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* ''Golden Classics'' (1996)
* ''Golden Classics'' (1996)


==External links==
* {{AMG Artist|sql=Beea9qjkboj6a|artist=Ram Jam}}





Revision as of 10:00, 7 May 2007

Ram Jam was an American 1970s rock band, best known for their 1977 Top 20 hit "Black Betty".

The band members were Bill Bartlett (guitar), Pete Charles (drums) Myke Scavone (lead singer), Howie Arthur Blauvett, and Jimmy Santoro (guitar on second album). Bill Bartlett was formerly lead guitarist for bubblegum group The Lemon Pipers, while Blauvett played with Billy Joel in two bands, The Hassles and El Primo.

Career

Early days

Bartlett went on from the Lemon Pipers to form a group called Starstruck - originally including Steve Walmsley (bass) and Bob Nave (organ) from the Lemon Pipers - later replacing Walmsley with David Goldflies (who later played for years with Dickie Betts and Great Southern, and The Allman Brothers). While in Starstruck, Bartlett took Leadbelly's 59 second long "Black Betty," composed music for it, then arranged it and recorded and released it on the group's own TruckStar record label. "Black Betty" became a regional hit, then was picked up by record producers in New York who formed a group around Bartlett called Ram Jam. They re-released the song, and it became a hit nationally. The Ram Jam "recording" was actually the same one originally recorded by Starstruck, the band at that time composed of Bartlett, lead guitar and vocals, Tom Kurtz, rhythm guitar and vocals, David Goldflies, bass, David Fleeman on drums. The rest of the tracks on the first studio album containing "Black Betty" was played by the Ram Jam line-up, as well as the first tour backing up the single. The touring band included Jimmy Santoro on guitar as well as Bartlett. The song caused quite a stir with the NAACP and Congress of Racial Equality calling for a boycott due to the lyrics. Despite the controversy, the song reached number 18 on the singles chart in 1977 in the U.S. and top ten in Australia while the Ram Jam album reached Top 40. Also, Ted Demme used the song in the soundtrack to his 2001 film, Blow, and it is often played between innings at Yankee Stadium.

Later

A subsequent album Portrait of the Artist as a Young Ram achieved little success, despite the addition of the Long Island, New York lead guitarist Jimmy Santoro. The “Portrait” album was re-issued on Rock Candy Records (from England in 2006, and is now considered by some to be a cult classic on par with Aerosmith, Starz, and Ted Nugent.

The second album is a hard rockin’ heavy metal collector’s favorite. Listed in the Top 100 lists in Martin Popoff’s book “The Collector’s Guide to Heavy Metal Volume 1: The Seventies.” The album’s heaviness was attributed to Santoro’s guitar and Scavone’s vocal power. Bartlett had left the group by then and did not play on the album.

Post hits

In the 1990s both studio releases by Ram Jam were packaged together as a German import record entitiled The Very Best Of Ram Jam. However, the cover of said album features the same artwork as their self-titled debut so be sure to check the track listing to differentiate, although both have "Black Betty" on the albums.

In 2006 Ram Jam was featured in an article that included bands like Moxy and Tucky Buzzard called Top 6 Classic Rock Bands You Never Knew You Didn't Know written by Dave White, an American writer, music critic, and film critic.[1]

Bartlett, now 63, still plays guitar, but during the last decade has transformed himself into a boogie-woogie piano player. He also plays banjo, harmonica, slide guitar and has written dozens of songs.

Santoro still plays professionally in various bands in New York, and teaches music in a public school on Long Island. Scavone lives and works in New Jersey and also plays in a band. However, Blauvelt and Charles have both died.

Discography

External links

  1. ^ "article Top 6 Classic Rock Bands You Never Knew You Didn't Know". ClassicRock.About.com.