Mandrake Memorial

Mandrake Memorial
Origin Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Genres Psychedelic rock, progressive rock
Years active 1967–1970
Labels Poppy Records

Mandrake Memorial was an American psych/progressive rock band active 1967-1970, known for their Baroque sound and unique songwriting.

History

The Mandrake Memorial formed in late 1967 when producer/promoter Larry Schreiber was asked to put together a house band for Manny Rubin's downtown Philadelphia club, The Trauma. Schreiber started with Michael Kac (pronounced "Katz"), a folksinger/guitarist/banjoist/keyboardist who was already a regular performer at both The Trauma and Rubin's other club, The Second Fret. Kac had been in a band called The Candymen, later known as Cat's Cradle, recently broken up (Schreiber had been their manager). Guitarist Kim King (of Lothar and the Hand People, another Trauma Club regular) told Schreiber about a drummer he knew in a similar situation. J. (John) Kevin Lally was from a band called The Novae Police, a fixture at the Night Owl Club and The Bitter End in Greenwich Village, playing with bands like The Flying Machine (with James Taylor) and The Ragamuffins (from Canada). Schreiber visited Lally in the basement of New York's Albert Hotel, where Kevin kept his drums in Lothar's practice room. Suitably impressed, he brought Lally back to Philadelphia to meet Michael, and the two musicians hit it off immediately. Kac then recruited a young guitarist he'd seen, Craig Anderton from a University of Pennsylvania college band called The Flowers of Evil, who'd been opening for Todd Rundgren's first band Woody's Truck Stop.[1] Last, Lally convinced his friend Randy Monaco, bassist/vocalist from The Novae Police, to relocate to Philly and join them. Although everyone was already working musicians, they jumped at the chance to be a house band, with a guaranteed gig every weekend and the chance to open for all the big-name bands brought in by Manny.[2][3]

The Mandrake Memorial quickly gelled and began developing a following. At the beginning they were a standard two-guitar, bass & drums quartet, but very soon a sales rep from R.M.I.[4] approached the group with a prototype of what was to become their Rock-Si-Chord (an electronic harpsichord). The band tried it out and quickly realized it gave them a new sound nobody else had. Since Kac was the only band member who could play keyboards, he switched from guitar to harpsichord and Mandrake was complete.

The new sound was an immediate success. The band was widely acknowledged[5] as "blowing off the stage" many of the headline acts they were supposed to be supporting. Mandrake opened for The Doors, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention, Moby Grape, and Strawberry Alarm Clock, among others, and appeared on TV with Pink Floyd.[6] Soon Mandrake was performing college circuit clubs like Boston Tea Party, Psychedelic Supermarket, Electric Circus, New York's Cafe Au Go Go, the Second Fret and The Main Point. Manny Rubin got them signed to Poppy Records,[7] the new experimental music label of MGM Records. Their first self-titled LP, produced by Tony Camillo and Tony Bongiovi (cousin of Jon Bon Jovi), sold over 100,000 copies, mainly in the Philadelphia, New York and Boston areas. A second LP, Medium was completed in early 1969 to similar high acclaim.

Kac (and his Rock-Si-Chord) left the band following Medium, citing musical differences, and in the summer of 1969 the remaining trio traveled to England to record a live-in-the-studio acoustic album with famed producer Shel Talmy. Booked to tour the U.K. with Todd Rundgren's new band The Nazz, unfortunately an English union disagreement prevented any American musicians from performing that summer. To top that off, their completed "Mandrake Unplugged" album was deemed too uncommercial by Poppy label executives and never released — although the idea was to become a huge trend two decades later.

Returning to Philadelphia, the band began working on a new album, re-working some of the songs from their failed acoustic album. They were teamed up with New York producer Ronald Frangipane with the result that he brought in an orchestra and filled out the songs with full choir, children's choir, orchestral splashes and elaborate production. Puzzle was a progressive rock masterpiece, but did not sell well enough to make back its considerable production costs. It did garner critical praise, however. "The idea they have is very great," wrote classical conductor Seiji Ozawa in the May 23, 1970 edition of Billboard magazine. "I love this recording. With some recordings, I can listen to only one selection, but this recording I love to hear from the very beginning, from the first note to the last." Fusion, a major rock music publication at the time, added that it was "a symphony of the mind; one of the most important albums of the decade to come." The band recorded just one more single, a cover of Thunderclap Newman's "Something In The Air" backed with an original tune by Anderton. When the single also flopped, Lally left the band and Anderton and Monaco soon called it quits.

Post breakup activities

After disbanding Mandrake, Craig Anderton teamed up with Charles Cohen and Jefferson Cain to form an electronic trio called Anomaly. Their only recorded legacy is the musical backing and production credits on three LPs by Philadelphia acoustic guitarist (and guitar teacher) Linda Cohen (no relation to Charles), Leda (1971), Lake of Light (1972) and Angel Alley (1973). In the early 1980s Charles Cohen and Jeff Cain went on to record and perform as The Ghostwriters (one LP, Objects In Mirrors Are Closer Than They Appear, 1981[8] and a cassette Remote Dreaming, 1986[9]). Even during Mandrake Anderton invented several guitar effects pedals, synthesizer modules and a programmable electronic drum machine, projects which he documented in a long series of well-known DIY books for musicians beginning with "Electronic Projects for Musicians" (1975). He wrote extensively for several music industry publications including Synapse and Keyboard Magazine, and was the editor of Electronic Musician magazine 1980-1990. His circuits appear in products from such manufacturers as TASCAM, Peavey Electronics, PAiA Electronics, Steinberg and Kurzweil Music Systems. He produced and guested on dozens of albums throughout the 1980s and 1990s. He released a solo album on cassette in 1977 and another (Forward Motion) on CD in 1989. He remains active as a producer, engineer and consultant.[10]

During spring and summer of 1969, Michael Kac worked in a guitar/harpsichord duo with Linda Cohen. As classically trained musicians, both hoped to forge a new synthesis of popular and classical forms, which is evident in her albums.[11] Already a graduate student in Linguistics, in 1971 Kac moved to Los Angeles to take his Ph.D at UCLA, then joined the faculty of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. He formally studied the harpsichord 1971-1983 and gives occasional solo and ensemble recitals.[12] In 1998 he reunited with Linda Cohen and Craig Anderton to record Naked Under the Moon.[13] Linda died in January 2009[14] of lung cancer.[15]

Kevin Lally traveled to England in 1970, where his family originated, and ended up apprenticing at Lloyd's of London in ship insurance. Returning to New York in 1980, he founded Seahawk International, Inc. which became the largest privately held aviation and maritime insurance broker in New York. He was also the chairman on the restoration of Wavertree, the largest iron sailing vessel afloat. He still performs occasionally as a studio drummer, although he prefers to do it anonymously.[16][17]

In 1974 Randy Monaco headed a short-lived Mandrake Memorial revival[18][19] in which he was the only original member.[20] Sometime afterward he joined a version of the 1910 Fruitgum Company[21] before succumbing to cirrhosis in 1983.[22]

Personnel

Discography

The Mandrake Memorial

All tracks written by The Mandrake Memorial. 

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Bird Journey"   2:40
2. "Here I Am"   3:50
3. "Rainy May"   3:45
4. "This Can't Be Real"   3:45
5. "Dark Lady"   4:14
Side two
No. Title Length
6. "House of Mirrors"   2:28
7. "To A Lonely"   3:50
8. "Strange"   3:55
9. "Next Number"   4:11
10. "Sunday Noon"   7:08

Medium

All tracks written by The Mandrake Memorial. 

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Snake Charmer"   2:45
2. "Witness The End / Celebration"   5:42
3. "Other Side"   3:25
4. "Last Number"   4:31
Side two
No. Title Length
5. "After Pascal" (Flute, Louis Delgato) 6:51
6. "Smokescreen"   5:06
7. "Barnaby Plum" (immortalizes a skip at 1:09) 6:10
8. "Cassandra"   5:26

Puzzle

All tracks written by The Mandrake Memorial. 

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Earthfriend Prelude" (immortalizes a skip at 2:08) 2:49
2. "Earthfriend"   6:17
3. "Just A Blur (version 1)"   0:53
4. "Hiding"   3:15
5. "Just A Blur (version 2)"   0:51
6. "Tadpole"   2:25
7. "Kyrie"   3:24
8. "Ocean's Daughter"   3:35
Side two
No. Title Length
9. "Volcano Prelude"   2:09
10. "Volcano"   5:59
11. "Whisper Play"   3:00
12. "Bucket of Air"   9:37
13. "Children's Prayer"   3:25
14. "Puzzle"   3:08
15. "Just A Blur (version 3)"   0:51

Single

Side one
No. Title Length
1. "Something In The Air" (by Speedy Keen) 4:32
Side two
No. Title Length
2. "Musical Man" (by Craig Anderton) 3:51

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.