A great singer you may have never heard, or even heard of.


 

One of the hotbeds of musical activity in the U.S.A. in the mid-to-late 70’s was New York City, especially the bands who were appearing at a club called CBGB. Everyone knows four of the bands who appeared at CBGB and as a consequence got themselves record deals---The Ramones, Blondie, Talking Heads, and Television most famously. Each had it’s own sound and style.

There was another band who didn’t do as well: Mink DeVille. Though the above bands all sounded different from one another, Mink DeVille sound more unlike them than any other. The singers name was Willy DeVille, and his style developed not out of the influences of the other NYC bands, but rather from R & B, 50’s R & R, and Latin music. Mink DeVille’s 1976 debut album Cabretta (on Capitol Records) was produced by Jack Nitzsche (Phil Spector’s arranger and orchestrator, and a member of Neil Young’s band Crazy Horse for a while), and is fantastic! Willy and the band included a great version of John "Moon" Martin’s killer song "Cadillac Walk" on the album.

Mink DeVille fared far better in Europe, as did Willy after he disbanded Mink DeVille and embarked on a solo career. He collaborated with Dr. John, Doc Pomus, Allen Toussaint, and Mark Knopfler (who produced and plays guitar on the Miracle album). Willy unfortunately was a heroin addict for many, many years, and passed away in 2009 at the age of 58. For those interested in learning more about Mink and Willy DeVille, here’s a video for ya:

 

https://youtu.be/YvaVSba-Y98?si=V3cUdkD5wuDV8xcH

 

For some reason the video runs a little over nine minutes on my computer, but over twenty minutes on my TV.

 

 

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I heard Mink DeVille’s “Gunslinger” a few years ago on Little Steven’s Underground Garage (SiriusXM channel), been streaming his music now and then ever since. I guess I like Moon Martin too, I have 2 of his LPs.

Love Miracle (great Knopfler playing on it),  Sportin Life, and Loup Garou.   Wanted to see him live, but never did.   Wouldn't mind seeing Willie Nile either, but he doesn't leave New York.   Wish Parker would come around again.

Willy DeVille should we well known in Hi Fi circles because Assassin of Love was one of Ken Kessler's reference tracks for years. I use it for demonstrations at hi fi shows myself.

If we're taking about voice/stage presence (work hand in hand) I'll toss in Charlie Farren from the 70s-00s Boston music scene. Just a super voice & frontman for bands like Live Lobster, Balloon, The Enemy, Joe Perry Project and Farrenheit. There's a reason JP reached out to Charlie to front his solo project. Even used a couple of Charlie's (The Enemy) songs. Farrenheit had a track in rotation on MTV in the mid 80s and their debut album was full of "Big Star"-esque power pop. Never understood why he didn't end up becommng more relevant. Terrific songwriter, charismatic frontman and always with a killer bar band backing. Should have been huge but at that time people were into hair bands and then the Seattle scene and Boston guys kinda died on the vine. Anyway, lots of poorly recorded stuff on YouTube to check out. Just my opinion,...