Jonathan Richman was born in Boston on 16 May 1951, and after he dropped out of school, he whiled away some time in Andy Warhol's formative Factory as a messenger, before returning to his beloved Boston. After seeing The Velvet Underground more times than any of its members, he decided that his future lay in rock 'n' roll, and in 1970 he formed The Modern Lovers. In early 1971, the band's membership was settled as Richman, Jerry Harrison (keyboards), Ernie Brooks (bass) and David Robinson (drums), with Richman's next-door-neighbour and original band member John Felice joining them occasionally as his school commitments allowed. By the autumn of 1971, through their live performances in Boston and New York, they had begun to attract the attention of several record company A&R men, including Stuart Love at Warner Brothers and Alan Mason and Matthew Kaufman at A&M. The band made their first recordings for Warner Brothers at the Intermedia studios in Boston in late 1971. and the following April they travelled to Los Angeles where they held two demo sessions. The first was produced by The Velvet Underground's John Cale for Warner Brothers, while the second was produced by Alan Mason and Robert Appere for A&M. The band were initially undecided over which record company to sign with, so returned to Boston and did some recordings organised by Kim Fowley and produced by Stuart "Dinky" Dawson. Eventually, in early 1973, they signed with Warner Brothers and agreed that John Cale should produce their debut album.
Returning to California in the summer to work with Cale, it became apparent that there were personality clashes between some of the band members, and that Richman now wanted to take a different approach to his songs, making them much more mellow and easy-paced rather than the earlier aggressive hard rock. The sessions with Cale were terminated before any new recordings were completed, and Warner Brothers then engaged Kim Fowley to work with the band, but by this time Richman refused to perform some of his most popular earlier songs live, and the sessions with Fowley were aborted. Warner Brothers withdrew support from the band, and in early 1974 the original Modern Lovers split up, with Jerry Harrison moving on to Talking Heads. After the split, Richman continued recording on his own, eventually moving to California in 1975 to work with Beserkley Records, but he never returned to the Velvets-inspired sound of the original Modern Lovers. In 1976 Beserkley Records compiled a posthumous LP from the first two demo two sessions, and issued it on their Home Of The Hits subsidiary. The album was simply titled 'The Modern Lovers' and included celebrated tracks such as 'Roadrunner', 'She Cracked' and 'Pablo Picasso'. Richman did not recognise this compilation as his "first album", preferring to consider 1976's 'Jonathan Richman & The Modern Lovers' as his debut, as it pursued the lighter, softer direction he had in mind with a completely different band. The Modern Lovers have always been considered as an integral part of the start of the US punk scene, alongside Talking Heads, Ramones, Blondie and Television, and so I was astounded to find out that The Modern Lovers pre-dated that scene by a good half decade, and even more amazed that many of those early demos had survived, and so here are the best of them that didn't make that 1976 album, along with a couple of 1971 live recordings, and alternative versions of two that did.
Track listing
01 Ride Down On The Highway
02 Such Loneliness
03 Womanhood
04 A Plea For Tenderness
05 A Song Of Remembrance For Old Girlfriends
06 Modern World
07 Fly Into The Mystery
08 Hospital
09 Dignified and Old
10 Cambridge Clown
11 I'm Straight
12 Government Centre
10 Cambridge Clown
11 I'm Straight
12 Government Centre