Give up? Here's a hint, it's the back cover photo from one of the most neglected albums of 1975. Despite the growing scourge of disco and punk rock, 1975 was still a pretty good year for rock music. Among the classic releases that year were Bob Dylan's Blood On The Tracks, Born To Run by Bruce Springsteen, Rumors by Fleetwood Mac, Katy Lied by Steely Dan, A Night At The Opera by Queen, Still Crazy After All These Years by Paul Simon, Physical Graffiti by Led Zeppelin, One Of These Nights by the Eagles, Young Americans by David Bowie, and Patti Smith's Horses. Alright, 1975 was no 1969, but it was no slouch either.
As happens every year, there are some really fine albums that fall through the cracks, don't find an audience, and don't sell nearly as well as they should. Assuming you haven't guessed the group in the photo, it's the back cover from the album Change by Spanky & Our Gang (front cover photo way down below). Not only was Change one of the best albums of 1975, I'd argue it's pretty high up on the list of all-time great neglected albums. Yeah, yeah, just hear me out.
New Wine Singers - first album, 1963 |
For the purposes of our story, The New Wine Singers are important because it was here that McFarlane got the nickname "Spanky." Reports vary as to why, but in a 2012 interview, McFarlane says that the band liked to watch reruns of Hal Roach's "Our Gang" comedy shorts, and the resemblance between the name of the child actor who played Spanky -- George "Spanky" McFarland -- and McFarlane, was too hard to resist, so she became Spanky McFarlane. It was also during her time with The New Wine Singers that McFarlane met multi-instrumentalist Malcolm Hale, who would later join Spanky & Our Gang.
By late 1965, The New Wine Singers had split up, and McFarlane headed to Florida. The story goes that she met musicians Oz Bach and Nigel Pickering when they were trapped for three days by a hurricane. They apparently hit it off, and McFarlane invited the guys to come see her in Chicago sometime.
Mother Blues nightclub in Oldtown Chicago |
The trio called themselves Spanky & Our Gang, which was originally meant to be a joke. After (somewhat surprisingly) getting some favorable press and attracting a local following with the name, they decided to keep it. As word spread and the group began to play bigger venues, they brought in McFarlane's old bandmate from The New Wine Singers, guitarist and percussionist Malcolm Hale, to fill out their sound. Soon they were in demand at the hottest spots in the Windy City. Curly Tait signed on to manage the group.
First single, 1967 |
First album, 1967 |
Indeed, the stylistic confusion of the material -- which included everything from the spoken-word song "Trouble" (from the Broadway show The Music Man) to a make-believe "Commercial" for pot to John Denver's "Jet Plane" to the depression-era dirge "Brother Can You Spare A Dime" -- made it difficult to get a handle on the group's style. Historically, they've been lumped into the category of bubblegum pop, but that really just applies to their hit singles and doesn't do justice to their gorgeous multi-part harmonies and McFarlane's world-class vocals. Unfortunately, the goofy Vaudevillian patter, the novelty songs, and the collage of "old-timey" photos inside the jacket showing the male band members in turn-of-the-century costumes with stiff, high-collared shirts, straw boaters, bowler hats, leather football helmets, and handlebar mustaches, all combine to make it difficult to take the group seriously.
1968 |
1969 |
Graphically, however, the album was a big departure. The cover, with the band all in white with puffy shirts and peace chains, looks like a lost Fifth Dimension album. Which might help explain why the album didn't sell so well. I suspect that many of their fans, who were charmed by the nostalgic, retro style of the previous albums, may have been put off by the full-blown psychedelia of the new release. In addition, the band didn't tour to promote the album because by the time it was released in early 1969, the group had already broken up. Oz Bach left in early 1968, and then Malcolm Hale tragically died (either from pneumonia or carbon monoxide poisoning) on Halloween night. Soon after, drummer John Seiter accepted an offer to join The Turtles, and then McFarlane announced she was pregnant and was quitting to raise a family. Though Mercury would release a bootleg live set in 1970, Spanky & Our Gang phase one was over.
Change, 1975 |
In his liner notes for the album, Jim Charne, who was head of marketing at CBS Records, writes: "I had instructions not to call Spanky & Our Gang "country" (even though they are - sort of), and instructions not to call Spanky & Our Gang "rock" (which they also are - sort of)." In fact, the new group was very much in the style of a wave of mid 70s country rock artists like Marshall Tucker, The Doobie Brothers, The Eagles, The New Riders Of the Purple Sage, Loggins And Messina, and The Flying Burrito Brothers.
Nashville Cat and Producer Chip Young |
The details of the recording of the album are unclear. Radio World (an industry trade publication) reported in their July 5, 1975 issue that the new Spanky & Our Gang "have signed a long-term contract with Epic Records" and have completed recording their first album for the label with producer (and noted Nashville Cat session guitarist) Chip Young (left) at his Young'un Sound Studio in Murfreesboro, TN, about 35 miles outside Nashville. (Young had recently been working with Kris Kristofferson and Rita Coolidge.)
However, the credits on the jacket note that only track A1 ("I Won't Brand You") was produced by Chip Young. The rest of the album is "Produced with Spanky & Our Gang." I can't say for sure, but it sounds like the band at some point took the reins back from Young and did it their way. Paul Grupp at the Record Plant in L.A. is given credit as Associate Producer, and the mixing was done at Mama Joe's Studio in Hollywood by Alex "The Turk" Kazanegras (who did a lot of work with Loggins And Messina and Poco, among others). A photo of the test pressing for the album on Discogs shows that it was mastered at Allen Zentz in San Clemente, CA. Epic Records was a subsidiary of Columbia, so the album was pressed by Columbia Records.