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The Amboy Dukes

 
Artist: The Amboy Dukes

Group Members:

Ted Nugent, Steve Farmer, David Palmer, John Drake, Andy Solomon, Rusty Day, Greg Arama, Bill White, Rick Lober, K.J. Knight

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Steve Farmer

Formal Connection With:

  • Formed: 1965, Detroit, MI
  • Disbanded: 1975
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Ultimate Collection: Ted Nugent & the Amboy Dukes," "The Best of the Original Amboy Dukes," "The Amboy Dukes"
  • Representative Songs: "Journey to the Center of the" "Baby Please Don't Go"

Biography

Best remembered for their 1968 acid-rock classic "Journey to the Center of the Mind," Detroit's Amboy Dukes also introduced the world to the Motor City Madman, guitarist Ted Nugent. The group's roots date to 1965, a period when a teenage Nugent was living in Chicago; there he formed the first incarnation of the Amboy Dukes, borrowing the moniker from a recently-disbanded Detroit band who themselves took the name from an infamous explotiation novel of the period. When Nugent returned to southeastern Michigan in 1967, he assembled a new Dukes line-up including vocalist John Drake, his former bandmate in the Lourds, as well as rhythm guitarist Steve Farmer, bassist Bill White, keyboardist Rick Lober and drummer Dave Palmer. Quickly the group emerged as one of the hottest attractions on the Detroit club circuit, famed for their snarling closer, an incendiary cover of Them's "Baby Please Don't Go."

Still, when the Amboy Dukes' self-titled debut LP appeared on the Mainstream label in 1967, it was the group's originals that became the focus -- while Nugent handled the music, Farmer penned the drug-fixated lyrics, adding a psychedelic sensibility to an otherwise proto-metal sound. After a series of line-up shifts which saw White and Lober exit in favor of bassist Greg Arama and keyboardist Andy Solomon, in 1968 the Dukes issued Journey to the Center of the Mind, riding the title track into the U.S. Top 20. Vocalist Rusty Day replaced Drake in time for 1969's Migrations, which failed to equal the success of its predecessor; Marriage on the Rocks, issued later that same year, was also a disappointment, and after 1971's Survival of the Fittest Nugent dismissed Day and Solomon after Palmer left the group to accept an engineering gig. After recording a handful of albums as Ted Nugent and the Amboy Dukes, he finally dropped the group's name altogether and mounted a solo career. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Amboy Dukes
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The Amboy Dukes
Origin Detroit, Michigan
Genres Hard rock, acid rock, psychedelic rock
Years active 1964–1975
Labels Mainstream, Polydor, DisCreet Records

The Amboy Dukes were an American rock music band of the late 1960s and early 1970s from Detroit, Michigan, best remembered for their hit single "Journey to the Center of the Mind", and for launching the career of Ted Nugent. The band's name comes from the title of a novel by Irving Shulman about a Jewish street gang of the same name in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn during the 1940s. The band went through a number of personnel changes during its active years. Bassist Greg Arama died in 1979. The group helped in the foundations of heavy metal and progressive rock.[1]

The original Amboy Dukes performed April 17, 2009 at the Detroit Music Awards at The Fillmore Detroit. Their performance began with the song "Baby Please Don't Go", from their 1967 debut single. Followed by "Journey to the Center of the Mind", and ending with Mitch Ryder's "Jenny Take A Ride" (featuring original Ryder drummer Johnny "Bee" Badanjek). In recognition of the band's contribution to rock music history, they received a Distinguished Achievement award.[2]

Contents

Later careers

Steve Farmer currently teaches in the Redford Township district of Michigan. He also performs with backing bands at various venues in and around the Detroit area.

Rick Lober is a classically trained composer best known in the greater Detroit metro area for his frenetic style of keyboard playing. Since the early 1990s, he has been in and out of the studio, appearing as performer/songwriter on the Steve Farmer CD Journey to the Darkside of the Mind (Saint Thomas Records, STP0069) completed in 2000. He is currently working in the studio and performing live with local Detroit rock legend Jeffrey Faust and his band "The Woodsman", which performs throughout Michigan and Canada.

Band line-ups

The pre-Nugent Detroit band was as follows:

  • Ron Medeiros (lead guitar)
  • Dave Opatic (guitar)
  • James Jackson (bass)
  • Ben Vineyard (drums)

1964

The Nugent Amboy Dukes began in the Chicago area in 1964,[3] and played such venues as The Cellar in the northwest suburb of Arlington Heights.[4] They moved back to Detroit in 1968. The members included the following:

  • Bob Lehnert (vocalist)
  • Ted Nugent (lead guitar)
  • Gary Hicks (guitar, vocals)
  • Dick Treat (bass, vocals)
  • Gail Uptadale (drums)

1967

After a band shuffle for signing a deal with Mainstream Records of New York, the band members who released their debut album, The Amboy Dukes, were:

  • John Drake (vocals) ex-Lourds
  • Ted Nugent (lead guitar, vocals)
  • Rick Lober (keyboards)
  • Steve Farmer (guitar, vocals) ex-Gang
  • Bill White (bass, vocals)
  • Dave Palmer (drums) ex-The Galaxy Five, ex-The Citations

1968

Journey to the Center of the Mind saw another member shake-up:

  • John Drake (vocals)
  • Ted Nugent (lead guitar, vocals)
  • Steve Farmer (guitar, vocals)
  • Andy Solomon (organ, piano, vocals)
  • Greg Arama (bass)
  • Dave Palmer (drums)

Migration saw another line-up:

  • Rusty Day (Russell Edward Davidson) (vocals, harmonica) ex-Rusty Day & The Midnighters
  • Ted Nugent (lead guitar, vocals)
  • Steve Farmer (guitar, vocals)
  • Andy Solomon (keyboards, sax, vocals)
  • Greg Arama (bass)
  • Dave Palmer (drums)

Discography

  • Journey to the Center of the Mind, The Amboy Dukes' second album, was released in April 1968 on Mainstream Records (56112 mono (promo only) and stereo S/6112 stereo). It crept into the top 100 and its highest position was #74. The single of the same name peaked at number 16 on the US Billboard Hot 100 pop chart. The album and song were classic examples of acid rock; for example, the original album cover depicted fifty different kinds of marijuana-smoking devices.
  • Migration, The Amboy Dukes' third album, was released in fall 1968 on Mainstream Records (stereo only S/6118). It failed to chart. In the UK, it can be found in mono, catalog number is London/Mainstream HAT 8393.
  • You Talk Sunshine, I Breathe Fire - buoyed by the success of the "Journey" 45, in 1968 they released this non LP, (Mainstream 693). It didn't chart.
  • The Best of the Original Amboy Dukes released after The Amboy Dukes left Mainstream Records (Mainstream S/6125), failed to chart.
  • Tooth Fang & Claw released in 1974 was the last album (DiscReet 2203) - didn't chart.
  • Journey To The Darkside of The Mind, released in 2000, saw a rebirth of the Amboy Dukes by Steve Farmer and original keyboardist Rick Lober, sans Ted. (Saint Thomas Records STP 0069) - didn't chart.

References

External links


 
 

 

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