All the leaves are brown
And the sky is grey
And the sky is
grey
Ive been for a walk
Ive been for a walk
On a winters day
On
a winters day
Id be safe and warm
Id be safe and warm
If I was
in l.a.
If I was in l.a.
California
dreamin
California
dreamin
On such a winters day
Stopped into a church
I
passed along the way
Well, I got down on my knees
Got down on my
knees
And I pretend to pray
I pretend to pray
You know the
preacher likes the cold
Preacher likes the cold
He knows Im gonna
stay
Knows Im gonna stay
California
dreamin
California
dreamin
On such a winters day
All the leaves are
brown
All the leaves are brown
And the sky is grey
And the sky
is grey
Ive been for a walk
Ive been for a walk
On a winters
day
On a winters day
If I didnt tell her
If I didnt tell her
I
could leave today
I could leave today
California
dreamin
California
dreamin
On such a winters day
California
dreaming
On
such a winters day
California
dreaming
On such a winters
dayThe Mamas & the Papas
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mamas & the Papas (credited as The Mama's and the
Papa's on the debut album cover) were an American vocal group of the 1960s. The
group recorded and performed from 1965 to 1968 with a short reunion in
1971, releasing five albums and 11 Top 40 hit
singles. They have sold nearly 40 million records worldwide.
Their signature sound was based on four-part male/female vocal
harmonies arranged by John Phillips, the band's
songwriter who managed to "leave the folk music behind"[1]
and blend his writing with the new "beat" sound in an unprecedented
mode. On the other hand, The Mamas & the Papas were riven by
internal frictions almost from the start which inevitably made them
short-lived as a working band. This, as well as other heavily discussed
issues like "Who sang and who was edited out from what final mix?" has
contributed to the group's myth even forty years later.
//
[edit] History
[edit] Formation
After the split-up of their two previous folk
groups—The Mugwumps and The New Journeymen—bandmates Denny
Doherty and John Phillips formed a new group, which included John's
wife Michelle. The last member to join was Cass
Elliot, though chief songwriter Phillips never wanted Elliot in the
group as he was convinced that there was no way they could succeed in
the music industry because of her image.[2]
The band shortly moved to the United States Virgin Islands,
and after running out of money, Michelle Phillips gambled back enough
money for them to return to New
York.[3]
After a short period of going under the name The Magic Circle,
the group found they disliked the name. One night, the Hells
Angels were on a talk show and one of them said "Now hold on there,
Hoss. Some people call our women cheap, but we just call them our
Mamas." Cass stood up and said, "Yeah! I want to be a Mama!" Michelle
joined in and the two of them started dancing around, chanting " We're
the Mamas! We're the Mamas!" After a couple of minutes of this, John and
Denny looked at each other and shrugged. "The Papas?" Name problem
solved.[4]
From that point on, shortly after signing a five-album contract with Dunhill Records, they referred to themselves as The Mamas
and The Papas[3].
[edit] Early commercial
success
The band's first single, "Go Where You Wanna Go", was released in
1965 and failed to chart. However, the second single, "California Dreamin'", was released in
late 1965 and quickly peaked at number four in the US, while in the UK,
it was less successful, peaking at number 23. The band's debut album, If You Can Believe Your
Eyes and Ears, was released in early 1966 and became the band's
first and only number one album on the Billboard
200. In the UK, the album peaked at number three and remains the
group's highest charting album there. The third and final single from
their debut was "Monday, Monday", which became the band's only
number one hit in the US. The song brought the band international
success when it peaked at number three in the UK.
After it was discovered that Michelle Phillips and Doherty were
having an affair, tension in the band erupted. Consulting their
attorney, Abe Somer, as well as their label Dunhill Records, the band drafted a formal statement
kicking Michelle out of the group in June 1966 - in the midst of
recording their second album, The Mamas & the Papas.
At this point they hired a new singer to replace Michelle, Jill
Gibson, girlfriend of their producer Lou
Adler. Gibson was already a singer/songwriter who had performed on
several Jan and Dean albums. Although Gibson was not known as a
strong singer, she learned to sing Michelle's parts within three weeks
while the band was in London, England. Who sang on the second
album is a disputed fact, and further confused by using Jill Gibson to
dub over an unknown amount of vocals in the second album. Gibson says
she sang all but two songs. Rock Historian Greg Russo says studio
records show Michelle had already recorded six songs for the second
album with the group in April 1966, including the singles "I Saw Her Again" and "Words of Love." Gibson recorded with
John, Cass and Denny in July and early August 1966. Michelle was asked
to rejoin the group by the end of August and went right into the studio,
and Gibson was let go and received an undisclosed payment for her part.
Producer Lou Adler states in the book Go Where You Wanna Go that
Gibson sang on "maybe six songs", but Michelle re-recorded them when
she returned. In the same book, Michelle Phillips is quoted as saying
that she doesn't know for sure who is singing on the second album, that
she and Jill both recorded many of the same songs. Phillips says only
Engineer Bones Howe and Producer Lou Adler know for sure who was on the
final record.[5]
The Mamas and the Papas album cover (1966).
The first single from the album, "I Saw Her Again" was about the affair. It peaked at number
five in the US and number eleven in the UK. There is a false start at
the final chorus of the song, which John Sebastian later mimicked on the Lovin' Spoonful song, "Darlin' Be Home Soon". Paul McCartney, however, was impressed by the way the
group came in too soon on the recording. "That has to be a mistake.
Nobody's that clever," he told the group.[6]
When the album was released afterwards, it peaked at number four in
the US, continuing the band's success, but peaked at number 24 in the
UK. "Words of Love" was released as the second single
in the US and peaked at number five in the US. In the UK, it was
released as a double A-side with "Dancing in the Street" and peaked at number 47.
"Dancing in the Street" was released as the third and final single in
the US and peaked at number 75.
[edit] Deliver
The band then recorded its third album, Deliver. During this
time Doherty was drinking heavily, trying to get over Michelle Phillips.[3]
As the closing act of the first Monterey International Pop Festival in
June 1967, the band performed dismally. John and Michelle Phillips and
Lou Adler organized the festival, and according to interviews with the
members of the group, they were all so caught up in the festival they
never got around to rehearsing. That, combined with Doherty's last
minute arrival from Canada, resulted in the mediocre performance.[7]
The first single from the album was "Look Through My Window", which peaked at number
24 in the US, but failed to chart in the UK. However, the second single,
"Dedicated to the One I Love",
gave the band a comeback, peaking at number two in both the US and the
UK. That success helped the album peak at a strong number two in the US
and number four in the UK. Third single "Creeque
Alley" showcased the band's history before their success. It peaked
at number five in the US and number nine in the UK. The fourth and
final single, a cover of "My Girl", peaked at number
fifteen in the US, but failed to chart in the UK.
Shortly afterward, a non-album single called "Glad to be Unhappy" was
released and peaked at number 26 in the US, but failed to chart in the
UK. Also that year, a song from the group's second album titled Dancing
Bear was released as a single and peaked at number 51 in the US,
but also failed to chart in the UK.
[edit] First break-up
and fourth album
The band then made their final TV appearance together where they
performed some of their most popular songs, on the Ed Sullivan Show in August 1967. During
the ensuing conversation with Sullivan, they revealed that they would be
taking a long vacation but would return. Because of this announcement,
Dunhill released their first Greatest Hits compilation entitled Farewell
to the First Golden Era volumes 1 and 2 featuring their early work.
Subsequently in October 1967, the group decided to take a trip to Europe to
spark their creativity while recording their fourth album. While in England,
Cass Elliot was talking to Mick
Jagger at a party thrown by their record label Dunhill Records, and John made an insulting remark about
her in front of the guests. Disgusted and humiliated, she stormed out of
the party and quit the group. However, Cass was contractually bound for
the band's next LP, and therefore appeared on The Papas & the Mamas,
their fourth album.
The first single "12:30
(Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon)" peaked at number 20 in the
US, but failed to chart in the UK. The album was then released and was
another commercial success in both the UK and US (although it was their
first album not to go gold or peak in the top ten in America). After the
second single, "Safe In My Garden" failed on the charts, only making it
to number 53, their label released Elliot's solo song from the album, a
cover of "Dream a Little Dream of Me" and
it ended up peaking at number twelve in the US. It also became their
first single to chart in the UK after five failed singles, peaking at
number eleven. It was their only single to ever chart higher in the UK
than the US.
[edit] Second
break-up and final split
After the success of "Dream a Little Dream of Me", Elliot admitted
she wanted to embark on a solo career. The fourth and final single from
the band's fourth album was "For the Love of Ivy", which peaked at
number 81 in the US and failed to chart in the UK. For the second time,
their label released a single from their previous work. A song from
their debut titled "Do You Wanna Dance" was released as a single, but
failed to chart in the UK and peaked at number 76 in the US.
After the official breakup, John Phillips issued the country-flavored
album The Wolf King of LA, featuring the minor hit single,
"Mississippi", but it was not a commercial success. In the TV special, Straight
Shooter: The True Story of John Phillips and The Mamas and the Papas,
other band members said that if they had recorded the material from
that album, it might have been their best album and would certainly have
been a hit.
In reviewing their contracts, their record company held that the band
owed them one more album and threatened to sue each member of the band
for US$250,000 for "breach of contract." Subsequently in 1971, after about a
year of John catching the other members as they passed through town,
teaching them their parts and then overdubbing them on tape, the band
released their final album People Like Us. The only single, "Step Out",
peaked at number 81 in the US and failed to chart in the UK. With the
failure of the lead single, the album failed to chart in the UK and
became the first album of the band's not to chart in the top 20 on the Billboard
200, peaking at number 84.
After the failure, the band officially split, with each member
embarking on solo careers.
[edit] Aftermath
[edit] Cass Elliot
After the final breakup, Cass
Elliot had a successful solo career, touring the U.S. and Europe,
becoming popular with hits such as "Make Your Own Kind of Music" and
"It's Getting Better". The three albums she recorded for RCA, (Cass Elliot, The Road Is No Place for a Lady,
both released in 1972 and Don't Call Me Mama Anymore,
released in 1973 contained singles, but none hit the charts.
She had many successful appearances on American variety shows,
including the highly popular Carol Burnett Show. She also
starred in two U.S. prime-time network TV specials - "The Mama Cass
Television Program" airing on ABC in January, 1969 and "Don't Call Me
Mama Anymore" airing on CBS in September, 1973. Cass also appeared on
the CBS game
show Match Game in 1973.
While on tour with her solo act, Elliot died of a heart attack on
July 29, 1974. She had just performed for two sold-out weeks to
audiences at the London Palladium in the UK. The night before she died, she had called Michelle in
L.A. to tell her how thrilled she was about getting standing ovations.
Michelle Phillips says that Cass Elliot "died a very happy woman." She
died in the same London flat, owned by Harry
Nilsson, in which Keith Moon of The Who
would later die. Her former band mates and Lou Adler all attended her
funeral in Los Angeles.
[edit] John Phillips
John Phillips continued to write songs for solo efforts and other
acts. Perhaps his best-known effort was as co-author of the Beach Boys'
#1 hit "Kokomo".
In the 1980s, John reunited with Denny
Doherty and formed The New Mamas and The Papas,
with his daughter Mackenzie Phillips and Spanky McFarlane (of the group Spanky and Our Gang). After some initial success,
Denny Doherty dropped out of the band in 1987 because he was
discontented with John』s drug abuse. The band did continue to prosper
and his old friend Scott McKenzie replaced Denny until 1991
when John Phillips began to show signs of liver failure and became very
ill. Mackenzie Phillips also continued to struggle with drug abuse and
was permanently replaced by Laurie Beebe, former vocalist of reformed
group The Buckinghams [1] ,in 1991. By this time, John Phillips
dropped out of the group after a liver transplant and Denny Doherty
reclaimed his position. Consequently, Scott McKenzie replaced John on
the front line until the break up of the band in 1994. Throughout the
rest of his life, Phillips toured with various versions of the group
playing smaller venues, reunion shows, and TV specials.
John's version of The Mamas and The Papas story is told in the
American PBS (Public Broadcasting System) TV special, Straight
Shooter: The True Story of John Phillips and The Mamas and the Papas.
After surviving a liver transplant in 1992, he died of heart failure
on March 18, 2001.
His final album, Phillips 66, was released posthumously in
August 2001.
In September of 2009, John's daughter Mackenzie told Oprah Winfrey on
the eve of her 1979 wedding she was raped by her father while in a drug
induced blackout. After that, the two had a "consensual", incestuous
relationship lasting ten years. During the same interview, Mackenzie
revealed she was also seduced by Mick
Jagger when she was eighteen. All statements made by Mackenzie
coincided with the release of a tell-all book High on Arrival.
[edit] Denny Doherty
Denny Doherty had a solo hit on the Adult Contemporary chart in 1974
with a rendition of the standard "You'll Never Know", and went on to host a popular
variety show in Canada.
In response to Straight Shooter: The True Story of John Phillips
and The Mamas and the Papas, Denny produced his own stage musical Dream
a Little Dream (the nearly true story of The Mamas and The Papas).
It featured music from the group and focused on his relationship with
Mama Cass. It was, he said, to "set the record straight."
In the 1990s, Denny was the producer and host of a popular children's
TV show in Canada, Theodore Tugboat — a kind of Thomas the Tank Engine for vessels in the Halifax Harbour.
Denny Doherty died on January 19, 2007, at his home in Mississauga,
Ontario, from kidney failure following surgery on an abdominal aneurysm.
[edit] Michelle Phillips
After the unsuccessful release of an album in 1977, Victim of Romance, Michelle Phillips went on to a
successful acting career, appearing in the
1973 movie Dillinger, 1979's Bloodline, the 1980 Sam Spade
tribute/spoof, The Man with Bogart's Face, American Anthem in 1986 and Let It Ride in 1989.
She also had a successful run in television drama, including Knots
Landing and Beverly Hills, 90210.
As the last surviving original member of The Mamas and The Papas, and
the copyright owner for the song "California Dreamin", Michelle was a
major contributor to the 2005 PBS Television Special California
Dreamin': The Songs of The Mamas and the Papas.
[edit] Legacy
Their first successful single, "California Dreamin'", was re-released
in the UK and peaked at number nine in 1997.
John's eldest daughter from his first marriage, Mackenzie Phillips, had a successful career as an actress
in the mid-1970s, having first appeared in George
Lucas's hit film American Graffiti (1973) and then in the successful TV series One Day at a Time, but found her success so overshadowed
by her problems with drug addiction—habits that she had shared with her
father—that by 1979 her career had effectively ended due to her
inability to work. It wasn't until the 1990s and 2000s that she would
rebuild her career, mostly with guest starring roles on a string of
popular television dramas.
John and Michelle's daughter, Chynna, would go on to form the band Wilson Phillips along with Carnie
Wilson and Wendy Wilson (the daughters of Beach Boy Brian
Wilson), with whom she's been friends since infancy.
John's youngest daughter, Bijou Phillips, is an actress and
model.
In 1986, the three surviving members of The Mamas and the Papas,
John Phillips, Denny Doherty and Michelle Phillips were featured in The Beach Boys music video California Dreaming
from the album Made in the U.S.A..
The Mamas and the Papas were inducted to the Rock & Roll
Hall of Fame in 1998 and into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2000.
Much press was given to their Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction, as
the members of the group, especially John Phillips, had publicly stated
their dislike for each other. At the 1998 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
induction ceremony the 3 surviving members accepted the award, with Cass
Elliot's daughter accepting for her. Michelle Phillips created a
memorable moment after all had accepted their awards returning to the
podium saying, " I know that Cass is sitting on that big full moon
tonight, looking down on these proceedings, wearing a size six Thierry Mugler dress, and thanking you all very, very much."
The audience then burst into applause. The group then performed
"California Dreamin'".
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
[edit] Greatest Hits
compilations
Year |
Album |
Label & number (U.S.) |
U.S. Billboard |
U.S. Cashbox |
UK |
1967 |
Farewell To The First Golden Era |
Dunhill D 50025/DS 50025 |
5 |
5 |
1 |
1968 |
Golden Era, Vol. 2 |
Dunhill DS 50038 |
53 |
41 |
42 |
1969 |
Hits Of Gold |
Stateside 5007 |
- |
- |
7 |
1969 |
16 Greatest Hits |
Dunhill DS 50064 |
61 |
72 |
2 |
1973 |
20 Golden Hits |
Dunhill DSX 50145 |
186 |
161 |
6 |
1998 |
Greatest Hits |
MCA Records 11740 |
? |
? |
? |
- Many other greatest hits packages have been released
world-wide since the group's split.
[edit] Singles