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RIP Ed Cassidy

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Rashmon, Dec 14, 2012.

  1. Rashmon

    Rashmon Member

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    Spirit was a really good under rated band...worth checking out if you never heard of 'em.
    <iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/h1Bnl8PjES8" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

    Ed Cassidy, Drummer for the Experimental Group Spirit, Dies at 89
    By WILLIAM YARDLEY

    Way back when rock ’n’ roll was countercultural — before the members of the Rolling Stones were anywhere close to 50 years old, much less celebrating their 50th anniversary together — the genre tended to emphasize rather than bridge generational divides.

    So when the experimental group Spirit formed in the late 1960s, it was different not just for the way it fused jazz and rock, or the way it mixed psychedelia with a particularly tight backbeat. It was also different because its drummer was the 44-year-old stepfather of its 16-year-old guitarist.

    That drummer, Ed Cassidy, died on Thursday in San Jose, Calif. He was 89. The cause was cancer, his former wife, Beverley Cassidy, said.

    By the time Spirit formed in 1967, Mr. Cassidy had already had a notable and diverse musical career. He had played with jazz musicians including Dexter Gordon, Chet Baker, Gerry Mulligan and Cannonball Adderly and had formed a folk-blues group with Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder called the Rising Sons.

    While Mr. Cassidy was performing with other adults, his young stepson, Randy Wolfe, was becoming a fine musician himself. He impressed Jimi Hendrix when they met in a music store in Manhattan, and it was Hendrix who gave Randy the nickname he went by for the rest of his life, Randy California. Soon enough, stepfather and stepson were playing and touring together.

    Spirit released more than a dozen albums from 1968 to 1996, but it was the first work that was the most influential and critically praised. Its biggest hit and only Top 40 single, “I Got a Line on You,” was released in 1968; the band was also celebrated for its adventurous 1970 album, “Twelve Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus.” That record included the song “Mr. Skin,” which was the nickname Mr. Cassidy’s fellow band members had given him in honor of his shaved head.

    Bob Irwin, the president and owner of Sundazed Records, which has reissued many Spirit albums and also released previously unissued tracks, said the band’s early recording sessions were “kind of like a jazz history lesson” in which Mr. Cassidy nurtured his much younger colleagues.

    “Ed always encouraged them to color outside the box, to take chances onstage, to play to the best of and beyond their abilities,” Mr. Irwin said.

    Early reviews were usually complimentary, but critics were less positive several years later, after the band’s lineup changed. (Mr. Cassidy and Randy California remained its only constant members.) The critic Robert Palmer, writing in The New York Times in 1976, singled out Mr. Cassidy from what he said was an otherwise unimpressive performance.

    “Mr. Cassidy’s drumming is still exceptional — his obligatory long solo at the end of the set was the subtlest, most musical part of the evening,” Mr. Palmer wrote.

    Edward Claude Cassidy was born on May 4, 1923, in Harvey, Ill. His family moved to Bakersfield, Calif., when he was a young boy. He took interest in the drums after listening to musicians who played clubs in the area in the 1930s.

    Randy California died in 1997 in a drowning accident in Hawaii.

    In addition to Ms. Cassidy, Mr. Cassidy’s survivors include a daughter, Carol Ann Griffith, and several stepchildren and grandchildren.
     
  2. Dubious

    Dubious Member

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    12 Dreams of Dr. Sardonicus is is maybe the most under-rated album ever. It's not Sargent Peppers but it was still hugely innovative in it's production values and 'rock opera' theme. The only problem with it is, as often in the days of vinyl, it's just too short.

    Here's all 38 minutes of it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=358hm7rugyI
    (won't seem to embed?) Break out the headphones if you've got'em.

    [​IMG]
     
    #2 Dubious, Dec 15, 2012
    Last edited: Dec 15, 2012
  3. Rip Van Rocket

    Rip Van Rocket Contributing Member

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    Sorry to hear this. That guy was cool, and Spirit has always been a favorite of mine.
     
  4. Rashmon

    Rashmon Member

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    Thanks for the responses. I was starting to think that Spirit was more unknown than I realized. A really good band.

    Another great full album...
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