Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Palace Guard

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Years active
  
1964 - 1966

Active until
  
1967

Members
  
Emitt Rhodes, Don Grady

Associated acts
  
The Emerals

Active from
  
1964

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Origin
  
Los Angeles, California, United States

Labels
  
Orange-Empire Cameo-Parkway

Past members
  
Emitt Rhodes Rick Moser Chuck McClong Mike Conley Dave Beaudoin Jon Beaudoin Don Beaudoin Don Grady Terry Rae

Genres
  
Garage rock, Folk rock, Pop rock

Similar
  
The Merry‑Go‑Round, The Yellow Payges, lyme and cybelle, The Yellow Balloon, Michael and the Messengers

The Palace Guard was an American garage rock band formed in Los Angeles, California in 1964. Though the band never obtained national success, they made a huge splash in Southern California with their song "Falling Sugar". The group is also notable for featuring the first commercial appearance of Emitt Rhodes, later a member of the Merry-Go-Round.

Contents

History

The foundation of the Palace Guard was set in early 1964 with the formation of the Emerals (sometimes incorrectly noted as the Emeralds) in Los Angeles. However, the band did not last long after a contract dispute resulted in the band members parting ways. After drummer Emitt Rhodes had a change of heart, he reconciled with some of his former bandmates, rechristening themselves the Palace Guard. The earliest lineup consisted of Rhodes, Rick Moser (bass guitar), Mike Conley (rhythm guitar), Chuck McClong (piano), and brothers David (tambourine, vocals), John (tambourine, vocals), and Don Beaudoin (lead guitar). For a brief period, the band also featured actor Don Grady—contributing vocals, keyboards, and drums—of My Three Sons fame, who went on to become a member of the sunshine pop band the Yellow Balloon. Grady stayed with the Palace Guard to record one obscure single, "Little People", in early 1965, which was credited to Don Grady and the Palace Guard.

The band was known for their style of dress, clothing themselves in military-themed red coats, as if they were members of the Queen's Guard. After months of rehearsal, the Palace Guard's big break came when KRLA deejay Casey Kasem invited the group to perform on his local television dance show Shebang. In mid-1965, the group began an extended residency at the Hullabaloo club, on Sunset Boulevard, earning popularity as a need-to-see attraction in Los Angeles. Two singles followed on the Orange-Empire record label, before the group scored a regional hit with "Falling Sugar" in early 1966, described by music historian Lenny Kaye as "a catchy Moptop-ish toe tapper brimming with youthful fervor". Indeed, "Falling Sugar", like most of their material derived from a blend of folk rock and the harmonic sound of the Beatles.

Rhodes began to have larger ambitions, both as a songwriter and to become a guitarist, leading him to depart the band to form the Merry-Go-Round and reaching number 63 on the Billboard Hot 100 with his song "Live". His replacement Terry Rae, formerly of the Driftones, an early version of the Yellow Payges, recalls in an interview that prior to leaving Rhodes "used to bring up his acoustic guitar and sing "Yesterday" at the Hullabaloo while he was with The Guard. I think this gave him the inspiration to play guitar full time, and to do only his material". After Rhodes' departure, the Palace Guard signed to Cameo-Parkway Records, releasing "Greed" and "Saturday's Children". However, with no national distribution in sight for the group, they decided to disband in mid-1966.

Since their disbandment, the Palace Guard's songs have been compiled on several compilation albums, including the Nuggets albums Nuggets Volume Four: Pop Part Two, the 1998 expanded box-set reissue of Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965–1968, and Where the Action Is! Los Angeles Nuggets 1965-1968. On February 23, 2003, Gear-Fab Records released all of the band's recorded material on The Palace Guard album.

Songs

Falling Sugar1972
Greed2016
Saturdays Child2002

References

The Palace Guard Wikipedia