|
PERSONNEL:
RANDY BOYTE -
organ, piano A B C D E (1966-1970)
DAVID DUFF - bass A B C D E (1966-1970)
WAYNE PROCTOR - lead guitar A B
TOMMY TALTON - guitar A B C (1966-1968)
TOM WYNN - drums A (1966)
LEE FERGUSON - drums A B (1966-1967)
TERRY COX - drums C D E (1967-1970)
CARL CHAMBERS - guitar D (1968-1969)
SKIP SKINNER - guitar E (1969-1970) 45s:
(A) My
Brother The Man/Proceed With Caution (Hot
Line 3680) 1966
(B) Mirror Of Your Mind/The Color Of
Your Love (Challenge
59333) June 1966
(B) He Doesn't Go About It Right/You
Burn Me Up And Down (Challenge
59340) 1966
(B) St. John's Shop/In The Past (Challenge
59351) 1966
(C) Follow Me Back To Louisville/Fluorescent
Hearts (RCA Victor
47-9292) 1967
(C) Love Is A Beautiful Thing/The
Day She Dies (RCA
Victor 47-9393) 1967
(C) Ain' t Gonna Find Nobody (Better
Than You)/When I Arrive (RCA
Victor 47-9498) 1968 CURRENT CD ALBUMS: Available
at Amazon.com
• DECLARATION
OF INDEPENDENCE
(Collectibles
COL-CD-0532) 1993
• MIRROR
OF OUR MINDS
(Sundazed
SC 11056) 1998
a
double CD retrospective, from the master tapes,
with no less than forty tracks and
an excellent biography of the group
in the member's own words.
This highly regarded band
hailed from Orlando, Florida, and despite their
lack of
national success at the time are nowadays regarded
in the same league as The Chocolate Watchband,
Standells, Music Machine etc.. This view is entirely
justified, as their 45s reveal a depth and diversity
of talent, from the raucous punk of When I Arrive
or You Burn Me Up And Down through to melodic drifting
ballads such as St. John's Shop and The Day She
Dies. We The People also have a unique quality
in their songwriting, with My Brother The Man,
Mirror Of Your Mind, In The Past and numerous
others all standing out as top quality stuff.
The band were formed out of two
acts - the Trademarks and Offbeets, at the suggestion
of Ron Dillman, who managed both bands. Within
a week of their first meeting/rehearsal in early
1966, they were recording their first 45, My
Brother, The Man, but shortly afterwards Tom Wynn was replaced
by Lee Ferguson and the band signed a production
and publishing deal with Nashville-based Tony Moon.
Whilst their first two 45s
contained punchy psychedelic rockers, He
Doesn't Go About It Right contains a dollop of Kinks
style humor, and St. John's Shop is a beautiful
slow ballad. All were big regional hits in Florida
and Tennessee, but under threat of the draft,
and frustrated by the lack of national success,
Wayne Proctor quit early in 1967. Shortly before
his departure they recorded Love Wears Black (None), at Bradley's Barn in Nashville in early
1967, which was intended for release under the
pseudonym Fresh Air. He also co-wrote The Skunks
1967 track, Don't Ask Why with Clark Taylor,
which has recently been given another airing
on The Quill Records Story (CD).
With Wayne pursuing a career in song-writing,
the group continued, although Lee Ferguson was
then drafted and replaced by Terry Cox from Those
Four Guys. Now signed to RCA, national success
still proved elusive, although the later 45s are
still pretty good (and When I Arrive remains a
complete stormer).
Tom Talton too left the group
in 1968 and later resurfaced with Tom Wynn
in Cowboy. We The People soldiered on for a while
with guitarist Carl
Chambers and finally Skip Skinner,
but they eventually called it a halt in 1970.
In addition to their 45s, the
band also had two French EPs with picture sleeves:
the first (London 10181) 1966 contains the four
tracks that comprise the first two Challenge
455: the second (London 10184) 1967 contains
St John's Shop, In The Past, Declaration
Of lndependence and Lovin'
Son Of A Gun - the last two being
non-US 45s tracks.
The band have also been
the subject of three retrospective compilations,
with Sundazed's Mirror Of Our Minds being the
latest and best. A double CD package, with extensive
liner notes/interviews by Jeff Jarema, it includes
no less than forty tracks. All their 45 cuts
are featured, plus all the "previously unreleased" cuts
that have cropped up elsewhere on other comps
etc. and a whole bundle of other tracks also
make their first appearance anywhere... All in
all a thoroughly recommended package!
|