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Revision as of 18:11, 13 June 2023


A lost 1967 recording session with The Red Crayola and John Fahey.

Background

  • John Fahey performed with The Red Crayola at the Berkeley Folk Festival on July 3, 1967
  • The Red Crayola opened for John Fahey on July 9, 1967

Retrospectives

Mayo Thompson, 1996[1]

We played the Berkeley Folk Festival in '67, and we recorded some material with John Fahey. And our record company went through the ceiling over this. They threatened not to bring us back from California, even though they had used our publishing royalties to fly us out here in the first place, which is illegal, I have subsequently found out. But they threatened not to bring us back. So Rick and Steve said, "You go to Frisco and get the tapes, and we're going back to Texas." So it became my job to do this, because I had started the band. So I came back up here and picked up the tapes, which were reluctantly handed over. We intended to try to do something with them. And then I had to take these tapes back to Texas, give them to the record company, and then bust up, that was the end of that.

Steve Cunningham, 2011[2]

When we were in CA for the 1967 [Berkeley Folk] festival, Ed Denson who was Country Joe & The Fish's manager and also John Fahey's, set up a recording session for John and us at Ed's studio (on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley) a day or so before we were to leave town. I remember Barry Melton of the Fish being there too. A few hours of tape were rolled as the Crayola did free-form stuff and the others joined in with whatever struck their fancy (our standard modus operandi). After the session we told IA [International Artists] about it, but instead of being pleased they focused on the legalisms around out being under contract to IA. They demanded the tapes from Denson, who surrendered them as requested. The tapes have sat idle for decades.

[...] IA had already experienced a problem with the 13th Floor Elevators, who had previously recorded an entire album for another label, so when they heard about the new Red Crayola recordings they went ballistic... To avoid any possible legal implications Mayo was dispatched to collect the tapes and deliver them to IA. Despite searching through the stash of surviving IA tapes nothing remains of the Crayola/Fahey collaboration but hopefully someone has kept a safety copy which might surface one day.

Ben Graham, 2015[3]

[...] the Red Crayola and the equally confrontational Fahey [...] hit it off, and booked time in Berkeley's Sierra Sound Studios to record a long improvised session together. The Red Crayola and John Fahey recorded four reels of tape; easily enough for an album, but none of it was to ever see the light of day. [...] The Red Crayola had fully intended to release an album from the sessions, but the recordings went into the IA vaults and like many of the labels' master tapes effectively disappeared for good. These recordings have never surfaced even on bootlegs, a huge loss to any enthusiast or student of 20th Century experimental music.

Mayo Thompson, 2016[4]

Anyone knowing the whereabouts of the tape would be handsomely rewarded. And, yes, we would put it out. As for the recording session, we had a ball all night long. The label were against it because they were afraid of losing us. They threatened to suspend our contract and wouldn't fly us home unless I brought the tapes back. Bear in mind that Parable had just sold 50,000 copies with no advertising, just word of mouth. They weren't going to let us go just like that.

References