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The Mojo Men

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Years active
  
1965–1969

Members
  
Sly Stone

Active until
  
1969


Also known as
  
Sly and the Mojo Men, The Mojo, Mojo

Labels
  
Autumn, Warner Bros/Reprise, GRT Records

Associated acts
  
Sly Stone, The Vejtables

Past members
  
Jim Alaimo Paul Curcio Don Metchick Bob Carhart Dennis DeCarr Jan Errico Sly Stone

Origin
  
San Francisco, California, United States (1965)

Albums
  
Mojo Magic, Sit Down... It's the Mojo Men, Whys Ain't Supposed to Be, There Goes My Mind

Genres
  
Garage rock, Psychedelic rock, Folk rock, Baroque pop

Similar
  
The Vejtables, The Beau Brummels, Michael and the Messengers, The Chocolate Watchband, The Mystery Trend

The Mojo Men was an American rock band based in San Francisco. Formed in 1965, the group underwent several name and personnel changes until their 1969 breakup. Their highest-charting Billboard Hot 100 single was a cover of Buffalo Springfield's "Sit Down, I Think I Love You", which peaked at number 36 in 1967.

Contents

History

The Mojo Men MojoMenjpg

Singer/bassist Jim Alaimo, guitarist Paul Curcio, drummer Dennis DeCarr, and keyboardist Don Metchick were bandmates in Florida who moved to San Francisco in 1964 to form a new band. There they met Sylvester Stewart, later known as Sly Stone, then a record producer at Autumn Records for acts such as The Beau Brummels and The Vejtables. Stewart and the band recorded a few songs under the name Sly and the Mojo Men but Stewart, unsatisfied with the results, chose not to release them. He continued working with the band as a songwriter and producer on "Dance with Me" (1965), the Mojo Men's first song to enter the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and "She's My Baby" (1966).

The Mojo Men httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

DeCarr left the group in 1966 and was replaced by drummer/vocalist Jan Errico, formerly of the Vejtables. The Mojo Men then moved from Autumn to Reprise Records, where the band's earlier British Invasion-influenced garage rock style evolved into pop/folk rock. In 1967, the band released a Baroque cover version of Buffalo Springfield's "Sit Down, I Think I Love You". Written by Stephen Stills and arranged by Van Dyke Parks, the song became the Mojo Men's first and only top 40 single. Metchick left the band in 1968, and the remaining trio shortened their name to The Mojo, and then just Mojo, before they released their lone studio album, Mojo Magic, on GRT Records. The group disbanded in 1969.

The Mojo Men Nights At The Roundtable The Mojo Men 1967 Crooks and Liars

"Sit Down, I Think I Love You" was included on the seminal 1972 Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965–1968 garage rock compilation album. Sundazed Records released three Mojo Men compilation albums between 1995 and 2003, and in 2008 Big Beat Records released the compilation Not Too Old to Start Cryin': The Lost 1966 Masters. The band's single "She's My Baby" was sampled on Kanye West's "Hell of a Life", a song from his 2010 album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy.

The Mojo Men The Mojo Men Discography at Discogs

The Mojo Men The Mojo Men Shes My Baby YouTube

Songs

Sit Down - I Think I Love You1972
She's My BabyWhys Ain't Supposed to Be · 1996
Not Too Old to Start Cryin'Mojo Magic · 1969

References

The Mojo Men Wikipedia