Wally Bryson | |
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Birth name | Wallace Carter Bryson |
Born | Gastonia, North Carolina, U.S. | July 18, 1949
Origin | Ohio, U.S. |
Occupation(s) | Guitarist, vocalist |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, vocals |
Years active | 1966–present |
Formerly of |
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Wallace Carter Bryson (born July 18, 1949 [1] ) is an American guitarist, best remembered for his time with the power-pop group Raspberries, famous for their hit "Go All The Way". After the Raspberries split in 1974, Bryson co-formed the power pop group Fotomaker and became one of the leading members of the group.
Born in North Carolina, at age four, Bryson's family moved to Cleveland, Ohio. His love for music came around as a child, upon hearing the guitar on the radio: I listened to early 1950's radio and after hearing Duane Eddy, asked my mother what that sound was, and she told me it was electric guitar. So, I got a four-string ukulele at age eight and got my first electric guitar at age 12. [2] His first influences were James Burton of Ricky Nelson's band, Buddy Merrill, and Elvis Presley. [2]
In 1964, at age 15, he joined the group The Mods (which was renamed the Choir in 1966); this band included future Raspberries members Jim Bonfanti and Dave Smalley,along with Dan Klawon and Dave Burke They had a huge local hit with It's Cold Outside, written by Klawon, which charted at 49 on the U.S. Record World, and 68 on the Billboard Hot 100. The Choir was a very popular local band and would later open for the likes of The Who, Herman's Hermits and The Blues Magoos. [2]
The Choir had become Raspberries by 1970 and helped to reinvigorate the power pop genre of the 1960s. After experiencing plenty of chart success, the group encountered some internal problems which prompted Bryson to leave the group in 1974 at the height of their popularity and the group disbanded a year later.
For Raspberries' 1972 debut album, "Raspberries", Bryson wrote "Come Around and See Me" and "With You in My Life" and with Eric Carmen co-wrote "Go All the Way", "I Saw the Light" and "Don't Want to Say Goodbye". [3] Bryson is best known for playing a double-neck guitar. He played a Gibson double-neck guitar on the opening riff on “Go All The Way”. [4]
Bryson's opening guitar riff on "Go All the Way" has been described as one of the all-time great rock 'n' roll riffs, with Steve Sullivan saying that its power "still has the capacity to startle and thrill more than four decades later." [5] Music journalist Ken Sharp particularly praised Bryson's "ripping power chords" on the 1973 single "Tonight". [6] Bryson said of his guitar playing at the beginning of "Tonight" that it has "one of those intros that nobody knows how to play but me" because he made up "weird chords to get different sounds." [7] Sharp also praised Bryson's guitar playing on the single "Ecstasy", saying that "this track displays my belief that Wally Bryson is a bona fide Guitar God." [6]
Bryson then joined Fotomaker in 1977, a group which was promoted as a power pop supergroup by Atlantic Records featuring former Rascals members Dino Danelli and Gene Cornish, as their bass guitarist. [8]
The 1978 debut release, simply titled Fotomaker, was a classic example of 1970s power pop. The LP was released on Atlantic Records.
The second album, Vis-a-Vis, was hurriedly released later in October 1978. It was recorded at The Record Plant studios (used by the Raspberries) that summer on Wally Bryson's suggestion. Vis-a-Vis opened with Vinci's song "Miles Away", which was released as a single and peaked at number 63 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Fotomaker recorded two albums with Bryson which received little notice, just before he left in 1979, prior to their third and final album.
After leaving Raspberries, Bryson relocated to Los Angeles and formed the group Flyer briefly before starting the band Tattoo which included some musician friends from Cleveland, but this band's only album in 1975 received poor reviews, and described by AllMusic as a "disaster". [9] The album also contained a cover of the Choir's "It's Cold Outside". After leaving Fotomaker and returning to Cleveland in the spring of 1979, Bryson teamed with songwriter/bassist Danny Klawon, formerly of the Choir and Its Cold Outside, to form Peter Panic. Peter Panic played out sparsely, performing mostly originals including Bryson's introspective "Don't Know" and Klawon's "Restless" and "Lost Your Love", and performed in January 1980 on Walt Maskey's radio show "Home-Grown". However, Peter Panic never officially recorded.
Bryson left Peter Panic in the spring of 1980 and teamed up with original Raspberries bassist Dave Smalley, Singer Eric Robertson and local drummer Frank Musarra to form the Cleveland Band The Secret, until Bryson's departure in 1985 when he went on to work with the Jimmy Ienner project Candy as a "musical director." [10]
In his current residence at Cuyahoga County, Ohio, he works with Mentally Challenged people at the Cuyahoga County Board of Mental and Developmental Disabilities. [4] [11] [12]
Like many of his future music associates, Bryson was influenced by folk rock artists, particularly the Byrds. [13]
Title | Released |
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The Choir [14] | 1976 (originally recorded 1966–1969) |
Choir Practice | 1994 (originally recorded 1966–1969) |
A-Side | B-Side | Year |
---|---|---|
"It's Cold Outside" | I'm Goin' Home | 1966 |
"No One Here to Play With" | Don't You Feel a Little Sorry for Me | 1967 |
"When You Were with Me" | Changin' My Mind | 1967 |
"Gonna Have a Good Time Tonight" | So Much Love | 1970 |
Title | Released |
---|---|
Raspberries [14] | 1972 |
Fresh | 1972 |
Side 3 | 1973 |
Starting Over | 1974 |
Title | Released |
---|---|
Live on Sunset Strip | 2007 |
Pop Art Live | 2017 |
Title | Released |
---|---|
Refreshed | 2000 |
Title | Year |
---|---|
"Don't Want to Say Goodbye" b/w "Rock & Roll Mama" | 1972 |
"Go All the Way" b/w "With You in My Life" | |
"I Wanna Be with You" b/w "Goin' Nowhere Tonight" | |
"Drivin' Around" b/w "Might As Well" | |
"Let's Pretend" b/w "Every Way I Can" | 1973 |
"Tonight" b/w "Hard to Get Over a Heartbreak" | |
"I'm a Rocker" b/w "Money Down" | |
"Ecstasy" b/w "Don't Want to Say Goodbye" | |
"Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)" b/w "Hands on You" | 1974 |
"Cruisin' Music" b/w "Party's Over" | 1975 |
Title | Year |
---|---|
Fotomaker [14] | 1978 |
Vis-à-vis | 1978 |
Singles
Title | Year |
---|---|
"Where Have You Been All My Life" | 1978 |
"The Other Side" | 1978 |
Title | Year |
---|---|
Tattoo [14] [15] | 1976 |
The Raspberries were an American pop rock band formed in 1970 from Cleveland, Ohio. They had a run of success in the early 1970s music scene with their pop rock sound, which AllMusic later described as featuring "exquisitely crafted melodies and achingly gorgeous harmonies." The members were known for their clean-cut public image and matching suits, which brought them teenybopper attention as well as scorn from some mainstream media outlets as "uncool". The group drew influence from the British Invasion era—especially the Beatles, the Who, the Hollies, and the Small Faces—and its mod sensibility. In both the US and the UK, the Raspberries helped pioneer the power pop music style that took off after the group disbanded. They also have had a following among professional musicians such as Jack Bruce, Ringo Starr, and Courtney Love.
Eric Howard Carmen was an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. He was the lead vocalist of the Raspberries, with whom he recorded the hit "Go All the Way" and four albums. He embarked on a solo career in 1975 and had global success with "All by Myself", "Never Gonna Fall in Love Again", "She Did It", "Hungry Eyes", and "Make Me Lose Control". In later years, he toured with Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band before reforming the Raspberries in 2004.
Starting Over is the fourth and final studio album by the 1970s power pop band Raspberries. It peaked at #143 on the Billboard pop album chart in 1974. Rolling Stone named it its rock record album of the year for 1974. The LP generated the #18 Billboard pop single "Overnight Sensation ", while a second single, "Cruisin' Music", did not chart. This was the first album by the Raspberries to feature songs with profanity. Those songs were "Starting Over", which featured the word "fucking" once, and the song "Party’s Over", which featured the word "shit" twice.
David Bruce Smalley is a pop musician. He was the guitarist and bass guitarist for Raspberries. He was born in Oil City, Pennsylvania and grew up in Cleveland, Ohio.
Fotomaker was a power pop group from Long Island, New York who released three albums between 1978 and 1979.
The Choir was a garage rock band largely active in the greater Cleveland area from the mid-1960s into the early 1970s. Originally called The Mods, their largest commercial success came with the release of their first single "It's Cold Outside" in December 1966. The song, considered to be a classic of the garage rock era, was featured on Pebbles, Volume 2, one of the earlier garage rock compilation LPs. The flipside, "I'm Going Home" was included as a bonus track when the Pebbles album was reissued as a CD, and it can also be found on a garage rock compilation LP on Ohio bands, Highs in the Mid-Sixties, Volume 9. The Choir is well known for containing three of the four original members of Raspberries.
"September Gurls" is a song written by Alex Chilton that was first released by Big Star on their second studio album Radio City in 1974. "September Gurls" was also released as a single.
"Go All the Way" is a song written by Eric Carmen of American rock group the Raspberries, from their 1972 self-titled debut album. Released as a single in July 1972, the song reached the Top 5 on three principal US charts: number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 4 on Cashbox, and number 3 on Record World. The single sold more than 1.3 million copies, earning the band their only certified Gold Record. It was their second single release and their biggest US hit.
Fun? is the second album from the British rock band the Candyskins. It contains their hit single "Wembley". It is the band's last release on a major label, being dropped by Geffen Records following two years of inactivity after its release. After the band had minor success with later singles, Geffen reissued Fun? in 1996. Nick and Mark Cope, the band's lead singer and rhythm guitarist, were arrested for spray painting 'No Fun' on the wall of the Geffen offices in London after learning about this.
"She's Tight" is a song by the American rock band Cheap Trick, which was released in 1982 as the third single from their studio album One on One. It was written by guitarist Rick Nielsen and produced by Roy Thomas Baker. It reached No. 65 on the Billboard Hot 100 Chart.
"Tonight It's You" is a song by American rock band Cheap Trick, which was released in 1985 as the lead single from their eighth studio album Standing on the Edge. It was written by Rick Nielsen, Robin Zander, Jon Brant and Mark Radice, and produced by Jack Douglas. "Tonight It's You" reached No. 44 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and No. 8 on the Billboard Top Rock Tracks Chart.
"Let's Pretend" is a song by Raspberries, released in March 1973 as the second single from their second LP, Fresh. It was written by band leader Eric Carmen, who also provided the lead vocals.
"I Wanna Be with You" is a song by Raspberries, released in November 1972 as the first single from their second LP, Fresh. It was written by band leader Eric Carmen, who also provided the lead vocals. It became their second greatest US hit.
"It's Cold Outside" is a song by the American garage rock band the Choir, written by member Dann Klawon, and first released on Canadian-American Records in September 1966. It was later re-released in 1967 on Roulette, with Dann's last name incorrectly spelled "Klawson". The song is considered a classic of the musical genre of garage rock, and became the group's only national hit. The song has since been featured on several compilation albums. At the time of the recording, the band consisted of: Wally Bryson - lead guitar, Dave Smalley - guitar/vocals, Dave Burke - bass, Jim Bonfanti - drums, and Dann Klawon - multiple instruments/vocals. The group changed members over the years, but Bryson, Smalley and Bonfanti would team up with songwriter Eric Carmen a few years later, and form the power pop group Raspberries.
"Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)" is a hit single by Raspberries, released in September 1974, on the Capitol label. It was written by band leader Eric Carmen, who also provided the lead vocals. It was the first single release from their fourth and final LP, Starting Over.
"Your Number or Your Name" is a song written by Doug Fieger and Berton Averre that was first released by the Knack as the second track on their No. 1 debut album Get the Knack in 1979. It also appeared on a number of live and compilation albums.
"Tonight" is a song by Raspberries, released in August 1973. It was written by band leader Eric Carmen, who also provided the lead vocals. The song was the first of three single releases from their third LP, Side 3.
"Don't Want to Say Goodbye" is a song written by Eric Carmen and Wally Bryson that was first released on the Raspberries 1972 debut album Raspberries. It was released as the first single from the album and reached No. 86 on the Billboard Hot 100.
"Ecstasy" is a song written by Eric Carmen that was first released by the Raspberries on their 1973 album Side 3. It was also released as a single but did not chart.
Greatest is a 2005 compilation album by Raspberries. The album contains 20 songs, 4 to 6 from each of the group's four albums. Most of the songs on Greatest had been included on previous Raspberries' compilation albums, but the songs on Greatest were remastered using 24-bit technology, and the album included liner notes quoting three members of the band – Eric Carmen, Wally Bryson and Jim Bonfanti discussing each song.