The Bands
Over the years I've been in a number of bands playing 5-nights
week paying my dues. I started out in High School and played
professionally for 10 years after that.
The Andy Gootch Band
The Andy Gootch Band
played mostly in the New York Hudson Valley area. It was the first band that really did original music thanks to Tom Christopher who wrote all of the original tunes we performed. We played places like the Last Chance Saloon in Poughkeepsie opening for bands like Papa John
Creech. This was one of the last bands that I was in and it lasted from 1979 to 1981. This bad was actually run like a business. We put the money we made in the band and drew a salary. We have a road crew that really cared about the band and made sure that everything was perfect. It was arealy joy to play with
Gootch.I then moved on to another original band called Steeplechase. I replaced a keyboard player who was leaving. I don't have any pictures from Steeplechase. We worked for the same agency
(CTA) and were goods friends with
Twisted Sister and opened up for bands like The Good Rats and Patty Smith. The Good Rats are probably some of the nicest guys in Rock and Roll. I met Joe Franco years later and he greeted me like I was an old friend. He's a really nice guy who is an extremely talented drummer.
It's difficult to explain to a band today what it was like playing in the 70's. The 1970s were a magical age. Peppi Marchello of the Good Rats said the best, "You see it was a different world physically. There
were a lot more people at the age of partying. There are many more Baby Boomers than there are Generation
X-ers. Number one, we were dealing with baby boomers. Number two, the drinking age was 18, now it's 21.
Number three, the cops used to look the other way, and now they're looking for you. This was a time when everybody was partying. We were working six or seven nights a week, primarily in the Tri-State area. This is
the most populated area in the country, and any direction four hours from where we live, we could still get home that night and not run up big bills." I was very lucky to be a
musician during this time.
This was when I turned to computers. I had my own software business that created MIDI Librarian software for the Apple ][+ and IBM Personal Computer. This was before Microsoft Windows and when I saw Windows V1.0
loved it. After programming all my own menus and display routines, I couldn't wait start developing for Windows and have all that taken care of for me. It wasn't until Windows V2.0 that this really happened.
Tracer
Tracer
was primarily a Rockland County band.
Rich
Steele on guitar, Ed Courtney on bass, and Peter Green on
drums. Peter was a human metronome. I've never played with a
drummer that played as hard or in perfect time as Peter. He is a
rock! Unfortunately, Peter left this world in January 2006 and
he is sorely missed by his family and friends. Ed is just as solid a bass player. Anyone could sound good
with those two guys behind you. in 1980 Richie left the group to
join the award winning kid's TV show: Hot Hero Sandwich.
Tracer had a cult following in Rockland County and the
fans were really a great bunch of people. It was good to play to
people you knew and who appreciated you. A far better experience
than some of the gigs we did with Glyder where was as just one
club after the next of people you've never seen before.
Tracer was also the first band that my parents came to see me
play in. I think they really understood my passion for
performing once they saw me on stage and saw the audience
reaction. It's like a drug you know.
Glyder & Steeplechase
The picture on the left
was taken when I was in Glyder. I was about 20 year old
at the time.
Gary Adamson was the drummer in this band, and Tom
Christopher from who I later played in the Andy Gootch
band played guitar for Glyder. We played everything from
Beatles to Led Zeppelin. Lots and lots of medleys. (I
hate medleys!)
This was my first band that worked for Creative Talent
Association (CTA, w/Kevin and Marty) the same agency that
managed Twisted Sister. I later played keys for Steeplechase who
were good friends with Twisted Sister because we played all the
same clubs (i.e., OBI's, Fore 'n Aft, Mother's, etc.)
I don't remember making much money after paying the sound man,
light man, and roadies, but we sure had a great time.
Lance Romance
Lance
Romance was my second band circa 1975 and the first of several
bands that I played in with
Gary Adamson on drums and
Rich Steele
on guitar.
Mike
Garner played bass. He had a Rickenbacker with each of two
pickups wired to a separate amplifier so that he could make the
front pickup very bass and the rear pickup very treble. It gave
it a unique tone that sounded great when we were doing Yes and
Genesis. Rich was forever changing guitars to get just the right
sound for the song and Gary had his first set of Octa-Plus drums
with eight white tom-toms that wrapped around him. Me, I
had lots and lots of keyboards front and back. We did a lot of
progressive rock especially Yes. I use to perform the solo that
Rick Wakeman did on the YesSongs LP. Gary and I went on to play
in Glyder and Rich and I went on to play in Tracer.
One of my fondest memories of this band was our rehearsal
space. It was a shed that was honed out of a rock hill in
Richie's back yard. We used egg crates on the walls a ceiling to
try and absorb the sound. We nick named it "the Golf Ball"
because when you stepped in, it felt like you were walking into
the inside of a golf ball. The rock walls were very damp and I
think some of the crates came from fruit like oranges because it
got a funky smell after a while. You had to see it to believe
it.
Cebra, my first band
This is a picture of me in my first working band called Cebra.
It was time when Cream and Hendrix were blowing us away. I
remember listening to Are You Experienced and thinking, "Wow
this guy is incredible". We were also heavily influenced by
bands like Led Zeppelin, Humble Pie, & James Gang.
That's me
kneeling down in front. The person directly behind me is
Fr. Stan Fortuna. Yep. that's right,
Stanley and I have been friends since childhood, went to Mt. Carmel school
together, played in
our first band together. He was a person of integrity back then and, of course,
is the same today. I would love to hear from other members of the band but we've
all gone our separate ways.
High School
This is me back in High School. Guitar was my first instrument. I learned from my sister and really enjoy it.
This Epiphone 12-string is long gone but I now have an Ovation
12-string acoustic electric that my wife gave me as a wedding
gift.
I once owned a 1967 Sunburst Fender Stratocaster with a maple neck. I sold it for $200
in 1970 to get my first keyboard, an RMI Electric Piano. Boy I wish I had kept that strat today...$$$ who knew?
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