Triphammer
“All of a sudden a mass of light, a jolting shock and a change in life.
Clear one minute, then it rains, pouring down on frosted brain.
Sail away, electric jammer, you’ve been nailed by your Triphammer.”
Little did Banastre Tarleton know that these lyrics would spawn one of
the most exciting, unique, and influential bands of the early and mid-70’s.
Triphammer’s story is not unlike that of many of their more famous
brethren from that era, and is complete with tales of debauchery, experimental
behavior, outlandish costumes, pre-Kiss make-up, numerous ego-clashes, and
living life in full throttle. The
music survived the band and is a reflection, not only of the times, but of their
passion and hard work.
Organized in the fall of 1969, the first line up consisted of Tom
Caldwell on drums, guitarist James Smith-Patrick a.k.a. James Meyers, and
Banastre Tarleton singing lead vocals and playing organ and keyboard bass.
Tarleton’s originals made up most of their repertoire, along with a few
selected alternative covers of the day and some 60’s standards.
They played the college circuit based out of Columbia, Missouri
(Smith-Patrick was finishing school at the University of Missouri) and it was
during this time the band opened for Canned Heat, Rush, and Big Brother &
The Holding Company. Triphammer
participated in several anti-war rallies as a headliner and was a fraternity
party favorite on many campuses in the
In May 1970 Triphammer had its debut recording session at L.A.R. Studios
in
Shortly after the L.A.R. session
Disc One continues with these tracks and it runs the seventies gamut,
from the protest and paranoia of “An
Evil Revival” and “Nervous
Breakdown” to psychedelic quickies “Menthol
Frog” and “The Guiding Light.”
Yes, that is an authentic Fuzz Face being used by the moody
Smith-Patrick. Oddly enough, one of
Banastre’s first compositions was “Sweet Virgin Blues,” a 50’s style blues song that makes a
rather strange appearance in the ultra heavy rock and shock pop set that
concluded with a Triphammer classic, “We
Are The Graveyard Children.”
After graduating from MU, a physically and mentally worn out
Smith-Patrick quite naturally decided to return home.
Tarleton was also exhausted by this time and went to rest and recuperate
at his Australian Mum’s home in
After several months in
With management secured, Whelan and Tarleton started auditioning
different guitarists, looking for the right person to complete the project.
They played a few gigs with ex-Pandora’s Box six-string ace, Deon Jones
and guitarist/bassist Kris Webber, a former band mate with Whelan in the group
Orange Flash. Then one afternoon at
the rehearsal house, like a bolt from the sky, in strolls Dennis Kroh-- cocky,
brash, enthusiastic, and blessed with the ability to make a guitar scream.
Earlier in the day, Kroh had met anther ex-Orange Flasher, Jimmy
Quisenberry, at the small town’s Kentucky Fried Chicken joint.
Quisenberry decided to bring Kroh over to Triphammer’s practice pad
(i.e., Whelan’s parent’s house) to try out.
Kroh had only recently arrived in
Within a week, manager Hunnegard had the band in a
Unfortunately, there remains no trace of these recordings extant.
Copies of these tapes were made and sent to many producers, promoters,
and record companies and it appears that during that busy summer and fall none
were actually put aside for the Triphammer archives.
Hunting down even a single copy for this project turned out to be
fruitless.
After the
Early in 1973 the boys went back into L.A.R. Studios to lay down tracks
for “Panzer President,”
Tarleton’s explosive Watergate/Vietnam War rocker.
A seasoned and well-rehearsed Triphammer, with a healthy Lou Renault
engineering, proceeded to record the band’s heavy rock masterpiece.
Kroh’s adaptation of distortion; use of the wah wah pedal; and tasteful
solos are proof that not all of the stellar guitarists from the Clapton/Blackmore/Hendrix
era are now household names. He
should be included in this group. His
work on “Panzer President” is quintessential 70’s rock guitar.
The sarcastic in-your-face lyrics were some of Tarleton’s best and the
arrangement is a delightful rollercoaster of musical styles and emotion,
complete with Seig Heil’s in the interlude, a reference to Nixon’s bunker
mentality. Jim Whelan’s drumming
is inventive and powerful and Tarleton’s keyboard bass thumps while the
Wurlitzer Electric Piano (played through a Leslie with an Electric Mistress
Distortion Pedal) is brutal. The
three rockers created one of the best anti-establishment songs ever recorded.
When released, the tune received critical acclaim and regional DJs put it
in rotation. Triphammer’s
popularity increased, not only with the alternative crowd, but with the public
in general. They were a big hit in
high schools, country clubs, and society parties as the nation in general
reacted to Nixon’s resignation and the end of the Vietnam War with a more
liberal attitude. The timing had
been perfect.
The hard-rocking “Crankcase” follows and features more superb guitar work from
Dennis Kroh. Tarleton’s subject
matter is made fairly obvious by the title.
The song is from the Panzer President session.
An inspired 1974 rendition opens up Disc Two’s live tracks.
The next phase in Triphammer’s recording career turned out to be a
giant slice of bad luck--the morale-sapping sessions with CMC Studios and
producer John Goodone. Goodone
hailed from
On
Luckily, while Whelan was still in the band, Kroh had been recording
their live shows on occasion and a few of the tapes have survived.
They are raw, exciting, distorted at times, but chocked full of the
energy that was Triphammer. And
remember listeners-there were only three people in this band.
There are no overdubs. This
is the way it happened. The tracks
on Disc Two, all Tarleton originals, are from these live recordings and include:
“Crankcase,” with amazingly
complex drum rhythms and electrifying guitar solos;
“Painted Woman,” a ballsy
Zeppelin-ish hellraiser; Kroh
introduces “Storybook,” a
rip-roaring musical LSD trip, which had been in Triphammer’s repertoire from
the beginning; the melodic and
brilliantly arranged “Standing In The
Sand” is one more example of the band’s versatility;
next is the aforementioned “Marching
To The Sound Barrier,” which Tarleton claims was inspired by the old
crusader’s hymn, “Onward Christian Soldiers”; followed
by “Kroh’s Guitar Solo” (what
hasn’t been said already); “Blitzwoman,” a provocative and pre-grunge power pop single; the
Triphammer blues standard, “Sweet Virgin
Blues”; “Dead Ringer,” a straight-ahead, no holds-barred rocker;
“Take It Easy,” a rootsy
upbeat number with a twist; and the ultimate rock finale, “Down
In The Junkyard,” a dark show-stopper, with tighter-than-frog-pussy vocal
and guitar trade-offs, and the unabashed frolicking and insanity of the French
Can-Can as the outro of the piece…and for the brave and stout-hearted fan, “Post Mortem Mayhem” is a chaotic maelstrom of sirens, frenzied
feedback, drivin’ rock riffs, and good-natured noise (boys will be boys).
It was played at the conclusion of a high school dance in
Triphammer, with Kroh and Tarleton at the helm, continued to sail on for
another 13 months after Whelan’s departure, with a cast of characters that was
ever-changing. Arbiter Spangle left
in October 1974 and was replaced by the talented Cranston Van Buren.
Willie Griffith took over the durms in January 1975, but left in April of
that same year. The last few gigs
were played by drummer Fil DiMaggio, who would end up playing with Banastre
Tarleton Band for the next 12 years until he became ill from a stroke suffered
during a club date in November of 1995. There
was a point during Triphammer’s final year when Banastre wanted to be more of
a frontman and finally the decision to add a bassist was made (not a move
favored by Kroh) and on June 13, 1974 Jerry Frischer joined the band, but he
couldn’t keep up with the grueling lifestyle, and was replaced in September
1974 by self-proclaimed warlock Dave “Baby” Mazzola, who in turn was
superceded by Dennis D’Clothier one month later.
D’Clothier took a hiatus in November and his fill-in, Les Gifford, a
gifted bassist from
It had been a damn good run. The
inevitable clash of musical direction came and Kroh decided to move to
On April 2, 2003, after nearly 30 years, Jim Whelan, Dennis Kroh, and
Banastre Tarleton reunited at Maple Room Studio, and with Randy Beeman on bass,
recorded a new version of “C’mon, Take Off With Me” for this project.
The magic was still there…the kind that’s good for the soul.
The track is the final track on Disc One.
Well, there it is. Now sit
back, pop a cold one, light the incense, turn up the volume and enjoy.