1963-66
Phil Stan
- rhythm guitar, vocals
Scott Peaker - bass guitar, keyboards
Don Young - drums, vocals
Bob Deutscher - lead guitar, vocals
Phil Don Scott Bob
I was invited to replace Byron Ebell when he left this band. A school mate of Scott's, Brian MacDonald, had gotten a couple Yardbirds 45's from his uncle in Britain, Eric 'Slowhand' Clapton. The band had been playing the song A Certain Girl. Byron figured out the 'trick' of turning the volume on his Fender Tremolux amp to 10 to get that sustaining sound. I started doing the same with my amp. Actually, I wired a foot pedal to my amp that would short out the volume pot to switch the level from about 5 to 10!
Those were the high school days of hanging out with the likes of Terry David Mulligan, "D" Charles (later known as Johnny Walker - real name Duane Dodson), Russ Campbell and other radio personalities of the day, We recorded a song for CJME radio, a spoof on Big Bad John for a mock kidnapping of DJ "Beatle Johnny Onn" (John Aune) and while in Earl Brown's studio we recorded the first two songs I ever wrote, Keep It Down and an instrumental entitled Rush Hour. Don Young has the acetate of the 45, the only source copy I know of. He is now the president of the Regina Musicians Association, Local 446, American Federation of Musicians.
We had known a band called The Dynamics, perhaps the premier Saskatchewan band of the early sixties. They had been having a lot of success playing the Eastern Townships of Quebec in '65 and '66. So in the summer of '66 after graduating from high school we headed out by train to Sherbrooke and on to the Rockcliffe Hotel, a saloon six miles from the Vermont border. We played around the Eastern Townships until we disbanded in the fall.
Keep It Down
my very first composition
with vocals
Rush
Hour (instrumental)