Beefy Red was an American, San Francisco Bay Area music band (1969–1972) based in Marin County, California, United States, which played at various Bay Area venues, including Bill Graham's Fillmore West from October 22–25 in 1970.[1] Beefy Red performed frequently at San Anselmo's 'The Lion's Share', a club often cited as one of the most historic in the history of the Marin County music scene.[2][3] The group was most noted for playing "swinging R&B" [4] but played other syles like blues and jazz.
Beefy Red | |
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Origin | Marin County, California, United States |
Genres | R&B, blues, jazz rock |
Years active | 1969–1972 |
Past members | Mark Isham Barry Finnerty John Whitelaw Irwin Goldfeld Ned Appleby Kirk Willat Jim Checkley James Preston Bruce Saxton L.B. 'Kyle' Keilman Phil Wood Jim Carraway Luke Ehrlich |
In 2008 Beefy Red was included by Paul Liberatore, of the Marin Independent Journal, on a list of potential nominees for a proposed 'Marin Music Museum'.[5]
Notable members
editMembers included later solo recording artist and composer Mark Isham on trumpet and soprano saxophone, and Barry Finnerty on electric guitar and some lead vocals, who was later a performing/recording artist with Miles Davis, the Crusaders and the Brecker Brothers among many others. Finnerty, as the group's arranger, also wrote horn charts for the band.[4]
Other members
editOther members included the late John Whitelaw (died 2006) on electric bass and some lead vocals, the late Irwin Goldfeld (aka Eric Gold, died circa 1991) on tenor saxophone, the late Ned Appleby (died 2000) on trumpet, Jim Checkley on electric guitar, Kirk Willat on Hammond Organ and some lead vocals, the late James (Jim) Preston (died 2014) [6] on drums and some lead vocals (like Isham, a later member of the Sons of Champlin, Preston also performed with Moby Grape and other groups), Bruce Saxton on tenor saxophone, L.B. 'Kyle' Keilman on harmonica (whose guest appearance on a later Sons of Champlin album was called "great harmonica" in Rolling Stone #200; he also recorded on several tracks on CD's by Ed Mann), Phil Wood on flugelhorn (yet another of the Beefy Red alumni who performed and recorded with The Sons Of Champlin), and Jim Carraway on percussion.
Break up
editFailure to obtain a recording contract put pressure on individual members to find more profitable enterprises, and the group played its final concert in Davis, California on Friday, January 14, 1972.
References
edit- ^ "Fillmore West Shows". Chickenonaunicycle.com. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ [1] Archived January 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Paul Liberatore (2009-10-29). "Paul Liberatore: Marin's 'Planetwalker' moves on - Marin Independent Journal". Marinij.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-07. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ a b Hamlin, Jesse (2005-07-04). "Jazz guitarist Barry Finnerty knows how to groove alone to make music". Sfgate.com. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ "A list of reader nominees for a Marin music museum - Marin Independent Journal". Marinij.com. 2008-04-17. Archived from the original on 2012-02-23. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ "Sons of Champlin > Official Website". Archived from the original on 2009-05-19. Retrieved 2009-03-15.