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New Years Eve With NRBQ!

  • 5
Live At The Bottom Line, NYC, 1978
With The Whole Wheat Horns
Friday, December 31, 2010



NRBQ's 'classic' line-up of Terry Adams, Joey Spampinato, Al Anderson, and Tom Ardolino had been firmly in place for several years at the time of this recording, and the development from that solidity was increasingly evident. From here, the unit would grow to even greater heights in the years to follow. While many were quite good, the plethora of live recordings from the band (both legit and bootleg) have ever been able to truly capture the real excitement of NRBQ in performance, although all of them easily demonstrate the open door approach that informed their music and made them a perennial favorite of clubgoer's for years. These sets like many others showcase the broad cross section of styles and genres that would comprise a typical night on stage with NRBQ. If you like this one, I would then also recommend checking out 'Live @ Toads, 1983'. Of the many live 'Q' dates captured on tape, I believe 'Toad's' to be the best I've heard. Have fun, but don't hurt yourself.

On a personal note, allow me to once again thank the many readers who wrote me words of support and encouragement during my 5 month absence from Birds With Broken Wings. They're all greatly appreciated, and I'd like to extend my best wishes to everyone for the new year at hand. Champagne for my real friends, real pain for my sham friends!




Live @ The Bottom Line, 1978


Early Set

1)Honey Hush

2) Bargains
3) Green Lights
4) That's Neat, That's Nice
5) The Same Old Thing
6) Yes, Yes, Yes
7) Mambo Jambo
8) Still In School
9) Do You Feel It?
10) Right String Baby, But The Wrong Yo-Yo


Late Set

1) Green Light

2) Ain't No Free
3) That's All
4) Daddy's Gonna' Tell You No Lie
5) Tenderly
6) It Feels Good
7) Wacky Tobacky
8) I Got A Rocket In My Pocket
9) Time And Place
10) Ridin' In My Car
11) I Love Her, She Loves Me
12) It Comes To Me Naturally
13) Accentuate The Positive
14) RC Cola And A Moon Pie

Recorded at The Bottom Line, NYC, August 24, 1978

Source material for 'New Years Eve With NRBQ!' came from:
Wolfgang's Vault


For more NRBQ at Birds With Broken Wings can be found here.

And be sure to check out Infinite Foolishness where you'll find 2 more NRBQ New Year posts,
a 1977 date at The Shaboo Inn, Williamantic, CT
and a 1978 performance at The Cellar Door, Washington, DC
Great stuff from another fan!

NRBQ TV

  • 0
Clips From The 'Q'
Thursday, December 30, 2010


Assorted television appearances and club dates with NRBQ


A blistering solo from Al Anderson who makes it look like mere child's play.


A tender country paeon that even wins approval from country great, Chet Atkins.


A great song and straight forward NRBQ performance. Features brother, Johnny Spampinato.


Not the best thing NRBQ has even done, but charming nevertheless in its 'Q' way.


A typical NRBQ club performance.


Imagine an entire evening like this. That was NRBQ Live!


More NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings can be found
here.

NRBQ Ski Party!

  • 4
Live At The Powder Ridge Ski Resort
Middlefield, CT 1975
Thursday, December 29, 2010





This is another early live recording from the second NRBQ line-up with Al Anderson, Terry Adams, Joey Spampinato, and Tom Staley, plus The Whole Wheat Horns with Donn Adams and Keith Spring. Staley left the band shortly thereafter and was replaced by uber-fan, Tommy Ardolino who had just graduated from high school. His addition to the ranks created the 'classic' line-up that lasted for several decades and also provided the final ingredient that then brought the group to fruition. This live document showcases the maturing band in their last transitional period, just before achieving full gallop. From there, the music went 'round and 'round with thousands of memorable performances until it all finally came to a stop just a few short years ago. That moment was indeed a sad one for me and many others alike. But the years that preceded it were filled with some of the best music and positive vibes that could ever be generated collectively by four individuals, the Beatles notwithstanding. Fortunately for those who missed out the first time 'round, that music will live on via recordings, and through the efforts of those like myself who share a deep affinity for the band. But as I publish these posts, I can't help but somehow feel sorry for those who may never know the kind of joy that the 'Q' were capable of delivering, and for the those who might never fully appreciate the depth in music that Terry, Al, Joey and Tom (and all the others throughout the years) brought to the stage time and time again. And finally, I also feel for those who will never come close to experiencing the true spirit of rock n' roll, because that's what NRBQ embodied, and we'll never see a band quite like them ever again.

Enjoy the sky party.



NRBQ Ski Party!


1) I Want To Show You

2) Do You Feel It?
3) That's All
4) Hey Baby Doll
5) Blues Stay Away From Me
6) We'll Make Love
7) Accentuate The Positive
8) Hold My Hand
9) All Mama's Children
10) Dr. Howard, Dr. Fine
11) No Good To Cry
12) Call Him Off, Rogers
13) Magnet
14) Rockin' In Rhythm
15) NRBQ Theme
16) Just Creep
17) C'mon Everybody
18) Rocket Number 9
19) You And I And George
20) Get A Grip
21) RC Cola And A Moon Pie
22) Brothers
23) Shake That Thing
24) Howard Johnson's Got His Ho-Jo Working


Source material for 'NRBQ Ski Party!' came from:

Infinite Foolishness Blogspot

Thanks!!

More NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings can be found here.

A Little 'Night Music'

  • 3
With NRBQ
Tuesday, December 28, 2010

The best band in the world appearing on what was
possibly
the best music oriented program
ever shown on American network television:

'Night Music' with David Sanborn



Pianist, Terry Adams channels Jerry Lee Lewis and Thelonious Monk. The results are monsterous.


Jazz legend, Phil Woods sits in on alto sax. It doesn't get much better than this!


Al Anderson demonstrates why he's been described 'a ton of twisted metal and stoic charm'.

Al Anderson and Terry Adams working in the zone.

Whew! Outstanding solos from Al Anderson and consumate showman, Terry Adams.
Tommy Ardolino
also punishes his tubs.



More NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings can be found here.

S-p-a-m-p-i-n-a-t-o

  • 3
33 Songs
Written Or Sung
By NRBQ's Bassist

Joey Spampinato

Monday, December 27, 2010



The three frontmen in the 'classic' version of NRBQ (Terry Adams, Al Anderson, and Joey Spampinato) all contributed material to the band's enormous repertoire, each with their own distinctive styles. Pianist, Adams wrote the bands sometimes goofy 'novelty' numbers, but was also capable of penning raucous rockers and tender, nearly poetic love songs. And although 'Big' Al Anderson often handled the vocals on those rockers (due to his pseudo-macho stage persona), his songwriting was the broadest based --- rockabilly to country, heartwarming acoustic ballads to mainstream rock numbers, and even a tinge of reggae --- all memorable and all easily adaptable for other rock, country, and pop artists to cover, many of which have been. In fact, when Anderson left the group, it was to concentrate on songwriting in the Country Music capital of Nashville where he's established a tidy and highly successful second career writing for others. Joey Spampinato's contributions on the other hand fell somewhere in the middle.

The band's bass player frequently penned sweet Beatlesque jewels that rang with jangly guitars, three part harmonies, and more hooks than you'll find in a bait shop. If you can imagine yourself standing at the intersection of 'Beatles For Sale' and 'The Lovin' Spoonful's Greatest Hits,' then you'll get a pretty accurate picture of where he's at. And if you happen to spot Brian Wilson somewhere out there directing traffic, then the image will come entirely into focus.
In other words, perfect radio fare, if only they'd ever actually gotten played on the airwaves. But that's another subject. Despite all three men sharing a flair for songwriting, Spampinato's accessible 3:00 tunes were easily among the most hummable and palatable to anyone who holds a true love for pop flavored rock. Charming, sincere, and soft-spoken, NRBQ's bassist has demonstrated not only considerable chops on his instrument of choice, but also that he possesses a true gift for lyric and songcraft, all delivered with the most mellifluous and pleasing of voices within the ranks of the band. And then there are his ballads. Although they were rarely performed live, his sweetest songs fortunately were evenly distributed across the bands recorded work, and many are presented here.

It's an odd paradox. To have only known NRBQ as a live touring act, one might conceivably walk away assuming that the zany wildness and reckless abandon was their stock and trade. And although those attributes comprised a very large part of their charm, it was actually on their studio work were you truly heard the masterful songcraft and sterling musicianship that the band possessed. Live, they aspired for spontaneity and excitement over perfection. In the studio however, the controlled environment revealed the true discipline they were capable of, and it served to shed light on their ear for tasteful detail. It was here that Spampinato's numbers were often among the best.

More than several years ago I compiled a sampler of songs either written, or sung by Spampinato (Yes. The hiss you'll hear is because these were digitally transferred from cassette! Remember those? But all things considered, the sound quality is actually not that bad). As a part of 'Joy To The World: It's A NRBQ Christmas!,' I'm sharing those personal favorites with you as my holiday gift. Admittedly, I choose to focus on some of Joey's softer material. Why? Because those songs tend to get overlooked, or else upstaged by the galloping rock numbers that the band is more well know for. Spampinato's material exposes the gentler side of NRBQ (remember, they did record a children's record after all), and it's a side that often goes unnoticed. Not to say that these songs in any way inferior. Quite the contrary. They're sweet, concise, melodic, and
very, very listenable.

Here's my collection of personal favorites that spell S-P-A-M-P-I-N-A-T-O
.


Spampinato, Pt.1

1) Sail On, Sail On
2) Breakaway To My Dreams
3) Blame It On The World
4) Be Careful What You Ask For
5) Ramona
6) Everybody Thinks I'm Crazy
7) Just Ain't Fair
8) I Love Her, She Loves Me
9) Advice For Teenagers
10) Birdman*
11) Always Safety First
12) Spider
13) Talk To Me
14) Christmas Wish
15) That's Alright
16) Queen Talk*

Spampinato, Pt.2

1) Mona
2) How Can I Make You Love Me?
3) Don't Knock At My Door
4) Only You
5) It's Not So Hard
6) Little Floater*
7) The One And Only
8) Beverley
9) That I Get Back Home
10) Boys In The City
11) If I Don't Have You
12) Things To You*
(w/Skeeter Davis)
13) I Like That Girl
14) I Don't Think Of...
15) You Can't Hide
16) I Got A Little Secret
17) This Love Is True
*non-Spampinato numbers


Source material for 'Spampinato' comes from the following:

Scraps (1971)/Workshop (1972)
All Hopped Up (1977)/At Yankee Stadium (1978)
Kick Me Hard (1979)/Tiddlywinks (1980)
Grooves In Orbit (1983)/Tapdincin' Bats (1984)
Christmas Wish (1985)/She Sings, They Play (w/Skeeter Davis) (1985)
Wild Weekend (1989)/Music For The Mess Age (1994)
You're Nice People, You Are (1997)/NRBQ (a.k.a. The Yellow Album) (1999)


More NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings can be found here.

NRBQ: An American Band

  • 1
An Insighful Essay By Mitchell Cohen
From Creem Magazine
Originally Published In 1982
And
NRBQ, Live In 'Derbytown'
Recorded That Very Same Year

Sunday, December 26, 2010




Think of NRBQ as a diner somewhere off the main highway, serving up Tex-Mex chili, Kansas City barbeque, Philadelphia cheese steaks, New England clam chowder, Chicago deep-dish pizza, San Francisco's Anchor Steam beer on draft. The gamut of American gastronomy. And every time you drop in, the clientele is whooping it up, clearly delighted with each course. So delighted, in fact, that they’re concerned lest this place become too popular.

So when the announcer at this club in downtown Manhattan introduces NRBQ as “America’s Best-Kept Secret” (as they come bounding out to the strains of Sinatra’s recording of ‘New York, New York’, with its “if I can make it there, I’ll make it anywhere” moxie), it’s part complaint, part boast. To the people inside, NRBQ is no secret, but there is this air of exclusivity, of being privy to something that the world at large hasn’t discovered yet. You get the feeling that if the exclusivity is never threatened, that’d be just fine with the regulars. Puts the band in a bind, you might conclude.

And doesn’t exactly fill founding band members Terry Adams and Joey Spampinato with glee. “That’s been said,” Spampinato admits. We’d like to keep these guys ours.” Adams adds, “And, you know, ‘We hope you guys never have a hit and become big.’ I do hear it, and I don’t appreciate that comment at all.”

“What are they gonna not buy the record so that we don’t get more successful?,” Spampinato asks. “It’s not like they can do anything. They can just wish that we didn’t, for their sake.”

NRBQ want you to know that they are tired of questions the thrust of which is “If you’re so smart, why aren’t you rich?” Tired of people wondering out loud why the band is still together. They bristle at suggestions that perhaps NRBQ hasn’t gone as far as they’d wish. “Some places can’t keep the record in stock,” Adams says. “You might not see our name on the charts in Billboard, but the records are sellin’. I’m makin’ money. The fact is that things are always getting better all the time. There’s never been a down. There’s nothing ever gone wrong. It’s always been ahead,” he says in his soft-spoken, emphatic drawl.

The thing is, the important thing is, the quasi-ironic thing is, that from the very first song on their very first album (Eddie Cochran’s ‘C’mon Everybody’), they have announced their open-door policy. This ain’t no members-only party, and never was. They are a band of expansive good cheer, as is evident from the performance This Reporter caught on a rainy night in June. The only difference in circumstance between this set and any other set they may have played in this neighborhood over the past few years is that now they have a new album (Grooves In Orbit), and its inevitable offspring, a new single (‘Rain At The Drive-In’), on a small upstate N.Y. label distributed by a much bigger downstate N.Y. communications conglomerate. In effect, they have printed up tens of thousands of copies of a portion of their menu and are circulating them around the country. “I don’t believe in being a living ad for the new record,” Adams says, “but I would like for the people to buy the new record because they like the band.”

It’s hard not to like a band that flings itself into its music with such ebullient abandon, who can swing from doo-wop to be-bop within the space of a single song, who can tear off a polka version of ‘Daddy-’O'’ that makes you imagine them sharing cabbage rolls and jamming with the Schmenge brothers on SCTV, who have a pianist (Adams) who never does the expected, always toys with context, and a burly guitarist-growler (Al Anderson) who can get an entire club chiming in on a song about a pregnancy scare. Their albums are woozy missiles, and most appealing for being same, but their live shows, each one designed on the spot, dictated only by whim, are where they go for the kill (in a water-balloony kind of way, of course). How can a band be devil-may-care and persistent at the same time, build a career on an apparent disinterest in Building A Career?

To backtrack a bit –-- longevity is part of the reason this 2500 word essay/interview is about NRBQ and not Cat Mother and The All-Night Newsboys, Bunky & Jake, or Rhinoceros – this band brought its farflung approach to Columbia Records (call this chapter Ad Hoc At Black Rock) at the end of the ’60s, and immediately were tossed to the wolves. “They knew we were different, and they knew we had something, but they just didn’t know how to say what it was.” But don’t drop the word “hype” into the conversation.

“That’s not true,” Adams says. “There was never any hype on us. You remember a reviewer saying that he liked one of our songs as much as he liked somebody else’s song, and that’s the extent that his hype went. It didn’t say anything else. He hadn’t been as excited by a song this much since this one. Nobody said we were the next anything. There was no money put into this band by Columbia Records. You’d have seen big cardboard cut-outs of us if they’d have been pushing us.”

Let’s fill in some of the blanks. The reviewer was Mike Jahn of The New York Times (the newspaper of record, but in those days without much savvy when it came to records); the song that ‘Stomp’ by NRBQ excited him as much as was ‘I Want To Hold Your Hand’ by the Beatles. He also called it “one of those eternal rock songs like ‘Satisfaction’.” Not only did CBS make a fuss over those notions, but Jahn’s opinions (NRBQ is the first group to play magic music since the Beatles grew up”) also comprised one-third of the album’s liner notes. Another third (that’s right, three essays on the back of the jacket) was by Terry’s brother Donn, trombonist in The Whole Wheat Horns, NRBQ’s horn section. NRBQ is life,” Donn claimed, one of the few times a rock group was explicitly compared to photosynthesis. Anyway, there was some backlash. Not a terrific start, but their instincts were right --- how many albums in 1969 piggybacked Cochran and Sun Ra, pointed a finger at Richard M. Nixon (on Adams Chuck Willis-inspired ‘Mama Get Down Those Rock And Roll Shoes’), or even tried to capture a rockabilly spirit?

Adams relates, “We requested the ‘Sun echo.’ Nobody in the studio knew what I was talking about, ’cause first off they didn’t know what ‘Sun’ was. Then I tried to describe it technically, that it was a single-delay echo, and they couldn’t get it. I think if we’d have had a thousand dollars we could have bought Sun.”

This Reporter points out that it was around that time when Sam Phillips sold off the whole catalog to Shelby Singleton. “We were ready to buy it, too,” Adams says. “We were thinkin’ about it. If we’d have had a hit record we’d have probably owned all that stuff. ‘Cause nobody cared about it. They were thinking about Jimi Hendrix and stuff like that.” Considering that early inclination, and the fact that NRBQ’s second and final LP for CBS was with Carl Perkins (“We told him we didn’t want to do ‘Blue Suede Shoes’ and he said OK”), it would be easy to assume that they could have followed the rockabilly trail. Not bloody likely, according to Adams.

“Everybody’s so used to everybody wanting to be something. They say, well, we’re gonna do rockabilly now, so they go out and get their haircuts, and they get the right clothes, and they study the Johnny Burnette Trio until it’s coming out their ears, and then they decide that’s what they are. We’re not trying to copy anything. It’s all there, but we just don’t want to be it. I don’t want to be Johnny Burnette. I don’t want to be Jerry Lee Lewis. I didn’t decide to be one of those guys.”

It was on to Kama Sutra at the top of the ’70s, a label that probably thought it had another Lovin’ Spoonful on its hands. You know, slightly wacky-eclectic, eastern on wry. Scraps and Workshop weren’t bad (‘Boys In The City’ mentions Ferlinghetti and Durwood Kirby, and the band does a fair job on ‘Ac-cen-tu-ate The Positive’ and ‘Hearts Of Stone’), and are especially notable because one song on each (‘Howard Johnson’s Got His Ho-Jo Working’ and ‘R.C. Cola and a Moon Pie’) has a reference to grilled cheese, a subject to which this article will ultimately return.

NRBQ started to hit their stride on their initial indy release, All Hopped Up. ‘Ridin’ In My Car’, Spampinato’s ‘Still In School’, some sloshed Louis Prima moves on ‘Cecilia’, and a Spike Jones-ish version of the Bonanza theme. That would’ve been cooler if they’d done the lyrics. As a Red Sox fan, This Reporter doesn’t want to be reminded of anything that involves Yankee Stadium and/or 1978, but it’s generally acknowledged that NRBQ At Yankee Stadium is their vinyl high point, and one can hardly disagree.

But if YS is quintessential recorded ‘Q, then the following semester’s Kick Me Hard is the one that comes closest to capturing the out-of-the-magic-box spontaneity of the band’s looniest performances. A very weird collection of tracks. Adams says, “I think we figured out that out of the, I don’t know if there’s 13 or 14 songs on it, 11 of them we had never played before the moment they were on the tape. Like ‘It Was An Accident’ was the very first time we ever played it. All those songs. ‘Tenderly’, we didn’t even know the chords. ‘This Old House’, that was recorded at home at a party. We were just goofin’ around, someone else took it seriously and made a lot of money off of it.” (This last remark concerns one Shakin’ Stevens, whose marginally tidier arrangement earned him a worldwide hit.) The album also features the “Whoo! Whooo!”s of ‘Electric Train’, ‘Hot Biscuits and Sweet Marie’ (a guy has to choose between mom’s home cooking and the favors bestowed by his bride-to-be), and ‘Things We Like To Do’, adapted from the Chipmunks’ original to reflect the band’s personal proclivities --- short dresses (on girls, they specify), ChiPs, pizza, and riding in limos.

Limos? NRBQ? Doesn’t that raise the very question that we’ve been trying to skirt, that of degrees of success obtainable by A Working Band In The U.S.A. that resists typecasting? “It’s relative, I guess,” Spampinato says about sales and stuff like that. Yeah. It’s relative. They aren’t mentioned in official histories or encyclopedias of rock, or even in The Catalog Of Cool. McCartney never invited Adams down to Montserrat to lay down some tasty licks (his loss). The guys don’t escort TV starlets to The People’s Choice Awards. Wozniak doesn’t offer them six figures to play in his ’80s dustbowl. Who cares? C’mon everybody.

“We’ve been making the most commercial, accessible music in the country for a long time now. We’re not trying to do anything abstract. We’re not trying to scare people. This music was made for people, and they’ll love it.” If you’ve ever seen NRBQ in a crowded club, you can see the devotion they inspire, another two edged thing they have to handle, just because it’s difficult to imagine them being as much fun in any venue where you’re ritualistically patted down for cans and bottles and taping equipment before you enter. Are they the ultimate bar band, as many have tapped them?

“We take the phrase ‘bar band’ as an insult,” Adams says.

“Why would you?” This Reporter asks, genuinely startled.

“Why wouldn’t we? We’re among the best musicians in the country, we can out-play any band on the planet, and they’re calling us a bar band. I could go out there without the band, I could sit down at the piano and play a concert at Carnegie Hall right now.”

Spampinato adds, “When people talk about bar band instead of concert band, what they’re talking about is something that has nothing to do with music. What they’re talking about is spectacle on a grand scale.”

“It just sounds like some kind of category that I don’t feel that we belong in,” Adams continues. “I know good bar bands, and most of the bands know how to play the blues, and they know how to play the latest hits, and they swing every night and people love ‘em, and that’s great. That’s not what we are. I don’t think of a bar band as one that can write songs like ‘How Can I Make You Love Me’ or ‘My Girlfriend’s Pretty’ and pull them off in a bar.”

Their diversity is their charm, not only in their own music – so what if no one in the band knows the lyrics to ‘Alone Again (Naturally)’? That doesn’t stop them from giving it a game try, or from releasing that try on an EP – but in their adjunct projects and passions. Everything gets blended, pulled into their orbit. This is, after all, a band that, when on the road, asks the folks back home to videotape professional wrestling matches and a Sun Ra interview on PBS. Terry Adams can compile and annotate a Thelonious Monk album (Always Know) and also sponsor the indescribable Shaggs. NRBQ are as comfortable with jazz composer Carla Bley as with country warbler Skeeter Davis. The paradox is that there’s no paradox.

“All music is folk music,” Adams states, “Because we’re all folks. I mean, I’m sure Sun Ra likes cornbread as much as Skeeter Davis, and we all might enjoy watching Deputy Dawg together again.”

After the release of Tiddlywinks in 1980, there was a recording hiatus broken up only by a single, ‘Captain Lou’ (lyrics about, and lead vocals by, their intimidating manager/wrestler Captain Lou Albano), and that EP mentioned earlier. Then they signed with Bearsville and issued Grooves In Orbit. In the interim, they got some impressive endorsements from colleagues, Elvis Costello for one, Bonnie Raitt for another (she cut their existential car song ‘Me And The Boys’ and ‘Green Lights’). On D E7th, Dave Edmunds put ‘Boys’ smack up against a new Springsteen song, and followed that by putting Adams’ ‘I Want You Bad’ on Information’.

“Future’s no problem, well we don’t care/’Cause wherever we’re going we’ll soon get there,” goes their most famous song, and it’s emblematic of NRBQ’s philosophy of aimless forward-motion (another non-paradox). From their first LP (“We never thought, ‘Ah, well let’s do this thing again slower,’ or ‘Wait a minute, let’s tune up,’ or anything like that”) though Orbit (‘Daddy-O was recorded with two microphones in a bar, and it wasn’t even a professional recording. We just found it, on a cassette or something”), they’ve valued freshness over polish, the wide view over the narrow focus. And the N in their names means that they won’t allow themselves to get locked into a revivalist frame of mind.

“A lot of groups try to perfect the sound of Chicago in 1955, and they’ll do real good at it,” says Adams. “And if they want to do that, that’s fine. But that’s not what we re doing. Music has to be right now. In fact, so right now that every night has to be for right then.”

Spampinato says, “You have to play like it’s the last time you’re ever gonna play, and that this particular moment is the moment we’ve all been waitin’ for. We haven’t been running this thing to a pre-planned-out program.

“You can't place us in the mainstream, Adams says. “I think something that's this good should be mainsteam. Let's all get the best. If you know the restaurant that's got the best grilled cheese, go to it!


NRBQ In Terry Adams' Hometown
Of Louisville, KY





More NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings can be found here.

A History Of NRBQ

  • 3
As Told By Connie Chung
And Then Expounded Upon
By The Editors Of Pure Music

Saturday, December 25, 2010








From The Archives Of Pure Music Online Music Magazine


NRBQ has not only stayed together for 30 years, they have been on the road steadily, and have arguably played more dates than anyone in the history of popular music. And that's basically what their repertoire is: the history of popular music. They are the crown princes and the court jesters of rock and roll. They are multiple musical personalities, and will throw every style of music in the book at you in an hour show, and shred them all faster than Oliver North. They make you laugh your ass off, dance your ass off, make you want to fall in love, and pull you right out of your bag. NRBQ is the ultimate refuge for grownups that want a living rock and roll outlet and young people who are looking for a roots band that's more than their peers imitating old records. NRBQ might laugh at the phrase, but they are living legends.

Unlike imaged bands, they don't do their hair and clothes to reflect the style of music they play. They'd literally have to wear wigs and change outfits for every song. Some say their repertoire is 500 songs, others even more. Sometimes they have a 'magic box' on stage where fans try to stump the band and they'll attempt to play whatever they draw. Some of these magic box numbers are on the live CDs, which many Q diehards insist are the best ones.

I recently digested nearly 100 pages of articles written about NRBQ over the years. The difficulty in writing a comprehensive article about them is that the story is inevitably very long, and potentially minutiae-intensive. Rather than tell the story again at length, I'd like to urge readers who've never heard the band to check them out, because there's literally nobody like them. They've been around so long that many more people have heard of them than have actually heard their music. For the best cross section of their work, you just can't beat the Rhino release called, Peek-A-Boo, an NRBQ compilation from '69 to '89. 35 tunes, 5 record labels, 20 years. Rounder Records, the actual home of NRBQ, has re-released a number of their early efforts and offers its own fine compilation titled, Uncommon Denominators.

Here's a thumbnail sketch of the band's story. In 1967, original guitarist Steve Ferguson and keyboard virtuoso Terry Adams left the bands and scene they'd shared in Louisville, KY, for Miami, in search of steady work. There they were destined to meet two musicians from New York who'd gone there to play some dates as 'The Seven of Us', a white soul band. They were Jody St. Nicholas (aka Joey Spampinato) and Frank Gadler. When the keyboard player from 'The Seven of Us' decided to go home, Terry Adams took his spot. Soon Ferguson was also added, quickly followed by a pair of horns, Keith Spring on sax and Terry's brother Donn on trombone. After incorporating drummer Tom Staley into the mix, the former 'Seven of Us' were renamed NRBQ. They journeyed north to Jersey and met the legendary Slim Harpo. Slim knew Steve Paul, who owned the hotspot in NYC called The Scene. Harpo arranged a gig for the band, which led to a contract with Columbia, and their eponymous debut record. Their stage show had created a big buzz in the city, and Hendrix and Page were among their fans. They'd already successfully pissed Bill Graham off by insisting that the Joshua Light Show be turned off during a Fillmore performance.

Right from the top, NRBQ released multi-genre records, which confounded the marketing department and fans alike. (Pop groups had never done that. When the Beatles had success pushing the pop envelope, they were already established.) On top of their original tunes, the first LP included covers by artists as diverse as Eddie Cochran, Sun Ra, Bruce Channel ("Hey, Baby"), Carla Bley, and Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee. It's now 30 years later, and you still can't get away with that on your first record. Looking for a marketing approach, Columbia paired NRBQ with Carl Perkins for the second record. Although there are some high spots, only half the LP was done together. (At least they insisted on not doing another remake of 'Blue Suede Shoes.') But again, critical reaction was mixed and it didn't sell. The hippies didn't like rockabilly, and the greasers didn't like long hair, so there you go. Even the esteemed Peter Guralnick in a Rolling Stone review said, "NRBQ...don't seem able to settle on a style. It isn't so much that they don't know what to play as that they don't know what to leave out..." He continued on in even less complimentary terms, but I don't care to repeat it. I do wonder what he thinks of them now, 30 years later, having made rock and roll history. (Guralnick himself went on to write a series of fabulous books on American music.)

Dang it, I had promised the reader a thumbnail sketch of a long story. I guess I don't know what to leave out, either. Exit Columbia, enter Kama Sutra records, home of the Lovin' Spoonful success. Steve Ferguson, guitar wunderkind and co-founder, also exits. Unfortunately, his sporadic later efforts would come to little, though his talent as a player, singer and songwriter were truly extraordinary. He was replaced by Al Anderson, who would thrill their audiences for decades with his Telecaster made tiny by his frame, but especially his hands. His onstage persona was charming, comical, moving, all at once, and mesmerized many. Al was in NRBQ from 1971 to 1994. His successor will be discussed at due length later.

Kama Sutra put out Scraps, a cool record. The Q started to gel at a different level, all their many influences began to combine and emerge as their own brand of pop, what many years later they would call omnipop. The songwriting of Terry, Al and now Joey was steadily developing, and all three were lead vocalists and good front men. In 1972, vocalist Frank Gadler moved on. The horns that they'd used on records became full time, and a big part of the next album, Workshop, their last one for Kama Sutra. It would be four years before another record came out, but NRBQ's essence was always live performance, and the shows raged on. 

On stage, the band is led by keyboardist Terry Adams. He not only calls the songs (there's never a set list), he runs the energy. The guitarist is playing off him, and Joey is the glue between. Joey is the good vibe with a perfect sound, and a velvet voice for the naive beauty of his pop songs. Terry is a right off his rocker piano and clavinet genius whose songs and vocals are frequently more off the wall. He stalks the stage like a crazy man, and mugs the audience like a simian caged. He plays with his fists, his elbows and his behind, and it all sounds right. He's a manic mystery. Little Richard meets Thelonius Monk and they beat the shit out of Bach. Around 1974 they joined forces with a suitably demented Rainman of a drummer, Tom Ardolino. He'd never played with a group before, and quit his job at K-Mart to join his favorite band in the world. Tom knew the band already for a few years as a fan, and used to exchange offbeat reel to reel tapes with Terry, before cassettes became popular. One show, drummer Staley didn't turn up for an encore in time, and Terry gave Ardolino the nod. When Tom Staley headed for Florida to join The Breathers, Tom Ardolino joined NRBQ and the personnel locked in for 20 years. As great as Ferguson, Gadler and Staley each were in their respective rights, the magic of this particular quartet went from fiery sparks to constant current.

No labels were biting in 1974, so the band started their own Red Rooster label, and put out All Hopped Up (recently reissued by Rounder as Ridin’ in My Car.) This included many favorites besides "Ridin’ In My Car", like "I Got A Rocket In My Pocket", and "It Feels Good." Mercury records picked up NRBQ in 1978 and released At Yankee Stadium. Although it's one of their very best records, Mercury fared no better than Columbia or Kama Sutra had with promotion and sales. Kick Me Hard came out in 1979 on Red Rooster, a swinging live record* (the later Rounder Deluxe edition has 8 bonus tracks, including some aforementioned magic box numbers.) The next year saw the popular, Tiddlywinks. It's enigmatic how a band with relatively little or no airplay and low sales managed to tour so extensively and put out a record almost every year! And their cult status as the best working band on the road continued to grow.

The Q were freaks for professional wrestling long before it became hip, and in 1980 hired Captain Lou Albano to be their manager. Lou got involved with public appearances, sang a commercial that became a single "B" side, pushed the band on wrestling shows, and did some TV and video spots. Although he would later reappear on Cindy Lauper's video and in the mid-eighties as her manager, his stint with NRBQ lasted only a short time. About three years of club dates later, Bearsville Records (owned by Dylan's former manager Albert Grossman) signed NRBQ. Their most accessible record to date resulted, Grooves In Orbit. It could have, should have, been a crossroads release based on the college airplay of the day, but failed to break them out onto the airwaves at large. What really created a crucial impasse, though, was that another Bearsville record in the works was stopped cold. Warners had wanted a cut removed from Grooves In Orbit, "12 Bar Blues." The band was behind the song, and it had been written by a friend, Jack Butwell, who was dying at the time. They had told him they were cutting his song, and it was staying on the album, as far as Terry and the group were concerned. That standoff opened up a rift with Grossman that proved costly. He refused to release the next album. Even worse, he wouldn't let them out of their contract. NRBQ was unable to make any new recordings until he died a few years later. But it didn't preclude them from re-issuing music cut before Bearsville. Out came Tapdancin' Bats, a decidedly less commercial collection of instrumental jazz and rock tunes less catchy than Grooves in Orbit. Although I haven't gone into the numerous recording projects different members of the band participated in along the way, it's personally important to note their collaboration with Skeeter Davis, an album called, She Sings, They Play. Though recorded in 1981, it did not get released on Red Rooster until 1985. It won the NAIRD Country Album of the Year. And Joey Spampinato and Skeeter Davis got married shortly afterward.

While Grossman and their contract with him mutually expired, the Q continued to release on Red Rooster. They put out a Christmas release, a collection of material from the Lou Albano days, and Little Al, recordings from Al Anderson's childhood that a neighbor had preserved. The next real Q record was RC Cola and a Moon Pie, which was a reissue of the early Workshop record with 3 bonus tracks. One side project that is too big not to mention is the Chuck Berry concert film, Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll. When musical director Keith Richards put the band together, he picked Joey to play the bass, because Joey was the only person he knew who could get an upright sound out of an electric bass. He also used him on some tracks of his solo record.

One weekend at Lupo's, a club in Providence, RI, two CDs worth of live material was captured: God Bless Us All (1987) and Diggin' Uncle Q (1988). The latter is especially enjoyable, and I'm diggin on it right now, as a matter of fact. And around this time the band contributed to a Disney tribute album with Hal Willner, adding a rousing rendition of 'Whistle While You Work.' On the heels of the Chuck Berry movie and the Disney record, up stepped the third major label, Virgin Records. Like a commercially viable follow up to Grooves In Orbit, Wild Weekend had great radio sounds and songs, and got some airplay. In 1989, NRBQ was the opening act on the R.E.M. tour. Rhino's excellent compilation, Peek-A-Boo, appeared in 1990. Although Rhino did another CD with the band, Message for the Mess Age, it did not appear for four years until 1994, just when Al Anderson decided to leave the band after 20 years.

The band bounced back to Rounder Records for 1996's Tokyo, the first album to include Joey's brother Johnny Spampinato on guitar. After 20 years as a formidable member, Al Anderson's shoes were not easily filled. On top of being a powerful stage presence, his contributions went beyond the uniquely guitaristic. He was also a singer with personality and a bona fide great songwriter. Covers of his tunes by other acts were beginning to roll in. He left, in fact, to pursue songwriting in Nashville full time, and has been very successful there. But Johnny had grown up with the tunes, and he stepped in as seamlessly as anyone could have. His guitar playing in the group today is very distinctive, he sings good lead and harmony, and he's brought some fabulous songs into the mix that are likely to become band classics. With only two personnel changes in 26 years, the renegade personality of NRBQ remains intact and yet continues to evolve. They recorded a kids' album in 1997, You're Nice People You Are. Yet another great live recording was released by Rounder in 1998, called You Gotta Be Loose, recorded live in the USA.

To bring us up to date recording wise, there are two reissues (with bonus tracks, always!) and a studio recording. Rounder reissued All Hopped Up (from '77) as Ridin in My Car, and also Scraps (from '72). Marking their momentous 30th Anniversary, the Q recorded NRBQ, self-titled like the first record. It's a tasty disc with a number of memorable songs. They also had a major anniversary bash at the Bowery Ballroom in NYC. One of the more unpredictable things in their unpredictable career took place recently when they were featured in an episode of The Simpsons. They appeared in animated form as a band in a biker bar, and Joey was the voice behind a tear jerker that Homer sang to his dad. Unprecedentedly, they appeared as themselves at the end of the show, taped backstage at the Bowery Ballroom anniversary show doing a completely whacked version of the Simpsons theme. Tonight I'm going to rent the video of 28 Days with Sandra Bullock (about rehab), because the band is not only part of the soundtrack, but appears in the film.

I tried, but there is no such thing as a thumbnail sketch of a career so full, so long, and one still thriving. There is no other story in rock and roll that parallels that of NRBQ. All other candidates either gave up, broke up, or blew up in one way or another. Some because they got rich and famous, some because they didn't. Many of the highest profile musicians of our age recognize them as the greatest rock and roll band in history. Elvis Costello called them "the greatest band in America" and Bonnie Raitt proclaimed them "the best band in the Universe". If you've been fortunate enought to have seen them live, then you know that the Q are something you'll never forget. NRBQ is what rock and roll is all about.
*This tidbit is actually incorrect. Kick Me Hard is in fact a studio album. --- Miles

More NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings can be found here.

Joy To The World

  • 10
It's a
Christmas!
Friday, December 24, 2010


Their first single:
An Eddie Cochran song b/w Sun Ra's 'Rocket Number 9.'
How else could it possibly be but NRBQ?

God, I miss this band! I've been a champion of NRBQ since 1969, just a few years after the worlds of Bronx born, Joey Spampinato and Frank Gadler from 'The Seven of Us' were drawn into the orbit of Kentucky bred, Terry Adams and Steve Ferguson who together were in a group called, 'The Merseybeats USA.' That cosmic collision resulted in a primordial stew that would soon solidify to become one of the greatest rock n' roll bands in the known world. Once drummer, Tom Staley was recruited, the colossal forces that converged in the unlikely locale of Miami, Florida gave birth to a new planet that we today call 'The New Rhythm and Blues Quintet' (later 'Quartet'). Young and restless, fearless and bold, they set out to befriend and conquer, only to be met largely with befuddled stares of disbelief and a quizzical lack of comprehension. What was this strange wonder that called itself NRBQ, and why were they so different from what we knew and understood? No one could provide an answer to those questions, failing to explain this wondrous entity. And so in their unenlightened way, the majority of the world simply walked away from the truth that greeted them and compartmentalized the 'Q' as an anomaly, a cosmic blip, whereas in any other parallel universe, 'The New Rhythm And Blues Quintet/Quartet' would have been huge. And they should have been here on Earth as well. But as we all know, there isn't really much intelligent life down here on this rock. That's why I've asked Scottie to beam me up on more than a few occasions, but for some reason I'm still here. Apparently he's asleep at the wheel.

One of my regrets is that I never got to witness that original and magical line-up of the 'Q' in a live setting, but I have heard the latter (and classic) 'Quartet' on countless occasions and can tell you that they were equally magnetic, if not even more so. And you know what? To this day I still believe NRBQ to be absolutely the finest band that America has ever produced. You hear me? The best. Period. Regardless of who was in the line-up, it just didn't matter. They were all great in their own way. With three primary versions of the 'Q' over the past 35 years, each held a charm that for me at least, made them all simply irresistible. Each shared the same philosophy towards their music and performance; an approach that radiated a good natured, high-voltage and kinetic vigor, as well as an unabashed devil-may-care attitude that was entirely refreshing, particularly in the rock n' roll arena. More importantly however, they were all stellar musicians who played with a sort of ragged exuberance that often belied their considerable skills. That passion, spark, and skill created an energy that frequently threatened to blow the lid off the whole thing at any moment. Yet the band simultaneously managed to keep it all contained right at the boiling point of 212°F. Then factor in their good humor and obvious bonhomie. That became the extra ingredient that added the entertainment factor; an essential element in any 'Q' performance.

It could be said that if the band actually had a failing, it was because they were factional zealots --- confident in their abilities, unfazed by current trends or popular opinion, playing by their own rules, and guided by their inner spirit. And above all, they were absolutely determined to have fun in the process. In my universe, I don't see that as a failing at all. In fact, I find it inspirational, for it's those many qualities, along with their joyful music that made them so very, very, endearing.
Is it any wonder then that through the course of my adult life, NRBQ has always stood as my top-of-the-list 'go to' band for a quick fix of good cheer and great tunes whenever I'm feeling the need? And in 35 some odd years, they haven't failed me yet. Which brings us to Christmas.

Seeing as how the 'season' possesses the uncanny ability to turn my otherwise easy-going disposition into that of a certifiable grouch, it should then come as no surprise that I invariably turn to the 'Q' each year around this time
(roughly between the 15th of November and mid-January of the following year) as my own private form of 'holiday' gaiety. They're often damn near the only thing that can get me through the Yuletide with my mental health still in tack.

All of this of course leads to this year's NRBQ feast --- 'Joy To The World', a full week of blog posts celebrating the only band that ever should have mattered --- the fabulous, NRBQ. I'll share live recordings, interviews, videos, and special compilations presented each and every day from today through New Year's Eve. It's the way that I
celebrate the holiday, and it can be very merry indeed. 'It's a NRBQ Christmas!'


About The Music

Tracks 1 and 2 of 'Joy To The World: It's a NRBQ Christmas!' were recorded live in 1970 and feature the original line-up of Steve Ferguson/guitar & vocals, Terry Adams/piano & vocals, Joey Spampinato/bass & vocals, Tom Staley/drums, and Frank Gadler/lead vocals. The band is additionally augmented by 'The Whole Wheat Horns' featuring Donn Adams on trombone and Keith Spring on tenor sax. These performances were issued on the Sundazed label as 'Interstellar NRBQ', vinyl only. Adams reports that Sun Ra had personally handed him the Saturn 45rpm of 'Rocket Number 9' saying "this is especially for you." After hearing it, the piano player realized that the song "opened up new possibilities in rock n' roll, and we were going with them." And go they did, incorporating the likes of left field composers like Carla Bley and Thelonious Monk into their repertoire while remaining true to R n' R originators like Carl Perkins, Gene Vincent, and the Sun records stable of artists. Just young guys open to new and old ideas alike, forging a personality that would one day make them a force to be reckoned with as well.

Tracks 3 through 17 were recorded before a small studio audience at the Ardent Recording Studios in Memphis, TN in 1972, and were broadcast on radio station WMC-FM.
By then Steve Ferguson had left the band and just been replaced by 'Big' Al Anderson from 'The Wildweeds'. The band is again supplemented by 'The Whole Wheat Horns' this time consisting Donn Adams on trombone and tour bus driver, Donnie Placco on trumpet. This recording comes courtesy of reader, Chazz B. who kindly donated it after seeing it on my wish list. Thanks Chazz! They come from a CD called, 'The Scraps Companion.'

One must remember that the band was still in that aforementioned embryonic state when these recording were made and had yet to fully gel, although they were so very close. The performances do serve however to give you insight into the ideas, energy, and innocence that fueled the group in those early days and would mold them into the greatest American band that the world has never really known --- NRBQ. Enjoy the tunage and my best wishes for the season.




Click on the 'Q' to download

1) Rocket Number 9/Venusian Sunset
Recorded live at Ludlow Garage, Cincinnati, Ohio, January 24, 1970
2) Next Stop Mars/Approach The Planet/I Love Lucy
Recorded live at Folly Farm, Clinton Hollow, New York, October 11, 1970
3) Do You Feel It?
4) Magnet

5) Howard Johnson's Got His Ho-Jo Working

6) Huggin' Bug

7) Mare, Take Me Home

8) Don't Knock At My Door
9) Valse Hot

10) Get A Grip
11) Sitting In The Park
12) Take This Hurt Off Me

13) RC Cola And A Moon Pie

14) Time And Place

15) Theme To 'I Love Lucy'

16) Ain't It Alright?

17) Brothers
Recorded live at the Ardent Recording Studios, Memphis, TN, April 30, 1972



Source material for
'Joy To The World: It's a NRBQ Christmas!' come from the following:
Interstellar NRBQ (2003) and The Scraps Companion (2000)


Look for more from NRBQ in Birds With Broken Wings right here.