The Stick Men: The official band bio
The Legend of The Stick Men
1977 was the year the public was first impregnated by Peter L. Baker. The
Columbus School of Art and Design graduate returned to his Philadelphia home and
unleashed his presence on the Philadelphia avant-art scene.
Baker's reputation grew throughout Philadelphia. His extraordinary creativity
opened many avenues for him to unleash his psyche and commitment to
self-indulgence (which was his self-proclaimed .. key to art). With integrity in
hand, Baker formed the Undertakers of Love while obtaining stance and prominence
in the Philadelphia art community.
The Undertakers of Love were the mother seed of what was eventually to become
Baker's true proclamation, The Stick Men. A mysterious mix of synthesizer
(Charles Cohen), keyboard (Jeff Cain), bass (Art Noel), and guitars (Baker and
poet J.W. McCullough) provided the backdrop for Baker to spew his character
views and visions. With uncommon beats and Baker's flair for making everything
living seem like it was out of Mad Magazine, the Undertakers of Love
successfully performed the local Philadelphia bar scene.
1978 brought a revamping of Baker's crew. The meeting of B.A.L Stack (nee)
Lejman provided both a vehicle for Baker's expression and a whole new vibe. The
teenage girl from the suburbs meets the creative genius. Baker mentored Stack
with the realization that expression was truly the kingpin and also enabled him
to peruse her trained keyboard skills. A meeting of the souls erupted forming
the bond that led to the pulse.
Baker and Stack immediately jelled the forces as Blu Beth and the Gentleman
Caller, with Baker on hollow body Hagstrom guitar and Stack on hollow body
Hagstrom bass, both playing through a Fender Twin, punctuating swamp-soaked
lyrics with limited keyboards and virtually un-listenable beats. Art galleries
posed as venues for the duo.
With acknowledgement and advancing public curiosity, Baker constructed a
one-man show in a vacant loft, to view his latest endeavors. Proving that, not
only were his sculpting and painting talents over the edge, so was his
perception of music. The show was a great success, exhibiting his latest works
of art along with the various incarnations of his musical ambition. The
Undertakers of Love, now a scaled down version of players, re-named The Stick
Men, performed, as well as Blu Beth and the Gentleman Caller, hoisting Baker
into public recognition.
Blu Beth and the Gentleman Caller blended into Baker's now newly formed Stick
Men vision, the couple began siphoning rhythms and lyrics, trying to build an
equation that wasn't yet discovered by anyone, but held true to Baker's belief.
This ventured to the hiring of George Shirley on drums and Michael McGettigan on
bass, with Charles Mattern Jr. accentuating on trumpet, sax, and homemade drum
devices. Revisions were made, resulting to Baker on guitar, Stack on Farfisa
organ/doubling on bass, Shirley on Fender Mustang bass, and McGettigan on drums,
with Mattern continuing to punctuate.
This line up (1980) plotted the original format of what eventually became The
Stick Men, as we know it now. With this formula of players Baker was able to
begin to submerge into his whole realm, a "snake boat beat." Baker, the
rail-thin-redhead was able to bring his personal cartoon view of himself to
life. Baker wrote.. "here's the blue print, wire bones, day-glo fur, express
yourself, I'm a pipe cleaner..." and wanted the masses to know "thin black
lines, feet to hands, express yourself, we're Stick Men, we had a vision."
The band practiced relentlessly, sharpening their precision, adding more
songs to The Stick Man monster. They merged onto the live music scene in
Philadelphia's notorious punk rock nightclubs, first David Carroll's Artemis,
and then, the Hot Club, impressively opening for such bands as the Contortions,
Johnny Thunder's Gang War, and the Model Citizens, amongst others.
With sudden notoriety, the band launched to a more sophisticated level.
Shirley was replaced by Billy Bradfield. A bassist with a poppin' funk technique
(think Larry Graham, Bootsy Collins) that totally deranged the original Stick
Man elementary sound, refining it to details and allowing the pureness to be
layered with a funk that was undeniable. Stack added a Hohner Clavinet to the
mix, to funk-a-fi, via her relentless adoration for Sly Stone. Mattern added
more and more bizarre accents and Baker continued to cluck outrageously on
chicken guitar.
 |
The Stick Men climbed the bottom rungs of the ladder that shot
them to the galaxy by eventually replacing McGettigan with Jim Meneses, a skilled
precision, climatic, master drummer who magically melded with Bradfield to
produce the claim on the mother... they made so viciously. As originators of the rockin' jam trance under the feet, The Stick Men
created and demonstrated a gut-wrenching psycho-funk sound with timing,
personality, charm, and humor. This presentation of funk domination was
pre-Chili Peppers, before P-Funk was considered cool with white audiences, when
anything with a dominating bottom-heavy-vibe was boo-hooed as "disco."
|
|
Drummer
Jim Meneses today |
The Stick Men ruled Philadelphia by releasing an LP in 1982 "This is the
Master Brew" and an EP in 1983 "Get on Board The Stick Men." They performed at a
variety of venues on supporting tours for such bands as the Gang of Four, Was
(Not) Was, the Slits, Lords of the New Church, Oingo Boingo, the Psychedelic
Furs, Bush Tetras, the Pop Group, Nina Hagan, Wall of Voodoo, and Pig Bag, to
name a few. The Stick Men magnetized and maintained a loyal fan base and were
glorified by both live audiences and the press.
Peter L. Baker died in 1994. This CD, "Insatiable," contains The Stick Men's
entire recorded output as well as rare tracks from live radio broadcasts. Also
included is bonus CD-ROM material: a 20 minute Quick Time video of the band,
playable on both PC and Mac computers, taken from some of the only live
performance video in existence. Insatiable was produced as both tribute and
recognition to Baker. The Stick Men are a phenomenon of a band that remains
incomparable to this day.
Contact:
B.A.L. Stack |
Jim Meneses
|