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Posts Tagged ‘Stark Naked and the Car Thieves’

Pleasant Hill to Hayward, California via Crow Canyon Road

04 Dec

Back when our band, then called The Checkmates, came to California, most of us lived inland around Pleasant Hill and Walnut Creek because the first club we worked in was in Pittsburg, CA a few miles further north and east. When we started working at the Town Club in Hayward in late spring of 1965 we had to make that trek each night back and forth from work.

Google maps, Pleasant Hill to Hayward, CA via Crow Canyon Road 1965

The hard part was the weekends. Not only did we have to play Friday and Saturday, 9pm to 2am like the other nights, we also had to be back Saturday and Sunday mornings, 4 hours later when the bar opened and liquor could be served to play a 4 hour jam session. Not enough time to get home and back so we found ways to stay up all night, at afterhours clubs like Soul City or even sleeping in the back seat of a car for a few hours. Later, to make more money we even became the house band at Soul City, which meant we were expected to play for 12 straight hours before we could drive from the East Bay back inland to our apartments.

Back then there wasn’t a freeway that ran through the mountains so we had to traverse twisty Crow Canyon Road when we were often so exhausted we would hallucinate. I remember staring out the window from the passenger side (not driving fortunately) and seeing mailboxes we were passing and losing all sense of motion and thinking they were rabbits. Going through the canyons was definitely like being down the rabbit hole. We did it for six months and in the end we had a much tighter band and a new name.

What I find particularly interesting is that in Google Maps, choosing directions between Pleasant Hill and Hayward, there is a ’3D’ button. When pressed it actually switches to satellite view and animates traveling along the route, up and down and around along Crow Canyon to where it comes out on the backside of the mountains near San Ramon before heading north through Walnut Creek and into Pleasant Hill. Maybe I’m easily amused but I love taking that trip because it reminds me of those days. Many years ago it inspired me to write a short story, ‘The House on Crow Canyon Road’. Unfortunately through years of moving I seemed to have misplaced it. I hope in one of those motivated moments when I decide to really straighten out the garage that I’ll find it again.

 

The Indianapolis Times 1964

14 Nov

The Indianapolis Times

My last job in Indianapolis was at the Indianapolis Times. I was hired in 1963 to sell classified advertising. I didn’t realize it at the time but it was a dead end job because Scripps-Howard had already announced they planned to discontinue the paper. The Indianapolis Star, a morning paper, had already gobbled up the Indianapolis News, portending the change in the business environment. You needed to know the news before your working day not leisurely looking at in the evening.

The venerable Indianapolis Times, also an afternoon paper, held on even longer than it should have to try and keep Indianapolis from becoming a one newspaper town. Even then it was realized how dangerous it was to have only one news source (FoxNews crack addicts are you listening?).

[Location: 300 block W. Maryland Street at Capitol Avenue, Indianapolis (Marion County, Indiana)]

Life at a Dying Newspaper

I was excited at the prospect of working for a newspaper at first but my department had realized long before I arrived that there was no future in working hard at the Times. We met at 8 o’clock in the morning for a half an hour sales meeting, usually including donuts and coffee (some people surreptitiously adding a little kick to their coffee even that early). Then everyone left, supposedly to work on sales for the classified ads. I was told to ‘cold call’ car lots, gas stations, radio stations, local businesses, etc. to drum up sales but within a couple of weeks some of the old timers told me not to waste my time. I would get ads from the companies that just wanted to be in every publication but I wouldn’t get any new ads because everyone knew the Time wouldn’t be in business much longer and circulation was way down.

Everyone in the department except me was split into two groups. The golfers, who left immediately for the links after the morning sales meeting, and the rest, who left for the bars. Around 4:30 everyone would gather again for the final sales meeting before leaving for the day. That could be a hoot as the barflys could be raucous and unruly and the golfers told outrageous lies about their golf game or sexual adventures.

For me, I found that I could slip into a library and read science fiction novels or meet up with some of the guys I sang with, most of whom were chronically unemployed. Often there were enough of us to get in some a cappella practice time. 1964 was the year we had a close brush with fame after recording “In The Still of The Nite” and our trips to Chicago to support the record. In the first few months of the year we still hoped we might be able to keep recording but the Indy Sound and Jan Hutchens Productions died as quickly as it had risen. It was on one such day in the fall that I recruited Mac Brown from the Casinos to come and sing with us. At our New Year’s Eve party on the last day of 1964, knowing that the day the Times would close was near I agreed to a brash proposal to try our luck as The Checkmates (precursor to Stark Naked and the Car Thieves) singing in night clubs. So in early February of 1965 I gave notice at the Times and tried my luck as a bar singer. Though that experience was a complete disaster life was never the same again.

Display Artist

One of the best things I learned at the Times was from the display artist. I would bring him display ads and he would draw them up right in front of me. He was half cartoonist and have illustrator. His main tools were a metal ruler and a #2 pencil. He would use the ruler to tear through newspaper pages and his pencil to block out new art, write in new copy using the ruler edge, and illustrate where and when needed. I’ve always been influenced by his rough and ready skill and talent even though the medium has changed to a digital world. I still keep a couple of steel rulers around for when I work on art in article, brochure, or book form even in this digital world.

 

Bailey Carlisle

24 Oct

When we attended Murray State in Kentucky my wife Pat and I and Dave Dunn sang for awhile in a 3 guy, 2 girl configuration. One of the other guys in the group was Bailey Carlisle. We did Skyliner tunes as well as some other popular songs of the day and I remember us as sounding pretty darn good. This was the only time that my wife Pat and I sang together.

When we returned from Kentucky to Indianapolis, Bailey came along. He was a Bailey Carlisle high school year book and obit piccarefree fun-loving guy. He was fascinated by the Indianapolis 500 mile race. We got a car in line on 16th street for the 1963 race, a traditional way of getting a good spot in the infield. But, as so often happens, we were so hungover on race morning that we pulled out of line and went home. All except Bailey. He wouldn’t hear of it. He got out, got in the trunk and pulled out the last full case of beer and decided he’d walk the mile and half to the track and figure out how to get home afterward. I want to point out that these were long-neck glass bottles and the case was one of those old-fashioned heavy cardboard reusable ones. It was HEAVY.

Sometime just before dusk of race day after sleeping off the heroic beer drinking of the previous night and after watching the race on television, I was sitting on the porch to cool off from the day’s heat when I see a figure trudging up the middle of our street, carrying something. It was Bailey and he had lugged that case as he’d emptied the bottles inside with him all day. He was red as a beet but only on on the front. He was so tired after he finally got into the race and had drunk so much beer that he had fallen asleep and slept through the entire thing. But still he dragged that case home full of empties so that he could cash them in.

Bailey, Dave, Chuck Tunnah and I sang together for awhile during 1963. One day we got a phone call from a guy who said he was a record producer in New York City and if we came to the city he’d be interested in recording us. He’d heard an audition tape we’d sent to California for Jimmy O’Neil’s Shindig TV show. So with my wife’s blessing, I joined Dave and Bailey in taking the train to New York City with high hopes. We arrived to find that our potential record producer was some 16 year old kid running on pure hutzpah. It was very disappointing. On the plus side we got a tour of Bell Sound studios where some of the most classic music of the 40′s and 50′s was recorded. The walls featured groups like the Platters on posters as we walked through the corridors. Much later Stark Naked and the Car Thieves would record for Bell Records (Amy/Mala/Bell), and though I haven’t researched this, I am almost certain this was the record label’s original studio before it was sold.

Dave and I went to a to a 50′s rock revival at the Brooklyn Fox theater. I remember we got separated on the subway yet found  each other somehow at the theater just in time to get good seats through some out-of-towner magic. It was a great show with groups like Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, The Supremes, the Chantels and lots more. We had very little money so we were staying at the YMCA in downtown Manhattan in rooms like closets. Bailey hadn’t told us that he came with us virtually penniless so we had to try and keep him alive as well as ourselves. After 3 days, Dave and I had to phone home for bus fare. But not Bailey, even though he didn’t have a nickel to his name he was determined to stay and find his fortune on the Great White Way. He was always an optimist. I thought there was a good chance we’d never see him again. He was such an innocent soul with an outrageous belief that he could walk into any lion’s den and walk away unscathed. After another week or maybe more he somehow got himself back to Indy. He never explained how. That was Bailey in a nutshell.

Recently I stumbled across an obituary for Bailey posted online at his high school. Since Dave and I remember him and he was in a couple of renditions of our singing group and one of the more original and colorful characters I have ever known I wanted to remember him here on our site.

Bailey died November 4, 1998 where he was living in Earlington, KY.

He was survived by his mother, Francis, a daughter Irish, a son Evan and brother Bill. He was preceded in death by his father Elmo.

He was a member of the Kentucky All State Chorus, a member of the Campus Lights at Murray State University and was a Methodist. He was a retired Theater Manager.

Larry Dunlap

(This post was originally posted on 10/24/11 and updated on 1/3/12)

 

A friend who always talked about you

13 Mar

Back in the early 80′s, I lived in the Los Feliz/Atwater area. I spent many a night walking my dog with my neighbor Bud Mason, ne Wayne Mason, who told me stories about growing up in 50′s and 60′s. He seemed to have a story about everything. To give you an idea of how wacky his childhood was, when Oregon went to the Rose Bowl in 1958 they found out Bud had a pet duck. They gave him free tickets in return that the duck could be their mascot for the game. That was the kind of stuff that happened to Bud, and I spent a lot time cracking up at his escapades. He spoke of his days in the navy, hot rodding up and down San Fernando Road, ordering Zombie’s from a black bartender named Ben at Gazzarri’s, and rocking out to a band named “Stark Naked and the Car Thieves.”

I was just a kid back then, but the name was instantly cool to me and remains so to this day. I decided to google your band for kicks, and it is nice to finally be able to put a face to the name. Bud has been gone for a few years now, but every once in a while I think about him fondly and laugh. I have regaled my own son with some of Bud’s stories… and yes, about a band called Stark Naked and the Car Thieves.

Thanks – Anthony

 

Spelling correction from former owner

13 Mar

Hi to all of you ~ and Merry Christmas

I’m Frances Lee, I am Herb Gee’s wife, and we were Dave Rapkin’s partner in the night club businesses [the Moulin Rouge, Galaxie, Rock Garden, Jazz Workshop, Woffer].

I am writing to tell you that you are misspelling the Galaxie Night Club’s name; it wasn’t GALAXY it was “The GALAXIE”.

F

 

Stark Naked & the Car Thieves 70′s

13 Mar

Wed 11/3/2010 1:45 PM

Hi Mac,

I’m hangin in there at age 63!!

I have a current hit record with Juelz Santana, the Gangsta rapper. I’m playing guitar for Andy Stokes. He’s a singer that sings with Tower Of Power on occasion and has the best R&B band in the Northwest.  gig mostly every weekend and some weeknights, when I can get them. There’s plenty of Casino’s in Oregon and Washington to keep me busy :) I retired last year, gigging gives me some extra money and keeps me feeling young lol.

I’m lucky to have been a member of Stark Naked & The Car Thieves. Yes it was an ass kickin band !! When I was 19-20, Tony [Ferra] let me in The Red Velvet to watch you guys play. I stood by the hallway near the dressing room, as Tony didn’t want me in the Club. It was close enough to hear and see one of the best groups of all time. Years later, you could imagine how I must have felt getting the guitar slot with the band. I can honestly tell you Stark Naked is still one of the best bands I’ve ever played in.

I would love to see those pictures on the website. The pictures are part of the great history of one of Americas best bands. I noticed there is a couple of empty slots on the website for them at the bottom of the photo page. Hope to see them someday!

How are you doing these days? What are you up to? Are you staying in contact with David & Larry? Will there ever be another reunion? I would definitely be there, if invited. Stay well my brother!

Regards,

Carlos Luevano

 
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YouTube Videos of Stark Naked and the Car Thieves songs

11 Mar

Look Back in Love

An amazing thing has happened on YouTube. Not the most amazing when it comes to video. We still don’t know where the music video we did in Hawaii for “Look Back in Love” in 1968. I’d give anything to find that. Still, it appears that there are many modern admirers of the band who have taken our music to YouTube. I was shocked to find that out today and while I had planned to do this for awhile, that’s what prompted me to take the day to get a blog up for it. While noodling around on the web I somehow got to a wikipedia page that mentioned Jan Hutchins and Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs, and then a link to a YouTube video (below) that was weird. But first things first. Here is the first video to kick this montage off …

CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW TO SEE ALL THE YOUTUBE VIDEOS

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