I’m not going to sugarcoat this at all: you people really suck when it comes to picking me out of a photo lineup. And I’m not talking about sucking just a little bit here, folks – no, I’m talking about totally sucking ass. And it wasn’t even a particularly difficult task, to be perfectly honest. After all, I provided you with twenty-one composite sketches of what I looked like circa 1966, and yet only one of you – just one! – could correctly identify me. So to give the rest of you a sporting chance, I’m going to narrow it down for you: I’m one of the three wise men – which is to say, the three hairless kids – in the top row.
Anyway, I believe we were discussing the Byrds when class was last convened, so let’s now meet a formidable behind-the-scenes player and the band’s first producer, Terry Melcher. It is fairly well known that Melcher was the son of ‘virginal’ actress Doris Day, who was just sixteen when impregnated and seventeen when Terry was born. Melcher’s father was trombonist Al Jorden, who reportedly regularly beat Day, and likely Terry as well. Jorden wasn’t around for long though; his death, when Melcher was just two or three years old, was naturally ruled a suicide.
After an
equally
short-lived
second
marriage,
Doris
Day
married
her
agent
and
producer,
Marty
Melcher,
who was
universally
regarded
as one
of the
biggest
assholes
in
Terry Melcher was arguably one of the most important figures lurking about the periphery of the Laurel Canyon saga, by virtue of the fact that he had deep ties to virtually all aspects of the canyon scene, including the Laurel Canyon musicians, the Manson Family, the Vito Paulekas dance troupe, and the group of young Hollywood actors generally referred to as ‘The Young Turks.’
As it turns out, Melcher first met Vito Paulekas when Terry was still in high school in the late 1950s. As Melcher later recalled, “Vito was an art instructor. When I was in high school, we’d go to his art studio because he had naked models.” A half-a-decade or so later, these two would, each in his own way, become key players in launching not just the career of the Byrds, but the entire Laurel Canyon music scene, as well as the accompanying youth counter-cultural movement.
Also
while
still in
high
school,
Melcher
befriended
Bruce
Johnston,
the
adopted
son of a
top
executive
with the
Rexall
drugstore
chain.
While
growing
up on
the
not-so-mean
streets
of
As I
probably
have
already
mentioned,
it would
be
Spector’s
crack
team of
studio
musicians,
dubbed
The
Wrecking
Crew,
who
would
provide
the
instrumental
tracks
for
countless
albums
by
The trio
of
Wilson,
Melcher
and
Jakobson,
who
dubbed
themselves
the
“Golden
Penetrators”
(
During
the
summer
of 1968,
when
Charlie
Manson
and
numerous
members
of his
entourage,
including
Charles
“
Watson
had
moved
out to
LA from
According
to Vanity
Fair,
Tex
Watson
was also
“a
regular
patron
of the
Whisky,”
which
isn’t
too
surprising
given
that
Elmer
Valentine’s
club was
well
known to
be a
major
drug
trafficking
site
during
the late
1960s.
Watson’s
frequent
sidekick
Dean
Moorehouse,
by the
way,
hailed
from
In the spring of 1969, the trio of Wilson, Melcher and Jakobson got close to Bobby Beausoleil as well. Jakobson made at least two trips to the Gerard Theatrical Agency to hear demo tapes that Bobby had recorded. The agency, headed by Jack Gerard, specialized in supplying topless dancers to seedy clubs, and actors and actresses for porno film shoots. Beausoleil’s primary job with the agency was to deliver carloads of girls to the clubs; more than a few of those girls were members of Charlie’s Family. In March of 1969, just months before he was arrested for the torture-murder of Gary Hinman, Bobby had signed a songwriting contract with the agency and begun recording demos.
Beausoleil
also
accompanied
Melcher
and
Jakobson
on at
least
two
trips
out to
the
Spahn
Movie
Ranch,
once in
May of
1969 and
then
again
the next
month.
Jakobson
was a
frequent
visitor
to Spahn
and was
known to
boast of
having
held
over 100
hours of
conversations
with the
all-knowing
prophet
known as
Charles
Manson.
Gregg
also
lobbied
NBC to
shoot a
documentary
film
about
the
Manson
Family’s
‘hippie
commune,’
and the
network
was for
a time
quite
interested
in the
project.
Along
with
Dennis
Wilson,
Jakobson
also
arranged
for
Charlie
to
record
at an
unnamed
studio
in
Lest
anyone
think
otherwise,
by the
way, the
Manson
Family
certainly
had no
shortage
of
talented
musicians.
Convicted
murderer
Charles
Manson,
of
course,
was
widely
viewed
by his
contemporaries
in the
canyon
as a
talented
singer/songwriter/guitarist.
So too
was
convicted
murderer
Bobby
Beausoleil,
who had
jammed
with
Dennis
Wilson,
played
rhythm
guitar
for the
pre-Love
lineup
known as
the
Grass
Roots,
knew
Frank
Zappa
and had
visited
the Log
Cabin,
and
later
composed
and
recorded
the film
score
for
Kenneth
Anger’s Lucifer
Rising.
Convicted
murderer
Patricia
Krenwinkle
was an
accomplished
guitarist
and
songwriter.
Convicted
murderer
Steve
“Clem”
Grogan
was a
talented
musician
as well;
he later
played
in the
prison
band
assembled
by
Beausoleil
to
record
the Lucifer
Rising soundtrack.
In
addition,
Family
members
Brooks
Poston
and Paul
Watkins
were
accomplished
musicians,
and
Catherine
“Gypsy”
Share
was a
virtuoso
violin
player
as well
as being
a singer
and
occasional
actress
(see,
for
example, Ramrodder,
costarring
Bobby
Beausoleil
and
filmed
partially
at –
where
else? –
Spahn
Movie
Ranch).
Catherine
Share is
notable
in other
ways as
well,
including
her
unparalleled
feat of
raising
the bar
so high
on
parental
suicides
that no
one
else,
even in
According
to Ed
Sanders,
Gypsy
Share
also
“arranged
for Paul
Rothschild,
the
producer
of The
Doors,
to hear
the
family
music.”
It seems
as
though
just
about
everyone
had an
opportunity
to hear
the
Family’s
music.
Some of
it was
recorded
in Beach
Boy
Brian
Wilson’s
state-of-the-art
home
recording
studio.
Some was
recorded
by Terry
Melcher
and
Gregg
Jakobson
at Spahn
Ranch
using a
mobile
recording
studio.
Some was
recorded
in
The Family was filmed at Spahn Ranch by Melcher as well. Family members also shot an extensive amount of film making ‘home movies,’ which many witnesses have claimed included Family orgies and ritualized snuff films. A vast amount of NBC camera equipment and film was found to be in the possession of Charlie’s motley crew, all of which was claimed to be stolen. It seems likely, however, given the network’s known involvement with the Family, that the equipment was provided to them so that they could film their exploits.
When not
hanging
out with
Charlie
and
In Hotel California, Barney Hoskyns writes that the Byrds were, from the very outset, “conceived as an electric rock and roll group.” What Hoskyns doesn’t really clarify though is who exactly it was that initially conceived of this hugely influential band in those terms. Surely it wasn’t the band members themselves who decided that they were going to pioneer a new musical genre, since they probably had their hands full with just learning to play their instruments.
It would
probably
be
slightly
more
accurate
to say
that the
Byrds
appear
to have
been
initially
conceived
as an
electric folk-rock group.
By July
of 1966,
however,
when the
band
released
its
third
album,
featuring
the Gene
Clark-penned
“Eight
Miles
High,”
it had
morphed
into
something
different
and by
doing so
helped
pioneer
another
genre of
music –
psychedelic
rock.
With the
later
addition
of Gram
Parsons
and the
growing
influence
of Chris
Hillman,
the
Byrds
would
next
morph
into a
country-rock
band,
thus
helping
to spawn
that
genre of
music as
well.
According
to rock
‘n’ roll
legend,
the
first
two
Byrds to
get
together
were
James
Joseph
McGuinn
Raised
on a
ranch in
Hillman
would
ultimately
become a
skilled
bass
player
and a
major
figure
in the
Laurel
Canyon-spawned
country-rock
movement.
Like
many
others
of that
bent,
Hillman
had been
a huge
fan of
Spade
Cooley
during
his
formative
years
and he
later
cited
Cooley
as a
major
influence
on his
own
musical
direction.
I’m
guessing
that
most
readers
are not
familiar
with the
story of
the
“King of
Western
Swing,”
which is
kind of
a shame
because
as
stories
go, it’s
a pretty
good
one, so
let’s
digress
here
briefly
and meet
the man
who was
frequently
cited as
one of
the
forefathers
of
country-rock.
Throughout
the
1940s
and
1950s,
Donnell
Clyde
“Spade”
Cooley
was a
popular
local
musician
and
bandleader.
His
weekly
shows at
the
Redondo
Beach
Pier
(which
was
close
enough
to my
childhood
home, by
the way,
that my
friends
and I
occasionally
rode our
bikes
there)
could
draw as
many as
10,000
appreciative
fans,
few of
whom
knew of
his
alcoholism,
violent
temper,
or prior
arrest
for
attempted
rape.
His
popularity
ultimately
landed
him his
own
local
television
show, The
Spade
Cooley
Hour.
His
career,
however,
came to
an
abrupt
end on
According
to court
transcripts,
Ella Mae
had been
spending
a
considerable
amount
of time
in the
company
of two
men,
identified
as
Luther
Jackson
and Bud
Davenport,
both of
whom
worked
in the
sprawling,
Spade Cooley’s response to his wife’s declaration was to brutally beat, stomp and strangle her to death, but only after repeatedly burning her with a lit cigarette. All of this was witnessed by daughter Melody, who had been told by her father that “now you’re going to watch me kill this whore.” After doing just that, Spade then asked his daughter if she thought that Ella Mae was really dead, adding, “Well, let’s see if she is.” He then proceeded to burn her lifeless body repeatedly with another lit cigarette, until he apparently was satisfied that she was indeed dead.
Unlike
so many
other
celebrity
homicide
suspects,
Cooley
was
convicted
of
first-degree
murder
and
sentenced
to serve
a life
sentence.
He was
sent to
the
rather
notorious
…
actually,
let’s
take one
more
quick
detour
here and
note
that not
long
after
Spade
Cooley
was
scheduled
for
release,
another
peripheral
character
in this
story
decided
that it
might be
a good
idea to
whack
his wife
as well.
“Humble”
Harve
Miller
was a
popular
DJ on
LA’s #1
pop
music
station
during
that
era, KHJ
on the
AM dial.
During
the
latter
half of
the
1960s,
Miller
was yet
another
of the
players
who
helped
launch
the
careers
of the
By
mid-1964,
the
nucleus
of what
would
become
the
Byrds
had
formed
with the
bonding
of
McGuinn
and
Clark.
Between
the two
of them,
they
would
provide
the band
with its
signature
12-string
guitar
sound,
its two
lead
vocalists,
and (in
the
early
years,
at
least)
its best
songwriters.
Along
then
came
David
Crosby,
who
added
little
more
than
harmony
vocals,
at least
on the
first
two
albums,
but who
seems to
have
largely
hijacked
the band
with the
help of
manager
Jim
Dickson,
who
added
fake
bass
player
(but
real
musician)
Chris
Hillman.
Clarke
had been
born
Michael
Dick in
The
band,
now
complete,
first
dubbed
themselves
the Jet
Set and
then the
Beefeaters,
even
recording
a
less-then-memorable
single
under
the
latter
moniker,
before
finally
settling
on the
Byrds.
Before
the end
of 1964,
Jim
Dickson
had
signed
the band
to a
deal
with
Columbia
Records.
As
Barney
Hoskyns
recounts
in Waiting
for the
Sun,
“The
obvious
ineptitude
of
Michael
Clarke
and
shakiness
of most
of the
others
was
still a
problem
when Jim
Dickson
got the
band
signed
to
That
assignment,
it would
seem,
was a
rather
fortuitous
one
given
that the
fledgling
band’s
rehearsal
space
just
happened
to be in
the very
same
basement
studio
that
Melcher
snuck
off to
while in
high
school.
Just two
months
after
signing
with
I
obviously
wasn’t
there so
I can’t
say for
sure,
but I’m
going to
go out
on a
limb
here and
guess
that a
band
whose
entire
rhythm
section
was just
learning
to play
their
instruments
probably
did not
put on a
very
compelling
performance.
The
Byrds
apparently
played
one
other
live
show
before
the
Ciro’s
opening,
though
the
nature
of that
show
appears
to be in
dispute
(or
perhaps
there
were two
previous
shows).
According
to Jim
Dickson,
“The
Byrds
first
public
gig was
booked
by Lenny
Bruce’s
mother,
Sally
Marr.
She got
them a
job at
In any
event,
“Mr.
Tambourine
Man” was
released
about a
month
after
the band
had its
big
public
debut at
Ciro’s
and the
LA music
scene
would
never be
the same
again.
Before
long,
clubs
big and
small
were
popping
up all
along
the
fabled
Sunset
Strip
and
bands
were
spilling
out of
That
would
soon
change
though.
By the
summer
of 1967,
the
mythical
Summer
of Love,
the club
scene on
the
Strip
was
quickly
dying.
It had
been
killed,
deliberately
or not,
by some
of the
key
players
who had
created
it:
Terry
Melcher,
producer
of the
scene’s
first
band;
Lou
Adler,
business
partner
of club
owner
Elmer
Valentine;
and John
Phillips,
leader
of The
Mamas
and the
Papas
and
composer
of such
ditties
as
“California
Dreaming”
and “If
You’re
Going to
As for
the
Byrds,
they
carried
on for a
good
many
years,
albeit
with
numerous
personnel
changes.
First
out was
the man
who many
feel was
the most
talented
member
of the
group,
Gene
Clark,
who
dropped
out in
March of
1966,
just one
year
after
the band
had
first
taken
the
stage at
Ciro’s.
Jim McGuinn, who remained a Byrd through numerous band lineups, joined the Subud religious sect in 1965. Two years later, upon the advice of the cult’s founder, he changed his name to Roger. A decade later, he became a born-again Christian. In a similar vein, Chris Hillman became an Evangelical Christian in the 1980s, but then later switched to the Greek Orthodox faith. Hillman played in various Byrds lineups, with Gram Parson’s Flying Burrito Brothers, and in David Geffen’s failed second attempt at creating a supergroup, this one known as Souther, Hillman, Furay. David Crosby, of course, left the Byrds and became 1/3 of David Geffen’s first supergroup, Crosby, Stills & Nash. These days he primarily spends his time inseminating lesbians and occasionally reuniting with former bandmates.
Jim Dickson and Terry Melcher continued to work with some of the Byrds, particularly Gram Parsons and Chris Hillman. Melcher formed a particularly close bond with his fellow ‘trust-fund kid,’ Gram Parsons, as did Melcher’s sometime sidekick, John Phillips. Both Melcher and Phillips, of course, knew Charlie Manson (Melcher raved about him to Ned Doheny), whose former prison buddy, Phil Kaufman, was Parsons’ road manager (and cremator). I’m pretty sure though that I already mentioned that, but what I haven’t yet worked into this narrative is that the Doors’ road manager, Bill Siddons, was once a paramour of Mansonite Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme.
The
Family’s
fingerprints,
as
always,
can be
found in
nearly
every
nook and
cranny
of the
Go to Part 13 -->
Endnote by Wes Penre, Illuminati News
[1] This
picture
was
added by
Illuminati
News and
is not
part of
the
original
article