This article's lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points.(September 2011) |
Motherlode | |
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Origin | London, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | Soul, rock |
Years active | 1969–1970, 1976, 1989–1990 |
Labels | Buddah, Revolver, Unidisc |
Past members | VERSION 1 William "Smitty" Smith Steve Kennedy Ken Marco Wayne "Stoney" Stone VERSION 2 Contents
Dave Berman Brian Dewhurst Gerry Legault Joey Roberts aka Joey Miquelon Brian Wray |
Motherlode was a Canadian pop rock group formed in 1969 in London, Ontario. [1] The group scored some success in the US with their single, "When I Die", [1] which hit #1 in Canada [2] and #18 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1969. [3] The group didn't have a bass guitarist. William Smith would play the bass notes on his keyboard. They did however use bass players on their studio recordings.
The act remains a one-hit wonder despite two more singles in the top 100 in Canada.
The first connection can be traced back to the Blue Note club on February 22, 1964 where the club's house band, The Silhouettes were playing. Steve Kennedy was a member of the band and in a relationship with the female singer, Dianne Brooks. Doug Riley was also in the group. This is where William "Smitty" Smith first met Kennedy. Smith was working at The Flamingo which was a club down the road. Getting on well with each other straight away, they kept in touch. They had a plan to put together a group to play behind Brooks and they eventually did. [4] [5]
In 1966 The Soul Searchers were formed. The correct name for the group was Diane Brooks, Eric Mercury and The Soul Searchers. [6] The instrumental part of the group consisted of Eric "Mouse" Johnson on drums and vocals, Steve Kennedy on tenor, baritone sax and background vocals, Terry Logan on guitar and vocals, and William "Smitty" Smith on Hammond B3 organ and vocals. [7] Their first gig the group played was at the Memory Lane in Toronto. [6]
Steve Kennedy left the band and his replacement was saxophonist Glen McDonnell. [8] Some time later, and following the break up of the Soul Searchers, William Smith went via the same direction as Kennedy and joined Grant Smith and The Power, a group which David Clayton Thomas had been a member of. [9] Kennedy had officially become a member of Grant Smith and The Power in April 1968 and Smith came in to the group in September. They played on the group's debut album, Keep On Running which was released on Boo BST 6802 around October - November 1968. Among the musicians on the album were Wayne Stone on drums and Kenny Marco on guitar. Some things Smith, Kennedy, Marco and Stone weren't happy about was the fact that they were playing mostly covers. And they were disappointed with the lack of the album's success. [10] [11]
Smith, Kennedy and co. formed Motherlode in 1969 and relocated to London, Ontario, [11] where they struggled and stayed with friends.[ citation needed ] They finally got a break following their debut at the Image Club when Mort Ross signed them to Revolver Records that same year. According to Ritchie Yorke's book, Axes, Chops & Hot Licks: The Canadian Rock Music Scene, they got about 25 songs together and cut some of them in the studio. [12]
Their first single, "When I Die" that was produced by Doug Riley and Terry Brown did not make any headway on the radio. A reciprocal deal in the US with Buddah Records made the song a hit reaching Number 18 on the charts. The song sold more than 500,000 copies and it eventually climbed to Number 1 in the Canadian charts. [13] [11]
Dianne Brooks contributed a song "Memories of a Broken Promise" as well as some background vocals to Motherlode's When I Die album. Motherlode also contributed a song and instrumental backing on Brooks album, Another Kind Of Soul that was released on Revolver Records. [14] The bass guitar work and some acoustic guitar was handled by L.A. session-woman Carol Kaye. Just one track had Dave Young on bass. [15]
Motherlode was booked to appear at the "Freak Out" festival. A 72-hour event that ran on the Labor Day period from August 29 to September 1, held at Rock Hill, 16 miles north of Orangeville. Other acts booked to appear were The Brass Union, Brutus, Lighthouse, Life, The Guess Who and Buckstone Hardware etc.. [16]
The group broke up in December 1969, their second album, Tapped Out which had already been recorded, previously was released posthumously only in the United States. Steve Kennedy, Ken Marco and Wayne Stone went on to be members of Dr. Music in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. [11] The album contained the song "Black Cat", which was sampled by Gang Starr's "Daily Operation" (intro). [17]
As Revolver Records owned the name Motherlode, it decided to reform the group, keeping William Smith making this the second version of the group. [18] [11] This new Motherlode was formed with Smith and three new musicians, all black! This line-up consisted of Doug Richardson (saxophone), Anthony Shinault (guitar) and Philip Wilson (drums). [19] It was reported by RPM Weekly in the July 11 issue that Mort Ross was producing new recordings for Motherlode and Chimo!. [20] Also at that time, their single "Dear Old Daddy Bill" was at #20 in the Top 50 Canadian MAPL Chart. [21]
It was reported by Billboard in its July 18, 1970 issue that their new single, "I'm So Glad You're You (And Not Me)" bw "Whipoorwill" which was produced by Mort Ross was scheduled for immediate release, with the Canadian release to be on Revolver and the United States release to be on Buddha. [22] Released on Revolver REVS-008, the A side was composed by William Smith and Phyllis Gorman. The B side was composed by Anthony Shinault. [23] For the week ending September 13, the single entered the Top 50 MAPL Canadian chart at #50. [24] It reached its highest position at #33 on October 17 and held it for another week. [25] [26] By the 31st, RPM Weekly had changed the chart to the Top 30 Canadian MAPL Chart, making it drop off the chart. It was now in the Recommended Canadian Singles list. [27] [28] Their new single flopped in the US.[ citation needed ]
This line up stayed together for around seven months. [19]
Mort Ross, Revolver Record's president had brought in Gord Waszek, of the rock group Leigh Ashford, to begin writing for the third version of Motherlode. They recorded "All That's Necessary", with Breen LeBoeuf on vocals, Mike Levine on bass plus Gord Waszek and several other members of Leigh Ashford. The B-side of this single was "My Chant" which was just a renamed version of "Hiro Smothek" from 1970's Tapped Out. [29]
It was reported by RPM Weekly in their December 5, 1970 issue that Motherlode had reformed for recording with the previous line up having failed to capitalize on the success of "When I Die". The group was now under the leadership of Mike Levine. [30] The line up consisted of Mike Levine (bass), Wayne St. John (vocals), Kieran Overs (guitar) and two former members of Leigh Ashford, Wally Cameron (drums) and Newton Garwood (keyboards). [31] [29] According to the December 5 article, there was still a high amount of American interest in the band. The group was working in Sudbury and Thunder Bay and later they moved to Western Ontario. Reactions to the group were said to be excellent. Along with Jam Jar, and Chimo!, Motherlode had been signed to the R.A.M. and Concept 376 agencies for Canadian representation. [32] The record flopped and this 4th version that was assembled to promote the record broke up. [29]
By March 1971, a fifth version of Motherlode was created from the remnants of Natural Gas, a Montreal-based group. The members were Dave Berman (saxophone), Brian Dewhurst (drums), Gerry Legault (bass, vocals), Joey Roberts aka Joey Miquelon (guitar) and Brian Wray (keyboards). They never managed to recording anything, and became part of Truck with the addition of Graham Lear. [18]
The original Motherlode members reunited in 1976, and recorded a song "Happy People" but, because of issues surrounding the name Motherlode, it had to be released as a Kenny Marco solo release. [11] In November 1989, they used the name Motherlode for a reunion during a week of live performances at the Bluenote club in Toronto. In 1990 they recorded eight new songs, but those sessions have remained unreleased. [29] Also in 1990, RPM Weekly mentioned William Smith and Motherlode as artists to appear in CBC Television's Supathon '90 13 hour long show, scheduled to begin on the 24th of February. [33]
Breen LeBoeuf eventually relocated to Montreal in 1978 to join Offenbach. He later recorded three solo albums and did a two-year stint with Celine Dion as bassist/background vocalist, before joining Canadian rockers April Wine in January 2007, replacing Jim Clench on bass. [34]
Kennedy later joined the Canadian band Lighthouse. He first performed with Lighthouse in 1982 at the One Fine Weekend Ontario Place reunion.
Smith became a session musician and played on and contributed background vocals to recordings by artists such as Eric Mercury on his Funky Sounds Nurtured In The Fertile Soil album, [35] Mark Tanner on his No Escape album, [36] and Rickie Lee Jones on her Flying Cowboys album. He also released a solo album Smitty, [37] which included a song "Sweetie Pie" that he co-wrote with Eric Mercury. He died in 1997, aged 53, of a heart attack. [38]
Newton Garwood left professional music in the mid-1970s, choosing instead to become a Toronto manager at Long & McQuade music instrument retailers. Garwood died of cancer in 2005. [39]
Guest musicians
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motherlode | "When I Die" / "Hard Life" | Revolver REVS 002 | 1969 | (#1 RPM CAN) (#5 CHUM CAN) |
Motherlode | "Memories Of A Broken Promise" / "What Does It Take" | Revolver/Apex REVS 004 | 1969 | (#25 CAN CHUM [41] ) (#40 CAN RPM [42] ) |
Motherlode | "Dear Old Daddy Bill" / "Living Life" | Revolver REVS 005 | 1970 | (#69 CAN [43] ) |
Motherlode | "I'm So Glad You're You (And Not Me)" / "Whipoorwill" | Revolver REVS 008 | 1970 | |
Motherlode | All That's Necessary" / "Chant" | Revolver 75-1046 (REVS 011) | 1971 | [44] |
Kenny Marco | " Happy People" / " Happy People (Instrumental)" | Quality 2197X | 1976 | Motherlode single but due to legal complications released under Kenny Marco's name [45] [46] [47] |
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motherlode | When I Die | Revolver RLPS 501 | 1969 | [48] |
Motherlode | Tapped Out | Unidisc UBK-4198 | 2018 | CD reissue [49] |
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motherlode | When I Die/Tapped Out | Pacemaker Entertainment Limited PACE-007 | 1994 | [2-fer-1 CD re-issue] |
Motherlode | The Best Of / When I Die | Unidisc AGEK-2246 | 2008 | [50] |
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motherlode | "When I Die" / "Hard Life" | Buddah BDA 131 | 1969 | |
Motherlode | "Memories Of A Broken Promise" / "What Does It Take" | Buddha BDA 144 | 1969 | |
Motherlode | "I'm So Glad You're You And Not Me" / "Whippoorwill" | Buddah BDA 185 | 1970 | |
Jim Weatherly / Motherlode | "The Need To Me" / "When I Die" | Collectables B 3535 Back To Back Hit Series | ||
Motherlode | "When I Die" / "Hard Life" | Radio Active Gold RD-18 | ||
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motherlode | A1. "Dear Old Daddy Bill" A2. "Memories Of A Broken Promise" B1. "Oh! See The White Light" B2."You Ain't Lookin' In The Right Place Baby" | Buddah Records SP 11 | 1969 | Promo [51] |
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|
Motherlode | When I Die | Buddah Records BDS 5046 | 1969 | |
Motherlode | Tapped Out | Buddah Records BDS 5108 | 1970 | [52] |
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Leigh Ashford was a Canadian rock group formed in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and which existed between 1966 and 1974.
Grant Smith & The Power were a popular Canadian rock-soul outfit from the 1960s that had a hit with a cover of Jackie Edwards' "Keep On Running" and was also a training ground for musicians who went on to the likes of McKenna Mendelson Mainline and Motherlode.
Douglas Brian Riley, CM was a Canadian musician, also known as Dr. Music. He spent two decades with the Famous People Players as its musical director, besides his participation on over 300 album projects in various genres. Riley died of a heart attack on August 27, 2007.
Gwendolyn Dianne Brooks, was a soul, r&b and jazz singer from New Jersey. With the Three Playmates, Brooks recorded several songs in 1957. She moved to Toronto shortly thereafter. Her part in Canadian soul music history began when the group Diane Brooks, Eric Mercury and the Soul Searchers was formed. As a solo singer, she recorded two albums and several singles of her own. Her biggest solo hit was "Walkin' on My Mind" in 1969. She was also a prolific session singer. As a vocalist, she provided backing vocals on albums by a multitude of artists that include Anne Murray, Gino Vannelli and Richie Havens. She was also a song-writer.
William Daniel "Smitty" Smith was a Canadian keyboardist and session musician.
No Escape is an album by the Marc Tanner Band which includes the single "Elena". It was released on the Electra label in 1979.
The Soul Searchers were an important part of Canadian soul music history. The group contained notable artists such as Diane Brooks, Eric Mercury, William "Smitty" Smith, Steve Kennedy and Eric "Mouse" Johnson. At times they are also referred to Diane Brooks, Eric Mercury and The Soul Searchers or Eric Mercury and the Soul Searchers.
Steve Kennedy is a Canadian based musician who co-wrote the hit song "When I Die" which was a hit for Motherlode in 1969. He is also notable for being a member of prominiant historical Canadian groups such as The Soul Searchers, Dr. Music, Lighthouse, and Grant Smith & The Power. He was also a member of Blood, Sweat And Tears.
Kenny Marco is a Canadian guitarist who has been a member of historical Canadian rock groups such as Grant Smith & The Power, Motherlode and Dr. Music. He was also a member of Blood, Sweat And Tears.
Revolution Records was a Canadian Record company. It was also the parent company for the Revolver label. It had success with hits from artists such as Dianne Brooks and Motherlode.
"Dear Old Daddy Bill" was the third and final charting single for Canadian band Motherlode. Not having the success of the two previous releases, it was only a minor hit for the group.
Truck was a 1970s Canadian rock group with a musical style similar to Natural Gas and Lighthouse. Signed to the Capitol label, they released two singles and an album. The outfit started out as Sound Spectrum in 1966 and by the early 1970s they had absorbed experienced musicians from groups Natural Gas and Motherlode. Their name had also been changed to Truck! The 1970s lineup was completely different to what it was when the group began. A busy live attraction, they did reasonably well with their album Truck which had an unbroken run for about a month-and-a-half in the charts.
Natural Gas was a Canadian rock music group featuring a horn section. Consisting of eight members, it was formed by George Olliver. They released an album and a single in 1970. They had hit that year with "All Powerful Man". Their self-titled album also made the charts.
Young was a Canadian rock music group led by Roger Plomish.They released a few singles and an album during the 1970s. They had success with "Goin' to the Country" which was a hit in both Canada and the United States. Their album also spent about 14 weeks in the charts. The group may have been working on a second album prior to their break up.
Life was a late 1960s/early 1970s Canadian musical group who had success with the top 20 hit, "Hands of the Clock". They also charted with a cover of the Beatles’ "Strawberry Fields Forever".
Freedom North was a Canadian rock group that was active in the 1970s. Recording for Aquarius Records, they had hits with "Doctor Tom" and "Losing You".
Poor Souls was a Scottish band who had a hit in the UK, broke up and then re-emerged as a Canadian band who recorded for the Quality Records label, and two hits in 1970 with "Lookin’ Round", and "Comin' Round". They also had another with "Land of the Few".
Madrigal was a Canadian band who had a 1970 hit in two different charts with "I Believe in Sunshine". Their album also made the charts the following year.
I'm So Glad You're You (And Not Me) was the fourth single for Canadian group Motherlode. It got to #33 in the Top 50 MAPL Canadian chart, staying around for about six weeks.
Aaron Space was a Canadian rock group that had a national hit with "Keep on Movin" in 1971. They had evolved out of a band called Mudflat.