Showing posts with label The Blue Things. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Blue Things. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

The Blue Things - One Hour Cleaners (1967)

The Blue Things formed as The Blue Boys at Fort Hays State College, from the remnants of a Hays R&B band, the Barons, who provided Mike Chapman (lead guitar and vocals), Richard Scott (bassist and vocalist) and Rick "Laz" Larzalere (drums and vocals). With a summer tour booked, the trio decided they needed a fourth member, and soon found a lead singer and rhythm guitarist in Chapman's roommate, Val Stöecklein, who had previously released an album with a college folk group, the Impromptwos, and he had also cut a demo of two original compositions, 'Desert Wind' and 'Nancy Whiskey', with another group, the Hi-Plains Singers. On their ensuing summer tour, the band hired Jim Reardon as manager, who in turn got the band signed with John Brown's Mid-Continent Co. booking agency. Reardon used what was left of his old sweatshirt business to manufacture Blue Boys sweatshirts, in addition to starting a fan club, complete with membership cards, and keeping true to their name, the Blue Boys wore matching blue suits and played blue guitars. Although their live set was mostly Top 40 and British Invasion covers, Stöecklein, Scott and Chapman began composing songs for the band to record, which they did in late 1964 at Damon Recording Studios in Kansas City. The five Stöecklein originals and two covers attracted the attention Texas' Ruff Records, who subsequently signed the group to their label. 
In December 1964, the Blue Boys cut their first single for Ruff at Gene Sullivan's studio in Oklahoma City, but before their cover of Ronnie Hawkins 'Mary Lou' could be released in February 1965, they had become The Blue Things, in order to avoid confusion (and possible legal wrangles) with the late Jim Reeves' backing group. The single charted in the Top 40 in Oklahoma City, thanks to local radio station KOMA, and their next single, 'Pretty Things-Oh', was once again a hit in the Midwest. After recording another six-song demo in Texas (this time with only two Stöecklein and one Scott originals), the band left Ruff Records over a royalty dispute. At this point, John Brown managed to get the Blue Things a deal with RCA Records, but before they could record for the label, drummer Rick Larzalere left the band to focus on school, and after several unsuccessful replacements, Bobby Day from Salina, Kansas, was chosen. The Blue Things' first RCA single, 'I Must Be Doing Something Wrong', was written by the three remaining band members, and was released in October 1965. A session drummer was used for the single sessions, as Day had yet to join, but once again, the single charted locally, but failed to chart outside of the Midwest. 
The following single, while repeating the chart action of the band's previous RCA single, at least gained the band some notoriety, as 'Doll House' sympathetically told the story of a prostitute, and criticized the role of brothels in society. Although it was a bold statement at the time, the single struggled after TIME magazine did a feature on supposedly obscene lyrics in rock music, citing 'Doll House' as an example. The album 'Listen And See' was released shortly after the 'Doll House' single from June 1966, and while it was popular with Blue Things fans, by the time it came out the band had moved past the folk rock/Merseybeat sound that RCA favoured, to a more psychedelic sound. Their January 1967 Nashville session, which was to be last with Stöecklein, produced the psychedelic single 'Orange Rooftop Of Your Mind' b/w 'One Hour Cleaners', after which Stöecklein left for a solo career, signed with Dot Records and released the album 'Grey Life' in 1968. The remaining Blue Things moved to California and continued to perform concerts, also signing with Dot Records and touring for 14 months before disbanding entirely. Although they are fondly remembered by fans of 60's folk-rock, and also in their later incarnation by psyche aficionados, their sole album is not really representative of their sound, as 1966 was a transitional time for them, moving from the folk-rock of their early singles to a more mature sound, which was never really evidenced on record. This album is therefore the unreleased follow-up to 'Listen And See', featuring the band's more psychedelic leanings, and could have come out some time in 1967.   



Track listing

01 The Orange Rooftop Of Your Mind
02 Since You Broke My Heart
03 Twist And Shout
04 One Hour Cleaners
05 Can't Explain
06 You Took The Flight
07 Pennies
08 I Can't Have Yesterday
09 Hey Joe
10 Alright
11 Caroline
12 Baby, My Heart
13 Yes My Friend
14 High LIfe
15 You Can Live In Our Tree