Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Mugwumps (band)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Genres
  
Labels
  
Warner Bros.

Genre
  
Years active
  
1964

Active from
  
1964

Albums
  
The Mugwumps

The Mugwumps (band) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenee2The

Origin
  
New York, New York, United States

Associated acts
  
The Big 3The Lovin' SpoonfulThe Mamas & the Papas

Past members
  
Cass ElliotDenny DohertyJim HendricksJohn SebastianZal Yanovsky

Members
  

Similar
  
The Big 3 (folk group), The Lovin' Spoonful, The Mamas & the Papas

Mugwumps - Everybody's Been Talkin' 1964 ((Stereo))


The Mugwumps were a 1960s folk rock band, based in New York City, that featured later members of the The Mamas & the Papas and the Lovin' Spoonful. They released one self-titled album in 1967 and two singles.

Contents

The Mugwumps Photos (4 of 8) | Last.fm

History

The origin of the band's name is unclear. One source says that it was taken from the William S. Burroughs novel The Naked Lunch. The liner notes for the 2007 re-release of The Mugwumps reports that Jim Hendricks claimed that the name came from music producer Erik Jacobsen. Denny Doherty claimed that the name came from his Newfoundland grandmother. (Historically, "Mugwumps" were dissident American Republicans of 1884, from Algonquian mugquomp, "important person"). They largely played covers with some of their own material and played live. The album was released after the band had split up.

Members Cass Elliot and Denny Doherty would become one-half of The Mamas & the Papas (who told the story of The Mugwumps in their hit song "Creeque Alley"), while John Sebastian and Zal Yanovsky would form the Lovin' Spoonful.

Jim Hendricks formed the Lamp of Childhood, which recorded three singles for Dunhill Records, and had some success as a performer and songwriter. He wrote the top 15 hit "Summer Rain" for Johnny Rivers, and the theme song "Long Lonesome Highway" for the TV show Then Came Bronson.

A different 1960s group known as The Mugwumps, based in Los Angeles and produced by Mike Curb for his Sidewalk Records label, had no connection to the New York group but reached #127 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart in 1966 with a cover version of "Jug Band Music", a John Sebastian-penned song on The Lovin' Spoonful's Daydream album.

Albums

The Mugwumps (Warner Bros. 1967)

Side 1
  1. Searchin'
  2. I Don't Wanna Know
  3. I'll Remember Tonight
  4. Here It Is Another Day
  5. Do You Know What I Mean
Side 2
  1. You Can't Judge a Book By the Cover
  2. Everybody's Been Talkin'
  3. Do What They Don't Say
  4. So Fine

John Sebastian did not appear on this album. Produced by Roy Silver & Bob Cavallo in association with Alan Loeber /A Cavallo & Silver Production. Recorded in August 1964.

Singles

  • "I Don't Wanna Know" b/w "I'll Remember Tonight" (1964 Warner Bros. 5471)
  • "Searchin'" b/w "Here It Is Another Day" (1967 Warner Bros. 7018)
  • Songs

    Here It Is Another DayThe Mugwumps · 1964
    Everybody's Been Talkin'The Mugwumps · 1964
    Searchin'The Mugwumps · 1964

    References

    The Mugwumps (band) Wikipedia