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I got an upright bass, an old Kay, so we could do bluegrass as well as electric music.
Bob, Michael, Jim, and I travelled in the band bus to Bill Monroe's Bluegrass Festival in Beanblossom, Indiana in the Summer of 1975, accompanied by some good-time girls. Boy, was that fun! I'll never forget Bill Monroe's disapproving comments to us young hippies dancing at the side of the stage (our dancing was "ruining the waltz)." And, of course, there was the music, played by giants of the genre (Bill Monroe, Lester Flatt, Ralph Stanley, and many more), and the jamming around campfires well into the nights.
In addition to a trip to Michigan for the Odee Festival in the early Spring, (click here for some nice photos if you have a high-speed internet connection), we played gigs in and around Lawrence and Kansas City. Billy already had a good following, so we were well received. At that time, our dances were attended by hordes of long-haired dudes in jeans and young women in knee-length skirts and heavy boots. Everybody stomped to the fiddle tunes.
Here are song
cuts from recordings made of the band May 13 and 14, 1975, at Madame
Lovejoy's, a club in Kansas City's River-Quay area. Jim
Bee came with us and sat in on harmonica, and Janet Jameson, from the
old band, showed up to sit in for a song as well. Bob played quite
a bit of electric six-string guitar here. Lowdown Ways - Marshall Tucker Band Settin' the Woods on Fire - Fred Rose, Hank Williams Your Good Girl's Gonna Go Bad - Tammy Wynette Space Buggy - Asleep at the Wheel I Dreamed of Highways - Hoyt Axton Fiddle tune, name unknown Mean Woman with the Green Eyes - Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys Route 66 - more in the style of Chuck Berry than Nat Cole Ride Me Down Easy - Billy Joe Shaver My Window Faces the South - Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys Hey, Good Lookin' - Hank Williams Tried So Hard - Gene Clark Mind Your Own Business - Hank Williams Willin' - Lowell George I Can't Stand Me - Merle Haggard and the Strangers Six Pack to Go - Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys Big Joe (fiddle tune) Fiddle Tune, name unknown I Can't Help It If I'm Still in Love with You - Janet Jameson sits in and sings this Hank Williams classic Jailhouse Rock - Lieber & Stoller, Elvis Presley Monkey Time - Carol delivers this Major Lance hit; not sure why we tried to do this tune! Panama Red - Peter Rowan |
The other recording
I have with Mike Roark on drums is from a biker party south of Lawrence
in June of 1975. It's interesting in that Jim Stringer sits in with
us. Jim Bee joins us on harp, as well as one of the worst trombone
players I've ever heard. A jazz tune which I've played lots of times but can't remember the name of. Jim Stringer, Mike Roark and I do a beer-fueled but serviceable job on this, and if you can listen past the damned trombonist, it's good. Leavin' Trunk - Jim Stringer sings this blues number, again marred greatly by Mr. Trombone Silver Threads and Golden Needles I Don't Want No Woman - the Bobby Bland classic Six Days on the Road - Dave Dudley You Can Have Her (I Don't Want Her) - I don't know why we didn't keep doing this tune - I like it. |
In early 1975, we stayed fairly close to home.
Early that year, however, we "went on tour," with stops in Hays, Kansas and Julesburg, Colorado, and on to Denver and the mountains.
We were in the bus that Spears had bought from the Penetrations, the 1960 International Harvester. The bus was hardly worthy of being on the highway, much less making it up steep grades at high elevations. Most of the time Bob or I drove the bus.
Drummerless, we considered
our options. None of us wanted to go back home to find and "train"
a new drummer. There weren't many drummers who could play
properly the stuff we were doing. I knew one guy who could come in and pick up his part quickly enough, and that was Bud Pettit. At the time, he had quit the show band he had been touring with after leaving the Lee Stover Trio and was living with a woman in North Dakota. |
I called him with my best sales pitch and he said okay. I think he came directly to Denver with his drums and his clothes. This picture was taken later, after he'd been cowboy-ified. |
Here are a few songs recorded live at the Off-the-Wall
Hall, 737 New Hampshire in downtown Lawrence, in, I would guess, late
1975. We sound happy - who wouldn't be, with such an enthusiastic crowd? At the time, there was a music store in the front, called McKinney & Mason Music. It was a good store; I got my upright bass there. Jim Baggett - whom you can also see doing appraisals on the Antiques Roadshow - worked for the store, as did Dave Wendler. The Off-the-Wall Hall is now The Bottleneck. **** NEW 8/2009
****
Recently, Noah Smith
of the Twang Brothers - a band we hung out with in Kalamazoo - sent me
some wonderful photos of a joint appearance we did with them at the Off-the-Wall
Hall in 1976. Junior Brown was in the band at that time.Click here to see! |
Big Wheels - a
Merle Haggard number
sung by Jim Jailhouse Rock - I sing this request, forgetting the last verse; but did anyone notice? The Kind of Love I Can't Forget - twin fiddles, with Carol also singing this Bob Wills/Tommy Duncan vehicle. Rocky Top - Carol sings the Osborne Brothers bluegrass standard. Lost Highway - Andy on this cautionary tale by Leon Payne. I hadn't seen NOTHIN' yet... Ragtime Annie - fiddle tune. Sweet Nothings - I love this Brenda Lee song, sung by Carol with the guy's part done by me. Nice rockabilly guitar by Bob. unidentified ballad - sung by Carol. Old Slewfoot - a Johnny Horton tune, I think. Billy starts a different song, but it all comes together. That Mothertrucker's Mine - a Carol Spears original, warning those "pretty little waitresses down on 59" to keep their hands off her man. Maiden's Prayer - the Bob Wills classic, slowed down a bit for heavy breathing on the dance floor. Choo Choo Ch'boogie - the Louis Jordan song which became a staple for us. Truck Drivin' Man - another "always-play" song, sung by Jim. Move It on Over - Carol sings this Hank Williams blues number. Steel Guitar Rag - Bob's rendition of Leon McAuliffe's smash hit. San Antonio Rose - Billy sings, with Andy and Jim on harmonies. Cattle in the Corn - this fiddle tune modulates from major to minor. Nobody's Business But My Own - Carol and Andy sing this Ernie Ford/Kay Starr duet, with Billy on the mandocaster doing a pretty good of channeling Jimmy Bryant's crazy guitar solo. This must have been our first performance of the song, because Andy has a little trouble with the words. Space Buggy - a ridiculously fast rendition of the Asleep at the Wheel song, sung by Carol. Billy in the Lowground - always one of Billy's best fiddle tunes. |