February 27, 2009

John Mahoney Makes Me Smile

I received a call during the week from John's son Matt.  I was busy at the time so it didn't really sink in that I would shortly be talking to his father (kind of strange because Matt is older than John when we were together in McLuhan and both 20 years old). 

I left my voice message for John a little sheepishly feeling that maybe I would be intruding (you know why don't you leave the past alone or something).  That feeling quickly evaporated when I heard John singing excerpts from the McLuhan album on the voice mail he left me.  It was a noticeably deeper voice but there was no mistaking the old vocal chcords behind it.

We reminisced for about 1/2 hour that seemed like a minute this morning and agreed that we would be getting together in a couple of weeks.  I was happy to hear that John was playing and performing in the Chicago area (guitar and vocals) so that is really exciting.

I thought about the Chicago tune John liked to sing (Make Me Smile) because that is what I have been doing all day today.

December 10, 2008

Anomaly is a Thriller! Or, is Thriller an Anomaly?

Just a quick update in case anyone is interested.  I recently received a call from Stoney Phillips who actually ran across this blog and called.  He definitely was the real Stoney Phillips.  I recognized the voice after all those years.  Still very laid-back about everything.  I enjoyed our brief conversation.  I am now down to John Mahoney and Dave Wright who I haven't re-visited with since I realized the internet related recognition of the album. 

In our brief conversation Stoney filled me in on what he had been up to since we disbanded in 1972.  After the group broke-up Stoney continued on as a local musician in the Chicago area playing with several local groups.  In the mid-80's he ventured out west when live-performance opportunities in Chicago became more difficult to find.

At one point he looked-up Bruce Swedien in Los Angeles and made several unsuccessful attempts to see him.  His interest was to get a little help in finding work out there.  It seemed a little strange that Bruce found excuses every day for several days to avoid even saying hello.

Later, Stoney ran into John Mahoney back in Chicago.  John proceeded to go into great detail about how Thriller was heavily influenced, to say the least, by Anomaly.  In particular, the Monster Bride cut.  So, the fact that Bruce was avoiding Stoney would have made sense because Thriller had come out not too much before Stoney's visit.  John seemed to think the similarities between the albums were probably at least a point of embarassment for the great producer, if not a legal issue in his mind.

Let's listen to the un-cut version of Thriller and compare with Monster Bride or Witches.  Let me know what you think.

April 25, 2008

April 08 Update

Still have not been in-touch with Dave and I expect wherever he is that he has no idea that his creation is blooming 37 years later.  I've been so busy that I really have not had time to figure out a way to locate him.  I am preoccupied with thoughts of the band members and the album every day.  Partly it might be my egoistic side needing to feed itself and partly it may be very real thoughts about the significance of the music.  Anyway I have noticed increase in interest here and in other parts of the world.  Recently noticed a facebook copy of the album that I guess someone put out there with excerpts from this site.  For some reason there are 3 of the 4 cuts as it is missing Monster Bride.  Don't know if that was a mistake or they didn't like that piece.  Another thing going on is that copies of the album that are available for sale have gone way up and most I have noticed lately are running $75 an up. 

Have not seen formal Brunswick download sites and was expecting to see it on Itunes, rhapsody, and a few others that they had mentioned. 

Anyway, if anyone has any further info on any of this I certainly welcome their input.  Also, if anyone knows either Dave Wright, John Mahoney, or Stoney Phillips of Mcluhan whereabouts please chime in an be my hero.  Or, better yet, if you are one of those people please give me a call, 616-437-5732.

November 20, 2007

It Found Its Way to Recognition

Several months ago I was overcome by the idea of the McLuhan Anomaly music itself finding its own way out of obscurity.  It was apparent that nothing else had ever been done to promote it.  The more I listened to the music, the more certain I was that this material belonged to more people than just the 6 or 8 people involved with its making.  I found it fascinating that although Brunswick Records never promoted it, that even though the album was stuck in the middle of Brunswicks exclusively Rhythm and Blues repetoire, that even though the group itself split-up right after producing it so we couldn't ever sell it at performances, that even though nobody ever asked any radio stations to play it, that it somehow poked and probed its own way out of that obscurity.  How?  Strictly through a few people who were able to listen to it telling a few other people about it, and so on.  Aided only by the power of the new MEDIUM, the Internet. (Electric Man as chanted by the Group at the end of Brief Message was, in fact, The Internet)  So this past Sunday November 18th for the first time it appears that the music itself may get some help.  Wow, thanks to the Holland Sentinel and Denise Galloway who thought this was a unique story worthy of note.  Denise heard about this from a friend who I had provided an album copy to and she came into my office in Holland in search of what she thought would be a great story.  I showed her what had happened after 35 years (internet websites, reviews, album web sales, illegal CD's, etc.) and what hadn't happened (locating Dave Wright, etc.).   She did a fantastic job of writing the story.  You can find the complete article on-line it by going to hollandsentinel.com and searching for McLuhan Anomaly or Paul Cohn.  I absolutely love the title she used "It Found Its Way to Recognition".  Shows that she really got it.  Here is hoping the music itself continues to fight its way out of obscurity, now with a little help from The Sentinel. 

October 29, 2007

Finding Tom

What a kick this October 29th has been.  Actually, it started yesterday when I received an email from Tom Hayes who is the Gnosis2000.net founder.  He was asking me if it would be OK to release the story about McLuhan to his membership.  He showed me a story about another group submitted by an ex-bandmember called "Sudden Death" out of California.  I had no problem with that and thought that it would be great to update the story with input of the other Mcluhan members.  He also inquired as to my progress in locating other members.  So, I told him I was coming up empty with regard to finding the "lost" members but I was still intent on doing so.

At 6:30am this morning driving in to Holland from Chicago I noticed another email from Tom.  He thanked me for the update and promised to get back in more detail but that in the meantime he provided this link to a yahoo people search for Tom Tojza.  Knowing that his name was unique he felt that the one reference to a Tom Tojza in the Chicago area and vicinity might be him.  Guess what?  Tom and I spoke at about 2pm this afternoon for the first time in 35 years, and again this evening.  It was absolutely great.  A really great moment in my life to be able to share with him what had happened with the album and such.  I talked alot and filled him in as much as possible.  I encouraged him to do a download off of the Mutant Sounds Link that comes up when searching Mcluhan Anomaly and to burn a CD for himself.  He has not listened to it in at least 25 years and was going to do so.  I know that when I did this 5 or 6 years ago it was absolutely ultra emotional.  Anyway, we are all very excited about this and wanted to post this to the Blog.  Hopefully I can get Tom and Neal, the other two "unlost" members to give us some thoughts and memories.  Isn't life great?  Stay tuned for more.

 

October 15, 2007

More Info

I have provided the great people at Progarchives with information about McLuhan, the Group and also the musicians that recorded the Anomaly album.  Here is that information for anyone interested:

McLuhan was a concept group.  The creator of the idea was David Wright, who also played trumpet, slide-whistle, and some vocals on the Anomaly album.  The concept was to develop a mixed-media group where no particular musical venue or style would necessarily prevail.  We wanted to throw out pre-conceived ideas of what would be “acceptable” to an audience.  The idea was to try different things in our performances including special sound effects such as baby’s crying, various weird instruments, background sounds and we even played old movies during our performance (“Monster Bride” was actually Bride of Frankenstein and in live performance we would turn on the movie at the point where we played the 20th Century Fox theme). Yes, we had a little attitude.  We were tired of commercial music, marching band music, Burt Bacharach music, elevator music in general.  McLuhan was telling us that “the medium was the message”, not the content.  So, we basically had an attitude that it was not important to be defined as a certain type of band (Rock, Jazz, dixieland, Soul, Prom, Bar-Mitzvah, Country, etc.)  Labels didn’t matter.  We were saying that the world should wake-up and reject conventional norms (Spiders - “business men in ranch-house cages, mindless-prisoners of routine”). 

David Wright was known to me as a fellow-student at UICC (University of Illinois Chicago) who played trumpet in the concert band.  I was playing clarinet and had paid my way through College with week-end prom gigs on Sax, Flute, Clarinet.  My group was called the Seven Seas which did a lot of Burt Bacharach with a female vocalist.  We lost our Trumpet player and so I asked David to fill-in.  He had never played professionally but I loved his trumpet sound quality.  He enjoyed the few months he played with us. Marvin Krout also played organ with the Seven Seas at the time of the break-up.  Then it happened, the group had a falling apart thing with the singer and guitar player feeling like they were the stars, deserved more, had big plans, etc.  (Never did hear what Lawrence Welk program they might have ended up on.)  So, we sat there in my basement after the two stars had walked-out and it was then that Dave introduced us to the McLuhan concept.  He said he had some material that he would like to try to develop as a group.  It was perfect timing.  We were all about 20 years old and at a perfect time in each of our lives to commit to something like this.   My neighbor Neal Rosner heard some of the sounds coming from my house and stopped in and told us he played the base and could sing.  Turned out he really could.  We brought in John Mahoney who was a drummer in the concert band and could also sing very well.  I then ran into a childhood friend also at school who seemed really strung-out but said he played electric guitar.  His name was Mark Rabin.  He gave our group a push over the top to where we were clearly “different”.  Unfortunately, we lost track of Mark before the album was created and he was replaced with Stoney Phillips who filled-in great on the album.  Michael Linn was a friend of Stoney’s and he filled-in on drums on “Witches”.  John Mahoney had gone to Indiana to their Music program so Mike Linn performed with us, but John came back to record most of the album with us.  Marvin had left for Canada before the album was recorded and so Tom Tojza (I believe Stoney Phillips knew him) replaced him and recorded the album with us.  I’ll get back to the album, but let me just say that we approached the studio with the same “anything goes” attitude as we did live performance.  So, we created a different sound by using the 16 tracks to the fullest degree.  For example Dave was the only trumpet player but we often sounded like there was at least 5 players screaming.

Our rehearsals were part development of the piece and performance.  We created together.  We crashed for hours that summer (I think the summer of 1970).  Then in the fall we did a few performances that were not that well received (frat parties wanted Chicago and until we gave that to them they looked at us with blank stares).  We did do the full “Make Me Smile” routine and some other knock-off pieces including a dynamite “Beginnings”.  Anyway, we took our original material down to an audition at “Wise-Fools Pub” on

Lincoln Avenue in Chicago.  They actually hired us to perform every Monday night and that is where we did develop a small local following.  The room was filled at about 75 people and it was a great performance environment.  We really got tight as a performance gorup at Wise Fools.  Eventually that led to our Brunswick Record contract.

The group only was together for about 1 to 1 ½ years.  The very last thing we did was produce the album.  We never had a live performance where we could promote the album because we disbanded right after the album was completed.  We all were at crossroads in our lives and their really seemed to be no hope of earning of living with the "new" music which we had invented, so-to-speak.

There is a lot of catching-up needed if we can put together a reunion, first step to find everyone.  Last I knew John went to Univ of Indiana graduate school in Music and later was at IBM, Neal a doctor in Chicago area, Dave had gone to work repairing trumpets and I don't have any idea after that, Marvin had moved to Canada, and I also lost track of Stoney and Tom.

The producer of the album is Bruce Swedien who went on to become the God of recording engineers, winning something like 13 Emmys. (He did Thriller for example).  He and Dave were a great team in the booth and although we were in the studio maybe for 8 or 9 hours total over maybe 3 different days, the album turned out to be a gem.

OK, get this…..Nothing ever happened to this album that I ever knew about for 35 years!  Yes I am an old man now of almost 57.  We all knew it was special but no one including Brunswick Records promoted it.  It got some obscure radio play but it was “dead” as far as we all knew.  Years went by and occasionally one of my kids would run into it and ask about it.  About five years ago my daughter took it to a local studio and had a CD made for me.  It brought back huge emotion when I listened again.  Then last November my wife was telling me about my cousin Bryan Scary and his new group (Bryan Scary and the Shredding Tears).  She said I could order his album on-line and so I did.  Then it happened.  I googled “McLuhan Anomaly” and I couldn’t believe my eyes.  There were people out there buying my album on Ebay (my daughter bought me my own album for $35).  There were companies bootlegging the album in Japan Germany and other places.  There were reviews that called my album legendary and mysterious.  Nobody knew anything about where it came from.  I was thrilled that people were listening. 

Of course the story fits.  The internet had given new life to this 1971 moment.  The very thing that we sang about (Electric Man, Electric Man, Electric Man, in “Brief Message”,  10 years before Bill Gates had thought about computers, the very Global Village that we were referring to also in “Brief Message” had given life to our album.  Brings a tear to me, sorry.

Now, here is where I need your help.  I can’t find David Wright.  I googled him and no, he isn’t the guy in England or the baseball player on the Mets. He doesn’t come up. He is not on alumni records and the last place he worked in Chicago doesn’t know where he went.  He is the one who should be the most proud and I don’t know if he is alive to tell him about the new recognition that people like you have given his concept album.  In fact the only other person I have been able to get in touch with is Neal Rosner (Base and Vocals). area.   Hopefully they are all alive and well.

I also am extremely interested in getting a CD re-release although after approaching Brunswick I think this will not be easy.  However, I am just so thrilled that McLuhan Anomaly has found an audience. 

August 16, 2007

Key Prog Rock Sites

Although there are numerous sites selling the actual album, selling an illegitimate CD, reviewing the album, etc., two major prog-rock sites have reviewed or included information about McLuhan Anomaly.  These are member generated sites and are very comprehensive.  Please follow the links to these sites.  On the progarchives link McLuhan info is now included with a link back to this blog.  You may join this site free of charge and we encourage you to enter a review of McLuhan's album Anomaly.  On the gnosis2000.net site McLuhan is highly rated and can be found by entering in 1972, USA in their search engine.  This will list albums by their rating system.  Or you may view the actual ratings of individual reviewers. 

July 25, 2007

Anomaly Personnel and Other Information

Side One
Monster Bride - Composition by David Wright, David Wright on Trumpet and Vocals, Paul Cohn on Tenor Saxophone and Flute, Tom Tojza on Organ and background vocals, Stoney Phillips Electric Guitar and background vocals, John Mahoney on Drums and background vocals,  Neal Rosner on Base, Narrative Reading, and background vocals,  Bobby Christan Tympani and Xylophone.
SPIDERS (IN NEALS BASEMENT) - Composition by Marvin Krout, Neal Rosner lead vocals, Base, and group vocal part, David Wright on Trumpet and group vocal part, Paul Cohn on Tenor Saxophone and clarinet, Tom Tojza on Organ and group vocal part, Stoney Phillips on Electric Guitar and group vocal part, John Mahoney on Drums and Group Vocal Part.
Side Two
WITCHES THEME AND DANCE - Composition by David Wright, David Wright Trumpet, Slide-Whistle, and Group Vocals, Paul Cohn Flute and Flute with Maestro Woodwind Device, Michael Linn on Drums, John Mahoney Group Vocals, Neal Rosner on Base, Falsetto Vocals, and Group Vocals, Stoney Phillips on Electric Guitar, Tom Tojza on Organ.
A BRIEF MESSAGE FROM YOUR LOCAL MEDIA - Composition by David Wright
1. The Garden - David Wright  on Vocals, Bobby Christian on Chimes, Stoney Phillips on Guitar, Neal Rosner on Base, Paul Cohn on Flute, Tom Tojza on Organ, John Mahoney on Drums.
2. The Assembly Line - David Wright - Narrative Reading, Trumpet, Paul Cohn on Flute and Clarinet,  Neal Rosner on Base, Tom Tojza on Organ, John Mahoney on Drums, Stoney Phillips on Electric Guitar, and Bobby Christian on Xylophone.
3. Electric Man - Neal Rosner on Base and Vocals (Soul Section Vocalist and Group Vocals), Paul Cohn on Tenor Saxophone, David Wright on Trumpet and Group Vocals, John Mahoney on Drums and Group Vocals, Stoney Phillips on Electric Guitar and Group Vocals, and Tom Tojza on Organ and Screaming.
4. Question - Paul Cohn on Flute, John Mahoney on Drums, Neal Rosner on Base, David Wright on Trumpet.

December 16, 2006

Swedien The Legend

Well - Being driven by the Internet, Information Age, Global Information Era, whatever, I easily discovered, that Bruce Swedien, the Studio Engineer who produced our album, has become a God!  I read that description of him in several places recently having googled his name.  Try googling him if you have about a month to look through all of the references to Mr Swedien.  I haven't got a phone number for him yet but I am going to look further when I get a minute.  I'm thinking it is very likely that Bruce has forgot about the McLuhan album, Anomaly, but would quickly remember the Spring of 1972 when it was born, and would be pleased that it is being ranked by the Gnosis group among the top albums of it's kind, whether from 1972 or without regard to date.  Most of the information I see is about Michael Jackson and all of the albums he produced for him, or Quincy Jones and other legends from earlier Jazz communities.  However, Bruce, you should give a listen again.  "Anomaly", the album,  might be special.

Anomaly - A Push From McLuhan

Not sure where I am going with this but my daughter Stephanie pointed out something that had been kicking around in my subliminal thoughts but she expressed it.  That is, Anomaly the album circa 1972 Brunswick Record label, has been given a re-birth, 34 years after inception, totally through the Electronic Age, the Media being the message.  Without funding, without promotion, without awareness, without any strategy, effort, program or plan, the album was discovered and given life.  How?  Through our new Internet driven Global Village without a doubt.  And, of course, the theme of the group McLuhan and it's only album, Anomaly, was The Medium is the Message.  Very frightening, goosebumps, etc.  In particular, cut #4 on the album, A Brief Message From Your Local Media, detailed the history of Man in terms of the stages of Technology; Tribal (Touching and Feeling), Print (secluded), Assembly Line (specialization), Electronic Man (TV images creating Global Village), and now the Computer, which seems as if it is jacking our information age up exponentially.

At this point it would seem that awareness of Anomaly, the album, is confined to be within the Collectors, Fusion or Rock Historians, and maybe Music Seekers who have their ears tuned to the internet to grab or discover something they had not heard before.

As Tom Hayes, co-founder of the Gnosis project, gnosis2000.net suggested to me, the illegal CD's are probably not very significant with respect to any distribution. 

I am still trying to contact others, including Dave Wright, Neal Rosner, John Mahoney, Marvin Krout, Stoney Phillips, Tom Toja Laney, Mike Lynn, Bruce Swedien and others to see if any of the ideas that are emerging about a legitimate re-release on CD might be possible.

Paul Cohn