Extreme
Measures
Bay Guardian
By J.H. Tompkins
Fillmore
Auditorium, San Francisco
I CAN'T REMEMBER
when I heard that the Sons of Champlin gave away their first single –
it was either "Sing Me a Rainbow" or "Jesus Is Coming,"
I've heard the story both ways – the gesture might have been an
omen of things to come, but it had the kind of hopeful absurdity that
suited me in those days. I'd meant to ask Bill Champlin about how much
acid a band had to consume to kick off a career with such a burst of inspiration.
Unfortunately, when he called me from Australia the other night, he entered
the conversation at high speed, and I'd been asleep; by the time I was
ready to talk, I'd forgotten what I wanted to say. Besides, statue of
limitations or not, a lot of folks have selective memory when it comes
to the past.
Champlin
was on tour with Chicago, the faceless, horn-driven rock band whose albums
are titled by their numerical order in the band's catalog. He was calling
to talk about the regrouped Sons and the new live album and DVD, Secrets.
That was a good thing, because asking someone a question like "How
are things in Chicago?" or "What's your favorite Chicago song?"
could legitimately be interpreted as antagonistic. Champlin joined Chicago
22 years ago, and the first time I mentioned them, he went out of his
way to praise the band, who have rewarded him handsomely for endless touring
and playing sets that consist of the band's hits. Money or no money, it's
hard for me to see Champlin playing "25 or 6 to 4" a hundred
times a year. He was an inventive musician, a great singer, and a prolific
songwriter, who, among many songs, cowrote Earth, Wind, and Fire's Grammy-winning
classic "After the Love Is Gone." Late in our conversation,
I got another, much more relevant comment on life in the band: I asked
how many songs he'd contributed to Chicago. "None," he replied,
which is what I needed to know.
Were I Champlin,
I'd have wanted to record with the Sons like I wanted to breathe fresh
air. Chicago offered him a decent living, and he had a family to support.
But Champlin wasn't an ordinary talent; in a world of mediocre rock bands,
the Sons were one of a kind, driven by Champlin's lifelong obsession with
R&B and a '60s-inspired recklessness. He had – still has –
as soulful a voice as any white singer of his generation, and while most
Bay Area bands were distinguished by blues-inspired guitar jams delivered
through a psychedelic squall, the Sons were funky and innovative, anchored
by a fat B3 organ and set apart by jazzy horn arrangements.
Once our
conversation began to roll, I had to fight to get a word in. I'd wanted
to confess how my ears were shaped by his music in those days, and how,
when The Sons was released in 1969, my old friend John Kochman –
the best keyboard player I knew (although I didn't know very many at the
time) – called and raved about it.
The Sons
played rings around most Bay Area bands; they had good songs, a soulful
vocalist, and a deal with a major label (Capitol). For six or seven years,
fans, critics, and musicians knew it was just a matter of time until the
band hit it big. And then, in 1977, I heard the band was dead and Champlin
was doing session work in Los Angeles as a vocal arranger and singer.
In 1979, I saw him in the movie The Rose as a member of Bette Midler's
band; he won two Grammies – one in 1979 for writing Earth, Wind,
and Fire's "After the Love Is Gone," and the other in 1982 for
writing George Benson's "Turn Your Love Around." That year he
joined Chicago and entered the twilight zone.
In the early
days I was fond of impressing friends with the band's albums, and then
– to show exactly how singular the group were – disclosing
details of the giveaway. My endorsement was unhampered by facts, because
I had no facts. I just knew this: the Sons were true believers, and in
my world they became a kind of punch line to a vision of the future built
around impending global ecstasy or, depending on my mood, lunacy.
The band
got some press for the giveaway – although knowing about what they
did and knowing the music were two different things. They were a reckless,
inspired posse of Marin County hippies, and Champlin told me what was
already obvious, that the band took a careless approach to career building.
"You know those songs like 'Get High' and 'Freedom'?" he asked
rhetorically. "We practiced what we preached."
Still, Secrets
is a monster album, with strong tunes, airtight playing, and great arrangements
– and Champlin's incredible voice, as strong today as it was back
in the day. I listened to it and remembered a 1970 show at the Berkeley
Community Theater where the Sons opened for the Youngbloods and gave the
furious headliners 20 minutes to play after a two-hour-plus set. "Jesse
Colin Young has been a prick to me ever since," Champlin said.
The '60s
don't translate well to the present for many reasons, suffice it to say.
The Sons stood up for something different – musically and socially
– and if their career hit the wall, their music is memorable. Secrets
is funkier than anything I've come across in a while: it doesn't take
me back to the old days as much as it puts me on the ground I want to
stand on today. You can't ask more from music than that.