Jack London (musician)
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The Sparrows was a Canadian
blues rock Blues rock is a fusion music genre that combines elements of blues and rock music. It is mostly an electric ensemble-style music with instrumentation similar to electric blues and rock (electric guitar, electric bass guitar, and drums, sometimes w ...
band of the 1960s. Notable for being the first group to bring musician John Kay into the mainstream, the Sparrows later morphed into the popular heavy rock group Steppenwolf.


Early years

The original Jack London and the Sparrows line-up was formed in
Oshawa Oshawa ( , also ; 2021 population 175,383; CMA 415,311) is a city in Ontario, Canada, on the Lake Ontario shoreline. It lies in Southern Ontario, approximately east of Downtown Toronto. It is commonly viewed as the eastern anchor of the G ...
, Ontario, in early 1964 by British émigré Dave Marden (also known as Jack London; born February 16, 1944, in London, England), guitarist
Dennis Edmonton Dennis Edmonton (born Dennis Eugene McCrohan; 21 April 1943), also known by the stage name Mars Bonfire, is a Canadian rock musician and songwriter, best known for writing the hit song "Born to Be Wild" for Steppenwolf. Career Born Dennis Eug ...
(born Dennis McCrohan, April 21, 1943, in Oshawa, Ontario), and keyboard player Dave Hare, who later played with Everyday People.


British invasion

Jack London and the Sparrows began as a beat group and played heavily on Dave Marden's English background. Their early repertoire reflected the influence of the "British invasion" and London even went as far as coaxing the others to "fake" English accents, in order to convince the audience that they had just arrived from England. Shortly afterwards, Dennis’ brother
Jerry Jerry may refer to: Animals * Jerry (Grand National winner), racehorse, winner of the 1840 Grand National * Jerry (St Leger winner), racehorse, winner of 1824 St Leger Stakes Arts, entertainment, and media * ''Jerry'' (film), a 2006 Indian fil ...
(born Jerry McCrohan, October 24, 1946, in Oshawa, Ontario) replaced the original drummer and Brent Maitland (stage name: Bert Enfield) joined on bass. The group began to build up a local following, playing at various venues, such as the local Jubilee Auditorium (which was owned by the Edmonton brothers' father). After moving to Toronto later that year, C.J. Feeney joined on organ. A short while later, Bruce Palmer replaced Maitland, who went to university. This line-up signed to Capitol Records and scored a #3 hit on the RPM chart with debut single "If You Don’t Want My Love". Palmer, however, soon tired of affecting an English accent and was traded for the Mynah Birds’ member
Nick St. Nicholas Nick St. Nicholas (born Klaus Karl Kassbaum on September 28, 1943) is a German bandleader, bass guitarist, singer and songwriter; best known for his partnership in Steppenwolf. Early life He was born in Plön, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany ...
in January 1965. Around the same time, local jazz keyboardist Art Ayre (born March 18, 1942 in Toronto) replaced Feeney, who formed a new version of his former band, the Spellbinders. The new line-up was responsible for the band’s lone album and the subsequent singles. The single "I'll Be The Boy" reached #29 in Canada in March 1965. Only "Our Love Has Passed", however, neared the success of the debut single, reaching #7 on the RPM chart in May 1965. By mid-1965, the group was beginning to progress beyond its early British influences and was starting to incorporate more of a North American blues-rock sound. At the same time, resentment was growing over London's role in the band; he had signed the recording deal so that he would collect most of the group's royalties. As a result, the band separated from London (who went solo) and recorded a final single as the Sparrows, "Hard Times With The Law", which hit #13 on the RPM chart in August.


The Sparrows

During September 1965, the Sparrows added singer/songwriter, guitarist and harmonica player John Kay to the line-up. Art Ayre left at this point to pursue a career in jazz with the Art Ayre Trio (and later Moe Koffman) and was replaced by Goldy McJohn, formerly keyboard player for the Diplomats and for the Mynah Birds. As the new look Sparrows, the group made its live debut at Waterloo Lutheran University (now Wilfrid Laurier University) in Waterloo, Ontario, during September 1965 and immediately made an impact with its high energy, blues rock sound. The following month, the band supported Gary Lewis & the Playboys at Massey Hall in Toronto and also found regular work at Chez Monique and the El Patio in the city's Yorkville village.KAY AND THE SPARROW RARE "COLLECTOR'S ITEM" ORIGINAL RELEASE FROM 1967
Retrieved on 27 Jan 2018 After his solo career dried up, London moved into production and then became president of the Canadian Association of Real Estate Investors.


New York connections

Throughout the first few months of 1966, the group consolidated its following on the local club scene. Realising that they needed to attract a wider audience, Sparrow (as the band was now called) attracted the interest of electronics executive Stanton J. Freeman, who became their manager and arranged for a booking at Arthur, Sybil Burton's hot new club in New York. Freeman then flew them to New York so the A&R people at the major record companies could see them perform. Sparrow were so well received that over the next five months, they commuted back and forth between Toronto and New York. While in the Big Apple, Sparrow also appeared at the Barge in Westhampton ( the Rascals had played there the previous summer) on Long Island and at another New York club, the Downtown.


Recording for Columbia Records

Producer
David Kapralik David Kapralik was a music industry executive. An A&R executive, producer and talent manager, he was also a manager who at times managed Van McCoy, Sly & the Family Stone. Background Kapralik brought Sly & the Family Stone to Epic records. He al ...
, later manager of Sly & the Family Stone, was introduced to Freeman by
Jerry Brandt Jerry Brandt (January 29, 1938 – January 16, 2021) was an American entrepreneur, impresario, agent, manager, promoter, and club owner who was active since the 1960s. He is known for discovering Carly Simon and serving as her first manager, as w ...
(head of Rock & Roll at the William Morris Agency). Freeman brought Kapralik to see and hear the band. He also heard some demos that the group had recorded at Allegro Sound Studios in New York on April 28, 1966. Impressed by the quality of the songs, he assisted Freeman in getting a recording deal with
Columbia Records Columbia Records is an American record label owned by Sony Music, Sony Music Entertainment, a subsidiary of Sony Corporation of America, the North American division of Japanese Conglomerate (company), conglomerate Sony. It was founded on Janua ...
. On June 25, the group recorded Dennis Edmonton's "Tomorrow’s Ship," which was subsequently coupled with the Dennis Edmonton–Nick St. Nicholas collaboration, "Isn’t It Strange," for the group's debut single. The single failed to chart on its release. The band returned to Columbia's New York studios in October and recorded a follow up, the Edmonton Brothers’ "Green Bottle Lover," which was coupled with the Dennis Edmonton–Nick St. Nicholas collaboration, "Down Goes Your Love Life." Released the following month, the second single also failed to chart.


Sparrow heads for California

By then, the band had abandoned Canada (and New York) for the warmer climes of California. During November 1966, Sparrow debuted at It's Boss in West Hollywood. Shortly thereafter, they moved to San Francisco where they performed at the Ark in nearby Sausalito as well as the Matrix and the Avalon Ballroom (sharing the stage with the Youngbloods and Moby Grape at the latter). Sparrow continued to commute back and forth between Los Angeles and San Francisco throughout the first six months of 1967, performing alongside the Doors, the Steve Miller Band and many others. During June, Dennis Edmonton announced his decision to go solo and the band recruited American guitarist Michael Monarch in early July. Edmonton subsequently changed his name to
Mars Bonfire Dennis Edmonton (born Dennis Eugene McCrohan; 21 April 1943), also known by the stage name Mars Bonfire, is a Canadian rock musician and songwriter, best known for writing the hit song "Born to Be Wild" for Steppenwolf. Career Born Dennis Euge ...
.


Steppenwolf

In 1967 St. Nicholas joined Los Angeles-based group the Hardtimes, who soon renamed themselves ''T.I.M.E.'', which stands for ''Trust in Men Everywhere''.
Capitol Records Capitol Records, LLC (known legally as Capitol Records, Inc. until 2007) is an American record label distributed by Universal Music Group through its Capitol Music Group imprint. It was founded as the first West Coast-based record label of note ...
signed them to a $500,000 recording contract. After having recorded two albums with Mars Bonfire and bassist Rushton Moreve along with
producer Producer or producers may refer to: Occupations *Producer (agriculture), a farm operator *A stakeholder of economic production *Film producer, supervises the making of films **Executive producer, contributes to a film's budget and usually does not ...
/
arranger In music, an arrangement is a musical adaptation of an existing composition. Differences from the original composition may include reharmonization, melodic paraphrasing, orchestration, or formal development. Arranging differs from orches ...
Gabriel Mekler, St. Nicholas' Sparrow bandmates (vocalist/guitarist John Kay, drummer Jerry Edmonton and organist Goldy McJohn) came to see him perform with T.I.M.E. at the Whisky a Go Go on the
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and asked him to leave T.I.M.E. to rejoin them as Steppenwolf. In 1969, in the wake of Steppenwolf's success, Columbia Records went into their archives and released the hitherto unheard 1967 live album of Sparrow at the Matrix, dubbed 'Early Steppenwolf'. This LP release included unknown material as well as a different mix of "Isn't It Strange" (leaving the 45rpm record single the only place to find the quite different original mix of the song).


Band members


Discography


As Jack London and the Sparrows

;Albums *''Presenting Jack London and the Sparrows'' (1965), Capitol *''Jack London and the Sparrows'' (2003), EMI Int'l ;Singles *"If You Don't Want My Love" c/w "It’s Been One of Those Days" Today (1964), Capitol - No. 3 CAN *"I'll Be the Boy" c/w "Dream On Dreamer" (1965), Capitol *"Our Love Has Passed" c/w "Sparrows and Daisies" (1965), Capitol - No. 7 CAN *"Give My Love to Sally" c/w "Take It Slow" (1965), Capitol *"Don’t Ever Change" c/w "Misery & Me" (1965), RCA (Jack London as solo artist)


Albums

*''John Kay & the Sparrow'' (1967 969, Columbia *''The Best of John Kay & Sparrow: Tighten Up Your Wig'' (1993), Columbia *''John Kay & the Sparrow'' (2001), Repertoire (re-issue of the 1967 album plus bonus tracks) ;As backing group on other artists' releases: *''Molly Camp Sings .....'' (1966), RCA Victor


Singles

*"Hard Times with the Law" c/w "Meet Me After Four" (1965), Capitol - No. 13 CAN *"Tomorrow's Ship" b/w "Isn't It Strange" (1966), Columbia *"Green Bottle Lover" b/w "Down Goes Your Love Life" (1966), Columbia *"Square Headed People" b/w "Twisted" (1967), Columbia (as John Kay)


References

* ''Magic Carpet Ride'' by John Kay and John Einarson, Quarry Press, 1994. * ''Before the Goldrush'' by Nicholas Jennings, Penguin Books, 1997. * "They Helped To Make Go-Go Big", '' Toronto Telegram'', After four section, December 30, 1965, page 8 * ''The Toronto Telegrams After Four section on Thursdays list live dates


External links

* * as Jack London & The Sparrows * as The Sparrow *
Entry at canadianbands.com
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sparrows, The Musical groups established in 1964 Musical groups disestablished in 1967 Canadian blues rock musical groups Canadian psychedelic rock music groups Musical groups from Oshawa Musical groups from the Regional Municipality of Waterloo Columbia Records artists RCA Records artists Steppenwolf (band) 1964 establishments in Ontario 1967 disestablishments in Ontario