil Cotten, Steve Martin, the band’s manager Reggie Lang, and Mike Neal of the Jackals all joined the Air Force together, drafted after they’d left Cooke County Junior College. Chris Vanderkolk replaced Steve Martin on drums. Paul Ray replaced Cecil on vocals, singing on a version of “Keep Down” recorded at IRL. It’s an interesting original with organ and descending bass line, and appeared years later with other Briks material on the old vinyl compilation Texas Punk vol. 7.

March 17-18, 1967 the Briks play at the Box in Fort Worth.

Paul Ray soon left to join the Cobras. Cecil was out of the service and back in the band by January, 1967, and Jamie Herndon came in on lead guitar, replacing Richard Borgens, who wanted to try production work and folk-oriented music.

Later that year the Briks released a second 45, a cover of Cream’s “NSU” b/w “From a Small Room”, an original by Borgens. Part of a show at the Northwood Country Club was recorded, the set list full of songs made famous by British bands: “Til the End of the Day”, “NSU”, “The Nazz Are Blue”, “Heart Full of Soul”, and “I’m a Man”. There’s also a live version of “Everybody Needs Someone to Love” that, to my ears, comes from an earlier live performance show. All of these are collected on Texas Punk vol. 8.

Lee Hardesty: I think that one of those unissued songs was actually recorded at Mike Meroney’s house using his father’s tape deck. The song “Over You” was an original by Jamie Herndon and the real title was “Green Green” if I’m thinking of the same thing here.

“Over You” has a lot of potential as a song, with moody, churning verses going into a brief ooh-ing “over you” and a short fast break. On the version I heard, the sounds of a guitar and bass doing some practice runs intrudes on the recording briefly about 35 seconds in.

The lyrics are hard to make out, but I can hear some snippets like “the sky is blue the night is black the sea is green …” The song finishes with an intense 12-string guitar solo that lasts a full minute over a bass line reminiscent of Cream’s “”Tales of Brave Ulysses”.

I’ve read they also cut a version of “It Won’t Be Wrong” but if so, I haven’t heard it.

The Briks after Cecil Cotten returned to the band
The Briks after Cecil Cotten returned to the band
Rear l-r: Mike Meroney, Chris Vanderkolk, Cecil Cotten. Front l-r: Lee Hardesty and Jamie Herndon

Briks Bismark 45 Can You See MeThe Briks broke up by 1968 and Cecil joined a band with some members of the Chessmen, who had also just split. Cecil told me “Jimmy Rabbit managed a band called Texas which included Jimmy Vaughn guitar, Cecil Cotten vocalist, Tommy Carter bass, Billy Etheridge keyboards and on drums Sammy Piazza. We did some recording at Robin Hood Brians studio in Tyler (I would really like to have a copy of those tapes). We played only a few times and one of those times was opening for The Jeff Beck Group with Rod Stewart at Louanns in Dallas.”

In 1969, Cotten moved out to San Francisco with Benny Rowe of the Wig, Steve Karnavas of the Chaparrals, and Keith Ferguson, where they gigged as Benny, Cecil and the Snakes.

Richard Borgens sang on The Truth’s 45, “Chimes on 42nd Street” / “When Was Then”.

The Briks reunited once, in 1996 at White Rock Lake.

Lee Hardesty: It was really a pretty short run for the original Briks, just a year and a half or so, then another year or so with Paul and Chris and Jamie I would guess. A lot happened in a fairly short time and it was quite a while ago. If we’d only had a clue we should have been writing and recording a lot more. Richard had more talent in that area than we realized at the time, and so did Mike for that matter. Somehow I just don’t think I had any idea what we were doing or what the potential was. It was mostly just fun and a way to make some money. And it was a lot of fun sometimes.

I’m very sad to report that Cecil Cotten passed away on Friday, April 4, 2008 in Winnsboro, TX, at the age of 62. In recent years Cecil and former Briks bandmate Mike Neal recorded a CD of blues-inspired songs as The Pickin’ Cotten Band. I greatly regret I never met Cecil in person, and his music will always mean a great deal to me.

Update February 2020: I’m very sorry to write that Richard Borgens passed away on November 25, 2019. He was a faculty member at Purdue University and founded the Center for Paralysis Research “to develop clinical therapies for injury and disease of the human nervous system” and that he was “regarded as a preeminent researcher in spinal cord neuronal regeneration.”

Thank you to the BigD60’s site for the history and photos of the band, and to Andrew B. for contributing the transfer of the incredible acetate of “It’s Your Choice”.

 Later photo of the Briks
Later photo of the Briks
Cecil Cotten of the Briks performing live on the train to Waco Denton Record Chronicle, December 8, 1965
Cecil Cotten of the Briks performing live on the train to Waco Denton Record Chronicle, December 8, 1965