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The Association are an American pop band, formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1965. When their breakthrough came in 1966, their line-up consisted of Terry Kirkman, Russ Giguere, Jules Alexander, Jim Yester, Brian Cole and Ted Bluechel Jr. Following Alexander's departure in 1967, Larry Ramos came in and filled his place.
History
editIn 1962, Jules Alexander was in Hawaii, serving in the navy. Whilst there, he met traveling salesman Terry Kirkman. The two became close friends and remained in contact. When Jules was discharged from the navy a year later, the two moved to Los Angeles and played in clubs all in different parts of the city. The two became members of a thirteen-piece folk group called The Men. In 1965, the Men split up and six of their members, Alexander, Kirkman, Russ Giguere, Bob Page, Brian Cole and Ted Bluechel Jr., formed their own group. The band decided to spend six months practicing before performing on stage, during that time, Page left and Jim Yester replaced him. In late 1965, they signed to Jubilee Records. Jubilee label issued a single of "Babe I'm Gonna Leave You" (a song originally recorded by Joan Baez, later popularized by Led Zeppelin), but nothing happened. Finally, Valiant Records offered them a contract, with the first result being a version of Bob Dylan's "One Too Many Mornings", which was produced by Valiant's owner, Barry De Vorzon, at Gold Star Studios.
In July of 1966, their debut album, And Then... Along Comes the Association, was released. The track Along Comes Mary was an instant hit, charting at number 7 on the Billboard Hot 100[1] and their song Cherish would hit number one on the Hot 100 and remained there for three weeks straight, before being replaced by The Four Tops' Reach Out I'll Be There.[2] In November 1966, their second album, Renaissance was released, although none of their songs managed to meet the success that Along Comes Mary and Cherish did. In March 1967, Alexander left to move to India, and Larry Ramos (previously of New Christy Minstrels fame) came in and filled his place. Insight Out, their third album, was released on June 8, 1967 and first on Warner Bros. Records after Warner Bros. bought out Valiant. Two tracks from that album include "Windy" and "Never My Love". Windy went to number one on four different American and Canadian charts.[3][4] Never My Love charted at number two on the Billboard Hot 100, but was a chart-topper on the Cash Box 100 and Canadian RPM Top Singles.[5]
Four more albums were released from 1968 to 1972, Birthday (1968), The Association (1969), Stop Your Motor (1971), and Waterbeds in Trinidad! (1972). Alexander returned to the group in 1969, while Russ Giguere left in 1970 to pursue a solo career. He was replaced by Richard Thompson. A few months after the release of Waterbeds in Trinidad, bassist Brian Cole died aged 29 from a heroin overdose. The band saw a rotating list of personnel until the band split in 1978. The split was proven to be short, and they regrouped again the following year. The band has been performing non-stop since. The current version of the band is led by Jules Alexander and Jim Yester, as well as Del Ramos, brother of Larry Ramos, and Jordan Cole, son of Brian Cole. During the 1970s and 80s, the band went through numerous line-up changes, with, at one point, only one original member in the band. Past notable members include Jerry Yester, Andy Chapin, and Ray Pohlman.
Members
editCurrent
editImage | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jules Alexander | 1965–1967, 1969–1974, 1979–1989, 2012–present | Vocals, guitar, piano, bass |
| |
Jim Yester | 1965–1973, 1974–1977, 1979–1983, 2007–present | Vocals, guitar, keyboards | All releases | |
Bruce Pictor | 1985–present | Drums | None | |
Paul Holland | 1987-1989, 2014–present | Vocals, guitar, bass, keyboards | ||
Del Ramos | 1999–present | Sound engineer, vocals, bass | ||
Jordan Cole | Vocals, guitar, keyboards |
Former
editImage | Name | Years active | Instruments | Release contributions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Terry Kirkman | 1965-1972, 1979-1984 (died 2023) | Vocals, woodwind instruments | All releases | |
Russ Giguere | 1965-1970, 1979-2014 | Vocals, guitar |
| |
Brian Cole | 1965-1972 (died 1972) | Bass | All releases | |
Ted Bluechel Jr. | 1965-1978, 1979-1984 | Drums | ||
Bob Page | 1965 | Guitar | None | |
Larry Ramos | 1967-1975, 1979-2014 (died 2014) | Vocals, guitar | All releases from Insight Out (1967) | |
Richard Thompson | 1970-1974, 1979-1980 | Keyboard |
| |
Wolfgang Melz | 1972 | Bass | None | |
Mike Berkowitz | Drums | |||
David Vaught | 1972-1978 | Bass | ||
Maurice Miller | Drums | |||
Jerry Yester | 1973-1974, 1978 | Guitar | ||
Art Johnson | 1974-1975 | |||
Dwayne Smith | Keyboards | |||
Larry Brown | 1975-1977 | Vocals | ||
Andy Chapin | 1975-1976 (died 1985) | Keyboards | ||
Jay Gruska | 1976 | |||
David Morgan | 1976-1978 | |||
Ric Ulsky | 1977-1978, 1980-1984 | |||
Cliff Wooley | 1977-1978 | Guitar | ||
John William Tuttle | 1978 | |||
Jack Harris | ||||
Davey Bernie | 1978 | Bass | ||
Ray Pohlman | 1979-1980 (died 1990) | |||
Keith Moret | 1983 | |||
Joe Lamanno | 1984 | |||
Brian Puckett | 1984-1985 | Drums | ||
Mike Peed | 1984 | Keyboards | ||
Donni Gougeon | 1984-1987, 1999 | |||
Paul Beach | 1985-1989 | Bass | ||
Chris Urmston | 1987 | Keyboards | ||
Bob Werner | 1999-2007 | Guitar | ||
David Jackson | 2007 | |||
Blair Anderson | 2008 | Drums | ||
Godfrey Townsend | 2012 | Guitar |
Timeline
editLineups
editPeriod | Members |
---|---|
1965 |
|
1965 – March 1967 |
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March 1967 – Late 1968 |
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Late 1968 – June 1970 |
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June 1970 – August 1972 |
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August–December 1972 |
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December 1972 – mid-1973 |
|
mid–late 1973 |
|
late 1973 – late 1974 |
|
late 1974 – mid-1975 |
|
mid–late 1975 |
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late 1975 – mid-1976 |
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mid-1976 |
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mid-1976 – mid-1977 |
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mid-1977 |
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mid-1977 – 1978 |
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1978 |
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mid-1978 |
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late-1978 |
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December 1978 |
|
December 1978 – September 1979 | Disbanded |
September 1979 – 1980 |
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1980 – June 1983 |
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June 1983 – July 1984 |
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July–September 1984 |
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September–November 1984 |
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November 1984 |
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early 1985 – early 1987 |
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1987 |
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1987 – early 1989 |
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early 1989 – 1999 |
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1999 |
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1999–2007 |
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2007 |
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2007 |
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2007–2008 |
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2008 |
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2008 – January 2012 |
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January–February 2012 |
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February–March 2012 |
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March 2012 – January 2014 |
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January–February 2014 |
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February 2014 – present |
|
References
edit- ^ Gilliland, John. "Show 37 - The Rubberization of Soul: The great pop music renaissance. [Part 3]". UNT Digital Library. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ tolsen (2013-01-02). "Billboard Hot 100". Billboard. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ "Cash Box Top 100 7/08/67". tropicalglen.com. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ "Wayback Machine" (PDF). 2022-10-11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-10-11. Retrieved 2023-04-04.
- ^ "Cash Box Top 100 10/14/67". tropicalglen.com. Retrieved 2023-04-04.