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ASFB -
1976
Summer Olympics |
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One
of the earliest influences in what has
since become a distinct sub-category of
Rock and Roll,
Contemporary Christian Music.
Broadcasting their first recorded songs
on WREO radio in Ashtabula County, Ohio
in the fall of 1968, ASFB joins
John
Fischer,
Larry Norman
and the California group,
Agape, as one
of the original “pioneers” of “Jesus
music,”
birthed in that same year.
Unique in many
ways, ASFB was a large, ensemble group
of 12 musicians. Predating Birmingham's
Electric Light Orchestra
by two years, ASFB was the first “rock”
band to use violin and cello as an
integral part of rhythmic music. Their
song, Seek Him, exemplifies the
layering of blues and classical strings
that characterized much of their sound.
Garnering acclaim for superior
songwriting and instrumentation, ASFB
recorded four albums now recognized as
classic examples of the earliest “Jesus
music.” Though courted by RCA and
Columbia, ASFB never signed a contract
in an effort to maintain control of the
band’s music and direction - that choice
also assuring their esoteric status.
Based out of a
Christian commune near Orwell, Ohio,
members included co-founders Joe Markko
and Larry Hill, Mike Berkey, Ed Durkos,
Tom Eritano, Tim Hill, Morgan King,
Norris McClure, Carole King, Randy
Markko, Kim Massman, Pam Massman, Tom
Miller, and rock guitarist
Glenn Schwartz.
Schwartz was lead-guitarist for the rock
group,
the
James Gang
[later replaced by
Joe
Walsh]
and
Pacific Gas & Electric
who recorded a top 10 song in 1969,
Are You Ready? Temporary
replacements for Glenn Schwartz and Tom
Eritano were guitarist
Phil
Keaggy
of the
Glass Harp
and drummer,
Val
Fuentes
from the California band,
It's
A Beautiful Day.
Though much of their music is blues
driven, their writing and harmonies have
been compared to a combination of
Bob
Dylan,
The
Who,
and
Peter, Paul, and Mary.
Prior to recording
their first album, three band members -
Brett Hill [Larry’s son], Joe's brother
Randy and Tom Miller - all lost their
lives in automobile accidents while
traveling to concerts. Singing backup
and playing piano, Tom "Aquinas" Miller
was one of the “Kent-25” and had been
featured in Life magazine as part of the
protests on the Kent State campus at the
time of the
Kent
State shootings.
Though the music on their first album,
My Poor Generation, was written
between 1968 and 1972, it wasn’t
released until 1973 and was dedicated to
the memories of Randy Markko and
Tom
Miller.
Their second
album, For Christians, Elves and
Lovers [1976] combined evangelical
theology and millennialism with
admiration for the fantasy world of
Lord
of the Rings
author,
J.R.R. Tolkien.
A copy of this album remains part of the
Tolkien Collection at Marquette
University. "And what is the
result of this musical fusion? An
absolutely incredible album which might
well become a classic in the annals of
Jesus music. The credit for this
record's brilliance belongs to the
artists themselves. Because of their
talent and versatility, the 14 cuts
never suffer from being repetitious or
boring. One need only look at the
diversity in style from one selection to
the next in order to appreciate the
creative abilities of these musicians.
This is the 3rd album for ASFB and
belongs on the shelf of every Jesus
music fan."
The band was
shaken again in early 1973 when
co-founder and guitarist,
Joe Markko,
was electrocuted with 27,000 volts of
electricity in an industrial accident.
Losing both hands and massively burned
over 55% of his body, Joe remained in
the Burn Unit of Cleveland MetroHealth
for 9 months. Rhythm guitarist Ed Durkos
learned all of Joe's music and the band
moved forward. Following Joe's release
he continued writing, singing and
arranging for the band.
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Glenn Schwartz in 2007 |
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In February 1975,
after lead guitarist Glenn Schwartz's
family grew concerned about the
deteriorating social conditions at the
church's communal farm, they had him
kidnapped for an intense, three day
"deprogramming" effort by famed cult
deprogrammer,
Ted
Patrick.
The attempt was unsuccessful and the
Band issued their third album,
Brainwashed in, as what one
ex-member termed, "a cynical response"
to critics of the band’s lifestyle.
Brainwashed is listed as album #4 on
the “Top 50 Collectible Jesus Music
Albums of all Time,” compiled by
contemporary Church historian, David
DiSabatino.
"This is a tough band to figure out.
With some of the best Christian 70s rock
by anyone anywhere their music is
stunningly powerful with a dark,
creeping psychrock menace achieved via
songwriting and guitar/organ
arrangements that spell big league all
the way. If 'For Christians, Elves &
Lovers' is the mellower side of ASFB,
"Brainwashed" is the flip side of the
coin."
Their fourth
album, Sower, was released in
1980 after all the band members had
departed except for Hill and the
Massmann sisters. Especially influential
on the lyrics of this recording were
Larry Hill’s apocalyptic visions. "Man,
these guys were just so good! Wailing
away one minute - folk mood, jazz
lightness the next. Seems impossible on
paper, but with ASFB it works. Showing
maturity in sound and lyric, all tracks
are standouts. All their albums are
treasures with layers of interest both
musically and lyrically."
ASFB mastered
their albums at Cleveland Recording.
Housed in an older building on Euclid
Avenue it was eventually torn down to
make way for the burgeoning growth of
Cleveland State University. ASFB
recorded alongside some well-known
"Great Lakes" rock groups.
The
Outsiders,
"Time Won't Let Me,"
Wild
Cherry
"Play That Funky
Music," the
Lemon Pipers
"Green Tambourine,"
the
Human Beinz
"Nobody But Me,"
Grand Funk Railroad's
first seven albums and the James Gang
albums were all recorded here using the
Cleveland Orchestra whenever needed. The
engineer and owner, Ken Hamann, teamed
up with Nashville producer, Rob
Galbraith, on all of ASFB's recordings.
The band met Rob while on tour in
Nashville in 1971 when Glenn, Larry,
Randy and Joe taped a demo of a few
songs at the Columbia Studio. Rob also
recorded an impromptu version of Old
Rugged Cross that appears on more than
one album.
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ASFB Reunion
2007. [Front] Ed
Durkos, Carole
[King] Hough and
Morgan King.
[Back] Joe
Markko, Norris
McClure and Tom
Eritano. Mike
Berkey, Tim Hill
and Glenn
Schwartz were
unable to
attend. |
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Independently produced and distributed,
the music of the All Saved Freak Band
had been played on hundreds of radio
stations in more than 14 different
countries by the time they disbanded in
the winter of 1978-79. Ministering in
the street, in concert and across
denominational lines for more than a
decade, the band's demise was based on
irreconcilable differences between band
members and the leadership of their home
church that involved legally prosecuted
charges of child abuse. Larry, Ed and
the Massmann sisters would attempt to
continue the effort until 1980 but one
of the most creative and original groups
in the early history of CCM was gone
following the departures of Joe Markko
and Glenn Schwartz.
In 2006, after
several years of legal efforts,
former band members united to regain
control of their music and end Hill's
35-year control of their collective
efforts. Releasing a “Best of”
collection, Harps On Willows,
ASFB has established an ongoing musical
legacy. The album was honored when
selected by
Cross Rhythms Magazine
as one of the Top 20 CD Releases of 2006
along with releases from
Bob
Dylan
and
Switchfoot.
"Here's a welcome collating of the best
performances from one of America's
greatest hippie Christian bands. While
bands like
Petra
and
Resurrection Band
spent the '70s perfecting a heavy
rock'n'roll, ASFB ploughed a blusier
furrow with ace blues guitarist Glenn
Schwartz exemplifying his renowned
skills. One joy is the fact that they
wrote songs that were simple in their
message. These are songs to get people
to think about the Gospel, an art that
seems to be missing in modern Christian
music. These recordings are very much of
their time so they are a little ragged
around the edges production wise but the
band certainly fulfilled their ambition
to create music that would stop people
in their tracks and make them respond to
the Gospel."
The 2006
Emmy-nominated documentary,
Lonnie Frisbee:
Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher,
by David Di Sabatino features two songs
by the All Saved Freak Band (Sower
and My Poor Generation), and the
soundtrack to the documentary also
includes Ode To Glenn Schwartz.
The All Saved
Freak Band played throughout the eastern
portion of North America and Canada. As
guests of the city of New Orleans, they
played and testified at Mayor
Moon
Landrieu's
private Mardi Gras reception held at
City Hall, playing in
Jackson Square
and other venues during the day. ASFB
also performed at the
1976
Summer Olympics
in Montreal, playing as headliners at
the
Man
and His World
pavilion. Following a series of concerts
at "Spring Break" in Fort Lauderdale,
national publications as diverse as
Christianity Today, Rolling Stone
Magazine and the National Courier began
carrying articles about the group.
Several of the band members were
credentialed ministers, licensed with
the Full Gospel Fellowship of Churches
and Ministers International in Irving,
Texas. With evangelistic fervor, they
were obsessively focused on the work of
"winning the lost," stressing personal
evangelism at all concert events. Indian
reservations in Canada, mental
institutions in Maine, prisons in Ohio,
rotundas and halls of State office
buildings, International Exposition
Halls, camps of migrant workers, tents
at County Fairs, Churches in most states
east of the Mississippi, open-air
platforms, Music Halls, military bases,
colleges, amphitheaters, nursing homes,
parking lots, street corners and hay
lofts ― the band's flexibility allowed
it to present a variety of musical
expressions best serving the needs of
evangelism. Creating their own label,
Rock the World Enterprises [changed
to War Again on the final
recording], the group was entirely
self-financed.
-posted on
Wikipedia.com,
All
Saved Freak Band
entry. 
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