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Rotary Connection was an American psychedelic soul band, formed in Chicago in 1966.

In addition to their own recordings, including their 1967 debut album Rotary Connection, the band backed Muddy Waters on his 1968 psychedelic blues album Electric Mud. The band's members included Minnie Riperton, who would later emerge as a solo artist.

CareerEdit

Foundation and debut albumEdit

The highly experimental band was the idea of Marshall Chess, son of Chess Records founder Leonard Chess.<ref name="LarkinSM">Template:Cite book</ref> Marshall was the director behind a start-up label, Cadet Concept Records, and wanted to focus on music outside of the blues and rock genres, which had made the Chess label popular.<ref name="LarkinSM"/> This led Marshall to turn his attention to the burgeoning psychedelic movement. He recruited Charles Stepney, a vibraphonist and classically trained arranger and producer. Marshall then recruited members of a little-known white rock band, the Proper Strangers: Bobby Simms, Mitch Aliotta, and Ken Venegas. Sidney Barnes, a songwriter within the Chess organization, also joined, as did Judy Hauff and a Chess receptionist named Minnie Riperton, who would later be successful in her own solo career.<ref name="LarkinSM"/> Marshall also called up prominent session musicians associated with the Chess label, including guitarist Phil Upchurch and drummer Morris Jennings.<ref name="LarkinSM"/> Chess described the band's members as "the hottest, most avant garde rock guys in Chicago".<ref name="Shannon">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The band released their self-titled debut album in late 1967.<ref name="LarkinSM"/> It had various styles, borrowing heavily from pop, rock, and soul, but was not radio friendly. The album also boasted an Eastern influence through its use of the sitar on the tracks "Turn Me On" and "Memory Band". Stepney's arrangements, brought to life by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, imbued the album with a certain dreamlike quality; this would become a trademark of both the arranger and the mouthpiece.

Electric Mud and The Howlin' Wolf AlbumEdit

As a result of the success of The Rotary Connection, Chess felt that he could revive the career of bluesmen Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf, by recording two albums of experimental, psychedelic blues with members of Rotary Connection as the backing band for the singers, producing the albums Electric Mud (1968) and The Howlin' Wolf Album (1969).<ref name="Murray">Template:Cite book</ref> Chess hoped the new albums would sell well among fans of psychedelic rock bands influenced by Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf.<ref name="Humphrey">Template:Cite book</ref> In place of Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf's regular musicians were Gene Barge, Pete Cosey, Roland Faulkner, Morris Jennings, Louis Satterfield, Charles Stepney and Phil Upchurch.<ref name="Cohodas-289">Template:Cite book</ref> Cosey, Upchurch and Jennings joked about calling the group "The Electric Niggers".<ref name="Cohodas-289"/> Marshall Chess liked the suggestion, but Leonard Chess refused to allow the name.<ref name="Cohodas-289"/> Ultimately, blues purists criticized the psychedelic sound of Electric Mud and The Howlin' Wolf Album.<ref name="Humphrey"/>

Further albums, Texas International Pop Festival and disbandmentEdit

In 1968, Rotary Connection released their second and third albums, Aladdin and Peace.<ref name="LarkinSM"/> Aladdin found Riperton assuming a more prominent vocal role than the "background instrument" status she had on the debut. The latter was a Christmas release, with strong messages of love and understanding for a nation in the grips of Vietnam. The album's cover art featured a hippie Santa Claus. Peace was notable for being involved in controversy: an anti-war cartoon, in a December 1968 edition of Billboard magazine, featured a graphic image of a bruised and bloodied Santa on a Vietnam battlefield. Mistaking this cartoon for the album's cover art, a drunken executive at Montgomery Ward cancelled all shipments of the album.

On August 30, 1969, the band played at the Texas International Pop Festival followed by the Palm Beach Pop Festival on November 29. Rotary Connection released three more albums: Songs, in 1969, a collection of drastic reworkings of other artists' songs, including Otis Redding's "Respect" and The Band's "The Weight"; Dinner Music in 1970,<ref name="LarkinSM"/> in which they added elements of folk and country into the mix along with some electronic experimentation; and Hey, Love in 1971,<ref name="LarkinSM"/> a more jazz-oriented LP on which the band was billed as the New Rotary Connection. From this album came "I Am the Black Gold of the Sun".

The outfit disbanded in 1974.<ref name="LarkinSM"/>

RevivalEdit

As part of the documentary film series The Blues (2003), produced by Martin Scorsese, members of the Rotary Connection recorded with rapper Chuck D and members of The Roots, to reflect the legacy of Electric Mud (1968).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

DiscographyEdit

Main albums

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As backing band

Compilations

  • 2006: Black Gold: The Very Best of Rotary Connection

Further readingEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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