The band was formed in 1966 by student musicians from Oxford, Ohio,
who had played the college bars with their previous groups that included
The Wombats (Nave), Ivan and the Sabres (Browne) and Tony and the Bandits (Bartlett, Albaugh and Dudek). The band played a mixture of blues, hard rock and folk rock, with a few covers from Byrds and The Who. They gigged regularly in an Oxford bar called The Boar's Head, and Cincinnati underground rock venues, The Mug Club and later The Ludlow Garage, and released a single on the Carol Records label,
"Quiet Please". The original band existed as a quartet, and then gained
notoriety by reaching the finals in the Ohio Battle of the Bands at the
Cleveland Public Auditorium in 1967, losing out to the James Gang.
The band then recruited Miami University student Browne as frontman, and also engaged Ohio music-industry impresario Mark Barger, who steered the Lemon Pipers to Buddah Records, then run by Neil Bogart. The Lemon Pipers, relying in part on advice from Barger, agreed to enter into a recording contract and music publishing deal with Buddah. The group began playing larger auditorium and concert hall venues around the US, including an appearance at Bill Graham's Fillmore West in San Francisco on the same bill with Traffic, Moby Grape and Spirit on March 21, 1968. Buddah's plans for the group focused on bubblegum pop rather than rock, and the Lemon Pipers joined a stable already containing Ohio Express and the 1910 Fruitgum Company. Paul Leka was assigned to be their record producer.
Buddah did not know how to handle the band at first and the group's
debut on Buddah was a Bartlett composition, "Turn Around and Take a
Look". When the song failed to make the charts, the label asked Leka and his songwriting partner, Shelley Pinz, who were working out of a Brill Building office on Broadway, to come up with a song. The pair wrote "Green Tambourine" and the band reluctantly recorded it. The song entered the Billboard Hot 100 at the end of 1967 and reached No. 1 in February 1968 on the Billboard and Cashbox charts. The song peaked at No. 7 in the UK Singles Chart, and was also a hit worldwide. It sold over two million copies, and was awarded a gold disc by the Recording Industry Association of America (R.I.A.A.) in February 1968.
The success of "Green Tambourine" caused the label to put pressure on
the group to stay in the bubblegum genre, and in March 1968 the band
released another Leka/Pinz song, "Rice Is Nice", which peaked at No. 46
on the US Billboard charts, No.42 on the US Cashbox charts and No. 41 in
the UK in May.
The band had little enthusiasm for either song, however, dubbing them
"funny-money music" and recording them only because they knew they would
be dropped by Buddah if they refused. "Ordinary Point of View", written by Eric Ehrmann and featuring a Bartlett country solo, was recorded, but rejected by Buddah. Disenchanted with Buddah and the music industry, Ehrmann stopped writing songs and went on to become one of the early contributors to Rolling Stone magazine. As is common with the music associated with the 1960s, a few copyright and royalties
issues connected with the previous owner of Buddah Records inherited by
current owners of the Kama Sutra music publishing catalog and Lemon
Pipers songs remain unresolved.
The Lemon Pipers evolution from 1960s rock music into a gold-record
bubblegum band created what Nave has described as "the duality of the
Lemon Pipers": "We were a stand-up rock 'n' roll band, and then all of a
sudden, we're in a studio, being told how to play and what to play."
The chasm between the label’s aspirations and the band’s own musical tastes became apparent on the Lemon Pipers’ debut album, Green Tambourine.
Produced by Leka, the album contained five Leka/Pinz songs, as well as
two extended tracks written by the band, "Fifty Year Void" and "Through
With You" (the latter, written by Bartlett, bearing influences of The Byrds
and, according to the original LP label, running 8:31 in length). "Ask
Me If I Care" written by Ehrmann, was also featured. Like Lemon Pipers'
members Nave and Albaugh, Ehrmann was a member of the Kappa chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Writing in Bubblegum is the Naked Truth, Gary Pig Gold
commented: "It was the Pipers’ way with a tough-pop gem in the
under-four-minute category which was most impressive by far: "Rainbow
Tree", "Shoeshine Boy" and especially "Blueberry Blue" each sported a
taut, musical sophistication worthy of The Move and, dare I say it, even the Magical Mystery Beatles
The band recorded a second album for Buddah, Jungle Marmalade,
which again showed both sides of the band – another Leka/Pinz bubblegum
song, "Jelly Jungle", (released as a single and peaking at No. 51 on
Billboard and No. 30 on Cashbox in the US), a version of the Carole King/Gerry Goffin penned song "I Was Not Born to Follow," and an 11 minute, 43 second epic, "Dead End Street"/"Half Light".
The band left the Buddah label in 1969 and later dissolved. Bartlett, Walmsley and Nave formed Starstruck, whose recording of a Lead Belly song, "Black Betty" was reworked by Super K Productions producers Jerry Kasenetz and Jeff Katz, and released in 1977 under the name of Ram Jam, featuring Bartlett.
Browne moved to California to continue playing music, Walmsley played
bass around Oxford. Bartlett became despondent and reclusive following
the death of his wife Dee Dee. Nave became a jazz disc jockey and played organ occasionally with The Blues Merchants in southwestern Ohio venues.
Drummer Bill Albaugh died on January 20, 1999, at the age of 53.
Classical bubblegum/sunshine band/project. Really great songs here on both albums. If you're in BubbleSun you can't passing by at this.
Cheers
Frank mp3@320
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Though he released just one single, made just one TV appearance, and has barely been sighted in public in over a quarter of a century, Brett Smiley can rightfully claim to rank among the true legends of glam rock. American born, but a thoroughbred Anglophile, Smiley (that is his real name, incidentally) spent four years with the touring company of the stageshow Oliver before moving into pop music.
In 1972, an aspiring manager tried launching him on the U.K., only to find there was no room past the then-prevalent mania for the Osmonds and David Cassidy. Smiley returned to the U.S., moving between Seattle, Hollywood, and New York, and recorded a set of demos with future Knack supremo Doug Fieger's band Sky. They failed to land a deal, but did catch the ear of Andrew Loog Oldham, former manager/producer of the Rolling Stones.
In early 1974, Oldham arranged a 100,000 dollar record deal with the U.K. Anchor label; Smiley's debut single, the effervescent "Va Va Va Voom" was recorded in London with Steve Marriott laying down some blistering guitar. They then traveled to Nashville to begin work on an album -- the sessions moved to New York and back to London before the set was completed. In the meantime, Smiley made his TV debut on Britain's Russell Harty - Plus that October and was pictured on the cover of the music paper Disc.
"Va Va Va Voom," however, bombed in the U.K. and a projected U.S. release through Sire fell apart soon after. Anchor then withdrew their support, shelving the album release before the recordings had even been paid for.
Smiley returned to the States, where he now lives in New York and continues to perform on a semi-regular basis. He reunited with Oldham during the late '80s for a handful of recordings, but they, too, remain unreleased. (allmusic.com)
allmusic.com review:
Brett Smiley
was a legend in glam rock circles, but a legend only to those who lived
through the times or fanatically dug through old, yellowed copies of
Melody Maker, NME, and Disc, seeking to re-create the times. Such is the
fate of a singer whose only album was shelved following a disastrous
performance of a heavily hyped single. Smiley
deserved better, but fate has been kind to him, since his longstanding
cult reputation led to the much belated but still celebrated release of
his scrapped 1974 album, Breathlessly Brett, on RPM in 2003. Its release was tied into RPM's Lipsmackin' 70s series, which debuted with Velvet Tinmine, a collection of glam and glitter singles forgotten to all but die-hard record collectors. Smiley
comfortably fit into this category, of course, and his storied bomb,
"Va Va Va Voom," received its CD debut there, whetting the appetite for
this disc. Everybody who's
heard the collection or the single will know what to expect, and will be delighted with what they get -- a fabulously fey, coyly campy, and smashingly swishy glam pop album; it's Bowie and Bolan filtered through Judy Garland and performed by the prettiest boy to sigh into a microphone in the '70s. These are precisely the ingredients for a cult classic, of course, but it's hardly something that would have burned up the charts, unless it hit at precisely the right moment and was sold to the hilt.
Smiley did have Andrew Loog Oldham, the man who sold the world the Rolling Stones in the '60s, behind him, producing his record, pushing his image, and selecting his material. Oldham
often had his finger on the pulse of pop currents and his genius was
promotion, but he was simply off here. He was a little late on the glam
bandwagon, he relied too heavily on Smiley's gorgeous visage, he bizarrely encouraged Smiley
to play up MOR and traditional pop links (he covers "Young at Heart,"
names one original "April in Paris," and adds "Over the Rainbow" to the
end of his cover of the Four Tops' "I Can't Help Myself"), and when it didn't sell, he jumped ship immediately.
To be frank, this music minces and swishes so much
and has so much old-fashioned theatricality that it's hard to see how it
would have been a big hit, no matter how pretty Smiley is or how catchy each of these songs are. But these are all the reasons why Breathlessly Brett
is a delight for obsessive glam fans and unrepentant pop record
collectors. It's the kind of record where even the bad moments -- and
there are undeniably silly patches -- have a kind of absurd charm, such
as ending a fizzy, trashy glitter-bubblegum album with "Young at Heart,"
or how Smiley
twists the words of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" to "You got that
something/You got that hand." But the real strength of the album is in Smiley's original songs. Prior to this, it seemed like he peaked early with "Va Va Va Voom" and its B-side, the tremendous Ziggy Stardust
rip "Space Ace," but the rest of the originals are on par with these
two peaks: "Highty Tighty" speeds by on sleazy horns and a tight, sexy
rhythm; "April in Paris" has a foppish swagger like the best Marc Bolan, while "Pre-Columbian Love" kicks like a good T. Rex rocker; "Run for the Sun" is Roxy Music for the teen set; "Queen of Hearts" has a Baroque art pop spaciness that proves Smiley
was not just a keen alchemist, but was developing a voice of his own.
Though he continued to write and record demos over the years, he never had a chance to follow through on the promise of this LP, since after all the hype, it simply vanished. Fortunately, RPM has unearthed this buried treasure and, in doing so, proves that the legend surrounding Brett Smiley was not wrong.
Pretty good glam rock/pop record from 1974. If i'm in the mood for listening glam, this record is
always on the shortlist. If you like glam this is for you and you will love it.
Brett Smiley died january 8th in 2016 at age 60.
Frank mp3@320
heard the collection or the single will know what to expect, and will be delighted with what they get -- a fabulously fey, coyly campy, and smashingly swishy glam pop album; it's Bowie and Bolan filtered through Judy Garland and performed by the prettiest boy to sigh into a microphone in the '70s. These are precisely the ingredients for a cult classic, of course, but it's hardly something that would have burned up the charts, unless it hit at precisely the right moment and was sold to the hilt.
Though he continued to write and record demos over the years, he never had a chance to follow through on the promise of this LP, since after all the hype, it simply vanished. Fortunately, RPM has unearthed this buried treasure and, in doing so, proves that the legend surrounding Brett Smiley was not wrong.
Pretty good glam rock/pop record from 1974. If i'm in the mood for listening glam, this record is
Brett Smiley died january 8th in 2016 at age 60.
Frank mp3@320