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Revision as of 22:47, 30 December 2011
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The High Spirits | |
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Origin | Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States |
Genres | Garage Rock, psychedelic rock |
Years active | 1964–1969 |
Labels | Soma Records |
Members | Owen Husney, Doug Ahrens, Cliff Siegel, Jay Luttio, Rick Beresford, Rick Levinson |
The High Spirits was a garage rock band from Minneapolis, Minnesota active in the 1960s and signed with Soma Records. While there was a small rotation of members, the original line-up consisted of Owen Husney, Doug Ahrens, Cliff Siegel, Rick Beresford, Rick Levinson and Jay Luttio. The band was among the Midwest groups that are credited with being the forefathers of the later punk rock scene.
Owen Husney later went on to discover and manage the artist
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Prince.
Charts and Awards
The group's first hit was a raveup of Bobby "Blue" Bland's "(Turn on Your) Love Light," recorded on May 7, 1965 and issued on Soma Records. The B side was "Tossin' and Turnin'," recorded at the same session. The record did well in the Twin Cities,[1] and hit Number 1 in both Kansas City (the band performed in KC on two occasions) and Dallas during the fall of 1965, and also was beginning to do well in California and Colorado.[2] A Top 40 chart from San Jose in September 1965 showed that the record was ranked Number 33 in that market.[3]
Their second release was "I Believe" (not the Frankie Laine song), recorded on January 12, 1966 and released on Soma. it was written by rhythm guitar player Rick Levinson. The flip side, recorded at the same session, was "Bright Lights, Big City," a cover of a Jimmy Reed/Animals tune.
In 2006, the band was inducted into the Minnesota Rock Country Hall of Fame for their contribution to music history.[4]