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Jody Reynolds
“ENDLESS SLEEP
“
( JODY REYNOLDS, Delores Nance)
Demon 1507
No. 5 June 30, 1958
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John Wesley Adams encouraged his young nephew Jody (b. Dec. 3, 1938, Denver) to take a poke or
two at the family guitar while he was growing up in Mountain View, Oklahoma. Jody formed the
Storms in 1952 with drummer Eddie Firth, guitarist Billy Ray, and bassist Noel Sutte, to play hops
and barroom stops. When not gigging or boxing, Reynolds worked as a cotton picker, an insurance
salesman, a miner miner, and a mortician’s assistant.
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After the boys had rocked and reeled their way through the Western states for some years, a couple
named Herb and Liz Mantei, who had good ears and record-biz connections, encouraged Jody and
his Storms to journey to LA and audition for Joe Green at the newly-established Demon label. Green
was duly impressed and rushed Reynolds—plus session players Al Casey (guitar), Howard Roberts
(guitar), Ray Martinez (drums), and lrv Ashby (bass)–into Gold Star Studios to record some tracks.
“Endless Sleep,” a number Jody had been working on with George Brown (who wrote under the
pseudonym “Delores Nance”), was the first of three tunes taped that day. Only 20 minutes were
needed to lay out “Endless.”
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The dusty disk is now a golden great–to pre-Baby Boomers–one of the finest of the “Death Rock”
ditties to gather a mass audience (others include MARK DINNING’S “Teen Angel,” Ray Peterson’s
“Tell Laura I Love Her,” the Shangra Las’ “Leader Of The Pack”). Aside from the immediate follow-
up, “Fire Of Love” (#66, 1958), none of Reynolds’ half-dozen other Demon disks charted. Jody and
his Storms persisted and blew through the ’60s, disbursing singles for such labels as Sundown, Emmy,
Smash, Brent, and Pulsar. The Storms finally got to show off their chops, recording “Tarantula,” a
rocked out “B-movie”-like instrument. Jody even duetted with a then-unknown Bobbie “Ode To Billy
Joe” Gentry on one Titan single.
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Reportedly, Jody Reynolds lives in Yuma, Arizona, where for a time he owned a guitarshop. He has
shelved rock and roll in favor of “prospecting or building houses,” according to New Kommotion’s
Adam Komorowsky. His only solo LP appeared on Tru-Gems in 1978.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik