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CD
and Concert Review: Thee Midniters Greatest
by
Mark Guerrero
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Its finally here! After years of legal obstacles,
Thee Midniters Greatest is available.
There have been bootleg collections in the past, but
this is the real thing. The CD has 20 songs,
including their classics Land of a Thousand
Dances, Whittier Blvd., Thats All,
and Sad Girl. Its on the Thump Record
label, which also is the current home of eastside
Chicano rock bands El Chicano and Tierra. Thee
Midniters, with Little Willie G. on lead vocals, were
the kingpins of East L.A. rock in the 60s. The
songs on this CD were part of the soundtrack of the
lives of those who grew up on the eastside of Los
Angeles in that era, myself included. Thee
Midniters were always best known for their great
ballads crooned by Little Willie G., but they also
excelled at up tempo r&b, British
Invasion-influenced rock & roll, and even garage
rock. Never Knew I Had It So Bad, and ,
Jump, Jive, and Harmonize are strong examples of
the two latter categories. Little Willie G.s
vocals are very strong in all the genres.
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Their instrumental Chicano Power, written by
their trombonist/arranger Romeo Prado, has a Latin
groove and is a reflection of the raised consciousness
of the Chicano in the late 60s that affected many of
the eastside bands. The CD also includes their
excellent version of the r&b classic, Everybody
Needs Somebody To Love, which had also been covered
by the Rolling Stones in the mid-sixties. Ten of
the twenty songs on the collection were written by
various members of Thee Midniters, which shows that
they could do more than do original arrangements and
excellent interpretations of existing songs.
Thee Midniters Greatest is smartly packaged and
contains a booklet with lots of information and
vintage photos of Thee Midniters. It also has a
photo of Los Angeles radio station KRLAs music
charts of June 1965, which shows Thee Midniters
recording Whittier Blvd sharing the top ten with
Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones and
Help by the Beatles. This CD is a must for
anyone with a collection of East L.A. or Chicano
music.
On January 28, 2003 to
celebrate the release of "Thee Midniters
Greatest," Thee Midniters, reunited with Little
Willie G., performed to a packed house at the House of
Blues in Hollywood. Invited by Willie himself, I
attended the event. Thee Midniters were
introduced by legendary disc jockey Casey Kasem.
Thee Midniters go way back with Casey. They had
appeared on Kasem's television show,
"Shebang," and played shows he MC'd in the
1960s. This magic night at the House of Blues,
almost four decades later, Thee Midniters sounded
great and Little Willie G.s vocals and performance
were world-class. In great voice, he handled the
ballads with his usual confidence and cool, sang the
rock and r&b songs with the proper grit and
edginess, and bounded around the stage testifying to
the audience of believers. The crowd, noisy and
enthusiastic, ate it up. Thee Midniters played
virtually all the songs from the CD and took them to
another level. The House of Blues was jumping
with lots of people from the eastside, who came across
the great divide for the event. Thee Midniters
consisted of the aforementioned Romeo Prado,
saxophonist Larry Rendon, bassist Jimmy Espinoza,
along with Little Wilie G., all members of Thee
Midniters in the 60s. Other musicians in the
current Midniters at the concert were: Bobby Robles,
guitar; Rev. Charles Williams, organ/piano; Bobby Loya,
trumpet; Bobby Navarrette, sax/flute; Robert Zapata,
drums; and Michael Guerra and Willies son, Jacob
Garcia, on background vocals. The Blazers, an
excellent Chicano roots rock band with two albums on
Rounder Records to their credit, opened the show. I
wanted to catch their set, but unfortunately arrived a
few minutes late. I did catch a comedian who
preceded Thee Midniters by the name of Gilbert
Esquivel. He was hilarious and got the crowd
warmed up and ready for the headliners. I ran
into a lot of musician friends at the event.
Members of Tierra; lead guitarist and leader Rudy
Salas, drummer Aaron Ballesteros, and percussionist
Dale Villavicencio; Ruben Guevara, formerly of Ruben
& the Jets; guitarrón virtuoso Lorenzo Martinez,
formerly of the Rock Angels and member of a band with
me that backed my dad, Lalo Guerrero in various
concerts; Louie Mendez, bassist of the Rock Angels and
sometimes for Flaco Jimenez; and Joey Guerra, former
keyboardist for Tierra and currently playing with
Steve Salas, former Tierra lead vocalist. Also
in attendance were guitarist Ron Reyes, formerly of
the Impalas and Yaqui and currently in my band, Radio
Aztlán; and the legendary Flaco Jimenez himself.
Im happy to hear from Little Willie G.s manager,
Gene Aguilera, that Willie has several gigs coming up
with Thee Midniters. Ill be listing them on
my Whats New page when I get the information.
In the meantime, pick up "The Midniters
Greatest" and hear why they continue to generate
excitement after all these years.
Mark
Guerrero
P.O. Box 8808
Palm Springs, CA 92263
web
site: http://markguerrero.net/
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