The Astronauts (band)

This article is about the US rock and surf music band of the early 1960s. For other uses, see Astronaut (disambiguation).
The Astronauts

The band in 1966.
Background information
Origin Boulder, Colorado, US
Years active 1961–1968
Labels Palladium, RCA Victor
Past members Rich Fifield
Jon "Storm" Patterson
Bob Demmon
Dennis Lindsey
Jim Gallagher
Dick Sellars
Mark Bretz
Rod Jenkins
Robert Carl McLerran

The Astronauts were an American rock and roll band, who had a minor hit in 1963 with "Baja" and remained successful for several years, especially in Japan. They have been described as being, "along with...(the) Trashmen, the premier landlocked Midwestern surf group of the '60s."[1] For most of their career, the band members were Rich Fifield, Jon "Storm" Patterson, Bob Demmon, Dennis Lindsey, and Jim Gallagher.

Career

The Astronauts developed out of a group, The Stormtroopers, which was originally formed at Boulder High School, Boulder, Colorado in 1956 by Jon "Storm" Patterson (vocals, guitar), Robert Graham "Bob" Demmon (11 February 1939 – 18 December 2010)[2] (guitar), and Brad Leach (drums). In 1961, they became The Astronauts after adding Richard Otis "Rich" Fifield (vocals, guitar) and Dick Sellars (guitar), the change of band name recognising the fascist connotations of the previous name and to pay tribute to local hero, astronaut Scott Carpenter.[3][4] Patterson switched to bass, Leech was replaced on drums by Jim Gallagher, and soon afterwards Sellars left to join the US Navy, being replaced by Dennis Lindsey.[5] With a line-up of Demmon, Patterson, Fifield, Lindsey and Gallagher, the band gained a strong local reputation, toured as far as Chicago and Dallas, Texas, and released their first single, "Come Along Baby", in 1962, on the small Palladium label.[3] They were signed to RCA Records after a record company executive was impressed by their performance at a local night club, the Tulagi.[6]

Their first single on RCA was "Baja", an instrumental written by Lee Hazlewood originally for his friend, guitarist Al Casey.[7] Released by The Astronauts in early 1963, the track was described as "a typical surf instrumental with a reverberation-heavy twangy guitar and driving drumbeat", and reached # 94 on the Billboard Hot 100 for just one week, the pinnacle of their US chart career.[4][8] However, they released a succession of further singles on RCA, in an attempt by the record company to emulate the success of the Beach Boys and other surf music-related groups in the charts at the time. According to reviewer Richie Unterberger, "the group shone brightest on their instrumentals, which used mounds of Fender reverb and two rhythm guitars; when they sang, the results were much less successful."[1] Patterson and Fifield shared lead vocals,[8] and the band recorded songs by Roger Christian, Gary Usher, Dick Dale and Henry Mancini, among others.[1] Fifield, the lead guitarist, used a Fender Jazzmaster on the recordings, with an early prototype reverb unit personally loaned to the group by Leo Fender.[9] Their 1965 song "Tomorrow's Gonna Be Another Day was covered by The Monkees in 1966.

As well as a succession of singles and EPs, the band released four LPs over nine months, starting in May 1963: Surfin' with The Astronauts – which reached # 61 on the Billboard 200 album chart[4]Everything Is A-OK! (recorded live at the Club Baja in Denver, Colorado), Competition Coupe, and The Astronauts Orbit Campus (recorded live in Boulder).

They appeared several times on the Hullabaloo TV show, and have the distinction of appearing in more teen movies than any other surf band: Surf Party, Wild on the Beach, Wild Wild Winter and Out of Sight. Regarding the band's performance in 1964's Surf Party, the book Pop Surf Culture states “The Astronauts bang out a thick, reverb-laden instrumental called ‘Firewater,’ and their theme song ‘Surf Party’ happens to be one of the best surf instrumentals ever recorded.”[10]

In 1964, their record company discovered that they had a growing fan base in Japan, where they outsold The Beach Boys and toured with The Ventures. Five albums and three singles made the top 10 there, with "Movin'" – retitled as "Over The Sun" – reaching number one in the country.[4]

In all, they recorded nine albums. Gallagher and Lindsey were drafted for Vietnam before the last album, Travelin' Men in 1967, and were replaced by Mark Bretz and Rod Jenkins respectively. Demmon also left, being replaced by Robert Carl McLerran, before Fifield and Patterson finally decided to end the band name after a tour of Asia in 1968.[4][5]

Associated acts

For a while, the same band – Fifield, Patterson, McLerran, Bretz and Jenkins – performed in the US under the name SunshineWard, who released one single, "Sally Go Around The Roses", in 1967. Patterson then left the band and music business, and Fifield and McLerran formed a new band, Hardwater, with Tony Murillo and Peter M. Wyant. In 1968, the band released two singles and an album, Hardwater, on Capitol Records, produced by David Axelrod.[4][11][12] Fifield also had a role in assisting Axelrod and record engineer David Hassinger, who owned the rights to the group name of The Electric Prunes, to find a new group of musicians to take on that group's name for their record, Mass in F Minor. Fifield contacted fellow Colorado musicians, Richard Whetstone, John Herron and Mark Kincaid, who then agreed to form one of the final line-ups of The Electric Prunes.[13]

Reunion

The Astronauts reunited temporarily to perform in Boulder, Colorado, in 1974, 1988 and 1989.[9]

Later years

A four-CD box set of the group's recordings, The Complete Astronauts Collection, was issued on the Collectables label in 1997.[14]

Bob Demmon worked as a teacher in Coronado, California.[6] He died on 18 December 2010, aged 71.[2] Dennis Lindsey died in 1991.[8] Mark Bretz died August 15, 1999, aged 54.

Discography

Singles (US releases)

The Astronauts

SunshineWard

Hardwater

Singles (Japan releases)

Albums (US releases)

The Astronauts

Mono LPM-2760/Stereo LSP-2760
Producer - Al Schmitt, Recording Engineer - Dave Hassinger
Side 1
  1. "Baja" (BMI 2:24)
  2. "Surfin'" USA (BMI2:10)
  3. "Misirlou" (BMI 2:08)
  4. "Surfer's Stomp" (ASCAP 2:34)
  5. "Suzie-Q" (BMI 2:02)
  6. "Pipeline" (BMI 2:01)
Side 2
  1. "Kuk" (ASCAP 2:09)
  2. "Banzi Pipeline" (ASCAP 2:00)
  3. "Movin'" (BMI 1:56)
  4. "Baby Let's Play HOuse" (BMI 2:26)
  5. "Let's Go Tripin'" (ASCAP 1:58)
  6. "Batman" (BMI 1:50)
Rating: In May 1963 album reached # 61 on the Billboard 200 album chart[4]
"Wine, Wine, Wine"
"Linda Lou"

Hardwater

CD Albums

Filmography

Appearing as themselves and as soundtrack artists

1964

1965

1966

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Biography by Richie Unterberger at Allmusic.com. Accessed 22 April 2011
  2. 2.0 2.1 Bob Demmon at FindAGrave.com. Accessed 22 April 2011
  3. 3.0 3.1 Mel Fenson, When The Astronauts Played Tulagi, Colorado Magazine Online. Accessed 22 April 2011
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 G. Brown, Colorado Rocks!: A Half-Century of Music in Colorado, p.1959. Accessed 22 April 2011
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 www.WangDangDula.com: The Astronauts: discography and information. Accessed 22 April 2011
  6. 6.0 6.1 Boulder Daily Camera: Obituary, Robert Graham Demmon. Accessed 22 April 2011
  7. Del Halterman, Walk - Don't Run - The Story of the Ventures, 2009, p.113. Accessed 22 April 2011
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Whitburn, Joel (2003). Top Pop Singles 1955–2002 (1st ed.). Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. p. 27. ISBN 0-89820-155-1.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Seymour Duncan Q&A, No. 82. Accessed 22 April 2011
  10. Chidester, Brian & Priore, Domenic (2008), pg 168.
  11. David Axelrod: HardWater. Accessed 22 April 2011
  12. BadCat Records: Review of Hardwater. Accessed 22 April 2011
  13. The Electric Prunes: Biography, Part 7. Accessed 22 April 2011
  14. Bradley Torreano, The Legendary Group at Their Best, Allmusic.com. Accessed 22 April 2011
  15. www.oldies.com: The Astronauts, 4CD box set, Released: November 18, 1997 - Item Number: COL 2708