Showing posts with label The Chocolate Watchband. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Chocolate Watchband. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2025

The Chocolate Watchband - Psychedelic Trip (1969)

The Chocolate Watchband was formed in the summer of 1965 in Los Altos, California by Ned Torney and Mark Loomis, who had previously played guitar together in a local band known as The Chaparrals. They were joined by Rick Young on bass, Pete Curry on drums, Jo Kemling on organ, and vocalist Danny Phay, and originally chose the name The Chocolate Watchband as a joke. The band garnered a local following, integrating cover versions of British Invasion groups, particularly The Who, into their live repertoire. Curry was soon replaced by Gary Andrijasevich, a jazz drummer from Cupertino High School, and when Torney and Phay accepted an offer from a rival band, The Otherside, the first incarnation of the band disintegrated. With the first version of the Chocolate Watchband disbanded, Loomis moved on to join The Shandels, but he quickly became disillusioned, and so he took the discarded Chocolate Watchband name and recruited The Shandels' bass player Bill 'Flo' Flores and former Watchband drummer, Gary Andrijasevich. Next he convinced former Topsiders guitarist Dave "Sean" Tolby to enlist, and with David Aguilar as the frontman and lead singer, The Chocolate Watchband Mark II was complete. 
Within a week, the band began performing at local clubs in San Francisco's South Bay, playing a range of songs that included obscure British import tunes that hadn't been released in the USA, so that unlike other local bands who were covering the latest hits from the Top 10, they played songs few people had heard before, and they therefore became associated with the Chocolate Watchband and not the original artists. Six months later, after opening for the Mothers of Invention at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, music producer Bill Graham urged the Chocolate Watchband to sign a management contract with him. He was opening up a new Fillmore East in New York City, and wanted to shuttle the Chocolate Watchband, the Grateful Dead, and Jefferson Airplane back and forth from coast to coast as his personal house bands. However, they had to turn him down, having signed a management contract with local promoter Ron Roupe a week earlier, and their future followed a different path. Roupe, having secured a recording deal with Green Grass Productions in Los Angeles, introduced the band to producers Ed Cobb and Ray Harris. 
They flew to Los Angeles and entered the recording studio, and Cobb introduced them to a song he had written a week earlier named 'Sweet Young Thing', which was released in December 1966 by Tower Records. Frontman Aguilar began writing material for the band, including their second single, the more restrained 'Misty Lane', backed with a sweet orchestrated ballad, 'She Weaves A Tender Trap'. During this period the band were featured in two Sam Katzman films, 'Riot On Sunset Strip' and 'The Love-Ins'. The band's debut album 'No Way Out' was released in 1967, and shortly after its release Aguilar left for university studies in science, while the other members searched for ways to continue playing music. Loomis and Andrijasevich would depart after Aguilar, leaving Tolby and Flores with the duty of fulfilling a month's worth of bookings. They decided to enlist the services of Tim Abbott, Mark Whittaker and Chris Flinders, members of the San Francisco Bay Blues Band and although they still maintained a level of success, the sound and style differed from the original band. During recording sessions for the Chocolate Watchband's second album, 'The Inner Mystique', the band chafed at Cobb's influence because he presented them as being more instrumentally refined on record than they were live. 
Less than half of the featured studio work was by official members of the band, with the majority of the record featured session musicians, and a singer named Don Bennett contributed vocals on the track 'Let's Talk About Girls'. Abbott and Flinders had a left the group following a disagreement with Tolby and manager Ron Roupe over financial matters, and so a new line-up formed in late 1968 for a short period of time, with Danny Phay, the group's original vocalist in its 1965 inception, re-joining the band, alongside guitarist Ned Torney, while Flores Tolby from the 1967 line-up remained. A third studio album, 'One Step Beyond', was recorded with Cobb again using session musicians, but it was a commercial failure, except for the songs written and sung by David Aguilar that were added to the album from past recording sessions. The Chocolate Watchband finally called it a day in 1970, but previously unreleased material has surfaced over the years and been added to various re-issues of their albums, and this post collects together all those rare tracks, along with a single by the pre-Watchband group The Hogs, their contributions to the soundtrack of 'Riot On Sunset Strip', and some non-album singles and their b-sides.



Track listing

01 Blues Theme (single by The Hogs 1966)
02 Loose Lip Sync Ship (b-side of 'Blues Theme')
03 Sweet Young Thing (single 1967)
04 Baby Blue (b-side of 'Sweet Young Thing')
05 Misty Lane (single 1967)
06 She Weaves A Tender Trap (b-side of 'Misty Lane')
07 Don't Let The Sun Catch You Crying (previously unreleased 1967)
08 Since You Broke My Heart (previously unreleased 1967)
09 Don't Need Your Loving (from the soundtrack of the film 'Riot On Sunst Strip' 1967)
10 Sitting There Standing (from the soundtrack of the film 'Riot On Sunst Strip' 1967)
11 Till The End Of The Day (previously unreleased 1967)
12 Milk Cow Blues (previously unreleased 1967)
13 In The Midnight Hour (unreleased single version 1969)
14 Psychedelic Trip (b-side of 'In The Mignight Hour')