"Ward Dotson once said that he left the band the Gun Club because he got
tired of playing for people in black leather who never smiled and he
responded by forming the considerably lighter hearted hard rock outfit
the Pontiac Brothers. Given this logic, it probably made sense that
after the Pontiac Brothers called it a day in 1989, Dotson found himself
moving away from the good-natured crunch of the Pontiacs and started
indulging his fondness for '60s-style pop and the result was a witty and
tuneful new project called the Liquor Giants. The group released their
first album in 1992, You're Always Welcome (which was released in some
overseas markets as America's #1 Recording Artists), but from the start
it was obvious that this was a "group" in only the broadest sense.
Dotson, who handled guitar and lead vocals and wrote the lion's share of
the material, was the only musician who played on every cut of the
album, with a round-robin crew of various L.A. cronies pitching in on
bass, drum, and keys (among them former Pontiacs drummer Dave Valdez on
bass; drummers Dan Earhart and Bill McGarvey, and keyboard man Dan
McGough dominated the supporting cast). The material played down the
hard rock stomp of Dotson's work with the Pontiac Brothers in favor of
hooky but enjoyably unpolished pop/rock tunes that made no secret of
their roots in the sounds of '60s AM radio."
There are a few bands that will forever hold a special spot in my heart. I was turned on to the Liquor Giants by way of an interview I had with Timothy Bracy of The Mendoza Line years ago where he casually dropped the band's debut as one of his favorite underrated albums. At the time (and frankly, I still do) hailing Mr. Bracy's musical opinion as 'Gospel', I dug around to discover the few albums that were as incredible as they were obscure. I heard the band, and Ward Dotson in particular, described as the Big Star of the '90's. I'll go with that. I love the band's entire output but a favorite has to be it's fourth record, "Every Other Day At A Time", released in 1998 while I was coming out of my 'psychedelic' phase and unfortunately ignoring the music I would cherish later. My loss. Do yourself a favor and track this stuff down, you will love it, I promise. My sincere thanks to Ward Dotson for honoring a fanboy's request to participate in this edition of First/Last.
The first album you ever bought?
‘Snoopy vs. the Red Baron’ by The Royal Guardsman.
‘Snoopy vs. the Red Baron’ by The Royal Guardsman.
Your last album bought?
“Message for the Mess Age” by NRBQ.
“Message for the Mess Age” by NRBQ.
Favorite album of all time?
I love greatest hits and comp’s, but they probably don’t count. I guess The Beach Boys’ “Today” is a good one or “With The Beatles”.
I love greatest hits and comp’s, but they probably don’t count. I guess The Beach Boys’ “Today” is a good one or “With The Beatles”.
Least favorite/most disappointing
album?
“Don’t Tell A Soul” by The Replacements.
“Don’t Tell A Soul” by The Replacements.
First concert attended?
Bo Donaldson and The Heywoods, they played on ‘Junior Angel’ night prior to an Angels game.
Bo Donaldson and The Heywoods, they played on ‘Junior Angel’ night prior to an Angels game.
Last concert?
Those Darlins.
Those Darlins.
Favorite concert ever?
The Rezillos.
The Rezillos.
Least favorite concert?
The Pixies.
The Pixies.
Any thoughts, experiences about
Pittsburgh?
Ed Masley is a good guy.
Ed Masley is a good guy.
Thanks so much, Ward. Needless to say, it means a lot to me that you were able to do this. If only I had a time machine to see your old band live.
2 comments:
I saw these guys at Electric Banana
Lucky bastard. What year?
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