Question Mark & the Mysterians | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | November 4, 1997 | |||
Recorded | July 17–24, 1997 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 40:21 | |||
Label | Collectables | |||
Producer | Chad Cunningham | |||
? and the Mysterians chronology | ||||
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- Question Mark The Mysterians Top Songs
- Question Mark And The Mysterians
- Question Mark And The Mysterians Biography
- Question Mark The Mysterians Albums
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Question Mark & the Mysterians is a 1997 eponymous album by the garage rock band ? and the Mysterians, known for their #1 1966 hit '96 Tears'. The album was recorded by the original members of the band as a result of their inability to access their masters or re-release their own earlier material, which had passed from the ownership of label Cameo to Allen Klein. It included all of the songs released on their first album, 96 Tears, as well as several other tracks. The rerecorded version of '96 Tears' was subsequently incorporated into compilations.
- Since the rights to the original 96 Tears album and singles have been held in limbo, fans have to be content with records like? & the Mysterians featuring 9.
- Question Mark & the Mysterians was a pre-punk rock band that was formed in Michigan in the early 60s. It is widely believed that the term 'punk rock' was first used in reference to them by Dave Marsh, a writer who often contributed to Rolling Stone magazine. The band was mysterious by design.
Background[edit]
Although they are often wrongly thought of as “one hit wonders”,? (Question Mark) & The Mysterians actually placed five singles on the Billboard charts and released two classic albums of their own original brand of garage rock in an incredible fifteen-month period that ended with the collapse of the Cameo-Parkway record label. And the Mysterians (also called Question Mark & the Mysterians or Question Mark and the Mysterians) are an American rock and roll band that formed in Bay City, Michigan in 1962. The group is best known for their song '96 Tears', a garage rock classic recorded in 1966 that reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
In the 1960s, Michigan-based band ? & the Mysterians found a regional hit with the song '96 Tears', particularly popular in Texas. The song was originally released on the Pa-Go-Go label, but aggressive offers from several larger distributors resulted in their selling the master to Cameo.[2][3][4] Cameo shortened the recording and distributed the single nationally, resulting in a #1 Billboard hit.[2] The band subsequently released several singles and two albums, 96 Tears and Action, on the label. In 1968, the entire catalogue of Cameo-Parkway releases, including those by ? & the Mysterians, were purchased by Allen Klein.[5] Klein refused to permit '96 Tears' to be included on compilations or to permit their albums to be reissued,[4] so in 1997 members of the band, including its vocalist, came together after a studio recording hiatus of several decades to re-record their original songs.[2] The eponymous album was the first of two such re-recordings by the band,[1] who were subsequently able to license their new version of the song for compilations.[2] It would be October 2005 before Klein's company, ABKCO Records, would make a CD of the original releases, The Best of ? & the Mysterians: Cameo Parkway 1966-1967.[6]
Album[edit]
The new album included all 12 tracks from the original album 96 Tears, plus an additional four. Two of the tracks, 'Smokes' and 'Got To', had were included on the band's second album, Action. The other two songs, 'Do Something to Me' and 'Make You Mine', had been released as singles in 1967 and 1968. In its review, Allmusic notes that although the album is made by the original line-up, the material doesn't sound the same as it did when first released, but adds that 'the group sounds tough, dynamic, and exciting...these guys can still kick hard, which is what makes the record worthwhile for die-hard garage freaks.'[1]
Track listing[edit]
All songs written by Rudy Martinez, except where noted.
- '96 Tears' – 3:01
- 'Midnight Hour' – 2:52
- 'I Need Somebody' – 2:12
- '8' Teen' – 2:46
- 'Smokes' – 1:50
- 'Got To' – 2:38
- 'Do Something to Me' (Jimmy Calvert, Norman Marzano, Paul Naumann) – 2:32
- 'Stormy Monday' (traditional) – 3:45
- 'Up Side' – 2:56
- 'Don't Break This Heart of Mine' – 2:02
- 'Ten O'Clock' – 2:24
- 'Why Me' – 1:45
- 'You're Telling Me Lies' – 2:29
- 'Don't Tease Me' – 1:37
- 'Set Aside' – 2:48
- 'Make You Mine' – 2:44
Personnel[edit]
Musicians[edit]
- ? (Rudy Martinez) – vocals
- Robert Balderrama – lead guitar
- Frank Lugo – bass guitar
- Frank Rodriguez – organ
- Robert Martinez – drums
Technical[edit]
- Chad Cunningham – engineer, producer
- Nicole Ruhl Fichera – jacket design
- David Graham – arranger
- Thomas Kaekel – photography
- Stephen Kaplan – photography, production supervisor
- Mike Kryger – engineer
- Jerry Schollenberger – research
- Harry Young – liner notes, research
References[edit]
- ^ abcErlewine, Stephen Thomas. 'Question Mark & the Mysterians'. Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
- ^ abcdDawson, Jim; Steve Propes (2003). 45 RPM: the history, heroes, & villains of a pop music revolution. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 161. ISBN0-87930-757-9.
- ^Sternfield, Aaron (October 1, 1966). 'Cameo-P'kway in LP comeback bid'. Billboard: 3–4. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
- ^ abHuey, Steve. '? & the Mysterians'. Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
- ^Larkin, Colin (1992). The Guinness encyclopedia of popular music. 1. Guinness. p. 398. ISBN1-882267-01-X.
- ^Erlewine, Steven Thomas. 'The Best of ? & the Mysterians: Cameo Parkway 1966-1967'. Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
Like so many rock 'n' roll classics -'Satisfaction,' 'Layla,' 'Whole Lotta Love,' 'Purple Haze,' 'Johnny B. Goode'- ? and the Mysterians' 1966 smasheroo '96 Tears' begins with a riff that drills into your cranium and, once implanted, never, ever leaves. And why would you want it to? It's the perfect riff for the perfect three-minute, badass lock 'n' roll song.
But '96 Tears' isn't like those other riff-o-matics. For starters, the guitar sits this one out; this tadically radiant riff is dispensed via that most soulful of seemingly long-lost instruments, the venerable organ. And that opening burst of austere insanity- a staccato sputter of eighth notes, all two of them tepeated ad infinitum- is only the beginning. No sooner has it stunned you into instantaneous acceptance of its immortality than it morphs into another unbearably mind-numbing riff of equal enormity. The song could end right there and you'd die happier for having heard it.
Then comes that voice:
'Too many teardrops for one heart to be cryin'/Too many teardrops for one heart to catry on.' Whoa. This guy sounds desperate, vulnerable. He's hurting like hell since she left him; she's even laughing at him! You feel his pain and you're hooked. You've got to stay tuned to see if he's gonna crack.
Nope, he's tough, defiant; he's got himself together now—he's not so much singing as sneering He may be down but soon things will be different: 'And when the sun comes up/I'll be on top/You'll be way down there/Lookin' up.' Is that a threat or a mere prediction? No matter; she's gonna be the one bawling before this is all over, you just watch and see: 'Ninety-six tears, c'mon and lemme hear you cry, now/Ninety-six rears (whoo!)/I wanna hear you cry/Night and day, yeah, all night long.'
What is this? Who is this? '96 Tears'? What an odd name for a song, you're thinking. And the gtoup singing it is called—huh?—? and the Mysterians ? The singer is a punctuation mark ? You've gotta be kidding me. Is he a strange visitor from another planet or somethin' ? Well, since you asked... The man who calls himself?, you see, was born on Mars. He's been around since the dinosaurs and regularly has conversations with The People From The Future. He's been famous for several lifetimes and his band, he once said, 'came together out of the clear blue sky.'
Not buying it? Try this earthly version then: He may or may not have been born Rudy Martinez circa 1945, in Texas. And he probably did his growing up in the Saginaw, Michigan area where the band -most of them transplanted Chicano Texans- really formed.
There are two sides to every story, after all. But ? -and yes, that's his legal name- ain't giving anything away. That's part of the mystique, like the perma-shades that blot out the King of Attitude's eyes. If he told you more about himself, he wouldn't be much of a questionmark, now, would he?
So we'll be the designated bean-spillers. The nucleus of the original band –bassist Larry Borjas, drummer Robert Martinez and guitarist Bobby Balderrama- took up rockin' circa 1962. Keyboard player Frank Rodriguez was soon added and before long the band was cranking out tunes by the Ventures and the like.
They named themselves after a 1957 Japanese sci-fi movie in which alien Mysterians from the planet Mysteroid land on Earth looking to mate with our women. That's where ? comes in. Around '64, he just appeared, a dancing, snarling enigma, declaring himself the Mysterians' new vocalist and suggesting that the others take names like X, Y and Z to maintain their inscrutability (they passed on the offer). By then Robert (spies swear he's ?'s brother) and Larry had found new lives in the military, replaced by Eddie Serrato (?'s brother-in-law) on drums and Frank Lugo on bass.
The now-solid lineup cut a couple of records that went nowhere. Then came '96 Tears,' which began its ascension to garage band eminence one day when Rodriguez began noodling on his keyboard. (And get this, trivia fans: Contrary to long-standing assumptions, Frank played the omnipotent riff on a Thomas organ, not a Farfisa, as is so often assumed.) ? once told this writer how the song materialized from the depths of his subconscious: 'As soon as Frank hit the first chord, I said, 'We can't use that because I've heard it before.' We were all trying to figure out where we'd heard it. Then I realized that I wrote the song a long time ago.' ? had called his composition, which he'd penned as much as four years earlier, 'Too Many Teardrops.'
Guitarist Bobby Balderrama picks up the story: '? started singing it, and then Eddie said, 'We should give it a number, like how many teardrops?' He said, 'Let's call it '69 Tears.' I was only 15 at the time, but I knew what that meant. So he said, 'Let's turn the numbers around.' And so we went with that.' In March of 1966, ? and the Mysterians shuffled into a makeshift studio in Bay City, Michigan, and cut '96 Tears' and its B-side, 'Midnight Hour.' The band's manager, Lilly Gonzales, issued approximately 750 copies on her own Pa-Go-Go Records label, and ? himself began promoting it, calling radio stations and visiting record shops all over Michigan.
After several months the single had stirred enough local buzz that Cameo-Parkway Records, a label that had logged dozens of hits by the likes of Bobby Rydell, Dee Dee Sharp and Chubby Checker earlier in the '60s, picked up the distribution, re-releasing the single on its Cameo imprint. (? claims he went with Cameo because the label was orange, his favorite color. More probably, Neil Bogart, then vice president of the company, cut a deal with Gonzales.)
Long story short: By the end of October, the quintet had laid claim to the number one single in America. Not to mention a bona fide rock 'n' roll anthem that forever raised the bar for rock 'n' roll anthems. '96 Tears' marked the last major hit for Cameo Parkway, certainly its last chart topper. It's also the only song that most people associate with ? and the Mysterians.
But that wasn't all, folks, and now, finally, all of the group's amazing slabs of pure teenage Tex-Mex bliss can be found in one place. What you've got here are 27 pristine examples of unadorned, unadulterated dementia: the entire contents of the two albums ? and the Mysterians spewed out for Cameo, 96 Tears and Action, the non-LP single 'Do Something To Me'V'Love Me Baby (Cherry July),' and two previously unreleased tracks, an early, slower and bluesier take of '96 Tears' and an outtake of 'Midnight Hour'—both in glamorous stereo!
? and the Mysterians did manage to place another three singles on the charts in '66-'67. 'I Need Somebody,' which led off that debut album and now christens our collection, made it to number 22 in Billboard. It's another cocky garageland masterwork, inexplicably inserted 'Mary Had A Little Lamb' funky organ lick and all. 'We weren't too far from Motown,' says Balderrama of the song, 'and I think we were trying to get that funky style.'
Following the opener, the group immediately struts its versatility, rolling through a set of incessantly hyper tunes like the boss '8 Teen' (no relation to the later Alice Cooper hit), 'You're Telling Me Lies' and 'Why Me' (with Tony Orlando singing background!). We're talking classic lusty, R&B-driven snot-nosed punk all the way here, yet there's an undetlying tenderness in ?'s vocals, belying his crusty demeanor. He's that kinda guy.
By the time the Mysterians recorded their second album, rock had grown fuzzier - heavier, as they said back then. ? was in the vanguard, as amply demonstrated in 'Girl (You Captivate Me),' the early '67 single that hinted at a proto-Detroit rock sound that would shortly be taken to extremes by the likes of the Stooges and the MC5. There's more upfront bass; louder, more depraved guitar; ?'s vocal is chewier- things are getting more mind-blowing by the minute. 'Can't Get Enough Of You, Baby,' which preceded 'Girl' by a few months, was virtually a '96 Tears' clone, although ?'s vocals swim in a sea of reverb.
There are nods to the soul and pop sounds of the day. 'Got To' borrows a page from the Otis Redding soul book, while the band's cover of the Isley Brothers' 'Shout' rivals any of the hundreds of other versions recorded back then. 'Do Something To Me' borders on bubblegum and preceded Tommy James' hit version by a year. ? and the Mysterians didn't hold on for long. Cameo-Parkway soon scaled back operations and although the band recorded for other labels in various guises, by 1968 they were through. Some of the musicians stayed active through the years but it wasn't until the late 1990s that the original members of? and the Mysterians returned to conquer the world for a second time, making new recordings and performing killer live shows.
The lucky ones who witnessed them reported that the band was every bit as nutso as it was in '66. It was, they said, enough to make a believer cry -cry, cry, cry. Whoo!- 96 tears.
by Jeff Tamarkin, 2005
1. I Need Somebody - 2:15
2. Stormy Monday (B. Eckstine, E. Hines, R. Crowder) - 2:27
3. You're Telling Me Lies (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 2:31
4. Ten O'Clock (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 2:13
5. Set Aside (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 3:03
6. Up Side (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 2:53
7. '8' Teen (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 2:48
8. Don't Tease Me (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 1:41
9. Don't Break This Heart Of Mine (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 1:55
10.Why Me (B. Balderrama, E. Serrato, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 1:38
11.Midnight Hour - 2:38
12.96 Tears - 2:58
13.Girl (You Captivate Me) (A. Dischel, J. Di Francesca) - 2:17
14.Can't Get Enough Of You, Baby (D. Randell, S. Linzer) - 1:57
15.Got To - 2:22
16.I'll Be Back - 2:02
17.Shout (Part 1 and 2) (Isley Brothers) - 5:31
18.Hangin' On A String (Gloria Shane, J. Darrow) - 2:15
19.Smokes - 1:52
20.It's Not Easy - 2:43
21.Don't Hold It Against Me (B. Ross, L. Crane) - 1:57
22.Just Like A Rose (Jason Darrow) - 2:10
Question Mark The Mysterians Top Songs
23.Do You Feel It - 2:2524.Do Something To Me (J. Calvert, N. Marzano, P. Naumann) - 2:37
25.Love Me Baby (Cherry July) (B. Balderrama, F. Lugo, F. Rodriguez, R. Martinez) - 3:03
26.Midnight Hour (Unreleased Version) - 2:30
27.96 Tears (Unreleased Version) - 3:03
All songs by Rudy Martinez except where stated.
*QuestionMark - Lead Vocal
*Bobby Balderrama - Guitar
*Frank Lugo - Bass (except Tracks 11, 12, 26 - 27)
*Frank Rodriguez - Organ
*Eddie Serrato – Drums
With
*Tony Orlando On Harmony Vocal (Track 10)
Question Mark And The Mysterians
*Fernando Aguilar - Bass (Tracks 11 - 12)