Let's just say it wasn't the cover that caught my eye. Three young men whose pictures were ready to be cut out and put into some young girls locket. "Ooooh that Gordon is dreamy" No, it wasn't the cover, it was the band's name: Steamer. My inner twelve year old started to giggle. Steamer . I was really hoping that at my age I would have started to mature at least a little. I didn't recognize any of the musicians names: Gordon Henderson, Mike Hilliard or Ed Hilliard. I did find it strange that there were no other musician credits to cover the instruments Steamer didn't play. I did see one name, that was at one time a pretty big deal in the music industry here on the West Coast through the '70s and '80s, Mister Terry David Mulligan who always went by three names. Steamer was part of the Canadian Talent Agency and the album was distributed by Pickwick Records, a label that seemed to specialize in budget re-issues and Christmas albums - at least t...
Ladies and gentlemen, The Elvis Brothers. I stumbled on their 1985 release Adventure Time a few years ago and really liked it, which sent me hunting for their other records ... and where I live they're a little harder to find but as it turns out not impossible, as I have found the first two records. I found not one, but two copies of Screams (I sent the other to a friend who lives in Illinois who was trying to find a copy), the band Brad was in back in the late '70s. Their first couple of albums came out on Portrait, and when the label folded in ’86, the band went on hiatus for seven years. I doubt I’ll ever track it down, but the original trio took one last kick at the can in ’92 with Now Dig This - after which they once again faded into the pop ether. I found a pretty nice copy of their debut Movin' Up by accident (it happens) last April and I immediately sent a pic to my buddy Jeff who wrote back without missing a beat telling me which tracks he really liked. I hav...