Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Treat Her Right

 
Artist: Treat Her Right

Group Members:

Mark Sandman, Jim Fitting, Billy Conway, David Champagne

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Performed Songs By:

Mark Sandman, David Champagne

Formal Connection With:

Pink Cadillac, Morphine, Coots
See Treat Her Right Lyrics
  • Formed: 1984
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "The Anthology: 1985-1990," "Treat Her Right," "Tied to the Tracks"
  • Representative Songs: "I Think She Likes Me," "You Don't Need Money," "Big Medicine"

Biography

Former Shane Champagne and Pink Cadillac singer David Champagne led the Massachusetts quartet Treat Her Right, whose style encompassed rock & roll, rockabilly, blues-rock, and swamp-rock, all with post-punk attitude. Champagne also sported a taste for avant-garde cover songs, including material by James Blood Ulmer and Captain Beefheart. Treat Her Right released its debut album in 1986; their 1989 Tied to the Tracks featured bassist Mark Sandman singing lead on several songs. Following the breakup of Treat Her Right, Sandman went on to form bass/sax/drums trio Morphine. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Treat Her Right
Top
Treat Her Right
Origin Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Genre(s) Blues, rock
Years active 1984-1991, 1995-1998, 2009
Label(s) RCA Records, Rounder Records
Associated acts Morphine, The The
Former members
Mark Sandman
Dave Champagne
Jim Fitting
Billy Conway

Treat Her Right was a blues rock group formed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1984. The band featured Mark Sandman on guitar, Billy Conway on drums, Dave Champagne on guitar, and Jim Fitting on harmonica. Singing and songwriting duties were shared by all but Conway.

In addition to being the forerunner to the popular indie rock band Morphine, Treat Her Right is often credited with helping to spawn the punk-blues hybrid (sometimes dubbed cowpunk, among other titles) that achieved prominence in the early 2000s.

Contents

History

Career

The band derived its name from the 1965 international smash hit by Roy Head and the Traits, "Treat Her Right." The group's self-financed and self-titled debut was released on a small Boston record label in 1986, and their first recording attempt was a modest success - Champagne's "I Got a Gun" and Sandman's cover of James Blood Ulmer's "Where Did All the Girls Come From?" received some play on college radio. "I Think She Likes Me" describes Sandman's experience in a Fairplay, Colorado bar where a woman came on to him. The group signed to RCA Records, who reissued the debut in 1988.

Tied to the Tracks was issued in 1989. Sales did not meet RCA's expectations. In the notes for their third record, the group writes, "RCA decided that if our little basement tape could do so well, why not spend fifty times more money and it will be fifty times better! (They think everything works like that.)" Treat Her Right were dropped from their RCA contract.

What's Good for You was issued on Rounder Records in 1991. The ragged, live-in-the-studio sound was partly modeled on the model established by Chess Records, which had released many classic blues and early rock and roll records. Shortly after this third release, Treat Her Right disbanded.

The group reformed in 1995 under the direction of Rolling Stones backup guitar player Bob Anderson,[citation needed] but disbanded for the second time in 1998.

Post-breakup

Fitting later played with The The and The Coots. Champaign remained musically active, playing with groups such as The Jazz Popes.[1] Sandman and Conway went on to form the nucleus of Morphine. Although more blues-based than Morphine, Treat Her Right sowed the seeds of Sandman's later sound with its unusual instrumentation (Sandman's guitar with Treat Her Right was a three string custom model, making it sound more like a bass guitar) and slightly dark focus, most evident on the Sandman-penned songs.

Sandman died tragically of a heart attack while onstage with Morphine in Italy in 1999.

The Treat Her Right song "Rhythm & Booze" was featured on The Hangover soundtrack, released in 2009. In the summer of this same year, The Lost Album, a record of unreleased Treat Her Right material, was released by Hi-n-Dry. Shortly thereafter, the three surviving members reunited as Treat Her Right to mark the ten-year anniversary of Sandman's death at the Mark Sandman Memorial Concert in September.

Discography

  • Treat Her Right (1986)
  • Tied to the Tracks (1989)
  • What's Good for You (1991)
  • Anthology 1985-1990 (1998)
  • The Lost Album (2009)

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Treat Her Right" Read more

 

Mentioned in