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GEORGE MAILLOT REMEMBERS .......
The beginning as best as I can
remember ......
"I was sitting innocently in my dorm room at U of H,
looking to get in as much trouble as possible in late 1966, when
my old high school surfing chum, Clay Stewart, came by to tell
me of a scene he'd fallen into in S.A. that he was convinced
I needed to be a part of. I'd written some poetry, and my first
song called "Day For Love", and Clay explained some
friends had formed a psychedelically oriented band playing music
the likes he'd never heard before. Jazz, folk, rock, and pre-Pythagorean
tunings all combined with great beatlesque harmonies. So much
for college. I cashed in the pre-paid tuition and was off to
S.A..
I'll never forget the first practice I heard. It was in Bobby
Grossman's living room. I couldn't believe the sound. Don Harding
leading the raga-rock sound playing a Gretch country gentleman,
Will (then Billy) Bellamy played bass, Rex Foster played an electric
12 string, Clay Stewart played bongos and congas, and Jimmy Newhouse
played drums. The three part harmonies were absolutely ethereal
and Newhouse' drumming was really intricate. He sounded like
a small factory or something.
Soon thereafter Bob Lenz came in from U. C. Santa Barbara
with a young jazz singer named Kitty at the suggestion of Phil
Krumm, who had the dubious job of managing the whole famn damily.
Lenz was a classically trained product of two M.I.T professors,
totally brilliant,but so high strung there wasn't enough valium
in production to keep him from losing it at a moment's notice.
He took my Day For Love song and arranged it bossa-nova style,
which worked perfectly. He left the group immediately after smashing
his Les Paul on the floor of a recording studio while attempting
a perfect 1st take on some demo they were trying to nail down.I
think Kurt Linhof joined in at Jimmy's behest before the first,
and
probably most memorable gig, the grand opening of Steve Perron's
club" The
Mind's Eye", where they opened for The 13th Floor Elevators.
Other gigs included the Doris Miller Auditorium in Austin
with the Conqueroo.I think Will left for Cal. meaning to re-assemble
there, but it didn't work out. What did work out years later
was the group Joker Moon, which he and Don (then "Don Earl")
Harding formed with Merrily Weeber, but that is Will's tale to
tell."
'Hi' to all who remember......."
_George Maillot, April 2002 |