Posts Tagged ‘Cactus’

Parlour to Parlour, Episode 2: Leopold and his Fiction

parlour_to_parlour

To say that Sunday, February 15, 2009, was a busy day for me is an understatement. I had decided to devote the entire day to Parlour to Parlour shoots, after discovering that I couldn’t spread them across two days. Basically, nobody was willing to give up any of their precious Valentine’s Day hours for an interview. In hindsight, I should have known better than to propose V-day for anything other than a date. But all was well that ended well: I did have a date of my own on the 14th, and I made the rounds on the 15th to visit three different artists I had discovered through my time at Performer Magazine. Daniel James from Leopold and his Fiction was the first I met that day.


Standing next to the Happy Hollows‘ Sarah Negahdari at the Knockout in San Francisco’s Mission District, on the night I first saw Leopold and his Fiction perform live (the Hollows had just finished their opening set), I remarked to her that the band’s fierce grooves reminded me a lot of the blues rock & boogie of early the ’70s band Cactus. Her reaction to that statement was pretty much the same as that of Daniel James, Leopold’s chief songwriter, singer and guitarist, when I dropped in on his San Francisco apartment about six months later — “I’ve never heard them before.”

I get that a lot. (more…)

Lo-Fi Mojo: Cactus

Lo-Fi Mojo

From its inception, the band Cactus was always supposed to be a supergroup. The rhythm section of late-‘60s psychedelic sludge rockers Vanilla Fudge – namely, bassist Tim Bogert and drummer Carmine Appice – had planned to form a group with Jeff Beck and Rod Stewart, but their plans got sidetracked after Jeff Beck was laid up for a year and a half after a car crash. Rod Stewart ended up joining the Faces with fellow Jeff Beck Group member and future Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood.

Bogert and Appice eventually hooked up with Jeff Beck in 1972 to form Beck, Bogert & Appice, which adjourned after a couple of years and two albums (the self-title studio album, and Live In Japan).

In the meantime, Beck’s accident and lengthy recuperation didn’t put too much of a dent in Bogert’s and Appice’s plans. They found suitable journeymen replacements in guitarist Jim McCarty (from Mitch Ryder’s Detroit Wheels and The Buddy Miles Express) and singer Rusty Day (from the Amboy Dukes – yeah, The Nuge’s old band).

Call it a not-quite-as-super supergroup, but this lineup put out three albums of pure, unadulterated early ‘70s bloozy boogie rock before interband squabbling did ‘em in. Bogert and Appice hired a few more guns for a fourth combination live-and-in-studio album in ’72 before dissolving the band and joining Beck for BB&A.

Apparently, Cactus has been referred to as “The American Led Zeppelin,” but tracking down the original quote has proved elusive, so it’s tough to verify who said it, where and when. Nevertheless, the band’s short-but-impressive run turned enough heads so that, years later, such rockers as Van Halen, David Coverdale, Kid Rock and Ted Nugent, among others, have gone on record as being Cactus fans. (more…)