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The Author..Wayne Jancik
Golden Age Of The 50s
Golden Age Of The 60s
1970s and There After
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AMBOY DUKES
“JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE MIND”
(TED NUGENT, Steve Farmer)
Mainstream 684
No. 16
August 24, 1968
.
.
.
“I started playing guitar when I was about six or seven years old,” wrote Motor City Madman and chief
Amboy Duke TED NUGENT in a self-penned piece for
Hit Parader
magazine
.
“I got an acoustic guitar
from my aunt, and was highly influenced by Elvis, Ricky Nelson, and James Brown songs that I’d heard
on the radio. I took about two years of guitar lessons in Detroit at the Royal School of Music. Learned
the basics and got into boogie-woogie and honky-tonk. I did my first professional performance when
I was 10, at the Detroit State Fair Grounds for the Polish Arts Festival. And I was a sensation.”
.
Detroit-born Nugent (b. Dec. 13, 1948) also formed his first band at age 10, The Royal High Boys. “It was
just me and a drummer named Tom Noe,” Nugent told
DISCoveries’
Allan Vorda. “The band’s name came
from this shirt that all greasers wore. We wore it, too, ’cause we were cool. Winded up getting a bass
player and that became the nucleus of the Lourds.” The Lourds quickly attracted a local following, and even
opened a sold-out show in Detroit with the Supremes and the Beau Brummels. (The band’s only recorded
tracks, three in number, are currently available on a compilation LP called either
Long Hot Summer
or
Friday at the
Cafe A Go Go
.) But all that ended when Ted’s father accepted a phone-company job in
Chicago; the family moved there in 1965.
.
Once in Chicago, Nugent (lead guitar) formed a group with Greg Arama (bass), Steve Farmer (rhythm
guitar), Dave Palmer (drums), and Andy Soloman (keyboards). As Ted explained to Vorda, the “Amboy
Dukes” name came from a Detroit R & B band that had recently broken up. “I thought it was a cool name
and when l moved to Chicago, I decided to use the name.
.
Obviously, I learned much later there was a street gang in the ’50s from Perth Amboy, New Jersey. And
there was this famous novel about the gang called
The Amboy Dukes,
but I’ve never read it…. That’s how
the original Detroit group got the name.”
.
With graduation behind him, Ted moved his group to Detroit. There, they competed with a budding bunch
of local talent like Bob Seger & The Last Heard, Tim Tam & The Turn-Ons, The Rationals, and The Wanted
for a recording contract. Mainstream Records, wowed by Nugent’s Hendrix-like guitar pyrotechnics, signed
the guys and issued their self-titled debut album in 1968. The LP largely eluded public attention, but their
quickly-pressed second outing,
Journey to the
Center of the Mind
(1968)–plus the 45 of the title cut–were
successful enough to launch Ted’s rock’n’roll career.
.
“When we put out ‘Journey to the Center of the Mind’ in 1968, it had that pipe collection on the front cover
and I didn’t have the faintest idea what those pipes were all about! Everybody else was getting stoned and
trying every drug known to mankind; I was meeting women and playing rock’n’roll. I didn’t know anything
about this cosmic inner probe. I thought ‘Jo urney to the Center of the Mind’ meant lookin’ inside yourself,
use your head, and move forward in life.”
How could the obviously drug-related connotations have escaped him? “I have never smoked a joint. I
have never done a drug in my life. I’ve never had a cigarette in my mouth. I don’t drink. … I watched
incredible musicians fumble, drool, and not be able to tune their instruments. It was easier to say no than
to say, ‘Hey, gosh, that’s for me.’ I’ve seen my fellow musicians die.”
.
Nugent’s indignant anti-drug stance shaped the short careers of his Dukes. John Drake, a later member,
was fired partly due to his inability to meet rehearsal schedules. Also removed was Steve Farmer, whom
Nugent described as a brilliant and creative thinker but who was “so high and so irresponsible you couldn’t
get from point A to point B with him.” As for Greg Arama, “heroin took over and I had to get rid of him”
(Greg is reportedly deceased). And Drake’s replacement, Rusty Day? “He insisted on doing LSD together as
a band; after I fired him, he was machine-gunned to death because of a bad drug deal.
.
“There never really was a break-up of the Amboy Dukes. It just got to be such a revolving door mentally
with the musicians. I also took a break in 1973. I was so upset internally. I felt like a baby-sitter! I also
acted as a road manager–I used to book the band; I used to maintain all the equipment; I used to change the
oil in the cars.”
.
By album number four
–Survival
of the Fittest–Live
(1971)–the band was billed as “Ted Nugent & The
Amboy Dukes.” The following year, the artist credit for their
Call
of the Wild
album read simply “Ted
Nugent.” The Amboy Dukes officially disbanded in 1975, at which time Nugent signed a contract as a solo
artist with Epic Records.
.
According to Ted, John Drake is now a car salesman. Steve Farmer is a conservationist planting trees in
Oregon. Robbie LaGrange is a realtor in San Diego, and Andy Soloman is “doing commercials in
hiladelphia.
*
In 1989, Nugent formed the Damn Yankees with Styx’s TOMMY SHAW, Night Rangers’ Jack Blade, and
Michael Cartellone. The act has been quite successful with the Top 10 self-titled album and several singles;
notably “High Enough” (#3, 1990), “Where You Goin’ Now” (#20, 1992), and “Silence Is Golden” (#62, 1993)
from the Jean-Claude van Damme flick
Nowhere to Run
(1993).
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik