The
following Information is borrowed from
Wikipedia by kind permission
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cowsills
The Cowsills is
an American singing group from Newport,
Rhode Island.
They specialized in harmonies and the ability to sing and play music at an early
age. The band was formed in the spring of 1965 by brothers Bill, Bob,
and Barry,
then shortly thereafter added John.
Originally Bill and Bob played guitar and Barry was on drums, then John learned
how to play drums and joined the band, so Barry went to bass. After their
initial success, the brothers were later joined by their siblings
Susan and Paul and
their mother Barbara. Bob's twin brother Richard was the road manager. When the
group expanded to its full family membership by 1967, the six siblings ranged in
age from 8 to 19. Joined by their mother Barbara (nee' Russell), the Cowsills
were the inspiration for the 1970 launch of the television show The
Partridge Family.
Origins and early
successes
The Cowsills' musical interest started
while their father Bud Cowsill was stationed in Canton, Ohio, in the late 1950s
as a US
Navy recruiter. Billy and Bob taught
themselves how to play the guitar.
The boys developed their musical talent and harmonized vocals, and they
performed at school church dances in Stark
County, Ohio. The boys' first television
appearance was on the Gene
Carroll Show on WEWS
in Cleveland.
Bud retired from a long career in the US
Navy and, along with his wife, managed his children's career.
In late 1965, the Cowsills were hired as
a regular act on Bannisters Wharf in Newport, where they would sing Beatles
songs hour after hour. A handful of singles were released on JODA Records and Philips
Records in
1965 and 1966, to only modest success. The band was signed by MGM records
in 1967, and Barbara, who would become known to their fans affectionately as
"Mini-Mom" due to her diminutive stature, joined the group just in time to
record the band's first album, including the hit single "The Rain, The Park &
Other Things" . It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold
disc.
Bill
sang lead vocal on this hit. Shortly thereafter the band was expanded yet again,
to include siblings Susan and Paul.
The group receives their
gold record for "The Rain, the Park and Other Thing.
With the success of "The Rain...", the
band quickly became a popular act in the U.S.,
and achieved significant airplay in England and
other parts of Europe.
"The Rain, The Park and Other Things" reached No. 2 on the Billboard
Hot 100.
Bob Cowsill is quoted as follows on the
band's early days:
"Although Bill and I
performed at a very young age, and Bill, I, Barry and John did a lot of frat
parties at Brown
University and
clubs in Newport ... the most memorable performance of what I would view as
the precursor of what The Cowsills would be was at Kings
Park in
Newport (right at the foot of Halidon Hall) at some carnival.
The family angle just evolved ... first Bill and me, then Bill me and Barry,
then Bill, me, Barry and John, then Bill, me, Barry, John and Mom, then
Bill, me, Barry, John, Mom and Paul, then later, me, Paul, John, Barry, Mom
and Susan, then back to Bill, me, Barry and John (very briefly in the end)
and then to me, Paul, John and Susan. Our first real break came when we were
playing the MK Hotel in Newport (in the basement there) and a guy from the "Today Show"
saw us and asked if we wanted to be on the "Today" show. We weren't famous
or anything but we were young and we were related and we were quite good. So
we went on "The Today show" (I doubt a tape exists of that but if it did it
would be priceless to see) and someone from Mercury
Records saw
us, which ultimately led to our signing with that label and putting out
"Most Of All" (a great "school's out" song that should have been our first
hit in my opinion), which led to Artie Kornfeld and Steve Duboff. Mercury
dropped us, but Artie and Steve had written "The Rain, The Park and Other
Things" and we went in and recorded that song at A&R studios in New York and
took the whole package to MGM, who decided wouldn't it just be terrific if their
mother performed with them and, voila, the rest, as they say, is history."
In 1968, the band scored another
million-selling hit with the song "Indian Lake"
which reached No. 10 on the charts and in 1969, the band had another number two
hit and another million seller with their version of the title
song from
the musical Hair
From 1968 through 1972, the band played
an average of 200 performance dates per year, and were among the most popular
acts on the American concert circuit. They were particularly noted for their
ability to achieve four- and five-part harmonies with remarkable accuracy and
relative pitch; a phenomenon common among sibling singing groups, e.g. the Boswell
Sisters, the Mills
Brothers, the Jackson
5, the Osmond
Brothers, the Andrews
Sisters, the Beach
Boys (whose
songs the Cowsills used to cover in
concert), the Bee
Gees, etc.
Television
and The
Cowsills
The Cowsills also made many television appearances
throughout the late 1960s and into the early 1970s. Their appearances included:
- The Ed Sullivan Show (twice)
- The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (twice)
- American Bandstand
- The Mike Douglas Show
- The Barbara
McNair Show
- Playboy After Dark
- Kraft Music Hall
- Music Scene
- The Johnny Cash Show
They starred in their own television
special, called A
Family Thing, in November
1968 on NBC, which guest-starred Buddy
Ebsen.
By
1969 Screen
Gems approached
the family to portray themselves in their own TV sitcom, but when they were told
that their mother was to be replaced by actress Shirley
Jones the
deal fell through. Screen Gems later hired Jones' stepson David
Cassidy to
join the cast and the show went on to be called The
Partridge Family, and to have a
four-year run on ABC Television.
The Cowsills were also known as
spokespeople for the American
Dairy Association, appearing in
advertisements promoting milk. They
performed the theme for the David
Nivenfilm The
Impossible Years (1968), and
also sang the theme for Love
American Style during
the first season (1969).
Breakups and
reunions:
In 1969, Bill was fired from the group by his father after he was caught smoking marijuana.
Now led by Bob, the Cowsills continued as a group releasing three more albums -
two with MGM including a second greatest hits compilation, and then one with London
Records. By 1972, Barbara, Paul and Susan had left the group and Bill returned,
reforming the original quartet; they released one more single, "Covered Wagon",
which failed to chart. Shortly afterward, The Cowsills stopped playing together
as a band amid a series of internal personal squabbles. The individual members
went on to various career attempts in and out of the music
industry, but they did appear at Madison Jr. High school in Tampa,
Florida as "The Cowsills" for one performance during the mid-1970s. Some
produced albums and performed from time to time, albeit not as The Cowsills,
during the remainder of the '70s and up into the '80s. One project in particular
was a band called Bridey Murphy, which
was formed in the mid-'70s and featured Paul, Bill, Barry, and Waddy
Wachtel, and performed to varying degrees of success.
In 1978, several of the Cowsills—including Paul, John, Barry, Bob and
Susan—recorded an album rather incongruously entitled Cocaine
Drain, with the producer Chuck
Plotkin. The album was never completed, and at some point the master tapes were
lost (or stolen). For almost 30 years the album existed only as a
scratchy acetate. In March 2008 a version of the album was finally released,
remastered from that acetate under Bob Cowsill's direction. Several other
previously unreleased tracks were included on the 2008 release. All six of the
performing Cowsill siblings appear on the cover art of the album in shots
apparently taken on stage around the time of the recording sessions
After the Cocaine Drain sessions,
the Cowsills did some reunion shows in 1979–1980 but returned to their separate
careers after that.
The central four members of the group created the power
pop tune "Is It Any Wonder?" in 1993,
which was released in the critically appraised multi-artist collection Yellow
Pills, Vol. 1: The Best of American Pop.
The most prominent Cowsill in the years since has been Susan,
who was a member of The Continental
Drifters, along with both her first husband Peter
Holsapple (who is the father of her
daughter) and her second husband, Russ Broussard. She was also part of Dwight
Twilley's band in the mid-1980s, and currently has a solo career as the leader
of her own band, the Susan Cowsill
Band.[
Her first-ever solo album, Just
Believe it, was released in late 2005 by Blue Corn Music. In 2011, she was
featured in an episode of the HBO series, Tremé.
John Cowsill has also been prominent as a musician. Since December 2000 John has
been a regular member of The Beach
Boys touring band, playing drums and keyboards and
singing lead on some of their tunes. In earlier years, he performed with artists
such as Jan & Dean and Dwight
Twilley. In the early 1980s, he was briefly a member of the band Tommy Tutone and
his backing vocals and percussion can be heard on their hit "Jenny (867-5309)."
Bill Cowsill moved to Canada in
the 1970s and did well in that country as a solo artist, and as a member of Vancouver,
British Columbia's Blue Northern, before forming the nationally acclaimed Blue
Shadows who recorded two albums for Sony Canada.
After working as a sound engineer for Helen
Reddy, Paul Cowsill left music for a career in the construction industry.
While he still performs with The Cowsills, his primary occupation is that of a farmer in Oregon.
Bob Cowsill has had a successful career outside of music in the software
industry. He currently trains hospital emergency departments to use a software
package called EDITS (Emergency Department Information Tracking System) that
manages data capture and billing issues associated with emergency room
accountancy. Bob was also part of the actual development and coding team for the
software package. He is also still an active performer.
In 1990, Bob, Paul, John, and Susan again regrouped as The Cowsills. The
original plan was to simply hit the "oldies circuit",
but after some deliberation, they decided to showcase new material written by
Bob and his wife, Mary Jo. This incarnation of the band started playing small
clubs and showcases in the Los
Angeles area and eventually spread
out to similar venues across the country and into Canada. Their performances
generated positive reviews from critics and fans alike, including a very well
received performance on The Late
Show Starring Joan Rivers, where Susan voiced in mock frustration as to
never being able to figure out which of the two girls on The
Partridge Family was
supposed to represent her.
The success of this reunion led The Cowsills back into the recording
studio, which resulted in the album Global.
This has also led to several reunions over the years in various
forms, ranging from a few concerts to special feature performances at major
events. Most notable of these events were "A Taste of Rhode Island in 2000",
which featured all seven surviving Cowsills, and "A Family Thing 2", which was a
benefit concert in 2004 for Bill's medical and financial difficulties at the
time. This concert took place at the El
Rey Theatre in Los Angeles and
included an appearance by Shirley
Jones, who introduced the band. It was the first time they had ever met. As the
mother on the TV show inspired by the Cowsills, Shirley made a point of calling
them "the real thing". Though she did not sing with them that night, immediately
after her announcement, the Cowsills played "I Really Want To Know You", which
is the one song that had been recorded by both The Cowsills and The Partridge
Family. (Both bands recorded songs called "Hello, Hello" ; they were different
songs by different writers.) During this period, Barry also released a solo CD, As
I.
In 2004, it was announced that the Cowsills had been asked to sing the National
Anthem at Fenway Park and
Susan's first solo release, Just
Believe It, was released in 2004 in Europe and
2005 in the U.S.
Currently, Bob, Paul and Susan perform several shows per month as The Cowsills
while still maintaining their separate lives and careers. In 2007 they toured as
part of a package called "The Original Idols Live!", hosted by Barry
Williams, who played Greg Brady on The
Brady Bunch
Information
borrowed from
Wikipedia by kind permission
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cowsills
Click here to see videos on
the Cowsills
Click here to read an article by James Gillis of the Newport Daily News from
November 15, 2005
In 2013 The Cowsills were inducted into the
Rhode Island
Music Hall of Fame on April 28, 2013. A special concert was followed at
the Met after the induction ceremony.
CONCERT WE PRESENTLY KNOW ABOUT
DATE |
VENUE |
MAIN BAND |
SUPPORT |
SUPPORT |
AD |
TICKET |
PICTURES |
TAPE |
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September 23,
2006 |
Taste of Rhode Island |
The Cowsills |
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September 24,
2006 |
Taste of Rhode Island |
The Cowsills |
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September 29,
2007 |
The Candy Store on Bannister's Wharf |
The Cowsills |
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September 30,
2007 |
Taste of Rhode Island |
The Cowsills |
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July 24, 2008 |
Newport Blues Cafe |
The Cowsills |
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September 27,
2008 |
Taste of Rhode Island |
The Cowsills |
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September 28,
2008 |
Taste of Rhode Island |
The Cowsills |
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August 10,
2011 |
Veterans Memorial Auditorium, Providence |
The Cowsills |
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April 28, 2013 |
The Met, Pawtucket |
The Cowsills |
Steve Smith & The Naked |
Paul Geremia |
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YES |
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