Friday, December 10, 2010

The Fantastic Dee-Jays - The Fantastic Dee-Jays


I don't think I ever mentioned this before, but from 2001 to 2007, I was in a band, a decent band at that. The group was made up of high-level executives, my colleagues, at the financial institution where I worked in Rhode Island - the drummer was the Chief Financial Officer, the bass player was Lead Syndicator, etc. The group was already going semi-strong before I joined the company, just doing instrumental jam sessions in someone's basement. One day they told me that they were looking for a singer, and asked if I was interested in the job. Now frankly, at the time, I couldn't carry a tune if it had a handle on it. But I went and auditioned for them one night, and I guess I was passable enough; they let me join up.

Our band did nothing but rock, garage rock and blues covers, stuff like "Devil With The Blue Dress", "Stormy Monday", "Burning Love" - nothing original. But we practiced a lot, and got competent enough to begin playing small local gigs, company parties and Open Mike Nights around Providence, stuff like that. We didn't take our group too seriously - it was just something to do, a way to blow off steam after work. However, as it turned out, we went a lot further with that band than we ever dreamed, and achieved some small measure of national success (on the amateur level, of course). But that's another story that I may tell later on down the line. All in all, it was really fun, and a dream come true for me. One day, maybe I'll post a recording of one of our songs too, for you all to have a laugh over.

We were a pretty close bunch, the group of us, often eating lunch together or going our for after-work drinks on the days we didn't practice. In addition to our regular jobs around the office, we were collectively known there as "the band", which got us a lot of attention in the building, both positive (in that people from work would flock to our gigs, a major selling point we used when negotiating fees with club owners) and not-so-positive (a few folks resented our insular, tight-knit combo, thinking that somehow our membership in an unofficial company band somehow gave us a Teflon coating). Fortunately, there wasn't much of that latter attitude around.

One day, an acquaintance of mine there in the office who often came to our shows handed me a CD of tunes he thought the band might like enough to take a swing at (in addition to being the lead singer, it was the bass player and I who came up with the majority of the group's material). The CD contained songs by an old '60s group called The Fantastic Dee-Jays. I'd never heard of them before, but the guy who gave me the recordings had an affiliation with the band - way back when, his dad was their rhythm guitarist.

The Fantastic Dee-Jays were a Pittsburgh-area (actually, out of McKeesport) group founded in 1964 by three 16-year-old high school students: Denny Nicholson on lead guitar, Dick Newton on rhythm guitar and Tom Juneko on drums (note that the band used an unusual bass-less setup). They were a straight-up, literal garage band, practicing at Newton's house after school; just a bunch of kids goofing and having fun.

However, in early 1965, a local radio DJ caught wind of the band's sound and began recording them after-hours on the station's equipment, then playing the songs on the station the following day. These singles began building the band a rabid local following, with kids flocking to their shows. And it generated enough of a buzz to lead to the recording of their one and only album, The Fantastic Dee-Jays, in early 1966, released on Stone Records. Later that year, on June 25th, the band played its biggest gig, opening for the Rolling Stones at the Pittsburgh Civic Center Arena during the Stones' second American tour (in support of the album Aftermath).

But, as things usually happen, the band began to unravel as the members got older and graduated from high school. By the end of 1966, The Fantastic Dee-Jays were history. Members of the original band stayed active, eventually evolving into another local garage band, The Swamp Rats.

It's an old story, told many times before - group gets together, has some level of success, breaks up and moves on - end of story. Sounds like That Thing You Do!, eh? Well, The Fantastic Dee-Jays should have fallen to that level of extreme 60s obscurity. However, the five singles and lone album they cut have long been celebrated by serious collectors of mid-Sixties garage rock, so much so that in 1996, Millennia Records obtained the license for their sole album and rereleased it on their label. In addition to their excellent original songs, the album includes a couple of notable/noteworthy tunes:
- A cover of "Fight Fire" by The Golliwogs, a band that would eventually evolve into Creedence Clearwater Revival;
- "What You're Doing", a Lennon/McCartney obscurity, and
- "T & C Lancers", a song the band recorded for a advertisement for a local shoe store!
We (that is, my band) never used any of the songs on this album, but I came to appreciate and enjoy the energy and simplicity inherent in these tunes. Shoot - I was in a garage band myself, so I could relate.

And I hope you all can relate too - here it is:

Please use the email link below to contact me, and I will reply with the download link(s) ASAP:

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Enjoy, and as always, let me know what you think.

7 comments:

  1. Yeah, I heard these guys on radio station WMCK (McKeesport) back in the day. The DJ/producer was Terry Lee (Nunzio) RIP, whose show, "The TL Night Train" aired every evening. Great stuff.

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    1. Hi - thanks for the comment. This is one of my more obscure postings, and doesn't get a lot of reviews or requests. It's good to hear that, in some places still, this old garage band hasn't been forgotten!

      Thanks again for your note.

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  2. I was classmates with this band. I was in the Arondies we also were w terry lee for awhile. I was drummer for about a year before it ended. I always loved love is so tuff but couldn’t acknowledge it. Wonder what happened to them

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    1. Dear Wackus -

      Thanks for the great comment and a look back at the music scene in Western PA back in the ‘60s! Did The Arondies ever put out anything, either regional or national?

      As for the Fantastic Dee-Jays, it looks like they had all moved out of music/performing by the early ‘70s; don’t know where they are now, but I hope they’ve been able to see people nowadays gaining a new appreciation of their music.

      All the best to you!

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  3. I was a teen-ager back in the mid 1960’s and anybody who ever heard of and listened to the TL Show knew who The Fantastic Dee Jays were. They had the music for young lovers end with their music while the changed band, from the Dee Jays to The Swamp Rats was the hard heavy hitting band.

    I, like any other young male who knew even a little about a guitar and played in the bands we was all in, knew what The Arondies “69 was. Every local band played it to death. It is up there in the classic status with 96 Tears and Gloria.

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  4. Hello, thank you for this post as Denny Nicholson is my uncle. My mom is his sister and she just gave me "The Fantastic DeeJays" Collectors Photo Book. So I am working on a project for her to get the 16 pages scanned and added to a photo book. It provides a lot of insight into the band and early beginnings.

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    1. Dear Mr. Jenkner -

      That sounds like a great, interesting project! Let me know when you’ve completed it; I would be very interested in acquiring a copy.

      All the best to you from Pee-Pee Soaked Heckhole

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