Fever Tree (band)

Last updated
Fever Tree
Origin Houston, Texas, United States
Genres Psychedelic rock, garage rock
Years active1966–1970, 1978
Labels Uni, Ampex, Shroom Records
Past membersDennis Keller
Michael Knust
Rob Landes
E.E. "Bud" Wolfe
John Tuttle

Fever Tree is a former American psychedelic rock band of the 1960s, chiefly known for their anthemic 1968 hit, "San Francisco Girls (Return of the Native)".

Contents

History

The group originated in Houston, Texas and began in 1966 as a folk rock group called The Bostwick Vines. They changed their name to Fever Tree a year later after the addition of keyboard player Rob Landes.

The band briefly entered the public consciousness when their song "San Francisco Girls (Return of the Native)" reached No. 91 in the U.S. on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in June 1968. [1] Like most of the band's material, it was written by the couple of Scott and Vivian Holtzman, who also were their producers. [2] This four-minute track captured all the band's trademarks: Dennis Keller's incantation-like vocals, the quick shifting between slow parts with an almost sacral feeling and faster, more rock-oriented parts, and especially the searing guitar work by Michael Knust.

Fever Tree also released their self-titled debut album, Fever Tree , in 1968, which charted at No. 156 on the Billboard 200 Chart. [3] A second album, Another Time, Another Place, followed in 1969 and peaked at No. 83 with a third album Creation, charting at No. 97 on the Billboard 200 Chart in 1970. [4] After "San Francisco Girls", they never had another hit, although they later also tried writing songs themselves when they had dropped the Holtzmans as producers. The group disbanded in 1970, but reformed in 1978 with only guitarist Michael Knust remaining from the original line-up. The new formation of the group had little commercial success; Fever Tree was not heard of again until 2003 when Michael Knust died.

Fever Tree's first two albums (Fever Tree and Another Time, Another Place) were re-released as a single CD on October 31, 2006. Fever Tree's third and fourth albums (Creation and For Sale) are also available as a single CD.

Their recording of "Ninety-Nine and a Half (Won't Do)" by Steve Cropper, Eddie Floyd, and Wilson Pickett was sampled as the primary riff in Madvillain's "America's Most Blunted" from their 2004 self-titled debut.


Band members

Discography

Albums

Singles [6]

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<i>Fever Tree</i> (album) 1968 studio album by Fever Tree

Fever Tree is the debut studio album by the American psychedelic rock band Fever Tree and was released on March 28, 1968 on Uni Records. It blended multiple influences ranging from psychedelia to baroque pop and folk rock, and was marked by eerie ballads and hard rock numbers. Much of the group's material was penned by the husband-wife songwriting duo of Scott and Vivian Holtzman, along with renditions of contemporary rock songs. The album was preceded by arguably Fever Tree's best known song, "San Francisco Girls ", becoming the group's only nationally charting single. Like its attendant single, Fever Tree was also moderately successful and managed to reach number 156 on the Billboard 200.

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"San Francisco Girls (Return of the Native)" is a song by the American psychedelic rock band Fever Tree, written by the songwriting duo Scott and Vivian Holtzman, and was released for the group's third single—their first on Uni Records—in March 1968 (see 1968 in music). It was the only single by Fever Tree to reach the Billboard Hot 100 and also appears on their first album Fever Tree.

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2009). Top Pop Singles 1955-2008 (12 ed.). Record Research. p. 341. ISBN   0-89820-180-2.
  2. "Fever Tree | Biography, Albums, Streaming Links". AllMusic . Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  3. "Fever Tree | Biography, Albums, Streaming Links". AllMusic . Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  4. Whitburn, Joel (1996). Top Pop Albums 1955-1996 (4 ed.). Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation. p.  264. ISBN   0-89820-117-9.
  5. Whitburn, Joel (2018). Top Pop Albums 1955-2016. Record Research Inc. ISBN   978-0-89820-226-7.
  6. Roxon, Lillian (1972). Lillian Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia (Universal Library ed.). Grosset and Dunlop. p. 180. ISBN   0-448-00255-8.
  7. Whitburn, Joel (2015). The Comparison Book Billboard/Cash Box/Record World 1954-1982. Sheridan Books. ISBN   978-0-89820-213-7.