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Flamin' Groovies

Flamin' Groovies is an American rock band that formed in San Francisco in 1965, originally co-led by Roy Loney and Cyril Jordan. After the Groovies released three albums, on Epic (Supersnazz) and Kama Sutra, Loney left the band in 1971. He was replaced as co-leader by Chris Wilson, and the band's emphasis shifted more toward British Invasion power pop.

Career
Beginnings Roy Loney and Tim Lynch, who met in first grade, had put together a Kingston Trio-type folk band with guitars when they were in junior high and high school. Beginning in 1965, after adding their friend George Alexander (whom they told to learn bass), they became a Rolling Stones-influenced rock band with drummer Ron Greco. who quickly became a part of the group, although Greco then left and was replaced by Danny Mihm. As a result of its success, they were signed to a contract by Epic Records. Around the same time, their manager leased The Fillmore from Bill Graham, and they became managers of the venue. During a stay in Detroit, the band would be exposed to local bands such as MC5, the Stooges, and the Frost, which caused the Groovies' sound to become heavier. During this period, they released 1969's Supersnazz. Despite the critical plaudits, though, neither album sold well, which caused Loney and Lynch to lose interest and left the Groovies in limbo about their future. Isolation and success Not long after the KSAN concert, Loney also left the band and was replaced by 18-year-old singer and guitarist Chris Wilson, who, along with Jordan, began to move the group in a more overtly power pop direction. even though the U.S. division of UA had already turned down the band. The Groovies moved to Britain, where they remained for the rest of 1972, but the UA deal was never expanded beyond two single releases, "Slow Death"/"Tallahassee Lassie" and "Married Woman"/"Get a Shot of Rhythm and Blues", which United Artists preferred to Edmunds and the band's choices "Shake Some Action" and "You Tore Me Down". The failure of these singles effectively left the band in limbo for two years. In an effort to gain some leverage, the band agreed to release the Edmunds-produced version of "You Tore Me Down" as the first single on the brand-new Bomp! Records label in 1974. Some of the various released and unreleased recordings made and produced by the Groovies during this period (six demos from 1971, "Tallahassee Lassie" from 1972, one TV recording from 1972, and the two Capitol demos from 1973) were later collected on the 2002 Norton album Slow Death. Finally, in 1975, Greg Shaw from Bomp! became the Flamin' Groovies' manager and arranged for them to sign to the new (but poorly distributed) label Sire Records, headed by Seymour Stein. The Groovies continued to tour continually and were supported by the Ramones and The Stranglers at the Roundhouse in London on July 4, 1976 (which was coincidentally the US's bicentennial) in the former band's first ever appearance in the UK. This concert has been widely noted as a seminal moment in the development of punk rock. Sire's distribution was taken over by Warner Bros. Records in 1977, and so the Groovies returned to a major label; however, shortly before that, James Ferrell, who had been unhappy with the band's "Beatle-esque" direction, was fired and replaced by Mike Wilhelm, who had previously played with Wilson in the San Francisco band "Loose Gravel". Breakup The commercial failure of ''Jumpin' in the Night'', as well as clashes between Jordan and Stein, led Sire to drop the Flamin' Groovies in 1980, although the band nevertheless added keyboardist Mark Dunwoody. (in which only five complete songs were recorded in a three-week period, but four of them were covers) Wilson called the Gold Star sessions "a complete debacle" and referred to the time as being "like a messy family divorce"; the Flamin' Groovies once again had to reform. Later in the 1980s, the Groovies, now including Jordan, Alexander, guitarist-vocalist Jack Johnson, and drummer Paul Zahl, became involved with an Australian promoter named Peter Noble (the owner of AIM Records), who began to issue various Groovies live and studio recordings and reissue prior albums. After a 1987 live-in-the-studio recording in Australia for AIM entitled One Night Stand, Post-breakup and partial reunions In 1979, Roy Loney formed the Phantom Movers featuring two other former Groovies, drummer Danny Mihm and guitarist James Ferrell, as well as Larry Lea (guitar) and Maurice Tani (bass). The band released several albums between 1979 and 1993 as well as a greatest hits CD (A Hundred Miles an Hour 1978-1989 on the Raven label out of Australia). Loney and Lea continued to work together after the band folded. Loney, Mihm and Ferrell, who were then playing together in a band called the Fondellas, tried to put a Groovies reunion together to capitalize on that interest, which had been further fueled by re-releases of Flamingo and Teenage Head, but Jordan wasn't interested at that time. In 2005, Jordan founded a new band, Magic Christian, which released a self-titled double album in 2005 and the album Evolver in 2009. In 2009, Loney and Jordan reunited and embarked on a brief tour, backed by members of the A-Bones and Yo La Tengo, including the Ponderosa Stomp in April. The tour focused on the Groovies' pre-1972 catalog, omitting the later songs; Jordan noted that, despite the band's continuing popularity, "when I did that tour with Roy, . . . the halls didn’t exactly fill up." One result of the Loney/Jordan tour were more reunions on the 2010 Chris Wilson album Love Over Money. George Alexander, Roy Loney, James Ferrell and Mike Wilhelm all appear on the CD, as does Procol Harum's keyboard legend Matthew Fisher and Barracudas guitarist Robin Wills. The album was released on the French label Rock Paradise. Wilson then followed this up with the 2013 album ''It's Flamin' Groovy'', which featured the same musicians as previously plus three songs with both Alexander and Cyril Jordan. Guitarist Mike Wilhelm (1976-1982) died from cancer on May 14, 2019. Drummer Danny Mihm died on March 26, 2020, following a stroke. Reunion Beginning in late 2012, following the "reunions" on Wilson's solo albums, Jordan and Wilson considered reforming and relaunching the band. Said Jordan, "the Flamin' Groovies Shake Some Action version makes way more money and did make way more money in the '70s than the Roy Loney version ever did. So it was a no-brainer to put that second version back together again and see if we could make some good money." Jordan noted that the band received $75,000 for six or seven shows on the tour, which was enough money to overcome the band's post-breakup geographic spread. As a result, Jordan, Wilson, and Alexander decided to reform the Flamin' Groovies and to record a new album. Their first release was a limited-edition single (on vinyl) in 2016 to commemorate the band's 50th anniversary entitled "Crazy Macy" b/w "Let Me Rock", followed by the album Fantastic Plastic, which was released in September 2017. In 2019, the Groovies, consisting of Jordan, Von Sneidern (now on guitar), Sales, and Atom Ellis (on bass), with special guest Roy Loney (vocals) but without Wilson (who retired at the end of 2018), embarked on the "Teenage Head Tour" in the US and Europe. However, Loney was hospitalized after a fall at the airport in June, just as the tour was headed to Europe, which forced the European leg of the tour to continue without him. Loney died on December 13, 2019. Despite Loney's death, the band continued to remain active, releasing a recording of "Fissure of Rolando" in 2023 and continuing to go on tour. ==Personnel==
Personnel
Current membersCyril Jordan - guitar, vocals (1965-1991, 2013-present) • Tony Sales - drums, vocals (2017-present) • Atom Ellis - bass (2019-present) • Sean Fitzsimmons - guitar, vocals (2024-present) • Miki Rogulj - guitar (2024-present) Former membersRoy Loney - vocals, guitar (1965-1971, 2019; his death) • George Alexander - bass, vocals (1965-1991, 2013-2017) • Tim Lynch - guitar, harmonica, vocals (1965-1971) • Ron Greco - drums (1965) • Danny Mihm - drums (1965-1973, 1982; died 2020) • James Ferrell - guitar (1971-1976) • Chris Wilson - vocals, guitar (1971-1981, 2013-2019) • Terry Rae - drums (1973-1974) • David Wright - drums (1974-1981) • Mike Wilhelm - guitar (1976-1982; died 2019) • Mark Dunwoody - keyboards (1980-1982; died 2013) • Jack Johnson - guitar, vocals (1983-1991) • Paul Zahl - drums (1983-1989) • Bobby Ronco - vocals (mid-late 80s, exact dates unknown; died 2014) • Victor Penalosa - drums (2013-2017) • Chris Von Sneidern - bass (2017-2019), guitar (2019-2024) Timeline ImageSize = width:800 height:auto barincrement:20 PlotArea = left:100 bottom:75 top:0 right:15 Alignbars = justify DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1967 till:01/01/2020 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy Legend = orientation:horizontal position:bottom ScaleMajor = increment:3 start:1967 ScaleMinor = increment:1 start:1967 Colors = id:vocals value:red legend:Vocals id:guitar value:green legend:Guitar id:keys value:purple legend:Keyboards id:bass value:blue legend:Bass id:drums value:orange legend:Drums,_percussion id:studio value:black legend:Studio_release BarData = bar:Roy text:"Roy Loney" bar:Chris text:"Chris Wilson" bar:Cyril text:"Cyril Jordan" bar:Tim text:"Tim Lynch" bar:James text:"James Ferrell" bar:Mike text:"Mike Wilhelm" bar:Jack text:"Jack Johnson" bar:Sean text:"Sean Fitzsimmons" bar:Miki text:"Miki Rogulj bar:George text:"George Alexander" bar:Chris2 text:"Chris Von Sneidern" bar:Atom text:"Atom Ellis" bar:Danny text:"Danny Mihm" bar:David text:"David Wright" bar:Paul text:"Paul Zahl" bar:Victor text:"Victor Penalosa" bar:Tony text:"Tony Sales" bar:Mark text:"Mark Dunwoody" PlotData= width:11 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-2) bar:Cyril from:01/01/1967 till:31/12/1993 color:guitar bar:Cyril from:01/01/1967 till:31/12/1993 color:vocals width:3 bar:Cyril from:01/04/2013 till:31/12/2019 color:guitar bar:Cyril from:01/04/2013 till:31/12/2019 color:vocals width:3 bar:George from:01/01/1967 till:31/12/1993 color:bass bar:George from:01/04/2013 till:30/06/2017 color:bass bar:Chris2 from:01/07/2017 till:31/12/2018 color:bass bar:Chris2 from:01/01/2019 till:31/12/2019 color:guitar bar:Atom from:01/01/2019 till:31/12/2019 color:bass bar:Roy from:01/01/1967 till:31/08/1971 color:vocals bar:Roy from:01/01/1967 till:31/08/1971 color:guitar width:3 bar:Roy from:01/01/2019 till:30/06/2019 color:vocals bar:Chris from:01/10/1971 till:31/10/1981 color:vocals bar:Chris from:01/10/1971 till:31/10/1981 color:guitar width:3 bar:Chris from:01/04/2013 till:31/12/2018 color:vocals bar:Chris from:01/04/2013 till:31/12/2018 color:guitar width:3 bar:Tim from:01/01/1967 till:30/04/1971 color:guitar bar:Tim from:01/01/1967 till:30/04/1971 color:vocals width:3 bar:James from:01/05/1971 till:30/09/1976 color:guitar bar:Mike from:01/10/1976 till:30/09/1982 color:guitar bar:Jack from:01/01/1983 till:30/06/1991 color:guitar bar:Jack from:01/01/1983 till:30/06/1991 color:vocals width:3 bar:Danny from:01/01/1967 till:31/12/1972 color:drums bar:Danny from:01/01/1982 till:30/09/1982 color:drums bar:David from:01/01/1974 till:31/10/1981 color:drums bar:Paul from:01/01/1983 till:31/08/1989 color:drums bar:Victor from:01/04/2013 till:30/06/2017 color:drums bar:Tony from:01/07/2017 till:31/12/2019 color:drums bar:Tony from:01/07/2017 till:31/12/2019 color:vocals width:3 bar:Mark from:01/07/1980 till:30/09/1982 color:keys LineData = layer:back color:studio at:01/09/1969 at:01/07/1970 at:01/04/1971 at:01/06/1976 at:01/06/1978 at:01/07/1979 at:01/07/1987 at:01/09/1993 at:01/09/2017 ==Discography==
Discography
Albums StudioSupersnazz (Epic BN-26487, September 1969) • Flamingo (Kama Sutra KSBS 2021, July 1970) • Teenage Head (Kama Sutra KSBS 2031, April 1971) • Shake Some Action (Sire SASD-7521, June 1976) U.S. No. 142 • ''Flamin' Groovies Now'' (Sire SRK 6059, June 1978) • ''Jumpin' in the Night'' (Sire SRK 6067, July 1979) • One Night Stand (AIM Records (Australia) 1008, July 1987) • Rock Juice (National Records NAT-030-2, November 1992) • Fantastic Plastic (Severn 0069, September 2017) LiveSlow Death, Live! (Lolita, 1983) (1971 KSAN broadcast) • Bucketful of Brains (Voxx, 1983) (1971 KSAN broadcast) • ''Flamin' Groovies '68'' (Eva, 1984) (live at The Matrix, 1968) • ''Flamin' Groovies '70'' (Eva, 1984) • 68/70 (Eva, 1984) (selections from '68 and '70) • Groove In (Revenge, 1988) (compilation from '68 and '70) • ''Rockin' at the Roundhouse'' (Mystery MRC 103, 1993) (live recordings from 1976 and 1978) • Live at the Festival of the Sun (AIM (Australia) 1051, 1995) (1987 Barcelona, Spain concert) • California Born and Bred (Norton 243, 1995) (1968-71 live recordings) • ''The Flamin' Groovies In Person'' (Norton 255, 2006) (official 1971 KSAN broadcast plus bonus tracks) DemosStep Up (AIM (Australia) 1030, 1991) (studio recordings from 1984 to 1989) • Slow Death (Norton 297, September 2002) (self-produced recordings with Chris Wilson from 1971 to 1973) CompilationStill Shakin (Buddah Records BDS 5683, 1976) (compilation from Flamingo and Teenage Head) • Super Grease (Skydog SKI 2226, 1984) (Grease & More Grease) • ''Groovies' Greatest Grooves'' (Sire 9 25948-2, July 1989) (greatest hits from 1971–81) • Supersneakers (Sundazed SC 6077, 1996) (reissue of Sneakers, with 10 live tracks from 1968) • ''Yesterday's Numbers'' (Camden (Australia), 1998) (compilation from Loney period) • Grease: The Complete Skydog Singles Collection (Skydog PVCP-8727, 1998) (Grease & More Grease plus Gold Star Tapes) • Sneakers & Rockfield Sessions (AIM (Australia) 0002, 2004) (both EPs on one CD) • Bust Out at Full Speed: The Sire Years (Sire, 2006) (US only; not complete) • At Full Speed... The Complete Sire Recordings (Sire 812274 0612, 2006) (complete) • This Band Is Red Hot (Raven (Australia), 2008) (greatest hits compilation from 1969-79 (Supersnazz to ''Jumpin' in the Night'')) EPsSneakers (Snazz R-2371, 1968) (official first Groovies release) • Grease (Skydog FGG-001, 1973) (1971 demo recordings with Chris Wilson) • More Grease (Skydog FGG-002, 1974) (1971 demo & live recordings with Chris Wilson) • The Gold Star Tapes (Skydog SKI 2224, 1984) (1981 Gold Star Studios sessions) • Rockfield Sessions (AIM (Australia) COLLECT 2, 1989) (Rockfield 1972 sessions for UA) • A Bucket of Brains (EMI 7243 8 32144 2 6, 1995) (official release of Rockfield 1972 sessions for UA, from original masters) Singles • "Rockin' Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu" b/w "The First One's Free" (Jul 1969, Epic) • "Somethin' Else" b/w "Laurie Did It" (1970, Epic) • "Have You Seen My Baby?" b/w "Yesterday's Numbers" (1971, Kama Sutra) • "Teenage Head" b/w "Evil Hearted Ada" (non-USA) (Aug 1971, Kama Sutra) • "Slow Death" b/w "Tallahassee Lassie" (Jun 1972, UA) • "Married Woman" b/w "Get a Shot of Rhythm and Blues" (Dec 1972, UA) • "You Tore Me Down" b/w "Him or Me" (1974, Bomp) • "I Can't Hide" b/w "Teenage Confidential" (1976, Sire) • "Shake Some Action" b/w "Teenage Confidential" (non-USA) (1976, Sire) • "Teenage Head" (rerelease) b/w "Headin' for the Texas Border" (Jun 1976, Kama Sutra) • "Don’t You Lie To Me" b/w "She Said Yeah"; "Shake Some Action" (30 cm, UK) (1976, Sire) • "I Can't Explain" b/w "Little Queenie" (1977, Sire) • "Move It" b/w "When I Heard Your Name" (UK, Aug 1978, Sire) • "Absolutely Sweet Marie" b/w "Werewolves Of London"; "Next One Crying" (UK, Jun 1979, Sire) • "Baby Please Don't Go" (live) b/w "Milk Cow Blues" (live) (1987) • "Sealed with a Kiss" (1993, National) • "Scratch My Back" b/w "Carol" (2010; both recorded 1971) • "Crazy Macy" b/w "Let Me Rock" (2016, Burger) • "Long Way to Be Happy" b/w "Don't Forget to Write" (2017, EFDE Music) (new vocals on A-side; both are 1981 Gold Star unfinished tracks) ==Book references==
Book references
• • The Flamin' Groovies, along with the band Frumious Bandersnatch, are mentioned in Roger Hall's 1970 novel, 19, which refers to them both as one band, "Frumious Bandersnatch and the Flamin' Groovies." (First edition, page 110). ==References==
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