The Original Surfaris

The Original Surfaris
Background information
Origin Fullerton/La Habra, California, United States
Genres Surf rock
Years active 19621965
Labels Impact; Regand; Northridge; Reprise Records; Del-Fi Records; Felsted; Sundazed Records
Past members Bob Bernard
Mike "Sticks" Biondo
Bobby Esco
Jim Tran
Al Valdez
Chuck Vehle
Larry Weed
Doug Wiseman

The Original Surfaris were a surf music American band of the early 1960s.

History

In 1960, three young friends, Al Valdez at the piano, Mike Biondo on drums, and Richard Lippy played at the 8th grade graduation dance of St. Mary's Elementary School in Fullerton, California.[1]

In the summer of the same year, Valdez, Biondo, guitarist Bobby Esco, and sax player Bob Bernard formed The Vogues and started playing at school assemblies.[1]

Guitarist Larry Weed, with a country and western musical background, replaced Esco soon after. Weed, notably, used to wear his belt buckle on the side when onstage, "so he would not scratch the back of his Fender guitar."[2]

In late 1961, a Sunday morning all-Mexican television show on KCHOP channel 13 announced that they were looking for musical groups to play on the show, and Valdez's mother phoned the show to submit the candidacy of the band her son was playing in. The Vogues, with Doug Wiseman having replaced Bob Bernard on sax, were contacted by Victor Regina, owner of a pizza stand on Western Avenue, also doubling as a music agent, who helped them, under the new name he gave them, The Customs, record their first single, "Steppin' Out" and "Hi Hat", both written by former member Bobby Esco.[1] Because Regina had put up all the money for the recording session, he took sole credit as the composer of the two songs.[3]

Bassist Jim Tran, who was playing in a Yorba Linda musical trio at the time, was added to the band, soon after the session. Around the early summer of 1962, they started appearing regularly at a bar near Big Bear, with Wiseman's and Biondo's dads driving them there. Soon after, with Chuck Vehle also on guitar, they changed their name to The Surfaris, which was a word play between "surf" and "The Safaris", a music group well-known at the time[4] for their hit "Image of a Girl".[3]

The Danville Battle of the Bands gave the group a lot of exposure and more jobs. They started playing in the Ventura/Oxnard area. While performing there, they backed Bobby Vinton and others.[5]

Between October 1962 and through January 1963, they recorded in the studio of producer Tony Hilder a number of songs written by Larry Weed, such as "Moment of Truth" and "Delano Soul Beat", also recording covers of "Ghost Riders in the Sky" and "Pipeline." The tracks "Moment of Truth" and "Delano Soul Beat" were released on Hilder's own Impact label, as part of a surf music compilation album titled Shake, Shout and Soul.[5] These tracks subsequently appeared on various compilation albums, such as Wheels (Diplomat Records LP 2309); The World of Surfin' (Almor LP 108); Surf's Up at Banzai Pipeline (Northridge Records LP 101); and others.[5]

After some months, the band again went into the studio with Hilder producing and recorded a number of tracks intended to be released on the Impact label, as their first full-length LP. Two of the tracks, "Bombora"[6] and "Surfari" were leased to Del-Fi Records, which sent them out as a single. But the record, even though it started selling well in the state[5] had to be pulled from the stores because of a lawsuit.

It was in early 1963 that, while the band were on the road, the surf instrumental "Wipe Out" came out and broke big nationwide.[4] It was written and performed by a Glendora, California band who also called themselves The Surfaris. The Glendora group's management sued for the exclusive use of the name and, in the trial that followed, the judge awarded them sole use of "The Surfaris." However, the judge also allowed the Fullerton band to carry on under the name The Original Surfaris, although they continued to be billed in the various venues they played as "The Surfaris."

After recording hot rod tracks, such as "Gum Dipped Stick", The Original Surfaris started changing their musical style, and Jim Tran along with Al Valdez left the group. The Original Surfaris started doing more vocals, in the soul and blues vein,[1] until eventually breaking up in May, 1965.

After the break-up

Mike Biondo went into the U.S. Army and then worked in a corporate position for United Gypsum.

Jim Tran joined the U.S. Coast Guard and then worked as an engineer for the Rancho Water District in Costa Mesta, California.

Al Valdez served in the U.S. Air Force Reserves and, after his discharge, spent the next ten years singing in a musical duo in Lake Tahoe and Orange County venues, before going solo.

Doug Wiseman went into the construction business where he became an independent contractor in his La Habra, California birthplace.

Legacy

The Original Surfaris, in their various incarnations, were "one of the most highly regarded" and "creative" surf groups of the 1960s, but also remained at the time "one of the most obscure" ones.[1] Critics described their music as featuring "reverb galore, swaggering sax and a tough surf sound",[7] while their best tracks were praised for their "spooky reverb guitar lines and Latin-influenced minor melodies that were hallmarks of much of the best instrumental surf music.[8]

They rose and peaked at a very young age: One night in 1962, the band were playing in a hotel bar and they got arrested by the police because they were all under 18 years old.[1] Another surf music group from Los Angeles named themselves The Bomboras inspired by the instrumental track.

The Original Surfaris allegedly never received any money for the tracks they recorded with Tony Hilder, since they had signed all their publishing rights away for one dollar per song.[1]

Discography

Composers given as listed on respective record

Singles

As The Customs:

As The Surfaris:

As The Original Surfaris:

Post break-up

1. "Bombora" (L.Weed-J.Tran-D.Weisman-M.Biondo-C.Vehle)
2. "Vesuvius" (R.Hafner)
3. "Surfari" (L.Weed-J.Tran-D.Weisman-M.Biondo-C.Vehle)
4. "Down Under" (L.Weed-J.Tran-D.Weisman-M.Biondo-C.Vehle)
5. "Surf Angel" (L.Weed-J.Tran-D.Weisman-M.Biondo-C.Vehle)
6. "Intoxica" (R.Hafner)
7. "Wipeout" (M.Fankhauser)[10]
8. "Beep Beep" (W.M.Brown-J.Rose-S.Metz)
9. "Latin'ia" (T.Nuñes-M.Hilder)
10. "Church Key" (D.Darnold-N.Knowles)
11. "Board Walk" (L.Weed-J.Tran-D.Weisman-M.Biondo-C.Vehle)
12. "Steel Pier" (W.M.Brown)
"Moment of Truth" (L.Weed-D.Weisman)
"Kalani Wipeout" (V.Regina-L.Weed-A.Valdez), and
"Ghost Riders in the Sky," an instrumental version of the country and western hit, recorded live. The guitar player, in the break, plays the riff from The Shadows' hit "Apache." The track does not appear in any other release featuring the band.
"Failsafe" (Lloyd-Greenspoon)
"Exotic" (Bruce Morgan), and
"Surfs Up" (L.Weed-A.Valdez-J.Tran-D.Weisman-M.Biondo-C.Vehle), none of which had been issued before.
"Latin Soul" (Robert J Hafner)
The track had previously appeared "in no less than five different budget labels during the surf boom,"[11] such as Ava (LP 28, 1965).[11]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Dalley (1988) pp.258-273
  2. Doug Wiseman interview, from Dalley (1988)
  3. 1 2 Al Valdez interview, from Dalley (1988)
  4. 1 2 Whitburn (2000)
  5. 1 2 3 4 Dalley (1995)
  6. Not related musically to The Atlantics' 1963 hit by the same name
  7. Popson (1995)
  8. Artists' review by Richie Unterberger, AllMusic website
  9. The spelling "psyche" was used on the Felsted single, while the record's details were printed in both English and faux Greek
  10. Not The Surfaris' hit
  11. 1 2 Burke, Taylor (2007)

Sources

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