There’s nothing particularly remarkable about the Grass Roots. Even the most obsessive music geek probably couldn’t pick ‘em out of a line-up, but the handful of hits they released between 1966 and 1971 are instantly recognizable to anyone acquainted with the music of that era.
Conceived as a vehicle with which songwriter/producers P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri could capture and cash in on the California folk-rock zeitgeist, the Grass Roots didn’t actually even exist when their first single was committed to tape. Once "Where Were You When I Needed You" was recorded, Sloan and Barri…entire summary
Creed Bratton - guitar
Rick Coonce - drums
Warren Entner - vocals, guitar, keyboards
Rob Grill - vocals, bass
There’s nothing particularly remarkable about the Grass Roots. Even the most obsessive music geek probably couldn’t pick ‘em out of a line-up, but the handful of hits they released between 1966 and 1971 are instantly recognizable to anyone acquainted with the music of that era.
Conceived as a vehicle with which songwriter/producers P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri could capture and cash in on the California folk-rock zeitgeist, the Grass Roots didn’t actually even exist when their first single was committed to tape. Once "Where Were You When I Needed You" was recorded, Sloan and Barri were faced with the onerous task of finding a band to take their hit on the road. Luckily, you couldn’t swing a 12-string Rickenbacker in mid-60s Los Angeles without hitting an unknown group of folkies with page-boy haircuts. So, after a couple false starts, the two svengalis settled on what would become the "popular" incarnation of the Grass Roots.
Captured here at the Fillmore Auditorium opening for local faves the Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Roots do a convincing impersonation of an organic Rock band. Their "own" Byrds-like tunes are augmented in this set by a few R&B covers, sounding more West London mod than West Coast electric folk. For those a little slow on the uptake, they even obligingly (or stonily) play their biggest hit twice.
To their credit, the official members of the Grass Roots eventually contributed some fine songwriting to their own albums with great success, but the lack of any real break-out personalities kept the band from achieving a higher status. Considering the number of bands that never experience even fleeting fame, theirs is a relatively happy story - just not a very interesting one.
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