Podcasts about Daryl Dragon

American musician, songwriter; member of musical duo Captain & Tennille

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Latest podcast episodes about Daryl Dragon

History & Factoids about today
Aug 27-Just Because, Lyndon Johnson, Captain & Tennille, Barbara Bach, Pee Wee Herman, Boy Howdy

History & Factoids about today

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2024 12:08


Natioal Just because day.  Entertainment from 1981.  Loudest sound ever-Krakatoa erupted, shortest war in history, 1st oil well drilled.  Todays birthdays - Lyndon Jonhnson, Tommy Sands, Daryl Dragon, Tuesday Weld, Barbara Bach, Pee Wee Herman, Jeffrey Steele.  Stevie Ray Vaughn died. Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard    https://defleppard.com/Just because - Janes AddictionEndless love - Diana Ross  Lionel RichieTheres no gettin over me - Ronnie MilsapBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent    https://www.50cent.com/ Teenage Crush - Tommy SandsLove will keep us together - Captain & TennilleShe'd give anything - Boy HowdyCrossfire - Stevie Ray VaughnExit - Its not love - Dokken    https://www.dokken.net/  Follow Jeff Stampka on facebook and cooolmedia.com

Interviewing the Legends: Rock Stars & Celebs
Charles Wright "Express Yourself" Singer & Songwriter Releasing New Music and Book!

Interviewing the Legends: Rock Stars & Celebs

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 65:38


Hello everyone and welcome to another edition of Interviewing the Legends I'm your host Ray Shasho. Charles Wright was born in Clarksdale Mississippi, where he grew up and was musically inclined by playing the guitar and singing in several doo-wop groups, including, The Twilighters, The Shield, and The Gallahads. Wright briefly worked as A&R Director for Del-Fi Records and was responsible for the hit recording of "Those Oldies But Goodies (Remind Me of You)" by Little Caesar and the Romans in 1961. By 1964, Wright formed his own band called Charles Wright & the Wright Sounds, which included John Raynford, and Daryl Dragon, the "Captain" of Captain & Tennille. Wright added more members to the group, and they became known as the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band, and they played in several venues across Los Angeles. In the 1970s the band was best known for their world-renowned hit, "Express Yourself.” It was written by Wright and distributed by Warner Bros. TM, where it would hit #3 and #12 on the R&B and Pop charts, respectively. Another hit record under Wright's reign was Do Your Thing, which set the stage for a 1970s pornographic study of Boogie Nights. To date, Wright's songs have been covered by legendary artists around the globe. During the rise of Hip-Hop in the 1980s, many rap artists sampled chunks of funk from Wright's wax, including N.W.A. and their smash track, "Express Yourself" Brand Nubian Funk, Naughty By Nature, Gang Starr, and Sean "P. Diddy" Combs also gleaned inspiration from Wright's work. PLEASE WELCOME LEGENDARY SOUL/R&B/FUNK/ SINGER/SONGWRITER AND MULTI-INSTRUMENTALIST CHARLES WRIGHT TO INTERVIEWING THE LEGENDS …   WATCH FOR THE BRAND-NEW ALBUM BY CHARLES WRIGHT COMING SOON! AND PURCHASE THE RECENT RELEASE BY CHARLES WRIGHT ‘TAKING IT BACK' AT  Amazon.com   Also Up: From Where We've Come An Eventful Journey A BOOK By Charles Wright author "UP" contains historical moments, where the reader will experience inserts of the author's life long before he gained his status as a musical legend. And like his music, Wrights' story is a historical account of events that could only be told in his own personal and unique style. Wright's book is about a young boy and his family's trials and tribulations on a cotton plantation owned by a cruel sharecropper named Edward Miles, who was born with an unfair advantage, which he uses to dominate his subjects. At the critical age of eight, the boy's father demanded he pick no less than a hundred pounds a day, which according to the author, he has yet to be able to deliver. But any time he failed, he faced yet another one of his father's vicious whippings. His father was involved with the cruel hearted landowner, who owned four hundred acres of fertile land, which he and his family were obligated to work 40 acres of. This, of course, called for an oversized family, which at that time was a sharecropper's dream. The beatings continued practically on a daily basis and continued even after the family relocated to California due to the fact that his father had developed a habit of taking his personal frustrations out on the boy. During the late forties and early fifties, his parents decided to opt out of the cotton business for good, but soon realized Mr. Miles was not so willing to let go. They plotted a scheme and leaving the plantation, they moved into Clarksdale, but only to realize how relentless the old sharecropper actually was. So in an effort to subdue the family, Mr. Miles used his influence among other white southerners to deny the boy's father employment. Their saga continued due to one incident after another until finally, the child's mother sought help from her oldest daughter, who'd already moved out of state. The rest is history. His story takes too many twists and turns to explain in a brief synopsis, yet in the end it has a surprisingly pleasant way of resolving itself.   FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT CHARLES WRIGHT VISIT https://expressyourself.net/ Official website www.facebook.com/charleswrightmusic FACEBOOK www.youtube.com/user/charleswrightz1 YouTube https://open.spotify.com/artist/6fN2KrVTKQmaJPNWfIiIuh?si=6yf8nhONRXC296guwV128w&nd=1 Spotify   Discography CHARLES WRIGHT Singles Act   Title Release   Year Charlie Wright "Help Yourself" / "Number One" (1966) Charles Wright         "(I'm Living On) Borrowed Time" / "Keep Saying (You Don't Love Nobody)" (1966) Charles Wright         "Soul Train" / "Run Jody Run" (1972) Charles Wright         "You Gotta Know Whatcha Doin'" / "Here Comes the Sun" (1972) Charles Wright         "(Well I'm) Doin' What Cums Naturally" Part 1 / "(Well I'm) Doin' What Cums Naturally" Part 2 (1973) Charles Wright         "You Threw It All Away" / "The Weight Of Hate"          (1973) Charles Wright         "Is It Real?" / "Don't Rush Tomorrow" (1975) Charles Wright         "You Gotta Know Whatcha Doin" / "Here Comes The Sun" Happiness (2014) Just Fine (2020)   CHARLES WRIGHT Albums Act   Title   Year Charles Wright         Rhythm And Poetry (1972) Charles Wright         Doing What Comes Naturally (1973) Charles Wright         Ninety Day Cycle People (1974) Charles Wright         A Lil' Encouragement (1975) Charles Wright of The Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band Going To The Party          (1997) Charles Wright         Music For The Times We Live In (2002) Charles Wright of The Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band High Maintenance Woman (2003) Charles Wright of The Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band with The Gallahads          My Love Affair With Doo-Wop (2004) Charles Wright         Finally Got It... Wright (2007)          Music For The Times We Live In (2007) Rhythm and Poetry (Remastered & Expanded) (2007) Something to Make You Feel Good (2016) Taking It Back (2021) A Little Bit of Everything (2023) Coming soon!   As Charles Wright and the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band Album    Year Express Yourself (1970) You're So Beautiful (1971)     Support us!

Personally Speaking with Msgr. Jim Lisante
Personally Speaking ep. 126 (Toni Tennille)

Personally Speaking with Msgr. Jim Lisante

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 28:00


In this episode of Personally Speaking, Msgr. Jim Lisante is joined by singer/songwriter Toni Tennille. Toni is best known as one half of the 1970's duo “Captain and Tennille” with her husband Daryl Dragon. Their signature song is “Love Will Keep Us Together” and The Captain and Tennille went on to become one of the most popular musical duo's of the ‘70's and ‘80's.  Toni talks about her life, her career, playing Dolly Levi in a current production of “Hello Dolly!”, and the values that matter most to her.Support the show

speaking captain personally msgr hello dolly tennille dolly levi toni tennille love will keep us together daryl dragon
Steve Dale's Other World from WGN Plus
Toni Tennille: Saying ‘hello' to Dolly

Steve Dale's Other World from WGN Plus

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2022


Singer-songwriter Toni Tennille joins WGN Radio’s Steve Dale to talk about her role as Dolly Levi in Yavapai College Performing Arts Center’s performance of Hello Dolly. Later, she discusses her music career and her relationship with the late “Captain” Daryl Dragon.

Harvey Brownstone Interviews...
Harvey Brownstone Interviews Toni Tennille, Pop Music Legend

Harvey Brownstone Interviews...

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 45:15


Harvey Brownstone conducts an in-depth interview with Toni Tennille, Pop Music Legend of Captain and Tennille, Stage Star About Harvey's guest: Today's special guest, Toni Tennille, is a popular music legend.  She's a fabulous singer, songwriter and musician whose beautiful voice first took the world by storm in the seventies, in the musical duo “Captain and Tennille”.   Their first big hit, “Love Will Keep Us Together”, was the number 1 song of 1975, and won a Grammy Award for Record of the Year.   A quick succession of 14 mega-hits followed, including:“The Way I Want to Touch You”“Shop Around”“Do That To Me One More Time”“Lonely Night”“I'm On My Way”“Can't Stop Dancin'”“You Never Done it Like That”, and of course, “Muskrat Love”.    In addition to her 9 studio albums as part of “Captain and Tennille”, our guest recorded 6 solo albums, including “More Than You Know”, “All of Me”, “Do It Again”, “Never Let Me Go”, “Things Are Swingin'”, and my all-time favourite, “Incurably Romantic”.    She and her former husband, Daryl Dragon, hosted their own prime time TV variety show, as well as 3 television specials.  And then, a few years later, she hosted her own daytime talk show.   She's toured all over the country, singing the Great American Songbook with symphony orchestras.   And in 1997, she starred in the highly acclaimed national tour of “Victor/Victoria”.    She also wrote a deeply poignant, best selling book entitled, “Toni Tennille: A Memoir”, in which she candidly shares her emotional evolution and some very important life lessons.   And now, she's preparing for the stage role of a LIFETIME.    From November 3 to the 20th, she'll be starring in HELLO DOLLY at the Yavapai College Performing Arts Center in Prescott, Arizona.   This is a woman whose voice brings warmth, emotion and accessibility to EVERY performance and EVERY song she sings.   For more interviews and podcasts go to: https://www.harveybrownstoneinterviews.com/ https://www.tonitennille.net/https://www.facebook.com/TheRealToniTennillehttps://twitter.com/tonitennillehttps://www.ycpac.com/ #ToniTennille    #harveybrownstoneinterviews

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs
Episode 151: “San Francisco” by Scott McKenzie

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022


We start season four of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs with an extra-long look at "San Francisco" by Scott McKenzie, and at the Monterey Pop Festival, and the careers of the Mamas and the Papas and P.F. Sloan. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on "Up, Up, and Away" by the 5th Dimension. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt's irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ Resources As usual, all the songs excerpted in the podcast can be heard in full at Mixcloud. Scott McKenzie's first album is available here. There are many compilations of the Mamas and the Papas' music, but sadly none that are in print in the UK have the original mono mixes. This set is about as good as you're going to find, though, for the stereo versions. Information on the Mamas and the Papas came from Go Where You Wanna Go: The Oral History of The Mamas and the Papas by Matthew Greenwald, California Dreamin': The True Story Of The Mamas and Papas by Michelle Phillips, and Papa John by John Phillips and Jim Jerome. Information on P.F. Sloan came from PF - TRAVELLING BAREFOOT ON A ROCKY ROAD by Stephen McParland and What's Exactly the Matter With Me? by P.F. Sloan and S.E. Feinberg. The film of the Monterey Pop Festival is available on this Criterion Blu-Ray set. Sadly the CD of the performances seems to be deleted. Patreon This podcast is brought to you by the generosity of my backers on Patreon. Why not join them? Transcript Welcome to season four of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. It's good to be back. Before we start this episode, I just want to say one thing. I get a lot of credit at times for the way I don't shy away from dealing with the more unsavoury elements of the people being covered in my podcast -- particularly the more awful men. But as I said very early on, I only cover those aspects of their life when they're relevant to the music, because this is a music podcast and not a true crime podcast. But also I worry that in some cases this might mean I'm giving a false impression of some people. In the case of this episode, one of the central figures is John Phillips of the Mamas and the Papas. Now, Phillips has posthumously been accused of some truly monstrous acts, the kind of thing that is truly unforgivable, and I believe those accusations. But those acts didn't take place during the time period covered by most of this episode, so I won't be covering them here -- but they're easily googlable if you want to know. I thought it best to get that out of the way at the start, so no-one's either anxiously waiting for the penny to drop or upset that I didn't acknowledge the elephant in the room. Separately, this episode will have some discussion of fatphobia and diet culture, and of a death that is at least in part attributable to those things. Those of you affected by that may want to skip this one or read the transcript. There are also some mentions of drug addiction and alcoholism. Anyway, on with the show. One of the things that causes problems with rock history is the tendency of people to have selective memories, and that's never more true than when it comes to the Summer of Love, summer of 1967. In the mythology that's built up around it, that was a golden time, the greatest time ever, a period of peace and love where everything was possible, and the world looked like it was going to just keep on getting better. But what that means, of course, is that the people remembering it that way do so because it was the best time of their lives. And what happens when the best time of your life is over in one summer? When you have one hit and never have a second, or when your band splits up after only eighteen months, and you have to cope with the reality that your best years are not only behind you, but they weren't even best years, but just best months? What stories would you tell about that time? Would you remember it as the eve of destruction, the last great moment before everything went to hell, or would you remember it as a golden summer, full of people with flowers in their hair? And would either really be true? [Excerpt: Scott McKenzie, "San Francisco"] Other than the city in which they worked, there are a few things that seem to characterise almost all the important figures on the LA music scene in the middle part of the 1960s. They almost all seem to be incredibly ambitious, as one might imagine. There seem to be a huge number of fantasists among them -- people who will not only choose the legend over reality when it suits them, but who will choose the legend over reality even when it doesn't suit them. And they almost all seem to have a story about being turned down in a rude and arrogant manner by Lou Adler, usually more or less the same story. To give an example, I'm going to read out a bit of Ray Manzarek's autobiography here. Now, Manzarek uses a few words that I can't use on this podcast and keep a clean rating, so I'm just going to do slight pauses when I get to them, but I'll leave the words in the transcript for those who aren't offended by them: "Sometimes Jim and Dorothy and I went alone. The three of us tried Dunhill Records. Lou Adler was the head man. He was shrewd and he was hip. He had the Mamas and the Papas and a big single with Barry McGuire's 'Eve of Destruction.' He was flush. We were ushered into his office. He looked cool. He was California casually disheveled and had the look of a stoner, but his eyes were as cold as a shark's. He took the twelve-inch acetate demo from me and we all sat down. He put the disc on his turntable and played each cut…for ten seconds. Ten seconds! You can't tell jack [shit] from ten seconds. At least listen to one of the songs all the way through. I wanted to rage at him. 'How dare you! We're the Doors! This is [fucking] Jim Morrison! He's going to be a [fucking] star! Can't you see that? Can't you see how [fucking] handsome he is? Can't you hear how groovy the music is? Don't you [fucking] get it? Listen to the words, man!' My brain was a boiling, lava-filled Jell-O mold of rage. I wanted to eviscerate that shark. The songs he so casually dismissed were 'Moonlight Drive,' 'Hello, I Love You,' 'Summer's Almost Gone,' 'End of the Night,' 'I Looked at You,' 'Go Insane.' He rejected the whole demo. Ten seconds on each song—maybe twenty seconds on 'Hello, I Love You' (I took that as an omen of potential airplay)—and we were dismissed out of hand. Just like that. He took the demo off the turntable and handed it back to me with an obsequious smile and said, 'Nothing here I can use.' We were shocked. We stood up, the three of us, and Jim, with a wry and knowing smile on his lips, cuttingly and coolly shot back at him, 'That's okay, man. We don't want to be *used*, anyway.'" Now, as you may have gathered from the episode on the Doors, Ray Manzarek was one of those print-the-legend types, and that's true of everyone who tells similar stories about Lou Alder. But... there are a *lot* of people who tell similar stories about Lou Adler. One of those was Phil Sloan. You can get an idea of Sloan's attitude to storytelling from a story he always used to tell. Shortly after he and his family moved to LA from New York, he got a job selling newspapers on a street corner on Hollywood Boulevard, just across from Schwab's Drug Store. One day James Dean drove up in his Porsche and made an unusual request. He wanted to buy every copy of the newspaper that Sloan had -- around a hundred and fifty copies in total. But he only wanted one article, something in the entertainment section. Sloan didn't remember what the article was, but he did remember that one of the headlines was on the final illness of Oliver Hardy, who died shortly afterwards, and thought it might have been something to do with that. Dean was going to just clip that article from every copy he bought, and then he was going to give all the newspapers back to Sloan to sell again, so Sloan ended up making a lot of extra money that day. There is one rather big problem with that story. Oliver Hardy died in August 1957, just after the Sloan family moved to LA. But James Dean died in September 1955, two years earlier. Sloan admitted that, and said he couldn't explain it, but he was insistent. He sold a hundred and fifty newspapers to James Dean two years after Dean's death. When not selling newspapers to dead celebrities, Sloan went to Fairfax High School, and developed an interest in music which was mostly oriented around the kind of white pop vocal groups that were popular at the time, groups like the Kingston Trio, the Four Lads, and the Four Aces. But the record that made Sloan decide he wanted to make music himself was "Just Goofed" by the Teen Queens: [Excerpt: The Teen Queens, "Just Goofed"] In 1959, when he was fourteen, he saw an advert for an open audition with Aladdin Records, a label he liked because of Thurston Harris. He went along to the audition, and was successful. His first single, released as by Flip Sloan -- Flip was a nickname, a corruption of "Philip" -- was produced by Bumps Blackwell and featured several of the musicians who played with Sam Cooke, plus Larry Knechtel on piano and Mike Deasey on guitar, but Aladdin shut down shortly after releasing it, and it may not even have had a general release, just promo copies. I've not been able to find a copy online anywhere. After that, he tried Arwin Records, the label that Jan and Arnie recorded for, which was owned by Marty Melcher (Doris Day's husband and Terry Melcher's stepfather). Melcher signed him, and put out a single, "She's My Girl", on Mart Records, a subsidiary of Arwin, on which Sloan was backed by a group of session players including Sandy Nelson and Bruce Johnston: [Excerpt: Philip Sloan, "She's My Girl"] That record didn't have any success, and Sloan was soon dropped by Mart Records. He went on to sign with Blue Bird Records, which was as far as can be ascertained essentially a scam organisation that would record demos for songwriters, but tell the performers that they were making a real record, so that they would record it for the royalties they would never get, rather than for a decent fee as a professional demo singer would get. But Steve Venet -- the brother of Nik Venet, and occasional songwriting collaborator with Tommy Boyce -- happened to come to Blue Bird one day, and hear one of Sloan's original songs. He thought Sloan would make a good songwriter, and took him to see Lou Adler at Columbia-Screen Gems music publishing. This was shortly after the merger between Columbia-Screen Gems and Aldon Music, and Adler was at this point the West Coast head of operations, subservient to Don Kirshner and Al Nevins, but largely left to do what he wanted. The way Sloan always told the story, Venet tried to get Adler to sign Sloan, but Adler said his songs stunk and had no commercial potential. But Sloan persisted in trying to get a contract there, and eventually Al Nevins happened to be in the office and overruled Adler, much to Adler's disgust. Sloan was signed to Columbia-Screen Gems as a songwriter, though he wasn't put on a salary like the Brill Building songwriters, just told that he could bring in songs and they would publish them. Shortly after this, Adler suggested to Sloan that he might want to form a writing team with another songwriter, Steve Barri, who had had a similar non-career non-trajectory, but was very slightly further ahead in his career, having done some work with Carol Connors, the former lead singer of the Teddy Bears. Barri had co-written a couple of flop singles for Connors, before the two of them had formed a vocal group, the Storytellers, with Connors' sister. The Storytellers had released a single, "When Two People (Are in Love)" , which was put out on a local independent label and which Adler had licensed to be released on Dimension Records, the label associated with Aldon Music: [Excerpt: The Storytellers "When Two People (Are in Love)"] That record didn't sell, but it was enough to get Barri into the Columbia-Screen Gems circle, and Adler set him and Sloan up as a songwriting team -- although the way Sloan told it, it wasn't so much a songwriting team as Sloan writing songs while Barri was also there. Sloan would later claim "it was mostly a collaboration of spirit, and it seemed that I was writing most of the music and the lyric, but it couldn't possibly have ever happened unless both of us were present at the same time". One suspects that Barri might have a different recollection of how it went... Sloan and Barri's first collaboration was a song that Sloan had half-written before they met, called "Kick That Little Foot Sally Ann", which was recorded by a West Coast Chubby Checker knockoff who went under the name Round Robin, and who had his own dance craze, the Slauson, which was much less successful than the Twist: [Excerpt: Round Robin, "Kick that Little Foot Sally Ann"] That track was produced and arranged by Jack Nitzsche, and Nitzsche asked Sloan to be one of the rhythm guitarists on the track, apparently liking Sloan's feel. Sloan would end up playing rhythm guitar or singing backing vocals on many of the records made of songs he and Barri wrote together. "Kick That Little Foot Sally Ann" only made number sixty-one nationally, but it was a regional hit, and it meant that Sloan and Barri soon became what Sloan later described as "the Goffin and King of the West Coast follow-ups." According to Sloan "We'd be given a list on Monday morning by Lou Adler with thirty names on it of the groups who needed follow-ups to their hit." They'd then write the songs to order, and they started to specialise in dance craze songs. For example, when the Swim looked like it might be the next big dance, they wrote "Swim Swim Swim", "She Only Wants to Swim", "Let's Swim Baby", "Big Boss Swimmer", "Swim Party" and "My Swimmin' Girl" (the last a collaboration with Jan Berry and Roger Christian). These songs were exactly as good as they needed to be, in order to provide album filler for mid-tier artists, and while Sloan and Barri weren't writing any massive hits, they were doing very well as mid-tier writers. According to Sloan's biographer Stephen McParland, there was a three-year period in the mid-sixties where at least one song written or co-written by Sloan was on the national charts at any given time. Most of these songs weren't for Columbia-Screen Gems though. In early 1964 Lou Adler had a falling out with Don Kirshner, and decided to start up his own company, Dunhill, which was equal parts production company, music publishers, and management -- doing for West Coast pop singers what Motown was doing for Detroit soul singers, and putting everything into one basket. Dunhill's early clients included Jan and Dean and the rockabilly singer Johnny Rivers, and Dunhill also signed Sloan and Barri as songwriters. Because of this connection, Sloan and Barri soon became an important part of Jan and Dean's hit-making process. The Matadors, the vocal group that had provided most of the backing vocals on the duo's hits, had started asking for more money than Jan Berry was willing to pay, and Jan and Dean couldn't do the vocals themselves -- as Bones Howe put it "As a singer, Dean is a wonderful graphic artist" -- and so Sloan and Barri stepped in, doing session vocals without payment in the hope that Jan and Dean would record a few of their songs. For example, on the big hit "The Little Old Lady From Pasadena", Dean Torrence is not present at all on the record -- Jan Berry sings the lead vocal, with Sloan doubling him for much of it, Sloan sings "Dean"'s falsetto, with the engineer Bones Howe helping out, and the rest of the backing vocals are sung by Sloan, Barri, and Howe: [Excerpt: Jan and Dean, "The Little Old Lady From Pasadena"] For these recordings, Sloan and Barri were known as The Fantastic Baggys, a name which came from the Rolling Stones' manager Andrew Oldham and Mick Jagger, when the two were visiting California. Oldham had been commenting on baggys, the kind of shorts worn by surfers, and had asked Jagger what he thought of The Baggys as a group name. Jagger had replied "Fantastic!" and so the Fantastic Baggys had been born. As part of this, Sloan and Barri moved hard into surf and hot-rod music from the dance songs they had been writing previously. The Fantastic Baggys recorded their own album, Tell 'Em I'm Surfin', as a quickie album suggested by Adler: [Excerpt: The Fantastic Baggys, "Tell 'Em I'm Surfin'"] And under the name The Rally Packs they recorded a version of Jan and Dean's "Move Out Little Mustang" which featured Berry's girlfriend Jill Gibson doing a spoken section: [Excerpt: The Rally Packs, "Move Out Little Mustang"] They also wrote several album tracks for Jan and Dean, and wrote "Summer Means Fun" for Bruce and Terry -- Bruce Johnston, later of the Beach Boys, and Terry Melcher: [Excerpt: Bruce and Terry, "Summer Means Fun"] And they wrote the very surf-flavoured "Secret Agent Man" for fellow Dunhill artist Johnny Rivers: [Excerpt: Johnny Rivers, "Secret Agent Man"] But of course, when you're chasing trends, you're chasing trends, and soon the craze for twangy guitars and falsetto harmonies had ended, replaced by a craze for jangly twelve-string guitars and closer harmonies. According to Sloan, he was in at the very beginning of the folk-rock trend -- the way he told the story, he was involved in the mastering of the Byrds' version of "Mr. Tambourine Man". He later talked about Terry Melcher getting him to help out, saying "He had produced a record called 'Mr. Tambourine Man', and had sent it into the head office, and it had been rejected. He called me up and said 'I've got three more hours in the studio before I'm being kicked out of Columbia. Can you come over and help me with this new record?' I did. I went over there. It was under lock and key. There were two guards outside the door. Terry asked me something about 'Summer Means Fun'. "He said 'Do you remember the guitar that we worked on with that? How we put in that double reverb?' "And I said 'yes' "And he said 'What do you think if we did something like that with the Byrds?' "And I said 'That sounds good. Let's see what it sounds like.' So we patched into all the reverb centres in Columbia Music, and mastered the record in three hours." Whether Sloan really was there at the birth of folk rock, he and Barri jumped on the folk-rock craze just as they had the surf and hot-rod craze, and wrote a string of jangly hits including "You Baby" for the Turtles: [Excerpt: The Turtles, "You Baby"] and "I Found a Girl" for Jan and Dean: [Excerpt: Jan and Dean, "I Found a Girl"] That song was later included on Jan and Dean's Folk 'n' Roll album, which also included... a song I'm not even going to name, but long-time listeners will know the one I mean. It was also notable in that "I Found a Girl" was the first song on which Sloan was credited not as Phil Sloan, but as P.F. Sloan -- he didn't have a middle name beginning with F, but rather the F stood for his nickname "Flip". Sloan would later talk of Phil Sloan and P.F. Sloan as almost being two different people, with P.F. being a far more serious, intense, songwriter. Folk 'n' Roll also contained another Sloan song, this one credited solely to Sloan. And that song is the one for which he became best known. There are two very different stories about how "Eve of Destruction" came to be written. To tell Sloan's version, I'm going to read a few paragraphs from his autobiography: "By late 1964, I had already written ‘Eve Of Destruction,' ‘The Sins Of A Family,' ‘This Mornin',' ‘Ain't No Way I'm Gonna Change My Mind,' and ‘What's Exactly The Matter With Me?' They all arrived on one cataclysmic evening, and nearly at the same time, as I worked on the lyrics almost simultaneously. ‘Eve Of Destruction' came about from hearing a voice, perhaps an angel's. The voice instructed me to place five pieces of paper and spread them out on my bed. I obeyed the voice. The voice told me that the first song would be called ‘Eve Of Destruction,' so I wrote the title at the top of the page. For the next few hours, the voice came and went as I was writing the lyric, as if this spirit—or whatever it was—stood over me like a teacher: ‘No, no … not think of all the hate there is in Red Russia … Red China!' I didn't understand. I thought the Soviet Union was the mortal threat to America, but the voice went on to reveal to me the future of the world until 2024. I was told the Soviet Union would fall, and that Red China would continue to be communist far into the future, but that communism was not going to be allowed to take over this Divine Planet—therefore, think of all the hate there is in Red China. I argued and wrestled with the voice for hours, until I was exhausted but satisfied inside with my plea to God to either take me out of the world, as I could not live in such a hypocritical society, or to show me a way to make things better. When I was writing ‘Eve,' I was on my hands and knees, pleading for an answer." Lou Adler's story is that he gave Phil Sloan a copy of Bob Dylan's Bringing it All Back Home album and told him to write a bunch of songs that sounded like that, and Sloan came back a week later as instructed with ten Dylan knock-offs. Adler said "It was a natural feel for him. He's a great mimic." As one other data point, both Steve Barri and Bones Howe, the engineer who worked on most of the sessions we're looking at today, have often talked in interviews about "Eve of Destruction" as being a Sloan/Barri collaboration, as if to them it's common knowledge that it wasn't written alone, although Sloan's is the only name on the credits. The song was given to a new signing to Dunhill Records, Barry McGuire. McGuire was someone who had been part of the folk scene for years, He'd been playing folk clubs in LA while also acting in a TV show from 1961. When the TV show had finished, he'd formed a duo, Barry and Barry, with Barry Kane, and they performed much the same repertoire as all the other early-sixties folkies: [Excerpt: Barry and Barry, "If I Had a Hammer"] After recording their one album, both Barrys joined the New Christy Minstrels. We've talked about the Christys before, but they were -- and are to this day -- an ultra-commercial folk group, led by Randy Sparks, with a revolving membership of usually eight or nine singers which included several other people who've come up in this podcast, like Gene Clark and Jerry Yester. McGuire became one of the principal lead singers of the Christys, singing lead on their version of the novelty cowboy song "Three Wheels on My Wagon", which was later released as a single in the UK and became a perennial children's favourite (though it has a problematic attitude towards Native Americans): [Excerpt: The New Christy Minstrels, "Three Wheels on My Wagon"] And he also sang lead on their big hit "Green Green", which he co-wrote with Randy Sparks: [Excerpt: The New Christy Minstrels, "Green Green"] But by 1965 McGuire had left the New Christy Minstrels. As he said later "I'd sung 'Green Green' a thousand times and I didn't want to sing it again. This is January of 1965. I went back to LA to meet some producers, and I was broke. Nobody had the time of day for me. I was walking down street one time to see Dr. Strangelove and I walked by the music store, and I heard "Green Green" comin' out of the store, ya know, on Hollywood Boulevard. And I heard my voice, and I thought, 'I got four dollars in my pocket!' I couldn't believe it, my voice is comin' out on Hollywood Boulevard, and I'm broke. And right at that moment, a car pulls up, and the radio is playing 'Chim Chim Cherie" also by the Minstrels. So I got my voice comin' at me in stereo, standin' on the sidewalk there, and I'm broke, and I can't get anyone to sign me!" But McGuire had a lot of friends who he'd met on the folk scene, some of whom were now in the new folk-rock scene that was just starting to spring up. One of them was Roger McGuinn, who told him that his band, the Byrds, were just about to put out a new single, "Mr. Tambourine Man", and that they were about to start a residency at Ciro's on Sunset Strip. McGuinn invited McGuire to the opening night of that residency, where a lot of other people from the scene were there to see the new group. Bob Dylan was there, as was Phil Sloan, and the actor Jack Nicholson, who was still at the time a minor bit-part player in low-budget films made by people like American International Pictures (the cinematographer on many of Nicholson's early films was Floyd Crosby, David Crosby's father, which may be why he was there). Someone else who was there was Lou Adler, who according to McGuire recognised him instantly. According to Adler, he actually asked Terry Melcher who the long-haired dancer wearing furs was, because "he looked like the leader of a movement", and Melcher told him that he was the former lead singer of the New Christy Minstrels. Either way, Adler approached McGuire and asked if he was currently signed -- Dunhill Records was just starting up, and getting someone like McGuire, who had a proven ability to sing lead on hit records, would be a good start for the label. As McGuire didn't have a contract, he was signed to Dunhill, and he was given some of Sloan's new songs to pick from, and chose "What's Exactly the Matter With Me?" as his single: [Excerpt: Barry McGuire, "What's Exactly the Matter With Me?"] McGuire described what happened next: "It was like, a three-hour session. We did two songs, and then the third one wasn't turning out. We only had about a half hour left in the session, so I said 'Let's do this tune', and I pulled 'Eve of Destruction' out of my pocket, and it just had Phil's words scrawled on a piece of paper, all wrinkled up. Phil worked the chords out with the musicians, who were Hal Blaine on drums and Larry Knechtel on bass." There were actually more musicians than that at the session -- apparently both Knechtel and Joe Osborn were there, so I'm not entirely sure who's playing bass -- Knechtel was a keyboard player as well as a bass player, but I don't hear any keyboards on the track. And Tommy Tedesco was playing lead guitar, and Steve Barri added percussion, along with Sloan on rhythm guitar and harmonica. The chords were apparently scribbled down for the musicians on bits of greasy paper that had been used to wrap some takeaway chicken, and they got through the track in a single take. According to McGuire "I'm reading the words off this piece of wrinkled paper, and I'm singing 'My blood's so mad, feels like coagulatin'", that part that goes 'Ahhh you can't twist the truth', and the reason I'm going 'Ahhh' is because I lost my place on the page. People said 'Man, you really sounded frustrated when you were singing.' I was. I couldn't see the words!" [Excerpt: Barry McGuire, "Eve of Destruction"] With a few overdubs -- the female backing singers in the chorus, and possibly the kettledrums, which I've seen differing claims about, with some saying that Hal Blaine played them during the basic track and others saying that Lou Adler suggested them as an overdub, the track was complete. McGuire wasn't happy with his vocal, and a session was scheduled for him to redo it, but then a record promoter working with Adler was DJing a birthday party for the head of programming at KFWB, the big top forty radio station in LA at the time, and he played a few acetates he'd picked up from Adler. Most went down OK with the crowd, but when he played "Eve of Destruction", the crowd went wild and insisted he play it three times in a row. The head of programming called Adler up and told him that "Eve of Destruction" was going to be put into rotation on the station from Monday, so he'd better get the record out. As McGuire was away for the weekend, Adler just released the track as it was, and what had been intended to be a B-side became Barry McGuire's first and only number one record: [Excerpt: Barry McGuire, "Eve of Destruction"] Sloan would later claim that that song was a major reason why the twenty-sixth amendment to the US Constitution was passed six years later, because the line "you're old enough to kill but not for votin'" shamed Congress into changing the constitution to allow eighteen-year-olds to vote. If so, that would make "Eve of Destruction" arguably the single most impactful rock record in history, though Sloan is the only person I've ever seen saying that As well as going to number one in McGuire's version, the song was also covered by the other artists who regularly performed Sloan and Barri songs, like the Turtles: [Excerpt: The Turtles, "Eve of Destruction"] And Jan and Dean, whose version on Folk & Roll used the same backing track as McGuire, but had a few lyrical changes to make it fit with Jan Berry's right-wing politics, most notably changing "Selma, Alabama" to "Watts, California", thus changing a reference to peaceful civil rights protestors being brutally attacked and murdered by white supremacist state troopers to a reference to what was seen, in the popular imaginary, as Black people rioting for no reason: [Excerpt: Jan and Dean, "Eve of Destruction"] According to Sloan, he worked on the Folk & Roll album as a favour to Berry, even though he thought Berry was being cynical and exploitative in making the record, but those changes caused a rift in their friendship. Sloan said in his autobiography "Where I was completely wrong was in helping him capitalize on something in which he didn't believe. Jan wanted the public to perceive him as a person who was deeply concerned and who embraced the values of the progressive politics of the day. But he wasn't that person. That's how I was being pulled. It was when he recorded my actual song ‘Eve Of Destruction' and changed a number of lines to reflect his own ideals that my principles demanded that I leave Folk City and never return." It's true that Sloan gave no more songs to Jan and Dean after that point -- but it's also true that the duo would record only one more album, the comedy concept album Jan and Dean Meet Batman, before Jan's accident. Incidentally, the reference to Selma, Alabama in the lyric might help people decide on which story about the writing of "Eve of Destruction" they think is more plausible. Remember that Lou Adler said that it was written after Adler gave Sloan a copy of Bringing it All Back Home and told him to write a bunch of knock-offs, while Sloan said it was written after a supernatural force gave him access to all the events that would happen in the world for the next sixty years. Sloan claimed the song was written in late 1964. Selma, Alabama, became national news in late February and early March 1965. Bringing it All Back Home was released in late March 1965. So either Adler was telling the truth, or Sloan really *was* given a supernatural insight into the events of the future. Now, as it turned out, while "Eve of Destruction" went to number one, that would be McGuire's only hit as a solo artist. His next couple of singles would reach the very low end of the Hot One Hundred, and that would be it -- he'd release several more albums, before appearing in the Broadway musical Hair, most famous for its nude scenes, and getting a small part in the cinematic masterpiece Werewolves on Wheels: [Excerpt: Werewolves on Wheels trailer] P.F. Sloan would later tell various stories about why McGuire never had another hit. Sometimes he would say that Dunhill Records had received death threats because of "Eve of Destruction" and so deliberately tried to bury McGuire's career, other times he would say that Lou Adler had told him that Billboard had said they were never going to put McGuire's records on the charts no matter how well they sold, because "Eve of Destruction" had just been too powerful and upset the advertisers. But of course at this time Dunhill were still trying for a follow-up to "Eve of Destruction", and they thought they might have one when Barry McGuire brought in a few friends of his to sing backing vocals on his second album. Now, we've covered some of the history of the Mamas and the Papas already, because they were intimately tied up with other groups like the Byrds and the Lovin' Spoonful, and with the folk scene that led to songs like "Hey Joe", so some of this will be more like a recap than a totally new story, but I'm going to recap those parts of the story anyway, so it's fresh in everyone's heads. John Phillips, Scott McKenzie, and Cass Elliot all grew up in Alexandria, Virginia, just a few miles south of Washington DC. Elliot was a few years younger than Phillips and McKenzie, and so as is the way with young men they never really noticed her, and as McKenzie later said "She lived like a quarter of a mile from me and I never met her until New York". While they didn't know who Elliot was, though, she was aware who they were, as Phillips and McKenzie sang together in a vocal group called The Smoothies. The Smoothies were a modern jazz harmony group, influenced by groups like the Modernaires, the Hi-Los, and the Four Freshmen. John Phillips later said "We were drawn to jazz, because we were sort of beatniks, really, rather than hippies, or whatever, flower children. So we used to sing modern harmonies, like Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross. Dave Lambert did a lot of our arrangements for us as a matter of fact." Now, I've not seen any evidence other than Phillips' claim that Dave Lambert ever arranged for the Smoothies, but that does tell you a lot about the kind of music that they were doing. Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross were a vocalese trio whose main star was Annie Ross, who had a career worthy of an episode in itself -- she sang with Paul Whiteman, appeared in a Little Rascals film when she was seven, had an affair with Lenny Bruce, dubbed Britt Ekland's voice in The Wicker Man, played the villain's sister in Superman III, and much more. Vocalese, you'll remember, was a style of jazz vocal where a singer would take a jazz instrumental, often an improvised one, and add lyrics which they would sing, like Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross' version of "Cloudburst": [Excerpt: Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross, "Cloudburst"] Whether Dave Lambert ever really did arrange for the Smoothies or not, it's very clear that the trio had a huge influence on John Phillips' ideas about vocal arrangement, as you can hear on Mamas and Papas records like "Once Was a Time I Thought": [Excerpt: The Mamas and the Papas, "Once Was a Time I Thought"] While the Smoothies thought of themselves as a jazz group, when they signed to Decca they started out making the standard teen pop of the era, with songs like "Softly": [Excerpt, The Smoothies, "Softly"] When the folk boom started, Phillips realised that this was music that he could do easily, because the level of musicianship among the pop-folk musicians was so much lower than in the jazz world. The Smoothies made some recordings in the style of the Kingston Trio, like "Ride Ride Ride": [Excerpt: The Smoothies, "Ride Ride Ride"] Then when the Smoothies split, Phillips and McKenzie formed a trio with a banjo player, Dick Weissman, who they met through Izzy Young's Folklore Centre in Greenwich Village after Phillips asked Young to name some musicians who could make a folk record with him. Weissman was often considered the best banjo player on the scene, and was a friend of Pete Seeger's, to whom Seeger sometimes turned for banjo tips. The trio, who called themselves the Journeymen, quickly established themselves on the folk scene. Weissman later said "we had this interesting balance. John had all of this charisma -- they didn't know about the writing thing yet -- John had the personality, Scott had the voice, and I could play. If you think about it, all of those bands like the Kingston Trio, the Brothers Four, nobody could really *sing* and nobody could really *play*, relatively speaking." This is the take that most people seemed to have about John Phillips, in any band he was ever in. Nobody thought he was a particularly good singer or instrumentalist -- he could sing on key and play adequate rhythm guitar, but nobody would actually pay money to listen to him do those things. Mark Volman of the Turtles, for example, said of him "John wasn't the kind of guy who was going to be able to go up on stage and sing his songs as a singer-songwriter. He had to put himself in the context of a group." But he was charismatic, he had presence, and he also had a great musical mind. He would surround himself with the best players and best singers he could, and then he would organise and arrange them in ways that made the most of their talents. He would work out the arrangements, in a manner that was far more professional than the quick head arrangements that other folk groups used, and he instigated a level of professionalism in his groups that was not at all common on the scene. Phillips' friend Jim Mason talked about the first time he saw the Journeymen -- "They were warming up backstage, and John had all of them doing vocal exercises; one thing in particular that's pretty famous called 'Seiber Syllables' -- it's a series of vocal exercises where you enunciate different vowel and consonant sounds. It had the effect of clearing your head, and it's something that really good operetta singers do." The group were soon signed by Frank Werber, the manager of the Kingston Trio, who signed them as an insurance policy. Dave Guard, the Kingston Trio's banjo player, was increasingly having trouble with the other members, and Werber knew it was only a matter of time before he left the group. Werber wanted the Journeymen as a sort of farm team -- he had the idea that when Guard left, Phillips would join the Kingston Trio in his place as the third singer. Weissman would become the Trio's accompanist on banjo, and Scott McKenzie, who everyone agreed had a remarkable voice, would be spun off as a solo artist. But until that happened, they might as well make records by themselves. The Journeymen signed to MGM records, but were dropped before they recorded anything. They instead signed to Capitol, for whom they recorded their first album: [Excerpt: The Journeymen, "500 Miles"] After recording that album, the Journeymen moved out to California, with Phillips' wife and children. But soon Phillips' marriage was to collapse, as he met and fell in love with Michelle Gilliam. Gilliam was nine years younger than him -- he was twenty-six and she was seventeen -- and she had the kind of appearance which meant that in every interview with an older heterosexual man who knew her, that man will spend half the interview talking about how attractive he found her. Phillips soon left his wife and children, but before he did, the group had a turntable hit with "River Come Down", the B-side to "500 Miles": [Excerpt: The Journeymen, "River Come Down"] Around the same time, Dave Guard *did* leave the Kingston Trio, but the plan to split the Journeymen never happened. Instead Phillips' friend John Stewart replaced Guard -- and this soon became a new source of income for Phillips. Both Phillips and Stewart were aspiring songwriters, and they collaborated together on several songs for the Trio, including "Chilly Winds": [Excerpt: The Kingston Trio, "Chilly Winds"] Phillips became particularly good at writing songs that sounded like they could be old traditional folk songs, sometimes taking odd lines from older songs to jump-start new ones, as in "Oh Miss Mary", which he and Stewart wrote after hearing someone sing the first line of a song she couldn't remember the rest of: [Excerpt: The Kingston Trio, "Oh Miss Mary"] Phillips and Stewart became so close that Phillips actually suggested to Stewart that he quit the Kingston Trio and replace Dick Weissman in the Journeymen. Stewart did quit the Trio -- but then the next day Phillips suggested that maybe it was a bad idea and he should stay where he was. Stewart went back to the Trio, claimed he had only pretended to quit because he wanted a pay-rise, and got his raise, so everyone ended up happy. The Journeymen moved back to New York with Michelle in place of Phillips' first wife (and Michelle's sister Russell also coming along, as she was dating Scott McKenzie) and on New Year's Eve 1962 John and Michelle married -- so from this point on I will refer to them by their first names, because they both had the surname Phillips. The group continued having success through 1963, including making appearances on "Hootenanny": [Excerpt: The Journeymen, "Stack O'Lee (live on Hootenanny)"] By the time of the Journeymen's third album, though, John and Scott McKenzie were on bad terms. Weissman said "They had been the closest of friends and now they were the worst of enemies. They talked through me like I was a medium. It got to the point where we'd be standing in the dressing room and John would say to me 'Tell Scott that his right sock doesn't match his left sock...' Things like that, when they were standing five feet away from each other." Eventually, the group split up. Weissman was always going to be able to find employment given his banjo ability, and he was about to get married and didn't need the hassle of dealing with the other two. McKenzie was planning on a solo career -- everyone was agreed that he had the vocal ability. But John was another matter. He needed to be in a group. And not only that, the Journeymen had bookings they needed to complete. He quickly pulled together a group he called the New Journeymen. The core of the lineup was himself, Michelle on vocals, and banjo player Marshall Brickman. Brickman had previously been a member of a folk group called the Tarriers, who had had a revolving lineup, and had played on most of their early-sixties recordings: [Excerpt: The Tarriers, "Quinto (My Little Pony)"] We've met the Tarriers before in the podcast -- they had been formed by Erik Darling, who later replaced Pete Seeger in the Weavers after Seeger's socialist principles wouldn't let him do advertising, and Alan Arkin, later to go on to be a film star, and had had hits with "Cindy, O Cindy", with lead vocals from Vince Martin, who would later go on to be a major performer in the Greenwich Village scene, and with "The Banana Boat Song". By the time Brickman had joined, though, Darling, Arkin, and Martin had all left the group to go on to bigger things, and while he played with them for several years, it was after their commercial peak. Brickman would, though, also go on to a surprising amount of success, but as a writer rather than a musician -- he had a successful collaboration with Woody Allen in the 1970s, co-writing four of Allen's most highly regarded films -- Sleeper, Annie Hall, Manhattan, and Manhattan Murder Mystery -- and with another collaborator he later co-wrote the books for the stage musicals Jersey Boys and The Addams Family. Both John and Michelle were decent singers, and both have their admirers as vocalists -- P.F. Sloan always said that Michelle was the best singer in the group they eventually formed, and that it was her voice that gave the group its sound -- but for the most part they were not considered as particularly astonishing lead vocalists. Certainly, neither had a voice that stood out the way that Scott McKenzie's had. They needed a strong lead singer, and they found one in Denny Doherty. Now, we covered Denny Doherty's early career in the episode on the Lovin' Spoonful, because he was intimately involved in the formation of that group, so I won't go into too much detail here, but I'll give a very abbreviated version of what I said there. Doherty was a Canadian performer who had been a member of the Halifax Three with Zal Yanovsky: [Excerpt: The Halifax Three, "When I First Came to This Land"] After the Halifax Three had split up, Doherty and Yanovsky had performed as a duo for a while, before joining up with Cass Elliot and her husband Jim Hendricks, who both had previously been in the Big Three with Tim Rose: [Excerpt: Cass Elliot and the Big 3, "The Banjo Song"] Elliot, Hendricks, Yanovsky, and Doherty had formed The Mugwumps, sometimes joined by John Sebastian, and had tried to go in more of a rock direction after seeing the Beatles on Ed Sullivan. They recorded one album together before splitting up: [Excerpt: The Mugwumps, "Searchin'"] Part of the reason they split up was that interpersonal relationships within the group were put under some strain -- Elliot and Hendricks split up, though they would remain friends and remain married for several years even though they were living apart, and Elliot had an unrequited crush on Doherty. But since they'd split up, and Yanovsky and Sebastian had gone off to form the Lovin' Spoonful, that meant that Doherty was free, and he was regarded as possibly the best male lead vocalist on the circuit, so the group snapped him up. The only problem was that the Journeymen still had gigs booked that needed to be played, one of them was in just three days, and Doherty didn't know the repertoire. This was a problem with an easy solution for people in their twenties though -- they took a huge amount of amphetamines, and stayed awake for three days straight rehearsing. They made the gig, and Doherty was now the lead singer of the New Journeymen: [Excerpt: The New Journeymen, "The Last Thing on My Mind"] But the New Journeymen didn't last in that form for very long, because even before joining the group, Denny Doherty had been going in a more folk-rock direction with the Mugwumps. At the time, John Phillips thought rock and roll was kids' music, and he was far more interested in folk and jazz, but he was also very interested in making money, and he soon decided it was an idea to start listening to the Beatles. There's some dispute as to who first played the Beatles for John in early 1965 -- some claim it was Doherty, others claim it was Cass Elliot, but everyone agrees it was after Denny Doherty had introduced Phillips to something else -- he brought round some LSD for John and Michelle, and Michelle's sister Rusty, to try. And then he told them he'd invited round a friend. Michelle Phillips later remembered, "I remember saying to the guys "I don't know about you guys, but this drug does nothing for me." At that point there was a knock on the door, and as I opened the door and saw Cass, the acid hit me *over the head*. I saw her standing there in a pleated skirt, a pink Angora sweater with great big eyelashes on and her hair in a flip. And all of a sudden I thought 'This is really *quite* a drug!' It was an image I will have securely fixed in my brain for the rest of my life. I said 'Hi, I'm Michelle. We just took some LSD-25, do you wanna join us?' And she said 'Sure...'" Rusty Gilliam's description matches this -- "It was mind-boggling. She had on a white pleated skirt, false eyelashes. These were the kind of eyelashes that when you put them on you were supposed to trim them to an appropriate length, which she didn't, and when she blinked she looked like a cow, or those dolls you get when you're little and the eyes open and close. And we're on acid. Oh my God! It was a sight! And everything she was wearing were things that you weren't supposed to be wearing if you were heavy -- white pleated skirt, mohair sweater. You know, until she became famous, she suffered so much, and was poked fun at." This gets to an important point about Elliot, and one which sadly affected everything about her life. Elliot was *very* fat -- I've seen her weight listed at about three hundred pounds, and she was only five foot five tall -- and she also didn't have the kind of face that gets thought of as conventionally attractive. Her appearance would be cruelly mocked by pretty much everyone for the rest of her life, in ways that it's genuinely hurtful to read about, and which I will avoid discussing in detail in order to avoid hurting fat listeners. But the two *other* things that defined Elliot in the minds of those who knew her were her voice -- every single person who knew her talks about what a wonderful singer she was -- and her personality. I've read a lot of things about Cass Elliot, and I have never read a single negative word about her as a person, but have read many people going into raptures about what a charming, loving, friendly, understanding person she was. Michelle later said of her "From the time I left Los Angeles, I hadn't had a friend, a buddy. I was married, and John and I did not hang out with women, we just hung out with men, and especially not with women my age. John was nine years older than I was. And here was a fun-loving, intelligent woman. She captivated me. I was as close to in love with Cass as I could be to any woman in my life at that point. She also represented something to me: freedom. Everything she did was because she wanted to do it. She was completely independent and I admired her and was in awe of her. And later on, Cass would be the one to tell me not to let John run my life. And John hated her for that." Either Elliot had brought round Meet The Beatles, the Beatles' first Capitol album, for everyone to listen to, or Denny Doherty already had it, but either way Elliot and Doherty were by this time already Beatles fans. Michelle, being younger than the rest and not part of the folk scene until she met John, was much more interested in rock and roll than any of them, but because she'd been married to John for a couple of years and been part of his musical world she hadn't really encountered the Beatles music, though she had a vague memory that she might have heard a track or two on the radio. John was hesitant -- he didn't want to listen to any rock and roll, but eventually he was persuaded, and the record was put on while he was on his first acid trip: [Excerpt: The Beatles, "I Want to Hold Your Hand"] Within a month, John Phillips had written thirty songs that he thought of as inspired by the Beatles. The New Journeymen were going to go rock and roll. By this time Marshall Brickman was out of the band, and instead John, Michelle, and Denny recruited a new lead guitarist, Eric Hord. Denny started playing bass, with John on rhythm guitar, and a violinist friend of theirs, Peter Pilafian, knew a bit of drums and took on that role. The new lineup of the group used the Journeymen's credit card, which hadn't been stopped even though the Journeymen were no more, to go down to St. Thomas in the Caribbean, along with Michelle's sister, John's daughter Mackenzie (from whose name Scott McKenzie had taken his stage name, as he was born Philip Blondheim), a pet dog, and sundry band members' girlfriends. They stayed there for several months, living in tents on the beach, taking acid, and rehearsing. While they were there, Michelle and Denny started an affair which would have important ramifications for the group later. They got a gig playing at a club called Duffy's, whose address was on Creeque Alley, and soon after they started playing there Cass Elliot travelled down as well -- she was in love with Denny, and wanted to be around him. She wasn't in the group, but she got a job working at Duffy's as a waitress, and she would often sing harmony with the group while waiting at tables. Depending on who was telling the story, either she didn't want to be in the group because she didn't want her appearance to be compared to Michelle's, or John wouldn't *let* her be in the group because she was so fat. Later a story would be made up to cover for this, saying that she hadn't been in the group at first because she couldn't sing the highest notes that were needed, until she got hit on the head with a metal pipe and discovered that it had increased her range by three notes, but that seems to be a lie. One of the songs the New Journeymen were performing at this time was "Mr. Tambourine Man". They'd heard that their old friend Roger McGuinn had recorded it with his new band, but they hadn't yet heard his version, and they'd come up with their own arrangement: [Excerpt: The New Journeymen, "Mr. Tambourine Man"] Denny later said "We were doing three-part harmony on 'Mr Tambourine Man', but a lot slower... like a polka or something! And I tell John, 'No John, we gotta slow it down and give it a backbeat.' Finally we get the Byrds 45 down here, and we put it on and turn it up to ten, and John says 'Oh, like that?' Well, as you can tell, it had already been done. So John goes 'Oh, ah... that's it...' a light went on. So we started doing Beatles stuff. We dropped 'Mr Tambourine Man' after hearing the Byrds version, because there was no point." Eventually they had to leave the island -- they had completely run out of money, and were down to fifty dollars. The credit card had been cut up, and the governor of the island had a personal vendetta against them because they gave his son acid, and they were likely to get arrested if they didn't leave the island. Elliot and her then-partner had round-trip tickets, so they just left, but the rest of them were in trouble. By this point they were unwashed, they were homeless, and they'd spent their last money on stage costumes. They got to the airport, and John Phillips tried to write a cheque for eight air fares back to the mainland, which the person at the check-in desk just laughed at. So they took their last fifty dollars and went to a casino. There Michelle played craps, and she rolled seventeen straight passes, something which should be statistically impossible. She turned their fifty dollars into six thousand dollars, which they scooped up, took to the airport, and paid for their flights out in cash. The New Journeymen arrived back in New York, but quickly decided that they were going to try their luck in California. They rented a car, using Scott McKenzie's credit card, and drove out to LA. There they met up with Hoyt Axton, who you may remember as the son of Mae Axton, the writer of "Heartbreak Hotel", and as the performer who had inspired Michael Nesmith to go into folk music: [Excerpt: Hoyt Axton, "Greenback Dollar"] Axton knew the group, and fed them and put them up for a night, but they needed somewhere else to stay. They went to stay with one of Michelle's friends, but after one night their rented car was stolen, with all their possessions in it. They needed somewhere else to stay, so they went to ask Jim Hendricks if they could crash at his place -- and they were surprised to find that Cass Elliot was there already. Hendricks had another partner -- though he and Elliot wouldn't have their marriage annulled until 1968 and were still technically married -- but he'd happily invited her to stay with them. And now all her friends had turned up, he invited them to stay as well, taking apart the beds in his one-bedroom apartment so he could put down a load of mattresses in the space for everyone to sleep on. The next part becomes difficult, because pretty much everyone in the LA music scene of the sixties was a liar who liked to embellish their own roles in things, so it's quite difficult to unpick what actually happened. What seems to have happened though is that first this new rock-oriented version of the New Journeymen went to see Frank Werber, on the recommendation of John Stewart. Werber was the manager of the Kingston Trio, and had also managed the Journeymen. He, however, was not interested -- not because he didn't think they had talent, but because he had experience of working with John Phillips previously. When Phillips came into his office Werber picked up a tape that he'd been given of the group, and said "I have not had a chance to listen to this tape. I believe that you are a most talented individual, and that's why we took you on in the first place. But I also believe that you're also a drag to work with. A pain in the ass. So I'll tell you what, before whatever you have on here sways me, I'm gonna give it back to you and say that we're not interested." Meanwhile -- and this part of the story comes from Kim Fowley, who was never one to let the truth get in the way of him taking claim for everything, but parts of it at least are corroborated by other people -- Cass Elliot had called Fowley, and told him that her friends' new group sounded pretty good and he should sign them. Fowley was at that time working as a talent scout for a label, but according to him the label wouldn't give the group the money they wanted. So instead, Fowley got in touch with Nik Venet, who had just produced the Leaves' hit version of "Hey Joe" on Mira Records: [Excerpt: The Leaves, "Hey Joe"] Fowley suggested to Venet that Venet should sign the group to Mira Records, and Fowley would sign them to a publishing contract, and they could both get rich. The trio went to audition for Venet, and Elliot drove them over -- and Venet thought the group had a great look as a quartet. He wanted to sign them to a record contract, but only if Elliot was in the group as well. They agreed, he gave them a one hundred and fifty dollar advance, and told them to come back the next day to see his boss at Mira. But Barry McGuire was also hanging round with Elliot and Hendricks, and decided that he wanted to have Lou Adler hear the four of them. He thought they might be useful both as backing vocalists on his second album and as a source of new songs. He got them to go and see Lou Adler, and according to McGuire Phillips didn't want Elliot to go with them, but as Elliot was the one who was friends with McGuire, Phillips worried that they'd lose the chance with Adler if she didn't. Adler was amazed, and decided to sign the group right then and there -- both Bones Howe and P.F. Sloan claimed to have been there when the group auditioned for him and have said "if you won't sign them, I will", though exactly what Sloan would have signed them to I'm not sure. Adler paid them three thousand dollars in cash and told them not to bother with Nik Venet, so they just didn't turn up for the Mira Records audition the next day. Instead, they went into the studio with McGuire and cut backing vocals on about half of his new album: [Excerpt: Barry McGuire with the Mamas and the Papas, "Hide Your Love Away"] While the group were excellent vocalists, there were two main reasons that Adler wanted to sign them. The first was that he found Michelle Phillips extremely attractive, and the second is a song that John and Michelle had written which he thought might be very suitable for McGuire's album. Most people who knew John Phillips think of "California Dreamin'" as a solo composition, and he would later claim that he gave Michelle fifty percent just for transcribing his lyric, saying he got inspired in the middle of the night, woke her up, and got her to write the song down as he came up with it. But Michelle, who is a credited co-writer on the song, has been very insistent that she wrote the lyrics to the second verse, and that it's about her own real experiences, saying that she would often go into churches and light candles even though she was "at best an agnostic, and possibly an atheist" in her words, and this would annoy John, who had also been raised Catholic, but who had become aggressively opposed to expressions of religion, rather than still having nostalgia for the aesthetics of the church as Michelle did. They were out walking on a particularly cold winter's day in 1963, and Michelle wanted to go into St Patrick's Cathedral and John very much did not want to. A couple of nights later, John woke her up, having written the first verse of the song, starting "All the leaves are brown and the sky is grey/I went for a walk on a winter's day", and insisting she collaborate with him. She liked the song, and came up with the lines "Stopped into a church, I passed along the way/I got down on my knees and I pretend to pray/The preacher likes the cold, he knows I'm going to stay", which John would later apparently dislike, but which stayed in the song. Most sources I've seen for the recording of "California Dreamin'" say that the lineup of musicians was the standard set of players who had played on McGuire's other records, with the addition of John Phillips on twelve-string guitar -- P.F. Sloan on guitar and harmonica, Joe Osborn on bass, Larry Knechtel on keyboards, and Hal Blaine on drums, but for some reason Stephen McParland's book on Sloan has Bones Howe down as playing drums on the track while engineering -- a detail so weird, and from such a respectable researcher, that I have to wonder if it might be true. In his autobiography, Sloan claims to have rewritten the chord sequence to "California Dreamin'". He says "Barry Mann had unintentionally showed me a suspended chord back at Screen Gems. I was so impressed by this beautiful, simple chord that I called Brian Wilson and played it for him over the phone. The next thing I knew, Brian had written ‘Don't Worry Baby,' which had within it a number suspended chords. And then the chord heard 'round the world, two months later, was the opening suspended chord of ‘A Hard Day's Night.' I used these chords throughout ‘California Dreamin',' and more specifically as a bridge to get back and forth from the verse to the chorus." Now, nobody else corroborates this story, and both Brian Wilson and John Phillips had the kind of background in modern harmony that means they would have been very aware of suspended chords before either ever encountered Sloan, but I thought I should mention it. Rather more plausible is Sloan's other claim, that he came up with the intro to the song. According to Sloan, he was inspired by "Walk Don't Run" by the Ventures: [Excerpt: The Ventures, "Walk Don't Run"] And you can easily see how this: [plays "Walk Don't Run"] Can lead to this: [plays "California Dreamin'"] And I'm fairly certain that if that was the inspiration, it was Sloan who was the one who thought it up. John Phillips had been paying no attention to the world of surf music when "Walk Don't Run" had been a hit -- that had been at the point when he was very firmly in the folk world, while Sloan of course had been recording "Tell 'Em I'm Surfin'", and it had been his job to know surf music intimately. So Sloan's intro became the start of what was intended to be Barry McGuire's next single: [Excerpt: Barry McGuire, "California Dreamin'"] Sloan also provided the harmonica solo on the track: [Excerpt: Barry McGuire, "California Dreamin'"] The Mamas and the Papas -- the new name that was now given to the former New Journeymen, now they were a quartet -- were also signed to Dunhill as an act on their own, and recorded their own first single, "Go Where You Wanna Go", a song apparently written by John about Michelle, in late 1963, after she had briefly left him to have an affair with Russ Titelman, the record producer and songwriter, before coming back to him: [Excerpt: The Mamas and the Papas, "Go Where You Wanna Go"] But while that was put out, they quickly decided to scrap it and go with another song. The "Go Where You Wanna Go" single was pulled after only selling a handful of copies, though its commercial potential was later proved when in 1967 a new vocal group, the 5th Dimension, released a soundalike version as their second single. The track was produced by Lou Adler's client Johnny Rivers, and used the exact same musicians as the Mamas and the Papas version, with the exception of Phillips. It became their first hit, reaching number sixteen on the charts: [Excerpt: The 5th Dimension, "Go Where You Wanna Go"] The reason the Mamas and the Papas version of "Go Where You Wanna Go" was pulled was because everyone became convinced that their first single should instead be their own version of "California Dreamin'". This is the exact same track as McGuire's track, with just two changes. The first is that McGuire's lead vocal was replaced with Denny Doherty: [Excerpt: The Mamas and the Papas, "California Dreamin'"] Though if you listen to the stereo mix of the song and isolate the left channel, you can hear McGuire singing the lead on the first line, and occasional leakage from him elsewhere on the backing vocal track: [Excerpt: The Mamas and the Papas, "California Dreamin'"] The other change made was to replace Sloan's harmonica solo with an alto flute solo by Bud Shank, a jazz musician who we heard about in the episode on "Light My Fire", when he collaborated with Ravi Shankar on "Improvisations on the Theme From Pather Panchali": [Excerpt: Ravi Shankar, "Improvisation on the Theme From Pather Panchali"] Shank was working on another session in Western Studios, where they were recording the Mamas and Papas track, and Bones Howe approached him while he was packing his instrument and asked if he'd be interested in doing another session. Shank agreed, though the track caused problems for him. According to Shank "What had happened was that whe

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SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Punjabi Diary: Heavy rain and hailstorms damage crops, delay paddy harvest in the state

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2021 8:00


In the past couple of days, heavy rainfall has inundated thousands of acres of agricultural land in Punjab, damaging standing crops and bringing misery for the farmers. This and more in our weekly news update from the north Indian state.

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Punjabi Diary: 15 ministers sworn in as MLAs in new Chief Minister Charanjit Singh Channi's government

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 10:00


On September 26, 15 Cabinet Ministers took oath as new ministers in Punjab at the Raj Bhavan in Chandigarh, a week after Charanjit Singh Channi was announced as the new chief minister of the poll-bound state. This and more in our weekly news update from Punjab.

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Punjabi Diary: State to gear up for third COVID-19 wave, to train doctors by June-end

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 8:00


Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh has ordered preparations against a possible third wave of Coronavirus amidst concerns about its impact on children. This and more in our weekly news segment from Punjab.

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
India Diary: PM Modi chairs meeting to commemorate the 400th birth anniversary of Guru Tegh Bahadur

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2021 8:00


Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a high-level meeting to commemorate the 400th birth anniversary of Guru Tegh Bahadur, the ninth Guru of Sikhs, on Thursday via video conference. This and more in our weekly news segment from India.

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Punjabi Diary: Government re-introduces restrictions amid rising coronavirus cases

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 8:00


Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh has announced new restrictions amid the rising cases of coronavirus in the state. This and more in our weekly news segment from Punjab.

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Settlement Guide: Be prepared- Simple tips to get yourself and your property ready for bushfire season - ਸੈਟਲਮੈਂਟ ਗਾਈਡ: ਬੁੱਸ਼ਫਾਇਰ ਮੌਸਮ ਦੌਰਾਨ ਆਪਣੀ ਜਾਨ ਅਤੇ ਮਾਲ ਦੀ ਸੁ

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 7:00


Managing bushfire risk to your home and family means being prepared. Experts advise that people who live in bushfire-prone areas need a plan for an emergency. - ਬੁੱਸ਼ਫਾਇਰ ਵਾਲੇ ਮੌਸਮ ਦੌਰਾਨ ਆਪਣੀ ਜਾਨ ਅਤੇ ਮਾਲ ਦੀ ਸੁਰੱਖਿਆ ਕਰਨ ਲਈ ਸੱਭ ਤੋਂ ਪਹਿਲਾ ਕਦਮ ਹੁੰਦਾ ਹੈ ਢੁੱਕਵੇਂ ਇੰਤਜ਼ਾਮ ਕਰਨੇ। ਜੋ ਲੋਕ ਅਜਿਹੇ ਇਲਾਕਿਆਂ ਵਿੱਚ ਰਹਿੰਦੇ ਹਨ, ਜਿੱਥੇ ਅੱਗਾਂ ਲੱਗਣ ਦਾ ਖਤਰਾ ਜਿਆਦਾ ਹੁੰਦਾ ਹੈ, ਮਾਹਰ ਸਲਾਹ ਦਿੰਦੇ ਹਨ ਕਿ ਅਜਿਹੇ ਲੋਕਾਂ ਨੂੰ ਇੱਕ ਰਣਨੀਤੀ ਪਹਿਲਾਂ ਤੋਂ ਹੀ ਤਿਆਰ ਕਰ ਕੇ ਰੱਖਣੀ ਚਾਹੀਦੀ ਹੈ।

Bob Barry's Unearthed Interviews
Captain and Tennille

Bob Barry's Unearthed Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2020 6:40


The husband and wife duo of Captain and Tennille won a Grammy award for record of their year and had several big hits in the 70s. The Captain, Daryl Dragon, explains their roles in show business and Toni Tennille talks about songs she wrote including: ”How Can You Be So Cold When I’m So Hot” which she told me that she didn’t write for Daryl, but then in her book, “Toni Tennille a Memoir” she admits that she did write it for him.  At the end of the interview, Toni takes a few shots at me.

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Navjot Singh Sidhu shares stage with CM Amarinder Singh at a farmers rally

SBS Punjabi - ਐਸ ਬੀ ਐਸ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2020 8:00


After a tractor rally in Badhni Kallan in support of farmers, Navjot Singh Sidhu joined Captain Amrinder Singh on stage for the first time in nearly one and half years.

SBS Nepali - एसबीएस नेपाली पोडकाष्ट
Football match-fixing is not an "act against the state" - कथित म्याच फिक्सिङको आरोप लागेका नेपाली फुटबल खेलाडीहरू "देशद्रोही" नभएको ठहर

SBS Nepali - एसबीएस नेपाली पोडकाष्ट

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2020 3:09


The Supreme Court has cleared former captain of the Nepali football team Sagar Thapa, players Sandeep Rai, Ritesh Thapa, Vikas Singh Chhetri, coach Anjan KC and physiotherapist Davis Thapa all of Nepal of match-fixing. - फुटबलमा म्याच फिक्सिङ गरेको आशङ्कामा राज्य विप्लवको आरोप लागेका नेपाली फुटबल टिमका पूर्व कप्तान सागर थापा सहित खेलाडीहरू सन्दीप राई, रितेश थापा, विकाससिंह क्षेत्री, प्रशिक्षक अञ्जन के.सी. र फिजियोथेरापिस्ट डेविज थापालाई सर्वोच्च अदालतले सफाइ दिएको छ।

SBS Gujarati - SBS ગુજરાતી
ભારતના ભૂતપૂર્વ કેપ્ટન મહેન્દ્રસિંહ ધોનીનો મેદાન બહારનો એક રસપ્રદ કિસ્સો

SBS Gujarati - SBS ગુજરાતી

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2020 12:26


ભારતીય ક્રિકેટ ટીમના ભૂતપૂર્વ કેપ્ટન મહેન્દ્રસિંહ ધોનીએ વર્ષ 2012માં ઓસ્ટ્રેલિયા પ્રવાસ દરમિયાન સિડનીના બરવૂડ વિસ્તારમાં આવેલા સિનેમા હોલમાં ફિલ્મ નિહાળી અને હેરીસ પાર્ક ખાતે આવેલી રેસ્ટોરન્ટ્સમાં ભોજન લીધું હતું. આવો સાંભળીએ આ યાદગાર પ્રસંગ સ્થાનિક પત્રકાર ગૌરવ જોશી પાસેથી....

Snugradio
They Died in 2019

Snugradio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2020 72:59


January 1st - Show 787 In This Show Welcome to our annual tradition of celebrating the work of some of the musicians who died in the previous year.We take our names from this handy dandy site : http://weheartmusic.typepad.com/blog/musicians-who-died-in-2019.htmlSo here's the people we've picked this time:[02 Jan 2019] Daryl Dragon, [...]

died daryl dragon
Talking Smooth Jazz
Guitarist and Singer, Charles Wright

Talking Smooth Jazz

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2019 46:00


Charles Wright was born in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where he grew up and was musically inclined by playing the guitar and singing in several doo-wop groups, including, The Twilighters, The Shield, and The Gallahads. Wright briefly worked as A&R Director for Del-Fi Records and was responsible for the hit recording of “Those Oldies But Goodies (Remind Me of You)” by Little Caesar and the Romans in 1961. By 1964, Wright formed his own band called Charles Wright & the Wright Sounds, which included John Raynford, and Daryl Dragon, the “Captain” of Captain & Tennille. Wright added more members to the group and they became known as the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band, and they played in several venues across Los Angeles. In the 1970s the band was best known for their world renowned hit, “Express Yourself.” It was written by Wright and distributed by Warner Bros.™, where it would hit #3 and #12 on the R&B and Pop charts, respectively. Another hit record under Wright’s reign was Do Your Thing, which set the stage for a 1970s ographic study of Boogie Nights. To date, Wright’s songs have been covered by legendary artists around the globe, including Ray Charles, Les McCann, Della Reese, Roger Troutman & Zapp, The Ohio Players, and the Swiss Lon Genes Symphony Orchestra. During the rise of Hip-Hop in the 1980s, many rap artists sampled chunks of funk from Wright’s wax, including N.W.A. and their smash track, “Express Yourself.” Brand Nubian Funk, Naughty By Nature, Gang Starr, and Sean “P. Diddy” Combs also gleaned inspiration from Wright’s work.

Totally Reprise - Audio Entropy
Bonus Episode 5: Josie and The Pussycats

Totally Reprise - Audio Entropy

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2019


In our search for Totally Spies live action movie we all watched the 2001 film Josie and the Pussycats, wildly considered a cult classic and a secret great satire of the music industry. What we instead find is a movie that is real funny at its best and horrible and punching down at its worst. We struggle with that along with talking about: Re:Coded Is The Best KH Game, Molly: Apex Legend, Failed Speed Racer, Dreamcast Tower, Who Is This Movie For, The Dumb Character, Not A Hot Boy, Real Life Pop Up Ads, Eugene Levy Saves The Movie, Fionna’s Amazing Outfits, Daryl Dragon, Adam 12, Fat Shaming Jokes At Thin People, Carson Daly Is Hilarious, The Film Falls Apart, We Live In A Society, CN Groovies, Done With Movies,

Devlin's Mondo Nostalgia Radio Show
Episode 153 - January 10, 2019

Devlin's Mondo Nostalgia Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2019


Click for Download Version - Remembering: Stan Lee, Daryl Dragon and Penny Marshall! - Current Entertainment news... Grover, Aquaman, and more! - Movie Review: "Roma"! Music Credits: Disco Lounge Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Impact Radio USA
Music of "CAPTAIN AND TENNILLE" All Week! (1-7-19)

Impact Radio USA

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2019 1:38


Each week on "Dr. Paul's Family Talk" on http://www.ImpactRadioUSA.com, we feature the music of a specific artist, band, or genre. This week, we are featuring the music of CAPTAIN and TENNILLE, in honor of the passing of Daryl Dragon. LIVE SHOWS 11:00 am EST Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays (Repeated on the same days at 2:00 pm, 5:00 pm, 8:00 pm, 11:00 pm, plus 2 am and 5 am on the next day) Please click on the link below to listen: http://streaming.radio.co/sb17f7f4fa/listen Enjoy!

music captain live shows tennille daryl dragon captainandtennille
Hit Me
Muskrat Love

Hit Me

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2019 17:15


Inspired by the recent passing of Daryl Dragon, the Captain in The Captain and Tennille, Hit Me Episode Eleven takes a look back at the song Muskrat Love.

Your Weekly Dose
Your Weekly Dose Podcast -Show 101 (First Show of 2019 )

Your Weekly Dose

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2019 97:59


For our first show of 2019 we open with Let It Whip by Dazz Band for National Whipped Cream Day. Then we all chip in what we did for NYE (most of us stayed home) Then we talk about the passing of Daryl Dragon, Ray Sawyer  of Dr. Hook and Super Dave Osborne actor Bob Einstein. Next we read our horoscopes for the month and then Steve tries to cancel his Sirius Radio Subscription.  Next we talk about a possible Van Halen tour for this year, New Years Resolutions and why they fail - then wrap it up with the game.  LINKS: Dazz Band Music     Captain & Tennille Music    Dr. Hook Music                    THIS EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY 

Your Weekly Dose
Your Weekly Dose Podcast -Show 101 (First Show of 2019 )

Your Weekly Dose

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2019 97:59


For our first show of 2019 we open with Let It Whip by Dazz Band for National Whipped Cream Day. Then we all chip in what we did for NYE (most of us stayed home) Then we talk about the passing of Daryl Dragon, Ray Sawyer  of Dr. Hook and Super Dave Osborne actor Bob Einstein. Next we read our horoscopes for the month and then Steve tries to cancel his Sirius Radio Subscription.  Next we talk about a possible Van Halen tour for this year, New Years Resolutions and why they fail - then wrap it up with the game.  LINKS: Dazz Band Music     Captain & Tennille Music    Dr. Hook Music                    THIS EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY 

When Nerds Collide
#271 – 2019? More of the same!

When Nerds Collide

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2019 79:56


Welcome one and all to this week's episode of When Nerds Collide! Dan and Tom start 2019 guest-free, so it's just the two of them! New WNC intern Jeremy live streams the episode using Dan's phone(that's why it's messed up)! Dan starts the show with talk about the mistaken identity he experienced at work on New Year's Eve! Friend of the show Valerie made us a video of what Christmas Crackers are! It's awesome! Watch it here! https://youtu.be/qy1p6vmJMww?fbclid=IwAR30Ionr3efFob-dmqxjj1-VUagxJWYgRd5HUutp5CsgGYqOT22l9YYGYXk Then Dan has a plethora of Dad jokes! Dan and Tom remember Super Dave, Daryl Dragon and Mean Gene Okerlund. They will be missed. We discuss the most anticipated(?) films of 2019! Tom closes out the first show of 2019 with a New Quiz! It's 2019! Give us a rate and review on ITunes! Check out our Facebook page, too! Thanks to Kirby Krackle for the bumper music! And Nerd to your mother! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7f7FuDagYLU The post #271 – 2019? More of the same! appeared first on When Nerds Collide.

Carnival Personnel
Episode #82 - Fallout at 76!

Carnival Personnel

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2019 96:44


Jacques and Joe ring in the new year by… mourning the passing of three celebrities in one day: WWE legend “Mean Gene” Okerlund, Daryl Dragon of Captain & Tennille, and Bob Einstein, aka “Super Dave” Osborne! PLUS: Sport, Random Video Game Review, Netflix picks, Parenting Tip and MORE! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/carnivalpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/carnivalpodcast

Potentium Podcast
Potentium – Episode 155 (1/5/19)

Potentium Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2019 92:49


Singing brain surgery Big Pharma raises prescription drug prices 6% (9:45) Texas 14 year old charged with murder after egg “prank” turns deadly (16:05) Zoo incidents - Lion kills intern/Girl goes into rhino enclosure (20:40) Louis C.K., Kevin Hart & Ellen DeGeneres (29:35) Doctor in Ohio purposely prescribes the wrong medicine to Jews (42:00) China lands on the far side of the moon (43:50) Elizabeth Warren running for President (46:00) Trump - The national debt/Shutdown/New laws & new House/Rashida Tlaib/Unhinged press conference/Trump knows more about everything than anyone (50:35) Celebrity deaths - Bob Einstein, Mean Gene Okerlund, Daryl Dragon (1:21:30) Notre Dame/Bears

Rambling Alcoholics
Rambling Alcoholics ep.64

Rambling Alcoholics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2019 177:10


The Boys are back!! More Beer, More Rambling!! the guys talk New Years Resolutions and discuss 2018 Guest of the Year. 2019 brings celebrity deaths (Mean Gene Okerlund, Bob Einstein and Daryl Dragon) so Mr. J and Eskeleto introduce their Twisted bet they are participating in 2019 Celebrity Death List. The laughs and beer continue to flow as the guys ramble about everything and everyone and much more.SUPPORTING THE PODCAST@barrelbrothersbrewing (INSTAGRAM)www.barrelbrothersbrewing.com@craftbeerkings (INSTAGRAM)FOLLOW USINSTAGRAM- @rambling_alcoholic_podcastTWITTER- @RamblingAlcoholFACEBOOK- The Rambling NetworkEMAIL US YOUR QUESTIONS OR ANY IDEAS FOR FUTURE EPISODESrambling.alcoholic.podcast@gmail.com

Radio Labyrinth
s04e01 - Louis CK, Bob Einstein, and Happy New Year

Radio Labyrinth

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2019 105:02


Happy New Year! New Year's Resolutions, we all had a great Christmas, Tim didn't get to see Phish in NYC, redneck's singing Les Miserables, Louis CK, What We're Watching, Staff Picks and more! Rest in Peace: Ray Sawyer, "Captain" Daryl Dragon, "Mean" Gene Okerlund & the late great Bob "Super Dave" Einstein. Jeff: Ron Funches Giggle Fit Comedy Central https://www.si.com/wrestling/2019/01/04/ron-funches-comedy-central-special-giggle-fit-wwe-njpw Steph: You’re The Worst-final season- Wednesday, January 9th FXX https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/youre-worst-final-season-will-explore-commitment-1132130 Crimetown: Podcast https://www.gimletmedia.com/crimetown?gclid=CjwKCAiAgrfhBRA3EiwAnfF4trzb68v3SLZ3169wUyW8YvtbBwxeFaA0ZcW9396n98BIdOQTF7WZERoCd4AQAvD_BwE Tim: The First 48 Presents: Homicide Squad Atlanta http://www.aetv.com/shows/homicide-squad-atlanta/about #LouisCK #BobEinstein #BirdBox #Bandersnatch #SuperDave #GeneOkerlund #MeanGeneOkerlund #WWE #RaySawyer #DrHook #DarylDragon #CaptainAndTennille #Phish #LesMiserables #DanaGould #PlanetOfTheApes #RodSerling #ComicBooks #TwilightZone #StrangerThings #KevinSpacey #HouseOfCards #EscapeAtDannemora #You #Showtime #Dexter #RayDonovan #Jaws #AllThePresidentsMen #TheSopranos #Ellen #ThePredator #Scrooged #BillMurray #Orville #WatershipDown #LohansBeachHouse #Halloween2018 #DoctorStupid #InfinityWars #TheBalladOfBusterScruggs #ChristmasChronicles #RonFunches #YoureTheWorst #FXX #Crimetown #TheFirst48 #Atlanta

The Mo'Kelly Show
@mrmokelly in for @ConwayShow - Travis Allen Interview and remembering legends

The Mo'Kelly Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2019 117:02


Mo sits in for Tim Conway Jr. to round out the holiday fill-in work. Former state assemblyman Travis Allen calls in as candidate for CA GOP chair and we remembered legends 'Mean' Gene Okerlund and Daryl Dragon.

The Chad Benson Show
Dems plan to end shutdown without border wall funding.

The Chad Benson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2019 110:03


Dems plan to end shutdown without border wall funding. 20 States increase minimum wage. Kid falls into rhino exhibit. Tiffany Haddish bombs stand up gig. Jane Curtain wants the GOP to die in 2019. Man wearing Trump shirt refused service at vape store. New Year's resolutions. Daryl Dragon of Captain and Tennille dies.

Blacker than BlackTimes Infinity
Eps 194: The Dankersnatch

Blacker than BlackTimes Infinity

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2019 109:44


Stitch is out this week saving the city. RIP June Whitfield, Mean Gene Okerlund, Bob Einstein, and Daryl Dragon. This week we talk about the Bandersnatch, Birdbox, the SouljaBoy console, Aquaman, #AskBthanBTI, Hulu/Funimation, Goblin Slayer, the Gamestop misgendering, changes in the porn industry, and more! Sponsors! Loot Crate: Save 10% on any new subscription at www.trylootcrate.com/BthanBTI. Enter promo code: bridge10 for 10% savings. Gamefly: Sign up for a premium FREE 30-Day (1 game out) trial at the following URL: www.gameflyoffer.com/BthanBTI. Come follow us: http://www.beenhadproductions.com/bthanbti SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/bthanbti Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BthanBTI/ Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/bthanbti Twitter: @BthanBTI iTunes: https://itun.es/i6SJ6Pw YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/BlackerThanBlackTimesInfinity

Kevin Hilley
Daryl Dragon dies

Kevin Hilley

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2019 2:08


Daryl Dragon, aka "The Captain" of Captain & Tennille has died at 76. #music #Captain&Tennille #CaptainandTennille #DarylDragon #CaptainKeyboard #LoveWillKeepUsTogether #pop #NeilSedaka #BeachBoys #news #radio #70s

captain tennille daryl dragon
Cleveland's Morning News with Wills and Snyder
Wills & Snyder: Cavs Burned By The Heat 117-92 - John Michael Recaps The Game - Super Dave Osborne-WWE "Mean Gene" Okerlund-"Captain" Daryl Dragon Of Captain & Tennille All Dead at 76 - President Trump called on both parties t

Cleveland's Morning News with Wills and Snyder

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2019 38:51


Bill and Mike got your Thursday rolling with Cavs Burned By The Heat 117-92 - John Michael Recaps The Game - Super Dave Osborne-WWE "Mean Gene" Okerlund-"Captain" Daryl Dragon Of Captain & Tennille All Dead at 76 - President Trump called on both parties to work together to pass a funding bill - Congress Class Of 2019 Gets Sworn In - “If You're in My Office, It's Already Too Late: A Divorce Lawyer's Guide to Staying Together”

Breaking Into...
Breaking Into… The Music Biz with Charles Wright | BHL’s Breaking Into

Breaking Into...

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2016 46:03


Breaking Into...  -- In this episode Black Hollywood Live host James Lott Jr. interviews Charles Wright. Charles Wright was born in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where he grew up and was musically inclined by playing the guitar and singing in several doo-wop groups, including, The Twilighters, The Shield, and The Gallahads. Wright briefly worked as A&R Director for Del-Fi Records and was responsible for the hit recording of "Those Oldies But Goodies (Remind Me of You)” by Little Caesar and the Romans in 1961. By 1964, Wright formed his own band called Charles Wright & the Wright Sounds, which included John Raynford, and Daryl Dragon, the "Captain" of Captain & Tennille. Wright added more members to the group and they became known as the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band, and they played in several venues across Los Angeles. In the 1970s the band was best known for their world renowned hit, "Express Yourself." It was written by Wright and distributed by Warner Bros.™,

Get Balanced With Dr Marissa Pei
Love Will Keep Us Together...Or Not! Tony Tennille talks to Dr. Marissa and relates!

Get Balanced With Dr Marissa Pei

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2016 56:06


Special monthly series Sexual Healing with Dr. Marissa, the new Asian Ruth brings a delightful Toni Tennille to the show, who takes the host back to the beginning of her relationship with the The Captain, keyboardist Daryl Dragon, to the attraction, and

Project Studio Network Recording Podcast
[Show #63] No Respect, And Why The Music Business Sucks

Project Studio Network Recording Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2007 39:01


News, Crosstalk and we tweak the Stupid Knob...twice! News: Snapper For Mac Guitar Shed 2 8 core Mac Pro Coming Soon? Alleged Web Site Slip Up Structure Public Beta The Death Of Paul Delay Crosstalk: PSN Breaks 100,000 Downloads! Bum Rush The Charts! The Special Buy Link For March 22! Barebonz.org Pro Tools Prefs Trasher Battlestar Galactica Free Files Weird Al Video Feature: First Television Appearance In The Studio - Latest Album The Stupid Knob: Cease & Desist For Lip Syncers The Demise Of Rap? Featured Story: Who are the Swampers? MuscleShoalsSound.org The Swampers in the mid-1970s: from left, Barry Beckett,Roger Hawkins, David Hood, and Jimmy Johnson. Viewer Mail: "Why The Music Business Sucks" from Ed Bradshaw and Dante Brown, and Patrick Abbas has a question about sample delay in Pro Tools. Answer To Last Week's Trivia Question: Q: This single debuted on Billboard’s Hot 100 on April 19, 1975 and catapulted from #98 to #1 in nine weeks, remaining in the top position for four weeks. The artist also recorded the song in Spanish, and it was released as a single later that year. It also charted, peaking at #49 on the Billboard pop charts that same year, making it the first #1 single ever to chart simultaneously in different languages by the same artist. What was the song and who was the artist? A: This is related to last weeks trivia question. The answer is Love Will Keep Us Together by Daryl Dragon and Toni Tenille, better known as The Captain And Tenille. The only correct answer was from Brian Cowie, who won last week's contest! Kudos to Brian, but no prize award this week. See you next week! Tags: music recording studio home studio project studio mixing protools plugin digidesign frappr creative commons digidesign mix it like a record snapper guitar shed mac pro digidesign structure bum rush the charts barebonz.org pro tools prefs trasher battlestar galactica weid al riaa swampers musclr shoals the captain and tenille daryl dragon toni tenille mick jagger keith richards Muscle Shoals Sound Studio Aretha Franklin Bob Seger Bob Dylan Rod Stewart Cher Paul Simon Willie Nelson lynard skynard sweet home alabama 3614 Jackson Highway Noel Webster Wilson Pickett Wayne Perkins cat stevens blackfoot wild horses brown sugar the swampers king karma Barry Beckett Roger Hawkins David Hood Jimmy Johnson

Project Studio Network Recording Podcast
[Show #62] Eric McMiller (aka Eric The Kid) - Hard Workin' Engineer

Project Studio Network Recording Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2007 55:39


News, a Celebrity Interview and and an extra large helping of Crosstalk! News: Massey Plugins - The To-do List Upcoming Massey Tape Delay Plugin Kylie Minogue Chooses Unknown Philharmonia Orchestra Samples MusicTheory.net ExpertVillage.com Brad Delp Dead At 55 Celebrity Interview: This week Al caught up with Eric McMiller, better known online as EricTheKid. Eric worked his way up from interning at a small midwest project studio to a full-time gig at a large New York commercial studio. He's also an alumni of Charles Dye's live Mix It Like A Record training class. Eric shares with us his story and what he's learned along the way. Interview LInks: Eric's Contact Info For Engineering& Booking: ericthekid@gmail.com Digidesign Listing Search For "Eric The Kid" Charles' Forum: MilarForum.com Taylor Studios Manhattan Center Studios Recording Connection ProMedia Training Crosstalk Jim Farley's What's Up With That? Podcast Shane Hendricks (aka Sonic Deviant)Releases New Album! Get Transduction Euphony At CD Baby Shane's Bio Shane's Blog Shane's MySpace Stuart McLellan Links: http://www.TC-Helicon.com http://www.harmony4.blogspot.com http://www.tc-helicon.com/default.asp?id=2895 http://www.tc-helicon.com/default.asp?id=2349 Al Sneaks IntoThe Home Recording Odyssey Podcast! Al's Video Feature: Answer To Last Week's Trivia Question: Q: For a short time this woman was a keyboard player for the Beach Boys. She was the only "Beach Girl" ever in the band. Who was she? A: Toni Tenille! Daryl Dragon, the son of classical conductor Carmen Dragon, had studied classical piano for ten years. During the run of Mother Earth Daryl became impressed with Toni’s writing and singing and persuaded her to join the Beach Boys as pianist on their next tour. She was the first and only “Beach Girl.? Daryl wound up being nicknamed “Captain Keyboard? by Mike Love, because he always wore a naval captain’s cap on stage, so when he and Toni teamed up, they naturally became the Captain and Tennille. Congratulation to this week's winner Brian Cowe! Brian takes home a copy of Guitar And Drum Trainer courtesy of Ryan Smith over at GuitarAndDrumTrainer.com. Honorable Mention goes out to Andrew Schaap, Mark Rufino, Pete Buchwald, Crazy Joe over at SurfLounge.com and John Azevedo. Way to go! See you next week! Tags: music recording studio home studio project studio mixing protools plugin digidesign frappr creative commons digidesign mix it like a record eric mcmiller massey plugins tape delay Kylie Minogue Philharmonia Orchestra MusicTheory.net ExpertVillage.com brad delp boston milarforum.com taylor studios manhattan center studios recording connection promedia training jim farley shane hendricks sonic deviant transduction euphony tc helicon stuart mcclellan home recording odyssey andrew brierly dave criddle edgar winter frankenstein rick derringer beach boys toni tenille daryl dragon the captain and tenille mike love