Cat Mother & The All Night Newsboys - Albion-Doo Wah 1970
Grassroots rockers Cat Mother & the All Night Newsboys formed in New York's Lower East Side in 1967 -- comprising singer/guitarist
Larry Parker, lead guitarist
Charlie Chin, bassist
Roy Michaels, keyboardist
Bob Smith, and drummer
Michael Equine; By year's end they were regularly headlining the Café Wha?, and soon were ensconced as the house band at the famed Electric Circus. In 1969 the group signed to Polydor Records, with longtime friend
Jimi Hendrix agreeing to produce their debut LP
The Street Giveth and the Street Taketh Away -- supported by a series of appearances as
Hendrix's opener, the record generated Cat Mother & the All Night Newsboys' lone Top 40 hit "Good Old Rock and Roll," a medley of pop classics from the late 1950s.
Chin left the lineup soon after, and in an attempt to also sever ties with manager
Michael Jeffrey, the remaining bandmembers traveled to San Francisco to record the follow-up, 1970s
Albion Doowah, a pastoral, country-inspired effort featuring
Paul Johnson on guitar and
Jay Ungar on bass.
Parker split soon after, and the remaining trio of
Michaels,
Smith and
Equine returned to New York, abbreviating their name to simply Cat Mother and recruiting guitarist
Charlie Prichard and percussionist
Steve Davidson for their eponymous 1971 LP. Guitarist
Charlie Harcourt replaced
Prichard for Cat Mother's fourth and final album, 1973's aptly-titled
Last Chance Dance, although the group continued playing live for several years to follow. AllMusic.
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