The Fifth Estate (band)
The Fifth Estate, formerly known as The D-Men, is an American rock band formed in 1963 in Stamford, Connecticut.
The Fifth Estate | |
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Background information | |
Also known as | The D-Men (1963-1965) |
Origin | Stamford, Connecticut, U.S. |
Genres | |
Years active | 1963 – present |
Labels | |
Website | thefifthestateband |
Members |
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Past members |
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Early years (as The D-Men)
The band began in Stamford, Connecticut, in 1963, as The D-Men. Early on, as The D-Men, the band played many small shows and local clubs but soon gravitated to Greenwich Village and larger clubs where they often played six nights a week for long stretches. Guitarist Carl Sabatini also played a role in the band's earliest conception, as shown far left in the below graphic. They released three singles, two on Veep/United Artists and one on the Kapp labels, which along with much of their later material have become collectors' items and established them as a central part of the garage rock movement. Boston Skyline released a 28-song collection of their music in 1993 and published a 41-page booklet of their story.[1]
The band made a number of appearances on television, including several NYC Clay Cole appearances, where on the first they were on the same taping session as The Rolling Stones when The Stones made their very first American East Coast TV appearance, and Hullabaloo, on which the D-Men performed "I Just Don't Care". The program was at that time co-hosted by Brian Epstein, who expressed an interest in signing them. They later won a Murray the K call-in contest for best new release over The Dave Clark Five and The Animals in 1965. In 1966 they changed their name to "The Fifth Estate".
The Fifth Estate
The Fifth Estate released the single "Love Is All A Game" on the Red Bird label, which became a regional hit, and still receives airplay around the country as they again have become more highly regarded through their connection with the garage band revival and garage rock movements in general.[1] They had a national / international hit in 1967 with a sunshine pop version of "Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead", which reached No. 11 on the Hot 100. The song was recorded and released around the world in five different languages (Japanese, Italian, French, German and English), and incorporated parts of "La Bouree," from "Terpsichore" by 17th-century composer Michael Praetorius. According to Cashbox, the song is in the Top 100 record releases of 1967[2] and has been the biggest hit with the highest American chart position of any Harold Arlen or Wizard of Oz song performed by any artist.[3] That same year, The Fifth Estate recorded their version of "Heigh Ho!", another film theme, this time from Disney's first feature length film, 1937's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Although "Heigh Ho!" made it into the top 40 on the Canadian CHUM chart, sales for both "Heigh Ho!" and their next single, "Do Drop Inn", proved disappointing in the US as each single skimmed the bottom of the American charts. Although not making an impact in America, in 1968 "Morning Morning", an original song that incorporated the band's core guitar and harpsichord driven sound, was a sizable hit in Australia and England on the Stateside label. It now receives substantial radio, Internet and Sirius XM play in the US and around the world.
The original five-member band lineup was consistent for six years. In that time they recorded about 100 songs, and released 13 singles and one album. Sam & Dave joined them on stage and sang "Soul Man" with them at one of their theater shows, while one of the Vandellas sang and recorded one of their tunes, "How Can I Find A Way," with them as her next release. They also appeared in a 1967 TV episode of Malibu U, with weird overlays and film footage. In 1968, on "The Frodis Caper", the last of their 58 television show episodes, The Monkees covered The Fifth Estate's version of "Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead".[4]
The Fifth Estate toured with acts such as Count Five, The Electric Prunes, The Music Explosion, The Buckinghams, The Ronettes, Gene Pitney, The Lovin' Spoonful, The Turtles, The Byrds, The Easybeats. They also did the Upbeat with another Greenwich Village band, The Velvet Underground.[5][6]
In 1970, they all went off on different projects, but have since re-established the band and continue to perform and record. Their new album, TIME TUNNEL, was recorded in 2010/11 and released as of on January 2, 2012. It was produced with the assistance of and mixed by Shel Talmy, the original producer for The Kinks, The Who, The Easybeats, Manfred Mann, early Jimmy Page and David Bowie.
On Sept. 19, 2012, The Fifth Estate - Anthology 1 was released by Fuel 2000/Universal Music Group. It's a 2-CD set with a 20 page booklet and 40 songs, more than half never released before.
In May, 2014 the German label Break-A-Way Records released a 14 song vinyl album of the band's early 1964 - 1966 material called "I Wanna Shout!"
On August 12, 2014, following the continued success of the 2012 Anthology 1 release, Fuel 2000 has also released a 14-song CD of new material from the Fifth Estate called "Take The Fifth." This album, like their 2012 Time Tunnel album, was mixed and executive-produced by Shel Talmy.
Members
- Rick Engler - guitar, fuzz bass, lead vocals, harmonica
- Ken 'Furvus' Evans - drums, vocals
- Doug 'Duke' Ferrara - bass, lead harmony vocals
- Wayne 'Wads' Wadhams (d. 19 August 2008) - harpsichord, piano, organ, lead vocals
- Bill Shute - guitar, shugro 8, vocals
- Chuck LeGros - vocals, harmonica (1966)
- Bob 'Bobby Lee' Klein - lead vocals, keyboards, guitar (1969 + 2006>)
US 60s singles discography
- as The D-Men
- "Don't You Know" b/w "No Hope For Me" (Veep/United Artists 1206-A / July 1964)
- "I Just Don't Care" b/w "Messin Around" (Veep/United Artists 1209-A / March 1965)
- "So Little Time" b/w "Every Minute of Every Day" (Kapp 691-A / May 1965)
- as The Fifth Estate
- "Love Is All a Game" b/w "Like I Love You" (Red Bird RB 10-064 / 1965)
- "Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead" b/w "Rub-a-Dub" (Jubilee Records 45-5573 / 1967)
- "The Goofin Song" b/w "Lost Generation" (Jubilee Records 5588-A / 1967)
- "Heigh-Ho" b/w "It's Waiting There for You" (Jubilee Records 5595-A / 1967)
- "Morning, Morning" b/w "Tomorrow Is My Turn" (Jubilee 5607-A / February 1968)
- "Do Drop Inn" b/w "That's Love" (Jubilee Records 5617-A / April 1968)
- "Coney Island Sally" b/w "I'll Let You Know" (Jubilee Records 5627-A / July 1968)
- "Night on Fire" b/w "I've Never Been" 3 members as Medicine Mike (Evolution Records 1011 / September 1969)
- In 1969, two unauthorized singles were released under the band name without their permission or participation.
Albums '60s–present
- Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead (Jubilee Records JGS 8005 / 1967)
- Ding Dong! The Witch Is Back: 1964-1969 (Boston Skyline BSD 116/1992)
- Time Tunnel (Roxon Records LLC RR1001 / 2011)
- The Fifth Estate - Anthology 1 1964-1969 (Fuel 2000 / Universal Music Group, 2012)
- I Wanna Shout! (Break-A-Way Records Break 039 / 2014) 12" Vinyl
- Take The Fifth (Fuel 2000 Records Fuel 302 062 017 2 / 2014)
- Surf, Rocks & Fuzz (Roxon Records LLC RR1002 / 2016) Band's 1963 &1964 material.
- I Wanna Shout! (Roxon Records LLC RR1003 / 2016) Download + Vinyl band's 1965 material.
- On The Road (Roxon Records LLC RR1004 / 2016) Band's 1966 material.
- The Best Of - The Fifth Estate (Roxon Records LLC RR1005 / 20016) 1964 to 1970
- Higher Density (Roxon Records LLC RR1006 / 2016) Band's 1968 more orchestrated material.
- Live, Loud & Lo-Fi (Roxon Records LLC RR1007 / 2016) 1964 to 2012 LIVE.
- Garunge DELUXE (Roxon Records LC RR1008 / 2020) Band's more Garage Rock&Roll material.
References
- Booklet "The Witch Is Back", Boston Skyline BSD 116, published 1993.
- (Cashbox Top 100)
- Reuters: McPhee's "Rainbow" hits Oz gold. (BILLBOARD article)
- Episode 58 "The Frodis Caper."
- 60sGarageBands.com, Fifth Estate HTML, 2004.
- "Billboard" (talent section) section one, August 6, 1966.
- Roxon, Lillian: Lilian Roxon's Rock Encyclopedia (Grosset and Dunlop, Universal Library Edition, 1972) p182 ISBN 0-448-00255-8