BOSS
written by J. Wenzel - Downey Music BMI
BOSS-
AVAILABLE NOW on YepRoc.com
While
the Carpenters are the most famous musical group to come from
my hometown of Downey, California, I have to admit they aren't
my favorite. Through the years I've come to appreciate Karen's
melancholy vocals and admire Richard's arranging chops but,
none the less, to me the greatest band to have risen up from
Downey's old orange groves and new tract homes of the early
1960's were The Rumblers. And their signature song was the tough
instrumental, BOSS!
Often
classified as a "surf" band, The Rumblers were actually
a hard rocking, sharp dressing R+B combo who were described
by their original bassist, Wayne Matteson, as "a black
band with white skin." The Rumblers recorded BOSS in the
backroom of a Downey record store called Wenzel's Music and
it was first released in 1962 on the Downey Records label (A
small label run by the record shop owner Bill Wenzel with his
son Jack, who had their biggest success with the surf classic
PIPELINE by the Chantays as well as cutting other great surf,
R+B, blues, rockabilly sides through the late fifties and sixties).
BOSS was a fairly big regional hit in California (it even charted
to some extent nationally) and is now considered one of the
essential early surf rock records. Despite recording some fantastic
R+B, surf and proto-garage-punk instrumental follow ups, The
Rumblers never had another hit and disbanded in 1965.
Bill
Wenzel's other son, Tom (along with Tom's lovely wife Maxine),
kept the record store going as an "oldies" store long
after the glory days of the Downey Records label. When my brother
Phil and I were kids we considered it a Mecca of sorts. It was
the place where we could find old, rare blues, country, rockabilly
and do-wop 45s, 78s and LPs. After I grew up and moved out of
town, I'd still drive back to Wenzel's to see what "new
old records" they had in stock. One day at Wenzel's, after
The Blasters started getting well known, I was lucky enough
to meet one of the original Rumblers, guitarist Johnny Kirkland,
who just happened to have stopped by that day. Well, to say
that I gushed over him like a kid meeting Santa Claus would
be an understatement. He just smiled as this wild young guy
with a pompadour raved on and on about The Rumblers and how
raw and powerful their records were. He was extremely kind and
patient with me (as is another Rumbler I still cross paths with,
saxophonist/philosopher Rex De Long). Sadly, Johnny Kirkland
passed away a few years after that and Wenzel's Music finally
closed it's doors in 2002.
My
version of BOSS was recorded a couple years ago as a bonus track
for my WEST OF THE WEST tribute to California songwriters CD.
While I crank up my electric guitars, my fellow Downey guy and
Rumblers connoisseur, Blaster Bill Bateman pounds out the big
BOSS beat on the drums along with long time Guilty Man and long
board surfer, Gregory Boaz, who does his always expert job on
the throbbing electric bass. The superb engineer Craig Parker
Adams recorded us at his Winslow Court Studio in Los Angeles.
I had a ball finally recording a song that meant a lot to me
growing up and I hope you get a kick out of it. If you do, I
then suggest you look for some of the Rumblers tracks that are
available on a variety of surf and instrumental rock and roll
reissue CDs. Even better, go looking for some of those old Downey
Records 45s. You might even like them more than The Carpenters.
Dave
Alvin - Sept 23, 2008
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