The Canadian Rogues
were Lakeland, Florida's premier garage band
of the 1960s. Vocalist Willie Metts was always
the soul of the band and his unique stylings
gave the group an edge other groups only envied.
After an eighteen year hiatus, the
group reformed in 1985 and continues to perform
today. Here is their story.
THE ECHOES
During 1963, six seniors at
Lakeland High School started playing rock and
roll under the name, "The Echos". Willie
(Pug) Metts and Shirley Mooney were the vocalists,
Harvey Criswell played lead, Dane Streets played
rhythm, Rob Mansfield played bass, and Graham
McKeel played drums. The band was a favorite
among the Lakeland area teen crowd.
THE
PLAYBOYS
Also
during this same time period, across town at
Kathleen High School, students Ronnie Harrell
on vocals and rhythm guitar, Doug English on
drums, Cecil Smith on lead, and Carlton Benton
on bass, were playing as "The Playboys".
They played their first gig early in 1964 on
the back of a flatbed truck for a Little League
Championship. The event was MC'd by local television
personality, "Salty Sol" Fleishman.
The Playboys were actually
served with a "Cease and Desist" order
from Playboy Enterprises, for using the name "Playboys" and
having a small white bunny on their jackets.
A family lawyer convinced the big shots of the
foolishness of entering into a lawsuit with a
group of high school kids who were playing gigs
on the back of a flat-bed truck.
By the end of the summer of
1964, both groups had split up due mostly to
graduation and college.
THE
MANIACS
The story goes that Dane was attending
the University of Tampa on a full basketball
scholarship when Willie Metts sauntered into
the dorm and announced that we have a gig --
come on. Dane packed up his belongings and walked
out leaving it all behind and returned to Lakeland.
Metts and Streets then approached
Ronnie Harrell and Doug English about the possibility
of bringing remnants of the two former groups
together and so was born "The Six Maniacs".
Those members were Willie Metts (vocals), Dane
Streets (lead guitar), Ronnie Harrell (rhythm
guitar), Doug English (drums), Cecil Smith (bass)
and Gary Herrington (organ). Because so many
made inference to the name as being "The
Sex Maniacs", the guys changed the band
name to simply "The Maniacs". The Maniacs
were a popular local band and played the common
circuit of University of Florida (Gainesville)
and Florida Southern College (Lakeland) frat
parties, high school sock hops and proms, with
a healthy dose of teen clubs like Lakeland's
Teen Midway and Roy Sanchez's Palladium (where
incidentally, the group backed up rock and roll
sensation, Conway Twitty). The Maniacs lasted
until the summer of 1965.
THE
CANADIAN ROGUES
It was during
that summer of '65 that the band morphed once
again. This new version of the group consisted
of Willie (vocals), Dane (rhythm), Ronnie (switched
to bass), Doug (drums), and Harvey Criswell was
added as lead guitarist. The band's
name was changed to "The Rogues" and
John Criswell (Harvey's father) became the group's
personal manager. After a solid month of rehearsals, "The
Rogues" played their first gig in August
1965.
Moose Vosberg owned a popular teen
club in the Tampa Bay area called the "Eldorado
Showcase". Moose (a gifted promoter) took
somewhat of an interest in the Rogues future.
He worked for a time as the groups self appointed
business manager in a sort of tandem situation
with John Criswell.
One fan tells
this story: "The first time Vosberg ever
saw the boys play was an audition they played
for him. I was standing right next to him and
when the band got through doing their songs,
Moose turned to John Criswell and said, 'If you'd
get rid of that singer, you'd probably be okay.'
We all know that "singer" was the famous
Willie Metts -- the rest is history."
In any event,
when the Rogues were first booked into the Eldorado
Showcase, Vosberg built up the band's introduction
to the point that he had the girls screaming
and the band being accosted for autographs.
It was also Vosberg
who thought that, with the success of the British
invasion, it would make the group more popular
if they were from some "foreign" country. And
so was born -- "The Canadian Rogues",
never mind that none of the guys had ever even
been
to Canada. It is interesting to note in the newspaper
articles from '65-'66 (linked below), that the
hype ran freely and the boys were born in a variety
of places.
During the fall
of 1965, Moose got the guys their first recording
session at Charles Fuller Productions studio
in Tampa. The Canadian Rogues debut single, Have
You Found Somebody New b/w You Better
Stop, charted locally on WLCY radio in August
1965. Both tunes were written by Harvey Criswell
and Willie Metts and the single was released
on the Fuller label. It was also during this
relationship that the song Snoopy and the
Red Baron was offered to the group and nobody
is quite sure who actually passed on the song
that went on to become an international hit for
the Royal Guardsmen out of Ocala, Florida.
In the summer
of 1966, John Criswell, along with his brother
who lived in Macon, Georgia, brought the Canadian
Rogues to Atlanta for a recording session at
Master Sound Studio. All in all, the band would
record six sides at Master Sound: Keep In
Touch b/w Oop-poop-a-doop which
was first released in 1966 on the Texas based,
Charay Records, and again on Detroit's Palmer
label in 1967; Run and Hide b/w Love
and Dreams released on the Paris Tower
label; and their last release, Do You Love
Me b/w a cover of the Motown hit Mickey's
Monkey on the Rogue Records label in December
1967.
Some of the above
vocals and overdubs were recorded at Lowery Music
Studios and the band signed a booking agency
contract with Lowery Music who promptly put the
guys on a tour of southeastern night clubs and
lounges. Lowery also handled, among others, Tommy
Roe, Ray Stevens and The Classics IV.
The Canadian Rogues
backed up Neil Diamond, Brenda Starr, Glen Campbell,
the ShangriLas, and the Tokens. They played on
shows with the Hollies, the Beau Brummels, Sam
the Sham and the Pharaohs, Mitch Ryder and the
Detroit Wheels, and Spirit. They appeared in
a summer movie (no one can remember the name
of it), the TV show, "Summer Focus" in
Jacksonville, and numerous benefit appearances
including shows for the Heart Fund, the Cancer
Fund, a Retarded Children's Home, etc., etc..
They toured from Florida, north to Indiana, and
west to Texas.
During the late
Fall of 1966, Ronnie Harrell left the group to
get married and was replaced by Rob Mansfield,
who played bass and some keyboards (Dane usually
played bass when Rob was playing keyboards).
The group toured
into 1968, when the pull of family obligations
drew Dane back home and Willie had to lay off
because of some throat problems. A remnant of
the band headed for California but were lost
track of.
The Rogues would
then lay dormant for the next 18 years.
In
early 2000, Gear-Fab Records released the CD, "Psychedelic
States: Florida in the 60s, Vol. 1" which
includes the original "Canadian Rogues" recording
of "Keep In Touch", along with recordings
by 27 other Florida garage bands of the 60s (CD
available at Amazon.com).
This site was created and is maintained by Carl Chambers for Dizzy Rambler Productions
.
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