Sky Saxon(1937-2009)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Singer, bassist and songwriter Sky Saxon was certainly one of the most
colorful and eccentric musicians to emerge from the groovy 60s
psychedelic garage rock scene. He was born Richard Elvern Marsh on
August 20, 1937 in Salt Lake City, Utah. Sky moved to Los Angeles,
California after he graduated from high school. Saxon started his music
career in the early 60s as a doo-wop performer. Sky formed the group
the Electra-Fires in 1962 and eventually went on to form the band Sky
Saxon & the Soul Rockers. In 1965 he and guitarist Jan Savage founded
the seminal psychedelic flower-power garage rock outfit the Seeds. The
Seeds scored a big hit with the ferociously punchy proto-punk anthem
"Pushin' Too Hard" in the summer of 1967. The follow-up single "Can't
Seem to Make You Mine" almost cracked the Top 40. The group appear as
themselves in the nifty hippie cult classic "Psych-Out." The Seeds
recorded several albums before breaking up in the early 70s. In the 70s
Saxon became a member of the religious group the Source Family and
moved to Hawaii. Sky returned to recording music in 1984. He released a
bunch of albums under various names that include the Sky Saxon Blues
Band, Sky Saxon & Firewall, Yahowha 13, the Starry Seeds Band, and King
Arthur's Court. In 1989 the Seeds reunited for a "Summer of Love"
concert tour, but then broke up again. In 2003 Sky formed a new
incarnation of the Seeds with a different line-up; this version of the
band toured both Europe and America. In 2008 Saxon released his final
albums "King of Garage Rock" and "Back to the Garden." Sky plays bass
on and appears in the music video for the song "Superchrist" by the
Smashing Pumpkins. His songs are featured on the soundtracks to such
films as "A Girl to Kill For," "976-Evil II," "Air America," "Cop
Land," "Almost Famous," and "Secretary." Sky Saxon died at age 71 on
June 25, 2009 at a hospital in Austin, Texas.