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Milan the Leather Boy

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Name
  
Milan Leather


Role
  
Singer

Milan the Leather Boy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaencc1Mil

Died
  
1971, New York City, New York, United States

Albums
  
Hell Bent for Leather, I Am What I Am

Record labels
  
Philips Records, ABC Records, MGM Records

Similar People
  
The Bruthers, The Monocles, The Galaxies IV, The Head Shop, The Ugly Ducklings

Leather boy i m a leather boy


Milan Radenkovich (December 15, 1941 – March 14, 1971), who was always credited mononymously as Milan, was an American record producer, songwriter and recording artist on numerous songs made throughout the 1960s, mostly though not exclusively in the garage rock genre. He released an LP and numerous singles for seven different national record labels and other independent labels (a total of more than 30 songs) under a variety of names, including Milan with His Orchestra, Milan, The World of Milan, Milan (The Leather Boy), and The Leather Boy, and also worked under the name Rick Rodell. As a producer, arranger and/or songwriter, Milan oversaw many other releases by a variety of artists ranging from the pop singer Lou Christie to the psychedelic rock band the Head Shop.

Contents

Milan the Leather Boy Milan the Leather Boy Wikipedia

Greg Shaw placed Milan's song "I'm a Leather Boy" as the opening track on two different albums in the Pebbles series: the Pebbles, Volume 10 CD and the earlier Pebbles, Volume 11 LP (which was also the first album to be released on his AIP record label). He has written of Milan as being "a cryptic artist who made a series of high image records offering himself as some leather-clad, bike-riding rebel, but so stylized he might've been imagined by Andy Warhol. . . . The only name to be found on these records is Milan, a name that also shows up as writer/producer on a big pile of records, from the early 60s right thru the end of the decade. . . . But who was he? No further clue has ever emerged. This is one guy whose story really cries out to be told."

In the promotional material for the 2009 retrospective album Hell Bent for Leather, Milan was described in this way: "From his earliest incarnation in the record industry as a Xmas twister, the enigmatic Milan has changed his name and re-invented himself several times: a teen idol with a cute hairdo and a preppy look, a garage gonzo savage, an all dressed-in-black biker stud, a psychedelic screamer in love with satellite sounds, and other characters known or waiting to be discovered. One thing is for sure: Few people can claim so many identities in less than a decade."

Milan the leather boy i get groovy feelings 1967


Identity and background

Milan was born Milan Radenković, anglicized as Milan Radenkovich, though the surname is rarely if ever shown on records attributed to him. However, he changed his name to Richard (Rick) Rodell while he was still in high school in Florida, and was often known by that name in the recording industry. Milan's father performed as Rasha (or Rascha) Rodell, and was a folk singer and guitarist who performed in the late 1950s at the Eden Roc Hotel in Miami Beach, Florida. Milan's older brother, Petar Radenković, is a former Yugoslavian-Serbian goalkeeper with the football (soccer) team, TSV 1860 München of Munich, who won the German Bundesliga title in 1966 and the German Cup in 1964.

Album, I Am What I Am

After a couple of early singles, Milan released an LP on 20th Century Fox in 1964, named I Am What I Am, along with two associated singles, "I Am What I Am" b/w "Over and Over Again" and later "Runnin' Wild" b/w "Angel's Lullaby". The front cover (pictured) also includes "presenting a bright new star". The album's liner notes describe Milan as "a darkly handsome, six foot, 160 lb. twenty year old" with a "European musical background" and continue: "Milan is popular music . . . he lives it, loves it and understands it and refuses to allow the tendency to copy whatever happens to be in the top ten at the present time to influence his work" (ellipses in the original).

The album is in the style of early 1960s orchestral pop music records, instead of the garage rock and psychedelic rock recordings for which he is better known. However, some of the songs on the album, including "Runnin' Wild" and "Spellbound" have the flavor of his later garage-rock classics.

Later recording career

As far as his persona is concerned, the moniker "Leather Boy" is certainly appropriate, since he is shown in several photographs in a leather jacket. Anticipating his pose on the single "I'm a Leather Boy", he is shown on the back cover of his earlier album holding a guitar and dressed in what appears to be a faux leather smock emblazoned with "Milan" in stylized lettering. (This lettering was later incorporated into the design of the cover of the 2009 Hell Bent for Leather album).

Producer, arranger and songwriting credits

For the most part, the name "Milan" was used in his many appearances on disc as songwriter, arranger or producer; but there are many exceptions. On his first single, the songwriter of "Santa's Doin' the Twist" and "Swing a Little Harder" is given as "Rick Rodell". On his 1964 album, the songwriter is listed as "M. Rodell", and on the first of the two associated singles, the songwriter is "Milan Rodelle" (with the surname misspelled in that case). "M. Rodell" is also listed as the songwriter and arranger on the Licorice Schtik song "The Kissin' Game".

He also was the producer for both sides of a 1967 single "Bongo Bongo" b/w "Free as a Bird" on MGM – MGM also released some of his own singles – for an obscure girl group called The Chanters. He was also listed as the songwriter of "Bongo Bongo". According to the programmer of the compilation albums Look What I Found, Volume 12 and Look What I Found, Volume 21 – which each included a re-release of one side of this single – "'Bongo Bongo' sounds like [Milan's] 'On the Go'. . . The Chanters have remained a mystery band as I've never seen this 45 on any compilation." A song by the Downtown Collection called "Washington Square" was included on Volume 42 of the same series; Milan was the producer on this record.

In a foray into yet another style of music, Milan wrote and arranged both sides of a single on Capitol for a bubblegum pop band called Ice Cream that was released in 1968.

Death

Milan died on March 14, 1971, aged 29, in New York, possibly from brain cancer.

As a recording artist

As Milan with His Orchestra:

  • "Santa's Doin' the Twist" b/w "Swing a Little Longer"; Migon (#1962-A/B) – 1962
  • As Milan:

  • "Innocence" b/w "Winter Time"; End (#1123) – 1963
  • "I Am What I Am" b/w "Over and Over Again"; 20th Century Fox (#487) – 1964
  • "Runnin' Wild" b/w "Angel's Lullaby"; 20th Century Fox (#552) – 1964
  • As The World of Milan:

  • "Cry, Lonely Boy" b/w "Luva-Luva"; ABC-Paramount (#10718) – 1965
  • "Follow the Sun" b/w "I'm Cryin' in the Rain"; Brunswick (#55292) – 1966
  • "One Track Mind" b/w "Shades of Blue"; Brunswick (#55298) – 1966
  • As Milan (The Leather Boy):

  • "You Gotta Have Soul" b/w "My Prayer"; Flower (#100) – 1967
  • As The Leather Boy:

  • "I'm a Leather Boy" b/w "Shadows"; MGM (#K-13724) – April 1967
  • "On the Go" b/w "Soulin'"; MGM (#K-13790) – August 1967
  • "Jersey Thursday" b/w "Black Friday"; Parkway (#125) – 1967
  • As a producer, arranger and/or songwriter

    Lou Christie:

  • "How Many Teardrops" b/w "You and I (Have a Right to Cry)"; Roulette #R-4504 – 1963
  • The American Beetles:

  • "Don't Be Unkind" b/w "You Did It To Me"; Roulette (#4550) – 1964
  • The Chanters:

  • "Bongo Bongo" b/w "Free as a Bird"; MGM (#K13750) – 1967
  • The Unclaimed:

  • "Memories of Green Eyes" b/w/ "Jingle Jangle"; Philips (#30430) – 1967
  • The Licorice Schtik:

  • "The Kissin' Game" b/w "Flowers Flowers"; Dot (#17131) – 1968
  • Studio albums

    As a recording artist
  • I Am What I Am; 20th Century Fox (#TFM 3149/#TFS 4149) — 1964
  • As a producer, arranger and/or songwriter
  • The Head Shop; Epic (#BN 26476) – 1969
  • Retrospective album

  • Hell Bent for Leather; LS (#LS-001LP) – 2009 (vinyl only)
  • I'm a Leather Boy

    1. Pebbles, Volume 11 (LP)
    2. Pebbles, Volume 10 (CD)
    3. Pebbles, Volume 3 (CD – ESD Release)
    4. Mayhem and Psychosis, Volume 1 (LP)
    5. Mayhem and Psychosis, Volume 1 (CD)

    Shadows

    1. Pebbles, Volume 11 (LP)
    2. Pebbles Box (LP Box Set)
    3. Trash Box (CD Box Set)

    You Gotta Have Soul

    1. Pebbles, Volume 11 (LP)

    On the Go

    1. Pebbles, Volume 10 (CD)
    2. A Journey to Tyme, Volume 5 (LP)
    3. Garagelands, Volume 1 (LP)
    4. Garagelands, Volume 1 (CD)
    5. Wavy Gravy series

    Soulin'

    1. A Journey to Tyme, Volume 5 (LP)
    2. Garagelands, Volume 1 (LP)
    3. Garagelands, Volume 1 (CD)

    One Track Mind

    1. Winning Sides, Volume 2 (LP)
    2. Quagmires, Volume 3 (CD)

    References

    Milan the Leather Boy Wikipedia