The Lovin' Spoonful

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The Lovin' Spoonful
Background information
Origin United States
Genre(s) Pop rock
Former members
John Sebastian
Zal Yanovsky
Joseph Campbell Butler
Steve Boone

The Lovin' Spoonful was an American pop rock band of the 1960s, named to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000. The band's name was inspired by some lines in a song of Mississippi John Hurt called the "Coffee Blues". In the book Rock Names by Adam Dolgins, John Sebastian claims the phrase "lovin' spoonful" is a reference to cunnilingus.

[edit] Career

The band had its roots in a John Sebastian bohemian folk group called The Mugwumps, who played coffee houses and small clubs. This band split to form the Lovin' Spoonful and the Mamas and Papas. Sebastian, who grew up in contact with music and musicians, was the son of a much-recorded and highly technically accomplished harmonica player. He had reached maturity toward the end of the American folk music revival that spanned the 1950s to early '60s. Sebastian was joined by guitarist Zal Yanovsky in the Spoonful. The band also featured popular drummer/vocalist Joseph Campbell Butler and bassist Steve Boone.

The Lovin' Spoonful became part of the American response to the British Invasion and was noted for such folk-flavored hits as "Jug Band Music", "Do You Believe in Magic", "You Didn't Have to be So Nice", and "Daydream". Putting an "anti-drug" spin on the traditional folk song "Blues in the Bottle", the Lovin' Spoonful endeared themselves to radio stations across the United States. Soon they were a cross-over hit, topping both rock-and-roll and country charts with "Nashville Cats". Other hits were "Did You Ever Have to Make Up Your Mind", "Six O'Clock", and "Younger Girl". Their only song to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100 chart was the hard-edged "Summer in the City".

Early in their recording and airwave career, Lovin' Spoonful members termed their approach "good-time music". Soon-to-be-members of the psychedelic rock band the Grateful Dead were part of the West Coast acoustic folk music scene when the Lovin' Spoonful came to town while on tour. They credited the Lovin' Spoonful concert as a fateful experience, after which they decided to leave the folk scene and 'go electric'.

The chart-topping band was originally selected to perform on the television show that became The Monkees, and also gained an added bit of publicity when Butler replaced Jim Rado in the role of Claude for a sold-out four-month run with the Broadway production of the rock musical Hair. The Lovin' Spoonful's music was also featured in Woody Allen's first feature film, What's Up, Tiger Lily.

Zal Yanovsky quit the band after the You're a Big Boy Now album was released in May of 1967, primarily due to a famous drug bust in San Francisco. As a Canadian citizen, Yanovsky was arrested for possession of marijuana and pressured by police to name his supplier. Fearing he would be barred from re-entering the U.S. he reluctantly did so. His act stirred anger among the group's fans and turmoil within the group itself which led to his departure. He would later open a pop restaurant in Canada.

Yanovsky's replacement was Jerry Yester, formerly of the Modern Folk Quartet. Sebastian left the group by early 1968 to go solo. Without the power of Sebastian, the Lovin' Spoonful only lasted until the end of 1968, with very little success, and splitting up following their album Revolution '69. There were resurgences of interest in the Lovin' Spoonful upon their induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000, as well as with the release of the 1995 film Die Hard: With a Vengeance which used their song, "Summer In The City", during its opening credits.

A brief reunion of the original group occurred for the Paul Simon film One Trick Pony in 1980. Yanovsky died in 2002. Sebastian has stated that he no longer wishes to perform with the remains of the group due to personal differences.

[edit] Discography