Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Lothar and the Hand People

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Years active
  
1965–1970

Active until
  
1970

Labels
  
Capitol

Lothar and the Hand People Lothar amp The Hand People 1968 1969 NoNaMe

Website
  
www.lotharandthehandpeople.com

Past members
  
John Emelin Paul Conly Rusty Ford Tom Flye Kim King Richard Willis William Wright

Origin
  
Denver, Colorado, United States (1965)

Albums
  
Presenting... Lothar & the Hand People, Space Hymn, Space Hymn (The Complete Capitol Recordings)

Members
  
Tom Flye, John Emelin, Rusty Ford, Kim King, Paul Conley

Genres
  
Psychedelic rock, Psychedelic pop, Space rock

Similar
  
Gary Stites, Robert Margouleff, David Marks, Fifty Foot Hose, C W McCall

Profiles

Lothar and the hand people space hymn


Lothar and the Hand People were a late-1960s psychedelic rock band known for its spacey music and pioneering use of the theremin and Moog modular synthesizer.

Contents

Lothar and the Hand People httpsimgdiscogscomA8hrzrBUNtFjqBe3RZIiQCU8

The band's unusual appellation refers to a theremin nicknamed "Lothar", with the "Hand People" being the musicians in the band, who included John Emelin (vocals), Paul Conly (keyboards, synthesizer), Rusty Ford (bass), Tom Flye (drums) and Kim King (guitar, synthesizer).

Lothar and the Hand People Lothar and the Hand People

The band was notable for being "the first rockers to tour and record using synthesizers, thereby inspiring the generation of electronic music-makers who immediately followed them." Formed in Denver in 1965, Lothar and the Hand People relocated to New York in 1966. The band jammed with Jimi Hendrix and played gigs with groups such as The Byrds, Canned Heat, Chambers Brothers, Grateful Dead and The Lovin' Spoonful. Lothar and the Hand People played music for Sam Shepard's play The Unseen Hand, and was the opening act at the Atlantic City Pop Festival.

Lothar and the Hand People Lothar amp The Hand People Presenting Lothar amp The Hand People

After three initial singles, Capitol Records released two albums by this short-lived band: Presenting...Lothar and the Hand People (1968, produced by Robert Margouleff) and Space Hymn (1969, produced by Nick Venet). A Rolling Stone review described Lothar and the Hand People's music:

It is electronic country, a kind of good-time music played by mad dwarfs, and it is really good to listen to. There is no tension here, no jarring forces at war with each other. It may be strange that New York, the city which deifies speed and insanity, could produce this music, but it is as if Lothar and the Hand People have gone through this madness and come out on the other side, smiling.

The band's most popular recording was the title song "Space Hymn," which received significant FM radio play.

The first album featured a notable "robotic" cover of Manfred Mann's UK hit "Machines" (composed by Mort Shuman), which Capitol released as a single.

Lothar and the Hand People Music Archive LOTHAR AND THE HAND PEOPLE 1968 Presenting

In 1997, The Chemical Brothers sampled the Lothar song "It Comes on Anyhow" in "It Doesn't Matter" on their album Dig Your Own Hole. A music video for "Space Hymn" screened in 2004 at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival and the ION International Animation, Games, and Short Film Festival in Los Angeles.

Lothar and the Hand People was the source for a Saturday Night Live skit called "Lothar of the Hill People" and a Boston-area theremin band named The Lothars.

Space hymn by lothar and the hand people music video


Studio albums

  • Presenting...Lothar and the Hand People (1968, Capitol Records)
  • Space Hymn (1969, Capitol Records)
  • Singles

  • "Rose Colored Glasses" (1967, Capitol Records)
  • "Have Mercy (Mercy, Mercy, Mercy)" (1967, Capitol Records)
  • "Comic Strip" (1968, Capitol Records)
  • "Machines" (1969, Capitol Records)
  • "Midnight Ranger" (1969, Capitol Records)
  • "We Three Kings" and another xmas piece, aired on WABC-FM on Xmas Eve 1968, maybe a promo tape, I have most of Kings on cassette, looking for more info on this
  • Compilations

  • This Is It, Machines (1986, See for Miles Records)
  • Space Hymn (The Complete Capitol Recordings) (2003, Acadia)
  • Songs

    It Comes on AnyhowPresenting Lothar & the Hand People · 1968
    Space HymnSpace Hymn · 1969
    Midnight RangerSpace Hymn · 1969

    References

    Lothar and the Hand People Wikipedia


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