Johnny Bee was among the best of the older subjects I
interviewed for Detroit Rock City. Once he started telling stories, he didn’t
seem to be able to stop, which is why he was included in quite a bit of the
book. You can’t deny his greatness and his experience.
I decided to focus on the band Detroit because it
represented Ryder’s last big chance to make it big. He made a great album and
no one seemed to notice.
When I was interviewing Ray Goodman, who played with Mitch
for a while, he mentioned he had some outtakes from the Detroit album sessions and we
went into the control room of Goodman’s home studio. Sure enough, there were
versions of songs with Johnny Bee singing, demos, and some covers I’d never
heard, including a Sly and the Family Stone tune. I mentioned that it would be
great to see that stuff released as a deluxe reissue double lp and connected Goodman
up with Bob Ezrin, who produced the album. Maybe someone will have the good
sense to organize that some day.
Johnny Badanjek, drummer Mitch Ryder, on Detroit (the band):
We played everywhere, anywhere, all the
time. One summer, we played two sets on a Friday night in Detroit and we stayed up all night then headed to
Carbondale, Illinois. Go to the hotel, a Howard Johnson's. They put us in back
where the pool is and no one can see us. After Carbondale, we drive to St. Louis, play, go to another Howard Johnson's to finally sleep, then catch a 7
a.m. flight to go to Washington DC to play the May Day rally with the Beach
Boys. There's like 200,000 people there. We play and Steve Hunter wears his
Army uniform. Not a great idea for the time. We play and leave, we're going
back to National Airport and the Army comes in and starts giving everyone shit,
it got real violent. But we’re out of there. We got back to the airport and
flew back to St. Louis and drove two more hours back to Carbondale, Illinois, and
played two more sets without any sleep. We haven't gone to bed yet since before the May Day show. Then we went
back to the hotel with 15 girls and everybody got naked and was using the sauna
and swimming. This was how we were living. We had real bikers hanging around us
all the time, you know, bikers love Mitch. They all wanted to hear “Devil With a Blue Dress On.” We were also playing a lot of Hell's Angels parties and all the outlaw
clubs. We'd play and they'd all be fighting. It was like a crazy wedding party or
something. We’d play for an hour and a half and we’d take a break and the whole
place would break out in a riot. The guy in charge would go, “Play! Get up there and
play! Maybe they'll stop.” The Outlaws, the Vigilantes, all these biker gangs,
they’d have us in to play their parties.
was at the May Day rally in DC, saw them play there
ReplyDeleteIt looks like Linda Ronstadt was also on the bill http://www.setlist.fm/venue/west-potomac-park-washington-dc-usa-3d76563.html
ReplyDeleteI love Mitch Ryder and played some gigs w/ W R Cooke bac in the day. As of late I've been getting up & singing a couple songs w. guitarist Jim McCarty.
ReplyDelete