Hilario D. "Larry" Ramos Jr. (April 19, 1942 – April 30, 2014)[1] was an American guitarist, banjo player and vocalist known primarily for his work with the 1960s pop band the Association. In 1963, he won a Grammy Award with the New Christy Minstrels, with Ramos being the first Asian American to do so.[2][3]
Larry Ramos | |
---|---|
Born | Hilario Ramos April 19, 1942 Waimea, Kauai County, Hawaii, U.S. |
Died | April 30, 2014 Clarkston, Washington, U.S. | (aged 72)
Occupation(s) | Singer, guitarist, banjo player |
Spouse | Helene (m.1964–2014) |
Children | 5 |
Early years
editRamos was of Filipino descent[1] with a blend of Chinese and Spanish.[4] He was born to father Larry Ramos Sr., who operated pool halls in Honolulu, Kakaako and Kalaheo,[4][5] and mother Pat Ramos. He was raised in Waimea, Kauai County, Hawaii.[2]
Ramos' father taught him how to play the ukulele, beginning with "My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean" at the age of four.[6] Ramos recalled practicing on the floor of the hotel gift shop where his mother worked and sleeping with the instrument so that he could play upon wakening.[6] He won a local music contest with his sister at the age of five, and when he was seven, Ramos played ukulele on The Arthur Godfrey Show after winning a statewide ukulele contest organized by Godfrey.[6] He played ukulele and sang in the 1950 musical romance film Pagan Love Song, starring Esther Williams, after Arthur Freed had heard him playing the song in his mother's hotel gift shop.[6] However, Ramos' part singing "The House of Singing Bamboo" was cut in the final edit to shorten the film's running time.[7]
In the early 1950s, the family moved to Bell, California.[8] At 13, Ramos performed in the national tour of the Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II musical The King and I as understudy (to Patrick Adiarte) in the role of the crown prince of Thailand opposite Yul Brynner.[4][6] He performed the lead role with Leonard Graves and Patricia Morison in 1955 (while the film was being produced) at the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto.[9] Concerned that her son's education was inadequate, Ramos' mother withdrew him from the tour after a year,[6] and he attended Bell High School before majoring in political science at East Los Angeles College and Cerritos College.[8]
Career
editThe New Christy Minstrels
editRamos joined the New Christy Minstrels, an American folk music band, in 1962.[8] The group served as a backup band on The Andy Williams Show.[1] At the audition, he noted that he was "the only brown kid in the group" and he did not hear back from them for several weeks.[6] When they eventually called him, they informed him that the delay was caused by the show's producers because he would be the only non-white member of the band.[6][8]
Ramos settled into a role providing vocals and playing banjo as well as other stringed instruments.[1] He was noted as being "one of the more popular ones" as he "stood out like a sore thumb."[6]
The New Christy Minstrels recorded their 1962 debut album Presenting the New Christy Minstrels, which subsequently won a 1963 Grammy Award for Best Performance by a Chorus, making Ramos the first Asian-American to win the award.[10]
Ramos toured almost every day for three years after joining the band.[6] While on tour, he met and married his wife, who was originally from Grangeville, Idaho,[7] in Reno, Nevada.[6][11] After the birth of his twin daughters, he did not see his family again for six months, prompting him to quit the band in January 1966[8] because he "wanted to watch his children grow up."[6]
The band's producers vowed that he would never work in music again.[6]
The Association
editAfter quitting the New Christy Minstrels, Ramos worked as a studio musician and backup singer,[6] releasing a solo single in 1966,[8] "It'll Take a Little Time"[12] (later collected in the 2002 album Anthology: Just The Right Sound by the Association).[13]
In 1967, Terry Kirkman of the Association asked Ramos to join the band because their lead guitarist, Jules Alexander, was planning to leave the band for a spiritual pilgrimage to India.[6][8] According to Ramos, he attended an Association concert in the San Francisco Bay Area to get a feel for their music, but after bass player Brian Cole injured his fingers in a firecracker accident,[8] Alexander asked Ramos to take the stage as the lead guitarist with only a few hours of notice. Ramos learned the chords after listening to the band's two albums for two hours.[8]
Later that year, Ramos performed with the band at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. While he was with the Association, he recorded five studio albums and several singles.[2] Most notably, Ramos contributed lead vocals for the hit singles "Windy" (along with Russ Giguere) and "Never My Love" (along with Terry Kirkman) for the Association's first studio album with Ramos, the gold-selling Insight Out.[8]
Ramos left the Association in 1975 over differences regarding the band’s future musical direction, but he reunited with the surviving members in 1979.[4] In 1984, Ramos and Giguere acquired the rights to the band's name and Ramos was considered its leader.[8]
On February 24, 2014, Ramos made his final performance with the band,[2] two sold-out shows at the Blue Fox Theatre[14] in Grangeville, Idaho with proceeds to benefit a local Relay For Life.[15]
After Ramos' death, his vocal parts were taken by Paul Holland.
Illness and death
editRamos, a longtime resident of Grangeville, Idaho, since the 1980s,[14] suffered numerous ailments over his last few years.[1] On August 31, 2011, he suffered a heart attack.[4] In 2013, he was diagnosed with metastatic melanoma. He died at a hospital in Clarkston, Washington on April 30, 2014, at the age of 72.[4]
Discography
editThe New Christy Minstrels
editAlbums
editTitle | Year |
---|---|
Presenting the New Christy Minstrels | 1962 |
The New Christy Minstrels In Person | 1962 |
The New Christy Minstrels Tell Tall Tales! (Legends and Nonsense) | 1963 |
Ramblin' Featuring Green, Green | 1963 |
Merry Christmas! | 1963 |
Today and Other Songs from 'Advance to the Rear' | 1964 |
Land of Giants | 1964 |
The New Christy Minstrels Sing and Play Cowboys and Indians | 1965 |
Chim Chim Cher-ee | 1965 |
The New Christy Minstrels | 1965 |
The Quiet Sides of the New Christy Minstrels | 1965 |
The Wandering Minstrels | 1965 |
Amore, Ritorna... | 1965 |
Singles
editYear | Single (A-side, B-side) |
---|---|
1963 | "Denver"
b/w "Liza Lee" |
"Green, Green"
b/w "The Banjo" (Non-album track) | |
"Saturday Night"
b/w "The Wheeler Dealers" | |
1964 | "Today"
b/w "Miss Katy Cruel" (Non-album track) |
"Silly Ol' Summertime"
b/w "The Far Side of the Hill" (from The Quiet Sides of The New Christy Minstrels) | |
"This Ol' Riverboat" (New recording; non-album track)
b/w "Same Ol' Huckleberry Finn" (Non-album track) | |
"Gotta Get A'Goin"
b/w "Down the Road I Go" | |
1965 | "Chim, Chim, Cheree"
b/w "They Gotta Quit Kickin' My Dog Around" (from The New Christy Minstrels Sing and Play Cowboys and Indians) |
"The River"
b/w "Se piangi, se ridi" (from In Italy...In Italian) | |
"A Little Bit of Happiness"
b/w "Jim 'N I, Him 'N I, Flying in the Gemini" (Non-album track) | |
"Born to Be Free"
b/w "Everybody Loves Saturday Night" (from The Wandering Minstrels) |
The Association
editAlbums
editTitle | Year |
---|---|
Insight Out | 1967 |
Birthday | 1968 |
The Association | 1969 |
Stop Your Motor | 1971 |
Waterbeds in Trinidad! | 1972 |
Singles
editYear | Titles |
---|---|
1967 | "No Fair at All" /
"Looking Glass" |
"Windy"
b/w "Sometime" | |
"Never My Love" /
"Requiem for the Masses" | |
1968 | "Everything That Touches You"
b/w "We Love Us" (from Insight Out) |
"Time for Livin'"
b/w "Birthday Morning" | |
"Six Man Band"
b/w "Like Always" (from Birthday) | |
1969 | "The Time It Is Today"
b/w "Enter the Young" (from And Then...Along Comes the Association) |
"Goodbye, Columbus"
b/w "The Time It Is Today" (from Birthday) | |
"Under Branches"
b/w "Hear in Here" (from Birthday) | |
1970 | "Yes, I Will"
b/w "I Am Up for Europe" |
"Dubuque Blues"
b/w "Are You Ready" | |
"Just About the Same"
b/w "Look at Me, Look at You" (from The Association) | |
"Along the Way"
b/w "Traveler's Guide" | |
1971 | "P.F. Sloan"
b/w "Traveler's Guide" |
"Bring Yourself Home"
b/w "It's Gotta Be Real" | |
"That's Racin'"
b/w "Makes Me Cry" (alternate title for "Funny Kind of Song") | |
1972 | "Darlin' Be Home Soon"
b/w "Indian Wells Woman" |
"Come the Fall"
b/w "Kicking the Gong Around" | |
1973 | "Names, Tags, Numbers and Labels"
b/w "Rainbows Bent" (from Waterbeds in Trinidad!) |
1975 | "One Sunday Morning"
b/w "Life Is a Carnival" |
"Sleepy Eyes"
b/w "Take Me to the Pilot" | |
1981 | "Dreamer"
b/w "You Turn the Light On" |
"Small Town Lovers"
b/w "Across the Persian Gulf" |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e "Passings: Larry Ramos, Billy Frank Jr". Los Angeles Times. May 5, 2014.
- ^ a b c d Swanson, Dave (May 7, 2014). "Larry Ramos of the Association Dies at Age 72". Ultimate Classic Rock.
- ^ "First Asian Americans to Win Grammy Awards". TRAKTIVIST. 2021-03-11. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
- ^ a b c d e f Harada, Wayne (May 4, 2014). "Larry Ramos (1942-2014)". Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- ^ "Larry Ramos April 19, 1942 – April 30, 2014". Lewiston Morning Tribune. May 4, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Bauer, Jennifer K (19 February 2014). "The Association's Larry Ramos says farewell after a career that took him from childhood stardom to the top of the Billboard". Moscow-Pullman Daily News. Inland360. Retrieved 2016-12-12.
- ^ a b Ramos, Larry (19 February 2014). "'It's probably why I became a singer... ': Ramos talks on career beginnings, The Association" (Interview). Interviewed by David Rauzi. Idaho County Free Press. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ramos, Larry (11 April 2013). "Into the next stage: Interview with Larry Ramos of the Association" (Interview). Interviewed by Guy Aoki. The Rafu Shimpo. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- ^ "Larry Ramos on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-30.[user-generated source]
- ^ Chong, Raymond Douglas (2023-02-06). "The story behind the first Asian American to win a Grammy". AsAmNews. Retrieved 2023-02-15.
- ^ Palmer, Lorie (July 2008). "A Familiar Face In Small-Town Idaho" (PDF). Ruralite. pp. 12–13. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- ^ "It'll Take A Little Time" at Discogs
- ^ Anthology: Just The Right Sound (2002) at Discogs (list of releases)
- ^ a b Palmer, Lorie (5 February 2014). "The Association: Ramos to offer 'farewell concert' Feb. 24". Idaho County Free Press. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- ^ "Larry Ramos, The Association concert raises $17,000 for Relay for Life". Idaho County Free Press. 5 March 2014. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
External links
edit- Rauzi, David (25 February 2014). "Larry Ramos Farewell Concert (photo gallery)". Idaho County Free Press. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- Watada, Terry (1 December 2015). "Cherish is the Word". tumblr. AsianAms Making Music. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
- The New Christy Minstrels - Michael Row the Boat Ashore on YouTube Ramos sings a verse as "Charlie Row the Junk Ashore" in Chinglish/Engrish at 2:20
- Pimentel, Joseph (10 April 2013). "Famous unknown inspired many Asian American musicians". The Inquirer. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
- Ramos, Larry (August 2011). "Along Comes Larry: A Conversation with Larry Ramos". Confessions of a Pop Culture Addict (Interview). Interviewed by Sam Tweedle. Retrieved 13 December 2016.
- Ryan, Tim (10 March 2000). "Fame by Association". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 13 December 2016.