To someone who never lived through the 60's, it's probably hard to try to wrap your brain around the amount of cultural experimentation taking place in America. Nothing it seemed was being taken for granted, almost as though young artists all across the country had made it their singular mission to re-imagine every last aspect of pop culture, especially music.
And the epicenter of this experimentation was, of course, New York's Greenwich Village, which at that time was not only a hotbed of jazz, an art form that had at its very core, experimentation, but also the country's budding folk music scene.
As an outgrowth of that Greenwich Village mix of jazz and folk, a group calling itself Circus Maximus emerged, formed when Bob Bruno, a young jazz pianist, crossed paths with a young guitarist and recovering pop star wannabe named Ronny Crosby. A few months earlier, Crosby had come to the City from Upstate and reinvented himself as a folk troubadour who went by the name Jerry Jeff Walker.
Bruno had been playing piano since the age of five and had, literally, been hanging around jazz clubs his whole life.
Walker, on the other hand, had played ukulele as a kid, and eventually formed a garage band in his hometown of Oneonta. Though his band was good enough to score an American Bandstand audition, rock and pop were not near and dear to Walker's heart. Over the years he had fallen in love with country and folk, and knew that's where he wanted to focus his creative energies.
So when Bruno, Walker and Circus Maximus went into the studio in 1967 to record the first of their two albums, what they came out with was an offbeat, uneven, but occasionally inspired hybrid of both jazz and folk.
Around the same time that all this whimsy and cross pollination was taking place, there was something nearly as interesting occurring in the world of radio. The long-underutilized FM band, with its rich, full, static-free sound, started to slowly give rise to a number of non-commercial "underground" stations across the country, most notably in college towns like Berkeley and Austin.
And the music the hosts on such underground stations played was the stuff Top 40 stations wouldn't touch; the experimental gumbo offered up by edgy groups like Love, the Fugs, the Holy Modal Rounders and Circus Maximus. And one of the first (and only) national "hits" of that era was a song written by Bruno called Wind, which proved to be particularly popular in New York and a handful of West Coast markets.
Wind featured an infectious jazz hook, some too-cool-for-school vocals by Bruno, and a few bars of free-form, almost atonal improvisational piano. It maintained, however, the unmistakable sound and feel of a folk tune, which made it perfect for an era whose iconography included legends like Bob Dylan, Donovan, Joan Baez and Barry Maguire.
In part because it clocked in at just over eight minutes long, Wind never came close to charting as a single. It also remained out of print for a full four decades before finally re-appearing on a reissue CD in 2007.
Nevertheless, for many children of the Sixties, Wind remains both a touchstone of their lives and an essential building block of the desert island jukebox of their minds.
Because just like any magic carpet ride of youth, the song has maintained its remarkable ability, despite the passing of the years, to transport certain people of a certain age to a simpler place and time, when life was defined not so much by the choices made, but by the possibilities that lie ahead.
So with that, please sit back, turn up the volume, and enjoy the Song of the Day for Tuesday, November 2, 2010...Wind by Circus Maximus.
Song: "Wind"
Group: Circus Maximus
Composer: Bob Bruno
Year Released: 1967
Great song. Thanks for all the background. So amazing that back then, a song too long for a single, could still receive enough airplay, via FM, that it feels like you're hearing an old hit song, all these years later. Here's a link to Bob Bruno - the song's writer and lead singer - performing the song at home in 2009.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SqBOiopVW4U
I saw that video. It is great, and just different enough to prove that Bruno remains a jazzman at heart. Speaking of Bob Bruno, you should also check out Bobb Bruno, one half of the coolest indy pop band you'd ever want to hear, Best Coast.
Thanks MC for helping me find this great gem of a song! It is not on itunes. I do remember this song form the FM days of the 60's, and had recently heard it on the Deep Tracks station on XM Radio.
Thanks much, Marc. I spoke and remain in occasional with Bob, who now lives in the DC area. He's a different breed of artist, no doubt, and one can easily see why he never became a brighter light in the music industry. Unlike Jerry Jeff, who seemed entirely comfortable with morphing into a more marketable entity over the years, Bob seems like one who never wanted to change who he was and who remained a guy on the fringes of pop music, making the kind of music that made him happy. You're right about "Wind" though. It really is a gem and takes a certain, small group of people back in time on those rare occasions they actually get a chance to hear it. Sorry I have not posted more lately. I've just getting over a brush with cancer and am only now starting to feel strong enough to write again. Hopefully, this will all be behind me now and I can catch up at least a few of the ideas I have for posts.
Thanks. An absolute gem. Had forgotten Jerry Jeff had anything to do with this. Got here looking up LOVE's Little Red Book, whicj I had forgotten was written by Burt, and also done by Manfred Mann.
Will there ever be another time in history ad rich with musical innovation?
No, Ross. I don't think any point in American history had a breadth of popular music any richer, any more diverse, or any more daring and different than the first decade and a half of the rock and roll era. Bob Bruno, the guy who wrote and sang Wind, is still alive and making art these days. Lives in Maryland now. Thanks for the comment!
That second to last paragraph hit me right in the heart. So true as were the words "touchstone of their lives". First heard this song in early 1970's and has been a top 5 favorite for years. I have been trying to get that album from my brother for 50 years!!
Thanks so much, Sharin. The guy who wrote and sang it, Bob Bruno, is still living in Maryland. I told him what you wrote and he wanted me to thank you.