Mink DeVille

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This article is about the rock band Mink DeVille. For information about the band’s frontman and composer, see Willy DeVille.
Mink DeVille
Willy DeVille on the cover of Cabretta, Mink DeVille’s debut album
Willy DeVille on the cover of Cabretta, Mink DeVille’s debut album
Background information
Also known as The Mink DeVille Band
The Mink
Origin San Francisco
Genre(s) Rock, Punk, Soul, R&B , Blues, Cabaret, Cajun, Latin
Years active 1974—1985
Label(s) Capitol, Atlantic, Polydor
Associated acts Willy DeVille, Fast Floyd and the Fabulous Firebirds, Ben E. King, Tuff Darts, Jack Nitzsche, Dr. John, Bruce Springsteen, Southside Johnny, Doc Pomus
Former members
Willy DeVille, Rubén Sigüenza, Thomas R. “Manfred” Allen, Jr., Fast Floyd, Louis X. Erlanger, Ritch Colbert, Bobby Leonards, Manfred Jones, Allen Rabinowitz, Vinnie Cirincioni

Mink DeVille (1974–1985) was a rock band known for its association with early punk rock bands at New York’s CBGB nightclub and for being a showcase for the music of Willy DeVille. The band recorded six albums in the years 1977 to 1985. Except for frontman Willy DeVille, the original members of the band played only on the first two albums (Cabretta and Return to Magenta). For the remaining albums and for tours, Willy DeVille assembled musicians to play under the name Mink DeVille. Since 1985, when Willy DeVille began recording and touring under his own name, his backup bands have sometimes been called “The Mink DeVille Band,” an allusion to the earlier Mink DeVille.

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame songwriter Doc Pomus said about the band, “Mink DeVille knows the truth of a city street and the courage in a ghetto love song. And the harsh reality in his voice and phrasing is yesterday, today, and tomorrow — timeless in the same way that loneliness, no money, and troubles find each other and never quit for a minute.”[1]

Contents

[edit] Beginnings in San Francisco

Mink DeVille was formed in in 1974 when Willy DeVille (then called Billy Borsay) met drummer Thomas R. "Manfred" Allen, Jr. and bassist Rubén Sigüenza in San Francisco. Said DeVille, “I met Manfred at a party; he'd been playing with John Lee Hooker and a lot of blues people around San Francisco…. I met Rubén at a basement jam in San Francisco, and he liked everything I liked from The Drifters to, uh, Fritz Lang."[2] Soon the trio was joined by guitarist Fast Floyd (later of Fast Floyd and the Fabulous Firebirds). They played small clubs under the names The Lazy Eights and Billy DeSade & the Marquis.

In 1975, the band changed its name to Mink DeVille; lead singer Billy Borsay took the name Willy DeVille. Said DeVille, “We were sitting around talking of names, and some of them were really rude, and I was saying, guys we can't do that. Then one of the guys said how about Mink DeVille? There can't be anything cooler than a fur-lined Cadillac can there?"[3]

Looking at music magazines in City Lights Bookstore, DeVille noticed a small ad in the The Village Voice inviting bands to audition in New York City, his hometown. “I convinced the guys that I could get them work, and we climbed in the van and drove back the other way. We auditioned along with hundreds of others, but they liked us and took us on. We played (at CBGB) for three years. During that time we didn't get paid more than fifty bucks a night."[4]

[edit] House Band at CBGB

From 1975 to 1977, Mink DeVille was a house band at CBGB. Guitarist Fast Floyd was replaced by Louis X. Erlanger, who had played with John Lee Hooker and brought a deeper blues sensibility to the band; Ritch Colbert joined on keyboards and was soon replaced by Bobby Leonards (formerly of Tiffany Shade).

CBGB, where Mink DeVille was a house band.
CBGB, where Mink DeVille was a house band.

In 1975, CBGB was the epicenter of punk rock and what would later be called New Wave, but Mink DeVille didn’t necessarily fit in the scene. “Onstage, Willy’s band, Mink DeVille, had nothing in common with the New Wave CBGB bands that the press had lumped them with,” wrote Alex Halberstadt. “Unlike Television, the Ramones, or Blondie, at heart Mink DeVille was an R&B band, and Willy an old-fashioned soul singer. He borrowed much of his phrasing from Ben E. King…”[5]

Said DeVille, “We were doing Little Walter stuff, we were doing Elmore James stuff. The only stuff we were doing that people had heard was 'Please, Please, Please' by James Brown. We used to do an Apollo thing. We played CBGBs for three years, and all of the sudden word got out, and then came this word Punk, which where I come from is a bad word. A punk is somebody who picks a fight with you and then never shows up.”[6]

Mink DeVille had in common with the CBGB bands an aversion to the hippy aesthetic (what Willy DeVille called “electric this and strawberry that”[7]); moreover, the band brought an eclectic New York sensibility to its music that the other bands didn’t have and that New York City rock fans recognized and appreciated. Critic Robert Palmer wrote, "Mr. DeVille is a magnetic performer, but his macho stage presence camouflages an acute musical intelligence; his songs and arrangements are rich in ethnic rhythms and blues echoes, the most disparate stylistic references, yet they flow seamlessly and hang together solidly. He embodies (New York's) tangle of cultural contradictions while making music that's both idiomatic, in the broadest sense, and utterly original."[8]

In 1976, three Mink DeVille songs appeared on Live at CBGB’s, a compilation album of bands that played CBGB (for the recording sessions, Manfred Jones replaced Thomas R. “Manfred” Allen, Jr. on drums). In December 1976, Ben Edmonds signed the band to a contract with Capitol Records. Wrote Edmonds:

When Mink DeVille took the stage (at CBGB) and tore into "Let Me Dream if I Want To" followed by another scorcher called "She's So Tough," they had me. These five guys...were obviously part of the new energy, but I also felt immediately reconnected to all the rock & roll I loved best: the bluesy early Stones, Van Morrison..., the subway scenarios of the Velvets, Dylan's folk-rock inflections, the heartbreak of Little Willie John, and a thousand scratchy old flea market 45s. Plus they seemed to contain all the flavors of their New York neighborhood, from Spanish accents to reggae spice.[9]

[edit] The Capitol Years

Cover of Return to Magenta, Mink DeVille's second album.
Cover of Return to Magenta, Mink DeVille's second album.

Early Mink DeVille albums — Cabretta, Return to Magenta, Le Chat Bleu, and Coup de Grace — were produced by Jack Nitzsche or Steve Douglas, both members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame who had apprenticed under Phil Spector and helped shape the Wall of Sound production technique. These producers were a natural fit for Mink DeVille, whose members’ tastes ran to the Ronettes, the Crystals and other 1960s-era New York bands with their rich textured sound. Said Willy DeVille, “You listen to that music and you hear those really high strings, and that percussion, and the castanets; that's all Jack's (Jack Nitzsche’s) work. All that really cool stuff.”[10]

Wrote Ben Edmonds, who paired Nitzsche with Mink DeVille:

It has always been assumed that our pairing was based on his (Nitzsche's) Spector accomplishments, but to me that was secondary. In the beginning I saw Mink DeVille as a hard-edged rock and roll band, and I wanted the Nitzsche who'd produced "Memo from Turner" (off the Performance soundtrack) and the great first Crazy Horse album... 'How did you ever get Jack Nitzsche?' Elliott Murphy later asked me incredulously. 'I tried to get him for years.' The sad truth is that it took one phone call, and even that was sheer luck—or maybe divine providence. I mentioned my mission while chatting with friend and Del Shannon manager Dan Bourgoise, who responded "Jack? I can put you in touch with him." Two days later the elusive producer was sitting in my office. I put on a live recording and after the first song, the band's version of Otis Redding's "These Arms of Mine," Nitzsche motioned for me to stop the tape. "When do we start?" he said. They had him. And that was the whole of it, plain and simple. I didn't get Jack Nitzsche. The voice of Willy DeVille did.[11]

Cabretta (called Mink DeVille in the U.S.), the band’s debut album released in 1977, was a spicy, multifaceted album of soul, R&B, rock, and blues recordings. For the album, Steve Douglas played saxophone, and the Immortals, a cappella singers whom Willy DeVille discovered at a reggae concert at Max's Kansas City, sang background vocals.[12] For the song “Spanish Stroll,” bassist Rubén Sigüenza spoke words in Spanish during the break (Hey Rosita! Donde vas con mi carro Rosita? Tu sabes que te quiero, pero ti me quitas todo), adding even more Latin flavor to the album. “Spanish Stroll” was a top-20 hit in the U.K.[13] Cabretta was selected number 57 in the Village Voice's 1977 "Pop & Jazz Critics Poll."[14]

In 1978, the band released Return to Magenta. Also produced by Jack Nitzsche, the album continued in the same vein as Cabretta, only it included strings. Dr. John played keyboards and, once again, Steve Douglas played sax. Mink DeVille toured the United States in 1978 with Elvis Costello and Nick Lowe.

[edit] Le Chat Bleu

In 1979, Willy DeVille took his band in a new direction and recorded an entirely original record in Paris called Le Chat Bleu. The Rolling Stone Critic’s Poll ranked Le Chat Bleu the fifth best album of 1980,[15] and music historian Glenn A. Baker declared it the tenth best rock album of all time.[16] “(Willy DeVille) created a record that sounded like nothing that had come before...,” wrote Alex Halberstadt. “It was clear that Willy had realized his fantasy of a new, completely contemporary Brill Building record. To the symphonic sweetness of the Drifters he added his own Gallic romance and, in his vocal, a measure of punk rock's Bowery grit.”[17]

Cover of Le Chat Bleu.
Cover of Le Chat Bleu.

DeVille wrote three songs for the album with Rock and Roll Hall of Fame songwriter Doc Pomus. He hired Jean Claude Petit to supervise string arrangements, and he dismissed the members of the band except for guitarist Louis X. Erlanger in favor of new musicians, including accordionist Kenny Margolis and members of Elvis Presley’s rhythm section, bassist Jerry Scheff and drummer Ron Tutt. Steve Douglas produced the album and played saxophone.

Capitol Records believed that American audiences would not warm to a record featuring accordions and strings. Said percussionist Boris Kinberg, “Capitol in the U.S. didn’t know what to do with it because they perceived Willy as this punk rocker from CBGBs and he came back from Paris with a very different kind of record. They didn’t understand the record, but they understood it in Europe. They released it immediately in Europe and everybody loved it.[18]

Capitol released Le Chat Bleu in Europe in 1980, and after it sold impressively in America as an import, finally released it in the United States in 1981.

[edit] The Atlantic Years

Cover of Where Angels Fear to Tread.
Cover of Where Angels Fear to Tread.

By 1981, no members of the original Mink DeVille save Willy DeVille remained in the band, but DeVille continued recording and touring under the Mink DeVille moniker. "I had band problems, manager problems, record company problems," DeVille told the New York Times. "And yeah, I had drug problems. Finally I got a new recording contract, with Atlantic, and a new manager. I cleaned up my act. I figured that since playing music with people I was friends with didn't seem to work out, I would hire some mercenaries, some cats who just wanted to play and get paid. And those guys turned out to be more devoted to the music than any band I ever had. They're professional, precise, but they're full of fire, too."[19]

DeVille recorded two albums for Atlantic, 1981’s Coup de Grace (produced by Jack Nitzsche) and 1983’s Where Angels Fear to Tread. Both albums featured saxophonist Louis Cortelezzi and had a full-throated Jersey Shore sound that evoked Bruce Springsteen and Southside Johnny. Wrote Thom Jurek about Coup de Grace, “The band's sound combined with Nitzsche’s timeless production style, which combined with that voice to create a purer rock and roll noise than even Bruce Springsteen’s in 1981.[20] Wrote Jurek about Where Angels Fear to Tread, “DeVille and his band were burning through the pages of rock and R&B history (there are a couple of doo wop and New Orleans-flavored cuts as well) with raw swagger and astonishing musicianship. Why they didn't catch and George Thorogood and Southside Johnny (briefly) did is a mystery that will be up to 1980s historians to figure out.”[21]

Mink DeVille’s last record, Sportin' Life, was recorded for Polydor in 1985. For this record, DeVille penned two more songs with Doc Pomus ("Something Beautiful Dying" and "When You Walk My Way"). The record was recorded at the legendary Muscle Shoals Sound Studio with the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Willy DeVille would record his next album, Miracle, under his own name, not under the name of his old band Mink DeVille.

[edit] ”The Mink DeVille Band”

On playbills and on live albums such as Willy DeVille Live (1993) and Acoustic Trio Live in Berlin (2003), Willy DeVille’s backup band is sometimes called “The Mink DeVille Band,” an allusion to the earlier Mink DeVille. Some musicians who backed up Willy DeVille in The Mink DeVille Band have been playing and touring with him for decades. Bass player Bob Curiano, for example, backed up Willy DeVille in his 1981 and 2007 European tours. As well, musicians who played in The Mink DeVille Band sometimes played on Mink DeVille and Willy DeVille albums. These members of different Mink DeVille Bands played with Willy DeVille for ten years or more:

  • Guitar: Ricky Borgia, Freddy Koëlla (also plays violin and mandolin)
  • Bass: Bob Curiano, David Keyes
  • Percussion: Boris Kinberg
  • Drums: Shawn Murray
  • Piano, accordion: Seth Farber, Kenny Margolis
  • Saxophone: Louis Cortelezzi, Mario Cruz
  • Background vocals: Billy Valentine, John Valentine, Dorene Wise, Yadonna Wise

[edit] Discography

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ This quote comes from the back cover of Mink DeVille's 1978 album Return to Magenta.
  2. ^ Rhodes, Dusty (1978) “Issue 13: Mink DeVille: Smooth Running Caddy: The Tale of the Mink.” Rock Around the World. (Retrieved 1-29-08.)
  3. ^ Marcus, Richard (2006) “Interview: Willy DeVille.” Leap in the Dark (a blog). (Retrieved 1-29-08). DeVille also remarked about the name, "What could be more pimp than a mink Cadillac? In an impressionistic sort of way." (See Cohen, Elliot Stephen (August/September 2006). “Willy DeVille.” Dirty Linen #125. p. 37.)
  4. ^ Marcus, Richard (2006) “Interview: Willy DeVille.” Leap in the Dark (a blog). (Retrieved 1-29-08.)
  5. ^ Halberstadt, Alex (2007) Lonely Avenue: The Unlikely Life and Times of Doc Pomus. New York: De Capo Press. p. 213.
  6. ^ See interviews with DeVille on Willy DeVille Live in the Lowlands (DVD).
  7. ^ Marcus, Richard (2006) “Interview: Willy DeVille.” Leap in the Dark (a blog). (Retrieved 1-29-08.) DeVille may have been referring to these psychedlic bands: The Electric Prunes and Strawberry Alarm Clock.
  8. ^ Palmer, Robert (September 18, 1980) "Pop: Willy DeVille Band." New York Times; p. C32.
  9. ^ See Edmonds, Ben (2001) Liner notes to Cadillac Walk: The Mink DeVille Collection.
  10. ^ Marcus, Richard (2006) “Interview: Willy DeVille.” Leap in the Dark (a blog). (Retrieved 1-29-08).
  11. ^ See Edmonds, Ben (2001) Liner notes to Cadillac Walk: The Mink DeVille Collection.
  12. ^ Rhodes, Dusty (1978) “Issue 13: Mink DeVille: Smooth Running Caddy: Tale of the Mink.” Rock Around the World. (Retrieved 1-29-08.)
  13. ^ Ankeny, Jason (2005) “Mink DeVille.” Answers.com. (Retrieved 2-1-08.)
  14. ^ Christgau, Robert (1977) “The 1977 Pazz & Jop Critics Poll”. Robert Christgau website. (Retrieved 2-1-08.).
  15. ^ Rolling Stone magazine. 1980 - Critics. Rolling Stone End off Year Critics & Readers Polls. (Retrieved 2-1-08.)
  16. ^ Baker, Glenn A. (1987) "Individual Critics Top 10s." The World Critics Lists ~ 1987. (Retrieved 2-1-08.)
  17. ^ Halberstadt, Alex (2007) Lonely Avenue: The Unlikely Life and Times of Doc Pomus. New York: De Capo Press. p. 214.
  18. ^ See interviews with Kinberg on Willy DeVille Live in the Lowlands (DVD).
  19. ^ Palmer, Robert (September 25, 1981) "Pop Jazz; Willy DeVille and the Mink in Weekend at the Savoy." New York Times.
  20. ^ Jurek, Thom (2006) “Review: Coup de Grace.” All Music Guide. (Retrieved 2-1-08.)
  21. ^ Jurek, Thom (2007) "Review: Where Angels Fear to Tread." All Music Guide. (Retrieved 2-1-08.)
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