Pre-Love His first known recording is from 1963.
The Ninth Wave (Capitol Records 4980) was released by his first band, the instrumental outfit called The LAGs, a
Booker T & The MG's type of unit which included
Johnny Echols (future co-founder, guitarist, and vocalist of Love), Lee (organ), Allan Talbert (saxophone), and Roland Davis (drums). As a songwriter, Lee composed the
surf songs "White Caps" and "Ski Surfin' Sanctuary". "My Diary" is the first Lee composition that came near to being a hit. It was written when Arthur was a teenager, about his teenage sweetheart Anita Billings. Later it was the
R&B singer Rosa Lee Brooks who performed and recorded it for Revis Records. This recording included
Jimi Hendrix on electric guitar. In a 2005 interview, Lee stated that he was looking for a guitarist with a Curtis Mayfield–like feel, and Hendrix was recommended for the session by label owner Billy Revis. Lee wrote "I've Been Tryin for
Little Ray. "Luci Baines", a song about President
Lyndon Johnson's daughter, was performed and recorded with Lee's new band, The American Four. He composed "Everybody Jerk" and "Slow Jerk" for Ronnie and the Pomona Casuals, a band that put out an LP on the Donna label featuring some vocals by Lee. These early recordings are very rare but have been collected on a 1997 bootleg CD. The American Four however have since been reissued as a 45 and are also available now on
iTunes.
Love in 1966 Lee said when he first heard
The Byrds he felt vindicated since he'd already been writing music that had a similar
folk rock sound. In 1965, the Grass Roots, his folk rock unit, changed their name to Love because there was already a signed act called
The Grass Roots. Lee's early appearances were at clubs in Hollywood, including the Brave New World; Hullabaloo; Bido Lito's; and the Sea Witch. At Bido Lito's, a tiny hole-in-the-wall club located on a cul-de-sac known as Cosmo's Alley, Lee first showed his potential for excellence. The Bido Lito's audience was sometimes dotted with celebrities, including actor
Sal Mineo, and rock stars
Mick Jagger,
Brian Jones,
Bob Dylan, and Jimi Hendrix, who would go on to collaborate with Lee on future recording projects. Lee then got the opportunity to play the larger
Whisky a Go Go on Los Angeles'
Sunset Strip, after which Love received a recording contract by
Elektra Records. Love received a lot of air play in Los Angeles, and performed several times in 1967 at the Cheetah nightclub in Venice, California. Love's music has been described as a mixture of
psychedelic rock,
folk-rock,
baroque pop,
Spanish-tinged pop,
R&B,
garage rock, and even
protopunk. Lee has been regarded as "the first punk rocker" but wasn't flattered by the phrase as he thought the term punk meant "being somebody's bitch or something like that." Though Lee's vocals have garnered some comparisons to
Johnny Mathis, his lyrics often dwell on matters dark and vexing, but often with a wry humor. The group's cover of the
Burt Bacharach/
Hal David composition "My Little Red Book" (first recorded by
Manfred Mann for the soundtrack of ''
What's New Pussycat?'') received a thumbs-down from Bacharach: Love had altered the song's chord changes. Nonetheless, the record was a
Southern California hit and won Lee and Love a spot on
American Bandstand.
Love (1966) included their cover of "My Little Red Book". "Emotions", an instrumental track from the album, is used in the opening credits of the 1969 movie
Medium Cool. Their second album,
Da Capo (1966), featured just one song, "Revelation" on side two. The first side contained six individual songs, including their only single to achieve any success in the Billboard Top 40 chart: "
7 and 7 Is". Da Capo has been described as Jazz-Rock (or
Jazz Fusion with its inclusion of flute and saxophone.)
Forever Changes (1967) followed, the album a centerpiece of the group's
psychedelic-tinged sound, bolstered by David Angel's orchestral arrangements.
Forever Changes sold moderately in its time (reaching No. 154 on the
Billboard 200, and stayed on the chart for 10 weeks, without the benefit of a hit single), although it reached the top 30 in the UK. Nonetheless, its
cult status grew. After
Forever Changes, the band managed to record one more non-album single ("Your Mind and We Belong Together" b/w "Laughing Stock") which was released in June 1968 and failed to chart. Love then dissolved due to drug and money issues, only to have Lee revive the group name shortly thereafter. The new Love featured a lineup consisting of Lee on vocals and guitar, Jay Donnellan on guitar, Frank Fayad on bass, and George Suranovich on drums despite a few tracks featuring
The Crazy World of Arthur Brown drummer Drachen Theaker. Lee signed a record deal with
Bob Krasnow's
Blue Thumb label during this time, but without mentioning to Krasnow that he was technically still signed to
Elektra Records. Lee had wanted out of his Elektra deal since 1966 (the year the self-titled debut was released). Elektra founder
Jac Holzman did not want to let Lee out of his contract as he admired his talents but he also did not want to keep an artist under contract who did not want to stay, so a deal was worked out that allowed Lee to record for Blue Thumb with Holzman getting his choice of ten of the resulting songs to fulfill the Elektra contract of a fourth album. That album would become
Four Sail (1969), Lee's pun on his original title "For Sale". A mere three months after the release of
Four Sail, Blue Thumb records released their Love album,
Out Here, using remaining tracks from the sessions.
Out Here featured the same musicians as
Four Sail with the addition of Gary Rowles, who played on one track. Lee felt that Donnellan was getting a little too egotistical for his tastes. The new lineup consisted of musicians who were not fans of
Forever Changes, resulting in a harder-edged rock sound. During the initial
Four Sail/Out Here sessions, Krasnow approached Lee about the possibility of rounding up the original members of Love. Krasnow felt there was some magic missing with the new line up. Lee obliged him, and started rehearsing and even recording some with original members Echols, Forssi, and Stuart (MacLean had turned him down). Heroin proved to be too dominant in the lives of Echols and Forssi. Both men were constantly pawning off the rented equipment for drug money and were eventually let go yet again. Love also toured both
Four Sail and
Out Here for their first trip to Europe, where they were always more popular, and went on to do a nationally televised performance on Dutch television which also featured promotional videos for older songs from the Elektra years.
Out Here managed to chart at No. 29 in the UK in May 1970. The next album to appear from Love was
False Start (1970) which continued on with the heavier sonic direction of acid rock, in addition to featuring elements of classic R&B. One new member was added to this incarnation of Love, a vocalist/guitarist named Nooney Rickett. The album's opening track, "The Everlasting First", features
Jimi Hendrix on guitar. Lee met Hendrix while in England, and they decided to record at Bob Krasnow's expense. For years there were rumors that Arthur and Jimi recorded an entire record together, but the truth surfaced in 2009 when an acetate from Blue Thumb made rounds and it was revealed that there was only a long jam session (titled "Jam" on the actual acetate, to accompany
The Everlasting First and an early version of the Hendrix song "Ezy Rider"). According to legend, Arthur overheard Bob Krasnow telling someone that if the
False Start album did not crack the top 10 he was going to release the band from its contract. Moreover, Arthur made Krasnow give him that in writing. The album did not even reach the top 200 on the Billboard charts. In 1971, Lee was signed to
Columbia Records and spent the better part of the summer recording; all of the songs were deemed unworthy of issue (the entire Columbia project, along with a handful of demos, was released for the first time in 2009 on
Sundazed Music as "Love Lost").
Solo career In July 1972, Lee released his first solo album,
Vindicator, on
A&M Records, featuring a new group of musicians also playing as the band Love. At one point in time they would use the name Bandaid, a name originally suggested by Jimi Hendrix for a briefly considered lineup of himself, Lee, and
Steve Winwood. This album failed to chart. Lee recorded a second solo album in 1973 entitled
Black Beauty for Buffalo Records, but the label folded before the album was released. Lee contributed the title track to the 1974 blaxploitation film
Thomasine & Bushrod. Lee's next move was to credit the backing group for
Black Beauty with the addition of guitarist John Sterling as a new Love for
Reel to Real (1974). A new Lee solo album, called just
Arthur Lee, appeared on
Rhino Records in 1981, featuring covers of The Bobbettes' "
Mr. Lee" and
Jimmy Cliff's "Many Rivers to Cross" and musicians Sterling (guitar), George Suranovich (drums), and Kim Kesterson (bass), as well as some of the members from "Reel to Real". Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, there were various attempts to reunite the original Love lineup. At the suggestion of guitarist John Sterling who first joined Arthur for
Reel To Real, one such show from the Whisky in October 1978 was recorded by Sterling on cassette. It featuring Lee and Bryan MacLean with Sterling (guitar), George Suranovich (drums), and Kim Kesterson (bass), and was released on Rhino as a live album picture disc entitled
Love Live (1980) on Rhino Records. In 1982, MCA released
Studio/Live, which was a collection of tracks from the early 1970s incarnation of Love coordinated by rock lawyer/journalist Stann Findelle, including never before heard tracks recorded from
Bill Graham's
Fillmore East. Apart from the
Studio/Live package on MCA, the 1980s were a mostly fallow period for Lee. According to him: "I was gone for a decade. I went back to my old neighborhood to take care of my father, who was dying of cancer. I was tired of signing autographs. I was tired of being BS'd out of my money...I just got tired." Alice Cooper did record a cover version of Lee's "7 and 7 Is" on a 1981 album,
Special Forces. Lee re-emerged musically in 1992 with a new album entitled
Arthur Lee & Love -{Five String Serenade} on the French New Rose label. The title track, "Five String Serenade", was later recorded by
Mazzy Star and
Jack White of
The White Stripes. The album also featured a new artist he discovered from San Francisco, Keith Farrish aka Demian X Diamond. He performed live around this time in Paris, London, and Liverpool. In 1993 he played shows in New York and England. The following year he released a 45 rpm single, "Girl on Fire" backed with "Midnight Sun", on Distortions Records. He began to tour regularly with a backup band comprising former members of Das Damen, and LA group
Baby Lemonade. In 1995, Rhino Records released the compilation
Love Story. The album was a two-disc set with extensive liner notes that chronicled the period of 1966–1972. ==Later years and death==