Friday, January 9, 2009

The Complete California Saga as told by Les Fradkin

Here it is as promised. Les Fradkin himself tells the tale of California, the band that continued the pure pop sound that was all but lost in the mid 1970's-early 1980's. In an era where schmaltz, punk, disco and more schmaltz permeated the airwaves, California kept the hook-filled pop song alive. Les finally records his detailed memories--naming names, chronicling dates and sessions, and providing a full discography--and is essential reading for any Beatles, Beach Boys, or Left Banke fan...or any fan of pop music. So without any further rattling, here is....

LES FRADKIN:

"THE STORY OF THE LAURIE RECORDS GROUP CALIFORNIA has seldom, if ever been told. I was an original member and the only constant throughout the group's history from 1973 thru 1985.

The group was originally formed by myself, Barry Butler and George Cameron (drummer of The Left Banke). Barry & I would write together on our matching Rickenbacker 12 string guitars and stumbled on a sound that, in some respects, predated the Fleetwood Mac sound of 1975 and, in other respects, shared influences of The Left Banke and The Beach Boys. Because of that trait, I asked George Cameron to be our drummer and third harmony singer and he enthusiastically agreed.

We wanted to do big harmony pop. Went looking for a record deal in 1973 and after recording some demos at A-1 studios in NYC, landed a contract with Laurie Records. Their offices were on West 46th St in Manhattan, NYC.During the course of the contract negotiations, Barry got quite uptight with the Laurie staff. He left the band and quit the music business. Steve Martin from The Left Banke came onboard to replace him. Bev Warren was added at Laurie VP Gene Schwartz's suggestion.

The first release came out in 1973 and was "See You In September" b/w "Ivy, Ivy". The B-side, although the same title as the Left Banke tune was one of my originals.

The group originally was myself, Steve Martin; George Cameron (from The Left Banke) and Beverly Warren (Female Vocalist). Mike Brown (composer of "Walk Away Renee") guested on these sides but was not a part of the group. That A-side had a "Let's Go To San Francisco" Flowerpot Men meets Motown meets Beach Boys feel. It ended up on a Laurie Compilation called Collector Records Of The 50's & 60's Vol. 14.

Lineup for the first single:Les Fradkin - Lead Vocal (Ivy Ivy), Rickenbacker 6-string Bass, Background vocals, Rickenbacker 12-string guitar George Cameron - Drums, Background Vocals Steve Martin - Electric guitar, Background vocals Mike Brown - Piano, Harpsichord Eliot Greenberg - Background Vocals ("See You In September")Beverly Warren- Lead Vocal ("See You In September")"

See You In September" got to #111 on the Billboard Charts if I recall correctly.

The group played a couple of shows and opened for Dion in New Jersey once. Then, the group broke up temporarily. Nothing further on the group until 1976. ........Gene Schwartz had the idea to revive the group and record a cover of "Jeans On" which at that moment, was NOT out in the US. Although he knew it was a risk, he plowed ahead anyway and asked me to put a new group together under the California name.Since George & Steve were unavailable and the Beatlemania show was still just in rehearsal with no real clue as to destination or possible success, I invited the Beatlemania group to participate. This single was recorded at Electric Lady Studios and is the ONLY California record I produced without Gene & Eliot.

I insisted on the artistic autonomy and was granted the chance. The record gets a Top 60 pick in Cash Box, Billboard & Record World.

Lineup for "Jeans On" and "Doo Wop Music"

Les Fradkin - Lead Vocal (Doo-Wop) Background Vocals, Moog and BassDiana Haig- Background Vocals (Jeans On and Doo Wop Music)Joe Pecorino- Lead Vocal and Background Vocals (Jeans On)Mitch Weissman- Piano and Background Vocals (Jeans On)Justin McNeill- Drums (Jeans On and Doo Wop Music)FYI: This lineup was the ONLY appearance by the Original Cast Of Beatlemania on record OUTSIDE the context of the Broadway show.
"Jeans On" is a cover of the David Dundas hit tune. We thought we could beat it out in the US. Not quite! :-) "Doo Wop Music" was written by Diana & I.

"Song Of A Thousand Voices" b/w "Abraham, Martin & John".

Lineup:Recorded 1973 > Released 1976 Les Fradkin - Lead & Background Vocals, 12-String Gtr, Bass, MellotronGeorge Cameron - drums, vocals Steve Martin - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals Barry Butler - 12-String Guitar, Vocals

"Song Of A Thousand Voices" (my song) had already been an nternational hit single for Mireille Mathieu and Roberto Jordan in French and Spanish language versions respectively. We thought it could hit in the US.Not quite! :-)"Abraham, Martin & John" was among the demos that got me my Laurie deal along with "Where Have All The Heroes Gone". Barry Butler was originally supposed to be in the group but left before the first release in 1973. But he helped form the sound we used. Just as a side note, Barry Butler co-wrote "Where Have All The Heroes Gone" and "Everything Is Gonna Be All Right" with me. Those two songs were also among the first California demos. "Heroes" was eventually sung by my friend Tom Selden. I released "Everything" as the closing track on my solo "Jangleholic" CD in 2006.

"I'm Just Thinking Of You" Lineup:Les Fradkin- Lead & Background Vocals, Guitar, Bass, Keyboards, MellotronDrum ProgrammingDiana Haig- Background VocalsJoAnne Calabrese- Lead & Background Vocals

This was a song that Joanne Calabrese wrote that I liked. It reminded me of Spanky & Our Gang as JoAnne had that same sort of vocal timbre. It didn't chart, unfortunately. On to 1981:I returned to Laurie Records as a producer / artist after Beatlemania closed at the end of 1979. Gene & Bob Schwartz wanted to revive the group with a Stars on 45 type release. I suggested a Beach Boys type record and they said OK if I could find the right guys. I went searching in the Village Voice under the guise of "auditioning" for a band that was advertising. That was Tony Pernice and Richie Tuske. Their ad read: "Wally Bryson, where are you?" That, I thought, would be me. Needless to say, it was a great match up. I brought the guys to the attention of Laurie Records and we got working on the medley. As you can hear, it turned out to be a pretty exciting record. It took 100 hours to record and mix at Minot Studios in White Plains, New York. Gene & Eliot co produced but my production direction held sway throughout. Tony, Richie & I arranged the vocals. I arranged the track with Gene. By that time, all tunes that California recorded were arranged t my home studio before going up to Minot to record final takes. This gave us a very clear idea of what to expect in the studio when the clock was running.Things evolved from there as the record took off fairly quickly across the country on radio. It swept to #1 in several markets and, as you may know, Dick Clark gave it an airing on American Bandstand. There was even a story in Billboard about it.

We were booked to open for Todd Rundgren & Utopia at The Last Chance in Poughkeepsie, NY. That was a pretty cool show. I played a Rickenbacker doubleneck at that time. In fact, the whole band used Ricks and matching Vox Amps. JP Patterson played drums with our live shows as Bob Miller had other work as the drummer of The Metro Men who recorded for Genra Raven's Polish Records label.

Summer Fun Medley

Lineup:Les Fradkin-Lead & Background Vocals, Lead Guitar, KeysTony Pernice- Lead & Background Vocals, BassRichie Tuske- Lead & Background Vocals, Rhythm GuitarBob Miller- Drums

Paris

Lineup:Les Fradkin- Guitars, Bass, Drum Programming

Brown Eyed Girl

Lineup:Les Fradkin- Lead & Background Vocals, Guitars, Theremin, Piano, MellotronTony Pernice- Background Vocals and BassRichie Tuske- Background Vocals and Rhythm GuitarBob Miller - Drums

Thank You For Lovin Me

Lineup:Tony Pernice- Lead VocalsLes Fradkin - Guitar & Bass Other Instruments from existing track from Laurie Archives

By 1982, the group started to evolve a bit out of the strict Beach Boys style and into a kind of Blondie like atmospheric Pop sound. Tony & Richie branched off to form The Singles which also included myself on guitar. Meanwhile Laurie & I replaced them in California with two new members from the Beatlemania show: Gigi Hagemann-Teeley (wife of my understudy Tom Teeley) on Vocals and Keyboards and Don Linares on Bass and Vocals. Bob Miller stayed on board on Drums. Gigi had a very interesting and unique voice.The first single for the new group was a tune Diana Haig & I wrote called "He's Almost You" A very unique but commercial song about jealousy and wandering thoughts of someone else other than the "one you're with". I loved the chorus hook: "He's Almost You.... But he's not you!" This song has since been covered by the girl group Venus In Bluejeans on my RRO Entertainment label. The B-Side, "Three Time Loser" was a Laurie catalog tune that Gene wanted us to try. "He's Almost You" charted Top 50 in the U.K. The follow up "The Land Of Fun ^ Love" did not se any chart action.

He's Almost You / Three Time Loser / Land Of Fun & Love

Lineup:Les Fradkin- Background Vocals, Guitar, Electric Piano, MellotronGigi Hageman-Teeley - Lead Vocals, PianoDon Linares - Bass, Background VocalsBob Miller - Drums The group had run it's course by 1983 but Gene & I revived the name for the 1985 album "Electric Swing" which was the first Guitar Synthesizer album ever made and a very early MIDI programming miracle for those days. An interest cross of pop, rock and big band arrangement were the chief highlight of that release. At that point, the book closed on California.Little Brown Jug / String Of Pearls Lineup:Les Fradkin- Guitar Synthesizer and all other instrumentsThis was the FIRST Guitar Synthesizer album EVER made.One of these days, EMI (who owns it all) will do a compilation, I hope. And when they do, I'll remaster it if they're interested. "


CALIFORNIA Discography: See you in September / Ivy Ivy (1973) Laurie 3612 Song of a thousand voices / Abraham Martin & John (1976) Laurie 3639
Jeans on / Doo-wop music - Laurie 3647 (1976)
I'm just thinking of you / Doo-wop music - (1976) Laurie 3649
Summer fun medley / Paris (1945) (1981) Laurie 3695
Brown eyed girl / Thank you for lovin' me - Laurie 3701
He's almost you / Three time loser (1982) Laurie 3706
Black gypsy / The land of fun & love (1983) Laurie 3710
He's almost you / Three time loser - RCA 306
Little brown jug / String of pearls - 3C-114
CALIFORNIA Performs ELECTRIC SWING - 3C-6000
COLLECTOR'S RECORDS OF THE 50's and 60's Vol 14 - (1982) Feat. See you in September

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