Presenting the best of arts and entertainment in the Chicago area
Sunday, May 26, 2024
Chicago band The Return of the Flock to bring its innovative sound to Ravinia in Highland Park
By ERIC SCHELKOPF
In the 1960s, Chicago band The Flock broke new musical ground when they added an electric violin to complement its jazz-rock sound.
The Flock's inventive sound won over acclaimed blues guitarist John Mayall, who had words of praise for the band after he shared the stage with the group. For those wondering when The Flock would return, the wait is over.
Now anchored by original members Jerry Goodman and Jerry Smith, The Return of the Flock also features two-time Grammy Award winner and Evanston resident Howard Levy. The band will perform at 7:30 p.m. June 7 at Ravinia Festival, 200 Ravinia Park Road, Highland Park.
Gates open at 5 p.m. Lawn admission tickets are $35, available at Ravinia's website, ravinia.org.
I had the chance to talk to Smith about the upcoming show.
Q – Great talking to you. Congratulations on your recent 51st wedding anniversary.
Thanks very much! It's only fitting that I met my
wife, Mary Louise, at Mercury Records in Chicago in 1971.
She was the
secretary to the president of the record label.
Q – Of course, The Return of The Flock will perform June 7
at Ravinia. What made the band want to perform together again and what
do you think Howard Levy brings to the mix?
We had been toying with the idea of reforming The
Flock for several years, but the personnel did not seem to fit
perfectly. Jerry Goodman lives in Oregon and was interested in playing
music with some of us in Chicago and we formed the band Dinosaur Exhibit
performing only one Flock tune (we played more mainstream-type music).
As we made various changes to the personnel, things started to really
click. Howard Levy sat in with us, at times playing harmonica, and Jerry
and Howard have recorded together in the past.
It was magical when
they were on stage together with us. We felt the time was right to
reintroduce the Flock, and also introduce the band to new listeners.
We
have fans both here and abroad that would love to catch us one more
time. We are performing original Flock tunes from our Columbia recordings as well as some of Jerry Goodman's beautiful originals and a
Mahavishnu Orchestra trilogy that is very moving.
We most likely would
have had this group together earlier, but the pandemic set us back –
like many things. As far as what Howard brings to us, he is an amazing
musician who understands and loves this type of avant-garde jazz rock
music.
He's a super person and knows how to play in various time
signatures. We are thrilled with him and each and every musician in the
band.
Q– Losing The Flock lead singer and guitarist Fred
Glickstein last year must have been hard. What do you think his biggest
contribution to the band was?
Fred was central to the creation of our new type of
music that we introduced back in 1969. Jerry Goodman was a classically
trained musician who also played guitar and we all fed off of one
another, creating something new and different at that time.
We miss Fred
dearly and I had conversations with his wife Bobbie after Fred's
passing. We wanted her approval to resurrect this project and she was
full in on it! This really is a tribute to Fred and [saxophonist] Rick
Canoff, who we lost many years ago.
Q – Noted guitarist John Mayall wrote the liner notes for
your debut album after seeing the band perform at Kinetic Playground in
Chicago. He said, “I got close to going berserk over their prodigious
and varied musical talent. (It’s) an exciting new direction in
contemporary music, a subtle fusion of sounds drawn from the bedrock of
blues, jazz, gospel, rock, country and many other sources.”
When the
band first formed, did you see yourselves as breaking new musical
ground? How would you compare the Chicago music scene back then to the
Chicago music scene today?
John Mayall definitely was helpful in getting us
noticed. With commercial-free FM radio on the rise, we saw music lovers
gravitating to all new types of music and appreciating what they heard.
Having a folk singer like Buffy Saint-Marie, The Flock, and The Who on
the same bill, was very well received back then as concert goers were
digging everything thrown at them. In Europe, we headlined a tremendous
amount of shows and performed at many festivals as well as The Royal
Albert Hall in London.
We simply felt we had music that we wanted to
express to others and the timing was right for us. The music scene
today, per se, is a bit different.
There are not as many clubs and
venues that we had in Chicago as people have other interests in their
lives. On any given weekend, most teens either went to the movies or
clubs to listen to the local bands.
We had The Buckinghams, Ides of
March, The Cryan' Shames, and many other local bands performing all the
time. It definitely was a tremendous experience for everyone.
Q – I understand The Flock has unreleased material. Do you see the material ever being released?
I don't see the material being released at this time.
Sony, previously Columbia, owns tape of recordings we made at CBS in
Chicago, but these were more or less recordings of ideas we had for new
material.
Q – At the Kinetic Playground, The Flock performed with
the likes of Mayall, Johnny Winter, Richie Havens, Ten Years After, Bo
Diddley and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. What was it like playing
with bands of such caliber? What did you learn from the experience?
We also had several performances with Santana, Jimi
Hendrix, The Who, Grateful Dead, Ike and Tina Turner and many other
prominent groups. They were all great experiences for us, getting to
know the bands and understanding that we were all from different
backgrounds with different tastes in music.
Some reached greater success
than others. Actually, we were in awe of most all the groups, but we
understood that we all came from humble beginnings.
I wouldn't trade the
experience for anything.
Q – After the June 7 show, what is next for The Return of The Flock? Will you be doing more shows or perhaps releasing new material?
The plan is to kick off [The Return of] The Flock at
Ravinia and we do plan on pushing for more shows soon. We will get this
performance under our belt and discuss the future soon.
No comments:
Post a Comment