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==Solo recording and The Beach Boys==
==Solo recording and The Beach Boys==


In the early 1970s, Boettcher had little commercial success and few rewarding recording projects. In 1971, at the insistence of Elektra Records founder and president [[Jac Holzman]], who was a huge fan of ''Begin'', Boettcher signed a deal with Elektra. He warned Holzman that the album would take a long time to produce, and started working on a solo album. The project got a boost when Boettcher met a young multi-instrumentalist named Web Burrel, and taking a cue from the early one-man albums by [[Emitt Rhodes]], Boettcher decided to record the album in a similar fashion, using as few musicians as possible. After almost two years of work, ''[[There's An Innocent Face]]'' was released in 1973 (under the name Curt Boetcher). It differed from his early work, being a collection of songs with [[country music|country]], sunshine pop, [[arena rock]], and [[folk music|folk]] stylings. (However, as posthumous collections indicate, it was a continuation of the direction that the Millennium had taken with their unreleased post-''Begin'' recordings.) The album was a commercial failure. He attempted to record a follow-up album, tentatively titled ''Chicken Little Was Right'',<ref>[http://waddywachtelinfo.com/CurtBoettcher3.html Waddy Wachtel discography]</ref> but it was never completed. A CD reissue by Rev-Ola Records shows that the arrangements were still to be worked out for most of the songs.
In the early 1970s, Boettcher had little commercial success and few rewarding recording projects. In 1971, at the insistence of Elektra Records founder and president [[Jac Holzman]], who was a huge fan of ''Begin'', Boettcher signed a deal with Elektra. He warned Holzman that the album would take a long time to produce, and started working on a solo album. The project got a boost when Boettcher met a young multi-instrumentalist named Web Burrell, and taking a cue from the early one-man albums by [[Emitt Rhodes]], Boettcher decided to record the album in a similar fashion, using as few musicians as possible. (Boettcher and Burrell collaborated on at least three published songs.<ref>[http://www.curtboettcher.com/2008/04/curt-boettcher-at-bmi/ Curt Boettcher songwriting credits (incomplete)] at CurtBoettcher.com]</ref>) After almost two years of work, ''[[There's An Innocent Face]]'' was released in 1973 (under the name Curt Boetcher). It differed from his early work, being a collection of songs with [[country music|country]], sunshine pop, [[arena rock]], and [[folk music|folk]] stylings. (However, as posthumous collections indicate, it was a continuation of the direction that the Millennium had taken with their unreleased post-''Begin'' recordings.) The album was a commercial failure. He attempted to record a follow-up album, tentatively titled ''Chicken Little Was Right'',<ref>[http://waddywachtelinfo.com/CurtBoettcher3.html Waddy Wachtel discography]</ref> but it was never completed. A CD reissue by Rev-Ola Records shows that the arrangements were still to be worked out for most of the songs.


In 1973, Boettcher served as mixdown engineer on the Emitt Rhodes album ''Farewell to Paradise.'' In the mid-1970s, he sang backing vocals on a number of [[Elton John]] recordings, including "[[Don't Go Breaking My Heart]]", a duet John recorded with [[Kiki Dee]].
In 1973, Boettcher served as mixdown engineer on the Emitt Rhodes album ''Farewell to Paradise.'' In the mid-1970s, he sang backing vocals on a number of [[Elton John]] recordings, including "[[Don't Go Breaking My Heart]]", a duet John recorded with [[Kiki Dee]].

Revision as of 18:29, 2 August 2013

Curt Boettcher
Birth nameCurtis Roy Boettcher
Also known asCurt Boetcher, Curt Becher
Born(1944-01-07)January 7, 1944
OriginEau Claire, Wisconsin, United States
DiedJune 14, 1987(1987-06-14) (aged 43)
Los Angeles, California, United States
GenresPop, rock, folk, country, psychedelic
Occupation(s)Record producer, songwriter, musician, arranger
Years active1964–1983
LabelsEpic, Valiant, Warner Bros., Columbia, Elektra, Boardwalk
Websitelink

Curt Boettcher (January 7, 1944 – June 14, 1987) was an American singer, songwriter, musician, and record producer from Wisconsin. His career spanned 1964 to 1983. (In his later years he altered the spelling of his name to "Boetcher" and "Becher", before reverting to the original spelling of Boettcher.)

Boettcher was a pivotal figure in the mid-1960s emergence of Sunshine pop, influencing Brian Wilson before the production of Pet Sounds. Boettcher worked with The Association, Gary Usher, The Millennium, Sagittarius, and The Beach Boys, among others. Boettcher sang some background vocals on The Byrds' The Notorious Byrd Brothers album, a Gary Usher production.

The GoldeBriars

Boettcher entered the University of Minnesota in fall 1962, where in 1963 he formed the folk quartet The GoldeBriars with the Holmberg sisters, Dotti and Sheri, and Ron Neilsson. They relocated to Los Angeles after being signed by Epic Records, for whom they recorded and released two albums in 1964, The GoldeBriars and Straight Ahead! (A third was reportedly recorded in 1965 but withheld from release.) Under the guidance of recording producer Bob Morgan, the vocals were mixed upfront and enriched by double-tracking to sound like six voices. Prior to recording their third album, the group added drummer Ron Edgar (later of The Music Machine; Edgar also worked with Boettcher in the bands The Ballroom and The Millennium). According to music historian Joseph Lanza, the GoldeBriars' material tended to follow the standard folk formula of songs such as "Shenandoah", but "acoustically, their style blended the homespun and the sugarspun."[1] Boettcher arranged most of the group's songs, but he also contributed as a songwriter. Morgan, quoted in Lanza's Vanilla Pop, said that Boettcher's childhood as a navy brat influenced songs like "Haiku" on the album Straight Ahead!.[2] Bobb Goldsteinn, an accomplished songwriter (who wrote the 1963 folk-dixie hit "Washington Square" for the Village Stompers), became "Boettcher's manager [and] confidant", as well as lyricist for some GoldeBriars songs.[3] As manager, Goldsteinn inched the band in a more pop-flavored direction. [4]

The Association, The Ballroom, and Tommy Roe

Following the demise of The GoldeBriars, Boettcher moved into production and songwriting work for others, including Lee Mallory and The Association. In 1966, through his production partnership Our Productions, Boettcher produced the debut album by The Association, And Then... Along Comes the Association, released on Valiant Records. The album spawned two Top 10 hits, "Along Comes Mary" (which reached #7 in the U.S.) and "Cherish" (which reached #1). In 2012, original Association member Jim Yester said Valiant Records claimed the song sounded "too old and archaic", but the song's success "just showed we can have our archaic and eat it, too."[5] The album included the song "Message of Our Love", co-written by Boettcher and Tandyn Almer (who also wrote "Along Comes Mary").

Boettcher's wife Claudia said that Almer wrote "Along Comes Mary" as a slow song. Boettcher sped up the tempo and recorded a demo on which he sang the vocal. This demo was presented to The Association, who used it as a guide for their arrangement of the tune. It was the band's attempt to replicate and build on Boettcher's demo that became the group's first hit single (produced by Boettcher).

After the album achieved commercial success, according to a November 1966 story in Billboard, the band dropped their manager, Dean Fredericks, who in turn filed a breach of contract suit against the band, claiming they were bound by a seven-year agreement. After filing suit, Fredericks joined Our Productions. "Consequently," Billboard revealed, "[the] Association will no longer associate with Our Productions, and henceforth will be a&r'd [sic] by Jerry Yester, brother of Association member Jim Yester."[6] As a result of this dispute, despite his valuable contributions to the debut album's commercial breakthrough, Boettcher would no longer produce the band.

In a 1974 interview with ZigZag Magazine, Boettcher said that during this period he was under contract to Our Productions and on salary. This arrangement accorded him no royalties, but a tremendous amount of artistic freedom. "I wanted to keep on working, to be there. I think for a while I had more hours [of studio experience] for any producer my age. I used to practically live in the studio. And I used to work until I fell over. It was like an addiction.[7]

In 1966 he formed the group The Ballroom with Sandy Salisbury, Michelle O'Malley, and Jim Bell. The quartet recorded an album's worth of material, but other than two songs on a 1967 Warner Bros. 45 rpm single, the sessions remained unreleased until 2001.

In 1966, he produced two hit singles for Tommy Roe, "Sweet Pea" and "Hooray For Hazel." Production on both was credited to Boettcher's Our Productions partner, Steve Clark, but Boettcher subseqently claimed that he himself produced these recordings.[8] The following year, Boettcher produced Roe's album It's Now Winters Day (ABC Records).

The Millennium and Sagittarius

Boettcher met both Brian Wilson and producer Gary Usher while producing and mixing the first single by Lee Mallory, "That's the Way It's Gonna Be", issued on Valiant Records in 1966. Usher bought Boettcher's contract and signed him as a staff producer for Columbia Records. In 1967 he enlisted Boettcher to collaborate on a personal project, a studio band called Sagittarius, under whose name he had produced a single, "My World Fell Down", which became a minor hit. (It was sung by Glen Campbell, who was doing a lot of session work in L.A. at the time, with Bruce Johnston of the Beach Boys on backing vocals.) Because of the modest chart success of the single, Columbia requested a full album, only to discover there was no group. Usher and Boettcher became the studio group, and an album was completed and released in 1968 under the title Present Tense. (Usher and Boettcher are pictured on the cover.) Some of the songs were adapted from the Ballroom sessions, while others were re-recorded with new arrangements. The single version of "My World Fell Down" was edited differently on the album, omitting a bridge of musique concrète that was on the 45. A second single, "Hotel Indiscreet", recorded with Boettcher (and featuring a comedic non sequitur by the Firesign Theater), was released, but it failed to chart. The album was a commercial failure.

Usher's clout, as well as Boettcher's successful productions for The Association and Tommy Roe, convinced Columbia to finance Boettcher's own studio project. In 1967 he assembled a group of musicians and songwriters with whom he had previously worked or personally knew (including Sandy Salisbury, Lee Mallory, Joey Stec, and Michael Fennelly), as well as some top Los Angeles session musicians, and started recording an album under the group moniker The Millennium. The album was co-produced by Keith Olsen, who had been a friend of Boettcher since his college days. Their debut—and only—album, Begin, was the most expensive album ever recorded for Columbia at that point. Despite the release of several singles, sales were dismal and the project was considered a commercial flop. This was partially attributable to Boettcher's reluctance to tour. The group staged a few live performances in Los Angeles, but the difficulty of replicating the album in concert posed a large enough challenge to dissuade Boettcher from sustaining the band. Although the single "It's You" became a hit in several regions, there was no group to support it. "5 AM" also charted in the Philippines. The group recorded one final single, "Just About The Same" b/w "Blight", which wasn't issued at the time. Despite its commercial failure, the album is critically regarded as one of the finest pop albums from the late 1960s, and has been described at AllMusic as a "bona fide lost classic".[9]

Soon after The Millennium broke up, Boettcher's friend Gary Usher, fired by Columbia Records, started a record label called Together Records. He brought in Boettcher and Olsen as staff producers, and Boettcher was involved in several projects for the label. These included his first attempt at a solo album, as well as producing recordings for a Sandy Salisbury solo album, contributing to the second Sagittarius album, and co-producing with Olsen "The Moses Lake Recordings" by The Bards, which was a mixture of garage rock with psychedelia and sunshine pop elements. Though the second Sagittarius album, The Blue Marble, did see release (and also notched a minor entry on the singles chart with a cover of The Beach Boys' "In My Room", sung by Boettcher), and several Sandy Salisbury singles were released, the label failed before any of Boettcher's other work could be completed. (Some Boettcher projects for Together were released in the early 2000s). Among other Boettcher productions remaining unreleased are sessions for Twice Nicely, the band of the legendary Californian guitarist Waddy Wachtel and the singer Judy Pulver (co-writers of "Malachi Star", a song on Boettcher's 1973 solo album), a single for Don Grady of The Yellow Balloon fame, and sessions produced with Gary Usher of a guitar duo called Tom and Dick (Dick was songwriter David Batteau, who would later write songs with and for Boettcher in the band California). Former Millennium bandmate Ron Edgar played drums on the Tom and Dick sessions.

Solo recording and The Beach Boys

In the early 1970s, Boettcher had little commercial success and few rewarding recording projects. In 1971, at the insistence of Elektra Records founder and president Jac Holzman, who was a huge fan of Begin, Boettcher signed a deal with Elektra. He warned Holzman that the album would take a long time to produce, and started working on a solo album. The project got a boost when Boettcher met a young multi-instrumentalist named Web Burrell, and taking a cue from the early one-man albums by Emitt Rhodes, Boettcher decided to record the album in a similar fashion, using as few musicians as possible. (Boettcher and Burrell collaborated on at least three published songs.[10]) After almost two years of work, There's An Innocent Face was released in 1973 (under the name Curt Boetcher). It differed from his early work, being a collection of songs with country, sunshine pop, arena rock, and folk stylings. (However, as posthumous collections indicate, it was a continuation of the direction that the Millennium had taken with their unreleased post-Begin recordings.) The album was a commercial failure. He attempted to record a follow-up album, tentatively titled Chicken Little Was Right,[11] but it was never completed. A CD reissue by Rev-Ola Records shows that the arrangements were still to be worked out for most of the songs.

In 1973, Boettcher served as mixdown engineer on the Emitt Rhodes album Farewell to Paradise. In the mid-1970s, he sang backing vocals on a number of Elton John recordings, including "Don't Go Breaking My Heart", a duet John recorded with Kiki Dee.

Thereafter, his output as a musician and producer was limited and sporadic. His best-known work in the late 1970s was a 10-minute disco version of the song "Here Comes the Night" by The Beach Boys, which was a moderate hit in 1979 and was included on L.A. (Light Album); it was a remake of the original recording from their 1967 album Wild Honey. As Curt Becher he produced a disco version of Shortnin' Bread for The Beach Boys that emerged on some bootleg collections. He also produced Mike Love's solo album Looking Back With Love. Others productions were largely overlooked, such as the Geno Washington album That's Why Hollywood Loves Me and The Diamonds' Live And Well album. He died in 1987 at Los Angeles County Hospital while being treated for a lung infection.[12] Shortly before his death, he set up the Valley Center Studios with musician Mark Antaky and engineer Dave Jenkins, and was recording music with Randy California, the guitarist of Spirit. Those recordings have never been released.

Cover versions

The Brady Bunch recorded Boettcher's composition "I Just Want To Be Your Friend" on their 1972 album, Meet the Brady Bunch (Paramount Records).[13] Their 1973 follow-up album, The Brady Bunch Phonographic Album, included the Boettcher co-composition "There Is Nothing More To Say."[14]

The Sunshine Company, a Los Angeles rock band, recorded two Boettcher compositions, "I Just Want To Be Your Friend" (on the 1967 album Happy Is the Sunshine Company, Imperial Records 12359), and "If You Only Knew" (on the 1968 album The Sunshine Company, Imperial Records 12368).

The Hep Stars, a 1960s Swedish rock group whose line-up included Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus before they went on to greater fame in Abba, recorded four Boettcher compositions, "Another Time", "Musty Dusty" (co-written with Tandyn Almer), "Would You Like To Go" (co-written with Jules "Gary" Alexander of the Association), and "Spinning Spinning Spinning" (co-written with Ruthann Friedman).[15]

In 2013, Beth Sorrentino (formerly of the American rock band Suddenly, Tammy!) released Would You Like To Go: A Curt Boettcher Songbook, produced by Sean Slade and issued in Europe on the Basta label.[16] The album includes covers of well-known and obscure Boettcher songs and co-writes, as well as an idiosyncratic recording of "Along Comes Mary" because of the song's strong association with Boettcher. Sorrentino's recording of "You Know I've Found a Way" (co-written by Boettcher and Lee Mallory) was used as the soundtrack for the trailer of Rik Cordero's film Starla.[17]

Discography

As Artist:

As Producer:

Appears on:

References

  1. ^ Joseph Lanza, Vanilla Pop: Sweet Sounds from Frankie Avalon to ABBA, Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2005, pp. 114
  2. ^ Joseph Lanza, Vanilla Pop: Sweet Sounds from Frankie Avalon to ABBA, Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2005, pp. 114
  3. ^ Joseph Lanza, Vanilla Pop: Sweet Sounds from Frankie Avalon to ABBA, Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2005, pp. 115
  4. ^ Joseph Lanza, Vanilla Pop: Sweet Sounds from Frankie Avalon to ABBA, Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2005, pp. 115
  5. ^ Palisin, Steve, "The Association teams up with Long Bay Symphony", The Sun News, October 19, 2012
  6. ^ "Valiant Records, a 4-Star Loser, Now $1,500,000 Winner for Original Ops", Billboard, October 12, 1966
  7. ^ McCarthy, Ray, ZigZag Magazine 49, January 1975
  8. ^ Spectropop's Curt Boettcher page
  9. ^ The Millennium Begin at AllMusic
  10. ^ Curt Boettcher songwriting credits (incomplete) at CurtBoettcher.com]
  11. ^ Waddy Wachtel discography
  12. ^ Dawn Eden, liner notes for Ballroom CD Preparing for the Millennium, Rev-Ola, 1998
  13. ^ Meet the Brady Bunch at AllMusic
  14. ^ The Brady Bunch Phonographic Album at AllMusic
  15. ^ Hep Stars, It's Been A Long, Long Time (album)
  16. ^ Would You Like To Go at BastaMusic.com
  17. ^ Starla trailer on Vimeo

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