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sabato 10 settembre 2016

Kim Vincent Fowley (July 21, 1939 – January 15, 2015) singer and musician

Kim Fowley

Kim Vincent Fowley (Los Angeles, 21 luglio 1939 – West Hollywood, 15 gennaio 2015) è stato un cantante, musicista e produttore discografico statunitense.
Artista incatalogabile per la varietà di generi viene considerato dal critico Piero Scaruffi "un genio musicale più unico che raro" ed il primo musicista decadente.
È noto per aver introdotto nella musica rock i brani musicali comici e non sense chiamati novelty, termine emerso nella Tin Pan Alley per indicare un genere musicale.

Biografia

Nipote del compositore di operette Rudolf Friml e figlio di Douglas Fowley, attore di film western decide di frequentare i bassifondi della città e guadagnarsi da vivere facendo il ballerino, cantante.
Iniziò come chitarrista alla fine degli anni cinquanta nel gruppo dalla breve durata degli Sleepwalkers con Phil Spector da cui mutuò l'interesse per la produzione discografica e nella voglia di scoprire talenti, nel suo caso di artisti provocatori che utilizzavano gag non sense, suoni onomatopeutici. Produsse il brano Cherry Pie del duo Skip & Flip che raggiunse la top 20. Tra il 1960 ed il 1964 lanciò gli Hollywood Argyles (autori di Alley Ooop) , gli Stingers, i Rivingstons (Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow) e i Murmaids. Si spostò nel 1964 nel Regno Unito dove scoprì gli Hellions (futuri Traffic), aiutò i Soft Machine agli esordi, i Family e gli Slade.
Tornato negli Stati Uniti partecipò come cantante all'album Freak Out! di Frank Zappa e nel 1967 esordì con un proprio lavoro da solista Love Is Alive and Well anche se aveva già pubblicato qualche 45 giri. Fu seguito dall'album di cover strumentali suonate con l'organo Born to Be Wild, da Outrageous del 1968 diventato con il tempo pietra miliare del rock più dissacrante e Good Clean Fun.
Nel 1969 su trasferì in Svezia dove registrò The Day the Earth Stood Still, album realizzato su ideali hippy e su musiche garage rock. Gli album successivi furono meno sperimentali anche se non mancano amare analisi sulla decadenza di Hollywood in album come Living in the Streets (1977) e Sunset Boulevard (1978).
Intrapresa la carriera di produttore discografico, negli anni settanta è stato tra gli ispiratori del punk californiano oltre ad essere scopritore delle Runaways e di altri gruppi minori, all'epoca della nascita del punk gestiva lo storico locale Whisky A-Go-Go. Poi collaborò con diversi gruppi come i Kiss.



Kim Vincent Fowley (July 21, 1939 – January 15, 2015) was an American record producer, singer and musician. He is best known for his role behind a string of novelty and cult pop rock singles in the 1960s, and for managing The Runaways in the 1970s. He has been described as "one of the most colorful characters in the annals of rock & roll," as well as "a shadowy cult figure well outside the margins of the mainstream."

Early life

Born in Los Angeles, Fowley was the son of character actor Douglas Fowley and actress Shelby Payne. He attended University High School at the same time as singers Jan Berry and Dean Torrence (later of Jan and Dean fame), Nancy Sinatra, Bruce Johnston (later of the Beach Boys), as well as actors Ryan O'Neal, James Brolin and Sandra Dee.

Career

In 1957, he was hospitalized with polio and, on his release, became manager and publicist for a local band the Sleepwalkers that included Johnston, drummer Sandy Nelson and, occasionally, Phil Spector. He spent some time in the armed forces and, by his own account, worked in the sex industry in Los Angeles in the late 1950s. In 1959 he began working in the music industry in various capacities for both Alan Freed and Berry Gordy. His first record as producer was "Charge" by the Renegades, a group comprising Johnston, Nelson, Nik Venet and Richard Podolor. He promoted records for the duo Skip & Flip (Skip Battin and Gary S. Paxton) including the #11 hit "Cherry Pie".

1960s

During the early 1960s, Fowley was involved as co-producer/co-publisher with a string of successful records produced in Los Angeles. With Gary S. Paxton he recorded the novelty song "Alley Oop", which reached # 1 on the charts in 1960 and was credited to the non-existent group the Hollywood Argyles. In 1961 he co-produced the instrumental "Like, Long Hair", arranged by Paxton, which became a #38 hit for Paul Revere and the Raiders. He wrote "Nut Rocker" for B. Bumble and the Stingers, which became a # 1 hit in the UK in 1962 and talent scouted "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow", a #48 hit for the Rivingtons. The following year he produced "Popsicles and Icicles" by the Murmaids, which reached #3 in the charts in 1963 and which was written by a pre-Bread David Gates, then a session musician and songwriter who had met Fowley while Kim was hitchhiking in Los Angeles.
During the mid-1960s, Fowley publicized/consulted singer P.J. Proby and relocated for a time to London, England. Fowley wrote the lyrics for the song "Portobello Road", the B-side of Cat Stevens' first single, "I Love My Dog". He produced a Them spin-off band led by two ex-Them members, brothers Pat and Jackie McAuley (who were only allowed to use the band name Other Them in the UK, but called themselves Them on the European continent, releasing an album called Them Belfast Gypsies and a single "Let's Freak Out" under the name Freaks of Nature); an early incarnation of Slade known as the N'Betweens; Soft Machine (he produced "Love Makes Sweet Music", their first single); and the Lancasters, an instrumental rock group featuring a young Ritchie Blackmore. He worked with an up-and-coming band, the Farinas, and renamed them "Family".
Fowley worked on occasion as a recording artist in the 1960s, issuing albums such as Love Is Alive and Well. In 1965 he wrote and produced a song about the psychedelic experience, "The Trip". He later was credited for "hypephone" on Frank Zappa's first album Freak Out! Other singles by Fowley as a recording artist included "Animal Man", during the song he remarks "Its too dirty, it'll be banned" from his popular 1968 album Outrageous. All his efforts as a solo artist since 1970 have become cult items, both in reissue and bootleg formats.
In 1968, Fowley joined forces with a young band from Topanga Canyon California, St John Green, to produce their only album containing songs, musical soundtracks, comedy and dark poetry. The band comprised Ed Bissot (bass), Bill Kirkland (guitars), Vic Sabino (vocals, harmonica and percussion), Mike Baxter (organ), and Shel Scott (drums). The album was engineered by Michael Lloyd. Fowley later claimed it to be "one of the great lost records...Somebody will reissue it someday and people will start crying and jacking off and smoking dope to it. It’s a great record. There’s only a handful of records that I’ve made that are great.” The album was released by MGM on the Flick Disc label, but the group disbanded soon afterwards.
He is credited with being the inspiration behind promoter John Brower's call to John Lennon that resulted in the last-minute appearance of the Plastic Ono Band at the Toronto Rock and Roll Revival on September 13, 1969, where Fowley was the MC. At this event, Fowley invited the audience to light matches and lighters to welcome a nervous John Lennon to the stage.
In 1969, Fowley produced the album I'm Back and I'm Proud for Gene Vincent. He co-wrote for Warren Zevon's first solo album, Wanted Dead or Alive. Fowley collaborated with his friend Skip Battin during Battin's membership as bassist with the Byrds on a number of songs. Several appeared on the group's 1970 album, Untitled; and one from the 1971 LP, Byrdmaniax, Farther Along was released as a single: "America's Great National Pastime".

1970s

In 1973, Fowley produced three recordings by Flash Cadillac & the Continental Kids for the film American Graffiti (1973). These songs were "At the Hop", "Louie Louie" and "She's So Fine". He co-wrote songs for KISS, Helen Reddy, Alice Cooper, Leon Russell and Kris Kristofferson. He made recordings with Jonathan Richman and the Modern Lovers, which were eventually released in 1981 as The Original Modern Lovers. Fowley's tracks were not included on the original versions of the album The Modern Lovers but some were included on later CD reissues.
In 1974, Fowley placed an advertisement in local fanzine Who Put the Bomp looking for female performers. He hoped to form an all-girl group that he could produce and would perform his songs, but no one responded to the advert. In 1975, he met the teenage guitarist Joan Jett who expressed interest in forming an all-girl band. Less than two weeks later, he met 15-year-old drummer Sandy West who introduced herself outside of the Rainbow Bar and Grill in Hollywood, California. West told Fowley of her aspirations to form an all-girl band after playing in all male groups. This meeting led to Fowley giving West Jett's phone number. The two met and began playing together at West's home the following week. A short time later Fowley recruited Lita Ford, Cherie Currie, and Jackie Fox. They eventually became the Runaways. While he did produce some of their albums and contributed lyrics to songs, the band was primarily responsible for creating their own music. The group severed their ties with Fowley in 1977.
Fowley co-wrote two Kiss songs "King of the Night Time World" and "Do You Love Me?". Both appeared on Kiss' 1976 KISS-album Destroyer, with Paul Stanley and producer Bob Ezrin.
In 1978, Fowley formed the Orchids, another all-female rock band, with Laurie McAllister, the last bassist from The Runaways, and Sandy Fury, a 13-year-old rock prodigy on rhythm guitar and vocals.
In 1979, Fowley signed new artists, such as Tommy Rock, the Popsicles, and the Orchids. Fowley promoted "Kim Fowley Night" featuring these bands at the Whiskey A Go-Go. Fowley brought Stiv Bators & the Dead Boys, the Popsicles, and the Orchids into Leon Russell's Cherokee Recording Studio in Hollywood to record "LA, LA (I'm on a Hollywood High)".

1980s

In the 1980s Fowley moved to Australia where he announced that he was "looking for the new Beatles or ABBA". His search turned up power pop band Beathoven who were still under a recording contract with EMI. Changing their name to the Innocents, he secured a new record deal with Trafalgar Records and produced several songs for the group. They too became a cult band in later bootlegs/reissues. Fowley produced the first demos for the iconic power pop band, Candy, which featured Gilby Clarke and Kyle Vincent. Vincent was Fowley's personal assistant. Producer Fowley and attorney David Chatfield recorded the first album for Steel Breeze at Rusk studios in Hollywood and got Steel Breeze their recording contract with RCA. Casey Kasem, on the edition of March 12, 1983 of American Top 40, describes how Fowley discovered Steel Breeze while going through approximately 1200 demo tapes that were about to be discarded by a local Hollywood nightclub, Madam Wongs. "You Don't Want Me Anymore" was the first single from the band's self-titled album and quickly jumped into the Top 20 on the Billboard Hot 100 supported by a video that was a favorite of early MTV, and peaked at # 16. The next single, "Dreamin' Is Easy", also made it into the Top 40.
In 1984, still owning rights to the name "the Runaways", Fowley rebuilt the image around Gayle Welch, an unknown teenager from New Zealand. Adding Denise Prior, Missy Bonilla (then a typist for Denny Diante at what was CBS Records) and Cathy DiAmber (Catherine Dombrowski) with David Carr on keyboards, a Chicago guitarist Bill Millay and numerous session musicians. Fowley, assisted by New Zealander Glenn Holland, sought to cash in on the fame of the former Runaways members who had gone on to significant success in their individual solo careers. In 1985, he returned to the United States and recorded further songs with the Innocents' David Minchin.
In 1986, Fowley spotted the band Shanghai (consisting of Eric Leach and Taz Rudd of Symbol Six, Brent Muscat of Faster Pussycat, Patrick Muzingo, and Todd Muscat of Decry) at the Troubadour. After seeing their performance he asked, "Are you ready to make a record?!" They immediately moved in with Fowley and began writing and recording songs. David Libert, Alice Cooper's ex-road manager and agent for George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, was recruited to come in to handle the day-to-day babysitting chores. Shanghai played the reopening of the Whisky a Go Go in April 1986 with Guns N' Roses and Faster Pussycat. Their last show was at the Scream in Los Angeles in 1987.

2000s

Fowley is featured in Mayor of the Sunset Strip, a 2003 documentary about the disc jockey Rodney Bingenheimer.
Also in 2003, Fowley made a return trip to London, England, where he made an in-store appearance at Intoxica Records on Portobello Road and curated and performed an evening of music and entertainment at the Dirty Water Club at its then base at the Boston Music Room in North London.
Kim became an experimental filmmaker after the DVD release of Mayor of the Sunset Strip. His written and directed works include: Black Room Doom, Dollboy: The Movie, Satan of Silverlake, The Golden Road to Nowhere, Frankenstein Goes Surfing, Trailer Park's On Fire and Jukebox California. Video clips/scenes from these movies can be seen on YouTube and Myspace, and feature a cast of regulars including but not limited to musical oddities such as the Fabulous Miss Wendy, Giddle Partridge, Richard Rogers (Crazy White Man) and Clown Porn Queen Hollie Stevens.
Fowley released the 21 track solo album Adventures in Dreamland on WEED/Innerstate Records in 2004. It contained the songs "Mayor of the Sunset Strip," "Terrors in Tinseltown," and "Ballad of Phil Spector."
In 2008, Fowley was reunited with Cherie Currie at Houdini's mansion in Los Angeles. He played three dozen gigs between June 2007 and February 2009 as the act Crazy White Man, a duo featuring him on vocals and Richard Rogers on guitar. The bulk of the Crazy White Man shows took place during 2008 and included the Tribute to Gidget Gein, which raised funds for Gidget's Hollywood Forever memorial.
Capitol re-released several of his titles, and director Guy Ritchie used his song "The Trip" in the 2008 film RocknRolla. Fowley was recently regularly heard on Sirius Satellite Radio with a four-hour show on Saturdays and Sundays.
Currie wrote a memoir of her time in the Runaways, which was turned into the film, The Runaways, released on March 19, 2010. It featured Kristen Stewart playing Jett, and Dakota Fanning portraying Currie. Michael Shannon played the part of Fowley.
In 2012, Fowley won the Special Jury Prize at the 13th Melbourne Underground Film Festival for his two feature projects – Golden Road to Nowhere and Black Room Doom.

2010s

Kim Fowley released the first part of his autobiography, Lord of Garbage, published by Kicks Books, in 2012. It covers the years 1939–1969 and describes his early childhood and beginning years in the music business. The second installment of his autobiography will be called Planet Pain and will cover the years 1970–1994. The last part of his autobiography was intended to be finished on his deathbed and released posthumously. On September 24, 2014, Fowley married longtime girlfriend and music executive Kara Wright-Fowley, in a private ceremony in Los Angeles.

Personal life

Fowley died of bladder cancer in Hollywood, California on January 15, 2015 at the age of 75.

Controversy

In 2015, Jackie Fuchs (formerly Jackie Fox of the Runaways) claimed that Fowley had raped her while he was involved with the band. Fox also alleges that Jett and Currie witnessed the rape, a claim which Jett and Currie deny.

Selected discography


 Kim Fowley - The Trip.(1965) - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vqqg_w7nrbs
03 gen 2016 - Caricato da ταsos epit
Kim Vincent Fowley (July 21, 1939 – January 15, 2015) was an American record producer, singer and musician ... 


Summer time here kitties
And is time to take a trip
To take a trip
If you feels so bad, if you feel so sad

You gotta take a trip into a world so glass
A world of frost and clean fountains
And flying dolls and surfing cakes
And theres no rats and purple clouds
Our faces as clown and wall of glass that never pass
And pick his head upside down

Would i ask ? where you ? is another world ?
You and your girl, and all your friends
All be there, oh yeah, lets take a trip.

TNT, S.O.S, HOB, TOP

Here we go now , lets climb some mountains everybody
Get all your walking shoes
Its time to climb some mountains, here we go

Lets take a trip , its time to dream , just close your eyes
Is grooving now, yeah, its all around, lets take a trip
I felt in the ground, ooh yeah , lets take a trip

Its really here , no one will know whats going on
Just you and me and the dreams that we see , oh c'mon baby
You doing right just put your head back . 
 

Animal Man - Kim Fowley - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VucFLwc8_AY
17 mar 2013 - Caricato da TheSpacegg
Animal Man - Kim Fowley ... Kim Fowley - Is America dead? ... Kim Fowley - Motorboat DORIAN GRAY OF ROCK ...



 

Kim Fowley - Bubble Gum (1968) - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rkkwovv_tlY
16 gen 2015 - Caricato da Facedebouc1
Kim Fowley - Bubble Gum (1968). Facedebouc1 ... The Runaways' Jackie Fuchs Tells Her Side of Kim ...



kim fowley underground lady.wmv - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkVYYeRdxPA
31 mar 2010 - Caricato da MrSuedehead72
"underground lady" par le "grand" kim fowley!!!! ... kim fowley underground lady.wmv. MrSuedehead72 ...


Kim Fowley - Strangers From the Sky (60s US Punk) - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8EbQBPPA9kk
28 apr 2010 - Caricato da FreakbeatJack
Kim Fowley - Strangers From the Sky (60s US Punk)


Kim Fowley - I Hate You (HQ) - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlGwFTQiQ2E
22 lug 2011 - Caricato da SolsburyHill22
Kim Fowley - I Hate You (HQ). SolsburyHill22 ... R.I.P. Kim Fowely - Long Live Rock 'n' Roll !! .... Thank ...
So sad, why do we're crying?
So mad, really was trying
to give you what you needed,
and needed what you have.
Everything you gave me baby, always something bad.
So glad, to get up when I did,
So bad, to be out on these kids
instead of being in your arms,
you did me so much harm.
I feel dead, sorrow inside.
I hate you
I hate you
for given me
all your pain.
I hate you
yes, I hate you,
thanks for letting me
off your chain.
So nice, yeah I'm free,
think twice
of what you did to me.
Wish I could get,
but teardrops back.
If I came around,
you'd step me in the back.
So good, another on the rack.
Hey, I'm getting ready
just to attack.
My breath is heavy
'cause the road is long.
Crying 'cause
I am down,
the grandpaw what I am.
I hate you
I hate you
for given me
all your pain.
I hate you
yes, I hate you
thanks for letting me
off your chain.




Kim Fowley at rock for sonic protest 2012, paris, eglise st merri.
Jean-Daniel Pauget

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