The Long Ryders
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2019) |
The Long Ryders | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Los Angeles, California, United States |
Genres | |
Years active | 1982–1987, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2016–present |
Labels | |
Members | Sid Griffin Stephen McCarthy Greg Sowders |
Past members | Barry Shank Des Brewer Tom Stevens |
Website | www |
The Long Ryders are an American alternative country and Paisley Underground band, principally active between 1982 and 1987,[6] who have periodically regrouped for brief reunions (2004, 2009, 2014, 2016). In 2019 they released a new studio album[7] – their first in 32 years[8] – and played a series of tour dates.
The Long Ryders were originally formed by several American musicians who were each multi-instrumentalists and influenced by
Although two members were transplants from the American South, they became a popular Los Angeles rock band, forming in the early 1980s and originally associated with a movement called the
History
Formation and early days (1981–1982)
The Long Ryders' roots can be traced back to 1960s garage rock revivalist the Unclaimed, who formed in Los Angeles in 1979.[11] After one EP,[12] Kentucky-born[13] guitarist and vocalist Sid Griffin and Kansas-born[14] bassist Barry Shank left the Unclaimed in November 1981 with intentions to form a new band.[15] Griffin: "I had this idea of what would happen if the top of the band, the guitars and the vocals were very West Coast [1960s], punchy and beautiful, but the bass and drums were as aggressive as a punk band.[16] Early rehearsals included Unclaimed drummer Matt Roberts and future Dream Syndicate guitarist Steve Wynn.[17][18] Drummer Greg Sowders, a native of Los Angeles,[19] had met Griffin through a mutual friend[18] and joined the band in February 1982 after an informal audition.[20] The band rehearsed shortly as a trio before guitarist and vocalist Stephen McCarthy completed the lineup after answering a musicians wanted ad in March.[17] Originally from Virginia, McCarthy had recently moved to Los Angeles and was looking for something "a bit rockier" after playing in country and western bands in New York City and Nashville.[20] They soon settled on the name the Long Ryders, named after the Walter Hill film the Long Riders. The band wrote a letter to actor Stacy Keach, who had starred in and produced the film, asking for his approval to use the name. Keach was "honored" but had suggested a different spelling for legal reasons.[17] The band then decided on the "y" spelling as an homage to the Byrds.[21]
The Long Ryders were initially linked with the
10-5-60 and Native Sons (1983–1984)
In September 1983,[20] PVC Records issued the band's self-funded 10-5-60 EP,[26][18] which was produced by former Sparks guitarist Earle Mankey at his home studio in California. Griffin was working for PVC's parent label Jem Records, an import and distribution label,[27] who agreed to take on distribution.[18] Griffin: "I got us on the in-house label, and they did it as a favour. ... it did really well, and they couldn't believe it".[28] The EP showed a strong 1960s influence, from garage rock and psychedelia to Byrdsian folk and country rock.[29][30][31] It was well received by critics,[32] prompting the band to tour the US.[15] Brewer, who was not committed to touring, left after the EP's release[32] and was replaced by Don McCall, who only lasted 3 months before he was asked to leave. "His playing and my drumming never quite clicked," Sowders explained.[20] Tom Stevens from Indiana became the Long Ryders' new bassist in late December,[33] playing his first gig with the band in January 1984,[34] after recommendations from mutual friends. "I didn’t even have to formally audition," Stevens said. "The Long Ryders had gigs coming up in the San Francisco area and needed someone quickly."[33]
In the spring of 1984,
State of Our Union (1985–1986)
Following the success of Native Sons, the Long Ryders decided to reissue the 10-5-60 EP as a full-length album, retitled 5 by 5 with five new studio tracks. The band entered A&M Studios in February 1985 with engineer and co-producer Paul McKenna and recorded at least six tracks: "Time Keeps Travelling", "The Trip", "Sandwich Man", "As God Is My Witness", the Flamin' Groovies' "I Can’t Hide", and Bob Dylan's "Masters of War". The planned album, however, was abandoned when the band would sign a new record deal and prepare to record their next proper album later in the year.[35] Most of the tracks were later included as bonus tracks on future compilation albums and on reissues of Native Sons and 10-5-60. "I Can’t Hide" was released as a flexi disc in 1986 under the moniker the Spinning Wighats and given away free with the Bob magazine.[40]
After touring the US for much of 1984,
In spring 1986, the Long Ryders were widely criticized for doing a TV commercial in the US for Miller Beer.[46] Fans, critics and certain areas of the music community were outraged and accused the band of selling out.[47][48] "The Long Ryders doing the Miller Beer ad killed us in the USA. It killed us stone dead. We went from hot to cold in about three weeks," Griffin said.[48] "The Blasters, Los Lobos and X all did beer commercials too, but only us and the Del Fuegos got ripped for it."[11] The band was not getting much airplay on regular commercial radio stations in the US and hoped that a beer commercial would provide them a much-needed exposure.[48] Also, the band was not making any money touring. "To this day the only money the Long Ryders has ever seen is from that beer commercial," Griffin said in 2016.[46] The band, however, continued to tour, building on their success in Europe. In Spain, they headlined in front of 100,000 people at a Barcelona festival in September 1986 which was broadcast live on national radio.[49] Griffin: "Probably the highest of the high points. Graham Parker and the Shot, Wilson Pickett – they were both opening for us that day. I nearly fainted."[11]
Two-Fisted Tales and break-up (1987)
The Long Ryders had ended 1986 by recording their second Island album,
The album was finally released in June and despite its first single, a cover of NRBQ’s "I Want You Bad", getting radio airplay, neither single nor album charted.[53] The lack of commercial success and label support as well as a relentless touring schedule began to take its toll on the band.[37] After a European tour,[33] Stevens left the band to be replaced by the band's guitar tech, Larry Chatman, for a US tour that followed immediately.[36][56] Griffin: "He went on the road with us and learned while driving across the country and in motel rooms at night. We never had a formal rehearsal."[57] In 2013, Stevens explained his reasons for leaving: "The spring 1987 tour of Europe was a nightmare. Despite a major label "deal," we were broke, and I found myself having to find another source of income so that my growing family could eat and have a roof over their heads. In June 1987, when the other Long Ryders insisted upon doing a U.S. tour that was expected to lose five figures, I announced that I was leaving the band."[58]
In August, McCarthy announced to the band that he would be leaving at the end of the US tour.[33][59] "It was a dead end," he said in 1988. "I don’t regret a day I played in the Long Ryders, but it was futile. I quit before it got to the point of beating each other on stage."[60] Even though Island offered Griffin and Sowders the opportunity to record a third album for the label,[37] they decided not to continue as the Long Ryders without McCarthy.[59] The band did not officially break up until late 1987.[60][37]
"Our signing with Island in 1985 worked well for the first few months," Stevens said in 2009. "Then our A&R guy got the axe at year's end [and] the new UK regime hated us. Island U.S. was also fairly useless. ... we never seemed to be a big concern for any of them. Between that and the slow shift that started in 1986 to hair metal, the terrain got so creepy and hard to navigate that it put a strain on us as a band, from which we could not recover."[11]
Post break-up
In 1989, the Long Ryders fan club released the authorized
Griffin, who relocated to London, kept busy as a solo artist and bandleader (
McCarthy, after a stint leading his own band, Walker Stories,
Reunion (2004–2018)
In 2003, a European booking agent approached the band about putting together a Long Ryders reunion for shows in the UK, Spain and the Netherlands in the summer of 2004,[11][73] including a performance at the Glastonbury Festival.[37] "I never thought the Long Ryders would play together again.", Griffin said in 2004. "I'd had offers before to tour as 'Sid Griffin and the Long Ryders', a kind of karaoke version of the Long Ryders playing Long Ryders songs ... But this offer was to get all the originals together, so I passed it along. ... I thought if we don’t do it now we [are] never going to do it."[74] A live album entitled State of Our Reunion resulted from the reunion tour. The band played their first live dates in the US in more than 20 years when they played two shows at the EARL in Atlanta, Georgia in January 2009.[75][76] "Just some crazy guy with money," Griffin said.[16] In January 2014, the Long Ryders played their first show in Los Angeles in 27 years at the one-off Earle Mankey Appreciation Night concert at the Troubadour.[77] A five date Spanish tour followed in December.[54]
In January 2016, Cherry Red Records released a Long Ryders box set, Final Wild Songs, composed of all the material from their three full-length albums, their one EP, various demos and rarities, and a previously unavailable 15-song performance from a Benelux radio appearance in March 1985. Mojo magazine, in its February 2016 issue, gave the collection a lead review, saying, "They unwittingly invented Americana, but seldom receive credit for it. This 4-CD box set puts the record straight."[78] The band subsequently played 12 dates on the Continent and in the UK in April and May, and 4 East Coast dates in the US in November.[79]
In 2017, Griffin, McCarthy, Sowders and Stevens recorded the first new material for the Long Ryders since 1987. McCarthy: "The band played a number of shows in 2016 and we felt it would be worthwhile to try and write/record some new material." McCarthy and Sowders recorded their parts for a few new songs with engineer and co-producer Adrian Olsen at his Montrose Recording studio in Virginia, while Griffin and Stevens recorded remotely from London and Indiana.[80] A single from these recordings, "Bear in the Woods," was released on April 17, 2017[81] in time for a 4 date Californian tour in late April.[79]
In November 2018, Cherry Red Records released three-CD box set editions of the band's albums State of Our Union and Two-Fisted Tales, also announcing that a new album from the band would be released in 2019 on Cherry Red Records in the UK and Omnivore Recordings in North America.[82]
Psychedelic Country Soul and September November (2019–present)
On February 15, 2019, the Long Ryders released
McCarthy contributed to
On September 4, 2020, the Long Ryders released a new single titled "Down to the Well".[99] The song had been recorded in February 2017 at the same sessions that produced "Bear in the Woods".[100] The download single includes a remix of "If You Want to See Me Cry", originally from Psychedelic Country Soul.[101]
On January 23, 2021, Tom Stevens died suddenly at the age of 64 at his home in Indiana of undisclosed causes.[102][103] The tribute single "Tom Tom" was released as a download on January 21, 2022. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Long Ryders and producer Ed Stasium recorded the track remotely, sending audio files back and forth between California (Sowders and Stasium), Virginia (McCarthy), and England (Griffin).[104]
The Long Ryders received the International Trailblazers Award from the Americana Music Association UK in January 2022.
Recording sessions for the band's next studio album took place during summer 2022,[107][108] followed by a six-date US tour in November.[109][110] On these dates, the band was augmented by touring bassist Murry Hammond of Old 97's. On December 2, 2022, the band announced the release of their fifth studio album September November on March 10, 2023,[111] released worldwide by Cherry Red. Like its predecessor, it was produced by Ed Stasium at his Kozy Tone Ranch studio in Poway, California, and features contributions from, among others, violinist Kerenza Peacock of the Coal Porters and X's D. J. Bonebrake on vibes. Bass duties on the album were shared by McCarthy and Hammond.[112] The band – still including Hammond – set out on a European tour in May and June 2023, with a second leg planned for October.[79] On September 15, 2023, the band released the three-track download-only Live EP – Copenhagen '23.[113]
Band members
Current members
- Sid Griffin – vocals, guitar, harmonica, mandolin, autoharp, mandocello, banjo, bugle (1982–1987, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2016–present)
- Stephen McCarthy – vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, lap steel guitar, banjo, mandolin, bouzouki, bass, upright bass, keyboards, Mellotron (1982–1987, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2016–present)
- Greg Sowders – drums, percussion, vibraphone, keyboards, trombone (1982–1987, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2016–present)
Former members
- Barry Shank – bass (1982)
- Des Brewer – bass (1982–1983)
- Tom Stevens – vocals, bass, upright bass, guitar, acoustic guitar, cello (1983–1987, 2004, 2009, 2014, 2016–2021)
Touring musicians
- Don McCall – bass (1983)
- Larry Chatman – bass (1987)
- Simon Hancock – drums (2019)
- Murry Hammond – bass (2022–present)
Discography
Studio albums
- Native Sons (1984, Frontier)
- State of Our Union (1985, Island)
- Two-Fisted Tales(1987, Island)
- Psychedelic Country Soul (2019, Cherry Red / Omnivore)
- September November (2023, Cherry Red)
Live albums
- BBC Radio One Live in Concert (1994, Windsong)
- Three Minute Warnings: the Long Ryders Live in New York City (2003, Prima)
- State of Our Reunion (2004, Prima)
Compilations
- Metallic B.O. (1989, R.O.W.Y.C.O.)
- Looking for Lewis and Clark: the Long Ryders Anthology (1998, Chronicles)
- The Best of the Long Ryders (2004, Prima)
- Final Wild Songs (2016, Cherry Red)
Extended plays
Singles
Year | Single | Label and format | Tracks | Peak chart positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UK[45]
|
UK Indie[39]
| |||||
1984 | "Tell It to the Judge on Sunday" | Lolita (France) 7" |
"Tell It to the Judge on Sunday" [A] "Fair Game" [B] |
— | — | Native Sons |
1985 | "I Had a Dream" | Zippo (UK) 7" |
"I Had a Dream" [A] "Too Close to the Light (Buckskin Mix)" [B] |
— | 4 | |
"Looking for Lewis and Clark" | Island 7", 10", 12" |
"Looking for Lewis and Clark" [A] "Child Bride" [B] (non-album track) UK 10": "Looking for Lewis and Clark (Extended Version)" [A] "Child Bride" [B] "Southside of the Story" [B] (non-album track) "If I Were a Bramble and You Were a Rose" [B] (non-album track) US 12" promo: "Looking for Lewis and Clark" [A] "Lights of Downtown" [B] |
59 | — | State of Our Union | |
1986 | "State of Our Union – Tour 86" (promo) | Ariola (Spain)7" |
"Looking for Lewis and Clark" [A] "Lights of Downtown" [A] "Here Comes That Train Again" [B] "State of My Union" [B] |
— | — | |
1987 | "I Want You Bad" | Island 7", 12" |
"I Want You Bad" [A] "Ring Bells" [B] (non-album track) US 12" promo: "I Want You Bad" [A] "Ring Bells" [B] "State of My Union (Live)" [B] (non-album track) |
— | — | Two-Fisted Tales |
"Gunslinger Man" (promo) | Ariola (Spain) Island (US) 7", 12" |
"Gunslinger Man" [A] "I Want You Bad" [B] "Prairie Fire" [B] US 12" promo: "Gunslinger Man" (album version) [A] "Gunslinger Man" (album version) [B] |
— | — | ||
2017 | "Bear in the Woods" | Prima Digital download |
"Bear in the Woods" | — | — | Non-album single |
2019 | "Greenville" | Cherry Red / Omnivore Digital download |
"Greenville" | — | — | Psychedelic Country Soul |
"Molly Somebody" | Cherry Red / Omnivore Digital download |
"Molly Somebody" | — | — | ||
"Walls" | Cherry Red / Omnivore Digital download |
"Walls" (radio edit) | — | — | ||
2020 | "Down to the Well" | Prima Digital download |
"Down to the Well" "If You Want to See Me Cry (Dry Eye Remix)" |
— | — | Non-album single |
2022 | "Tom Tom" | Prima Digital download |
"Tom Tom" | — | — | September November |
2023 | "September November Sometime" | Cherry Red Digital download |
"September November Sometime" | — | — | |
"Elmer Gantry Is Alive and Well" | Cherry Red Digital download |
"Elmer Gantry Is Alive and Well" | — | — | ||
"Seasons Change" | Cherry Red Digital download |
"Seasons Change" | — | — |
Other appearances
Title | Year | Album | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
"Still Get By" | 1983 | The Radio Tokyo Tapes | Various artists compilation album; recorded at Radio Tokyo Studio, 1982. |
"And She Rides" | The Rebel Kind – A Collection of Contemporary Garage and Psychedelic Bands | Various artists compilation album; recorded at Radio Tokyo Studio, 1982. | |
"Christmas in New Zealand" (as the Spinning Wighats) |
1985 | 7" flexi disc given away free as a fan club Christmas release and at a few selected gigs; recorded during the State of Our Union sessions, summer 1985. | |
"Encore From Hell" / "10-5-60" (Live) (as the Spinning Wighats) |
1986 | 7" flexi disc given away free with issue 17 of Bucketfull of Brains magazine; recorded live at the Mean Fiddler, London, December 1985. | |
"Baby We All Gotta Go Down" (Live) (as the Spinning Wighats) |
What a Nice Way to Turn Seventeen No. 6 | Given away free with issue 6 of What a Nice Way to Turn Seventeen fanzine, which combined a magazine with a full-length LP; recorded live at the Mean Fiddler, London, December 1985. | |
" I Can't Hide "(as the Spinning Wighats) |
7" flexi disc given away free with issue 28 of the Bob magazine; recorded at A&M Studios, Hollywood, February 1985. |
DVDs
- Rockin' at the Roxy (2002, Classic Pictures Entertainment)
- State of Our Reunion (2009, Prima)
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{{cite AV media notes}}
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{{cite AV media notes}}
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{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ State of Our Union (CD reissue liner notes). The Long Ryders. Cherry Red Records. 2018.
{{cite AV media notes}}
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