The Litter
The Litter | |
---|---|
Origin | Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States |
Genres | |
Years active | 1966-1970 (reunions thereafter) |
Labels |
|
Associated acts |
The Victors The Tabs |
Past members |
Dan Rinaldi David Strange Denny Waite Jim Kane Mark Gallagher Ray Melina Tom Caplin Tom Murray Mike Rowe |
The Litter was an American psychedelic and garage rock band, formed in 1966 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. They are best remembered for their 1967 debut single, "Action Woman". The group recorded three albums in the late 1960s before disbanding, but would re-unite in 1990, 1992, and again in 1998, when they recorded a new studio album consisting of both old and new material. All of their Minneapolis recorded material was produced by Warren Kendrick, who owned the Scotty and Warick and Hexagon labels.
History
Four members of the original lineup, Jim Kane, Bill Strandlof, Denny Waite, and Dan Rinaldi formed from the remains of two popular Minneapolis band's, The Victors and The Tabs, in 1966. Tom Murray joined as a result from a successful band audition. Their group name was presented by Jim Kane and accepted over other suggestions like "The Mustys".[1]
Heavily influenced by the bands of the British Invasion, the group recorded their debut single "Action Woman/"A Legal Matter"in late 1966. "Action Woman" proved to be their most impactful single and became a garage rock classic. Bill Strandlof, lead guitarist for the single, was replaced by Tom Caplan just before their debut album Distortions was released in the summer of 1967. Distortions leaned on cover songs, but became a classic that would be re-released when garage rock was revived.
By 1968, the band had shifted to the psychedelic rock scene. Their second album, $100 Fine, included original input from the band and British-influenced cover material. Although the album did not chart nationally, it did chart at number 10 on the Twin Cities chart. Their writer/producer, Warren Kendrick, had developed a method to precisely control the flanging effect (which would eventually become a staple of psychedelic recordings) and he applied it to a cover version of a Procol Harum song, "Kaleidoscope." A highlight for the band that year was their brief appearance in the movie, Medium Cool. Their scene in the movie however, was overdubbed by The Mothers of Invention's song, "Flower Punk". Further work on the soundtrack was also replaced by Frank Zappa tracks. The band, later in the year, turned down offers by Elektra Records and Columbia Records which slowed their progress to the national scene.[2]
In 1969, the band finally signed to a major label. Their third album, Emerge would be released on the ABC Records label and became their most successful to date. It would chart at number 175 on the Billboard 200. However, recording for the album did not include Chaplin or Waite. There were heavier rock tracks on the album. The group would later disband by 1970.
The group would continue to tour with several different lineups sporadically thereafter and released an album of new material in 1998.
Personnel
- Jim Kane - bass guitar and moog synthesizer, 1966-1970 & 1990
- Tom Murray - drums, 1966-1972 & 1992
- Dan Rinaldi - guitar and vocals - 1966-1972 & 1992, (died June 5, 2015).
- Bill Strandlof - lead guitar, 1966-1967
- Denny Waite - organ, blues harmonica and lead vocals, 1966-1968, 1990-1992, 1995-2012
- Tom 'Zippy' Caplan - lead guitar, 1967-1968 & 1990-1992 (left to form White Lightning with Woody Woodrich in 1968)[3]
- Lonnie Knight - lead guitar and vocals, 1968
- Mark Gallagher - vocals 1968-1970 & 1992 (Mark Patrick Gallagher; March 17, 1948 – February 24, 2009)
- Ray Melina - lead guitar, 1968-1970
- Sean Jones - lead guitar, 1970 (Sean Jones aka Jack Stanley Jones born October 9, 1948 died February 13, 2011)
- Jon Sutphen - bass, 1970
- Casey Macpherson, vocals, 1971-1972
- Mike Rowe - bass 1971-1972
- John King - lead guitar 1971 - 1972
Woody Woodrich, bass, 1970
- Mick Stanhope, vocals, 1992
- Bob Hood - 1992
- Rick Ottum - 1992
- Joe Scanlan - drums, 1998-2005
- Doug Hassman - rhythm and lead guitar, 2005-2007
- Kenny Carson - rhythm guitar and bass, 2005 and 2012–present
Discography
Singles
- "Action Woman" b/w "A Legal Matter" (Scotty 803G-6710) January 1967
- "Somebody Help Me" b/w "I'm a Man" (Warick 9445-6711) 1967
- "Action Woman" b/w "Whatcha Gonna Do About It" (Warick 6712) 1967
- "Silly People" b/w "Feeling" (Probe 461) 1968
- "Blue Ice" b/w "On Our Minds" (Probe 467) 1969
Albums
- Distortions (Warick WM-671-A) 1967
- $100 Fine (Hexagon 681-S) 1968
- Emerge (Probe 4504-S) 1969
- Re-Emerge (Arf! Arf! AA-080) 1998
Compilation albums
- Rare Tracks (Eva 12013) 1983
- "Action Woman":
- Pebbles, Volume 1 (LP-1979; CD-1992)
- Songs We Taught the Fuzztones (1993)
- Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968 — Box Set (1998)
- Garage Rock Classics (2004)
- Trash Box (5-CD box set)
- "I'm A Man":
- Pebbles, Volume 2 (LP)
- Pebbles, Volume 3 (CD – ESD Records)
- "Hey Joe":
- The Scotty Story (CD)
- "7 Up Commercial":
- The Scotty Story (CD)
Live albums
- Live at Mirage 1990 (Arf! Arf! AA-79) 1998
References
- ↑ "The Litter". last.fm.
- ↑ "The Litter". thelitterlightning.com. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ↑ "biomenu". Thelitter-lightning.com. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
External links
- The Litter's official website
- Zip Caplan's website
- The Litter at AllMusic
- Lonnie Knight's official website
- John King's official website