Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Sloths

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Genres
  
Garage rock

Labels
  
Impression Burger

Active from
  
1964

Record label
  
LOLIPOP RECORDS

Years active
  
1964-1966, 2012-2016

Associated acts
  
The Yellow Payges

Genre
  
Garage rock

Albums
  
Back from the Grave

The Sloths images1laweeklycomimagertheslothslefttorig

Origin
  
Los Angeles, California, United States

Past members
  
Michael Rummans Jeff Briskin Hank Daniels Steve Dibner Sam Kamarass Tommy McLoughlin Dave Provost Jose Rendon Mark Weddington Patrick DiPuccio Ray Herron

Similar
  
The Yellow Payges, The Textones, Death Valley Girls, The Resonars, Doug Yule

Profiles

Grunge band the sloths are back on tour 50 years later aarp


The Sloths were an American garage rock band formed in Los Angeles, California, in 1964. Although short-lived, the band had a profound presence on the Sunset Strip's live scene, and their lone single, "Makin' Love", while not very commercially successful during its original release, has been heavily praised since its inclusion on the Back from the Grave series. The Sloths, after their re-discovery by music historians, are now considered the "great lost garage band", and surviving band members have been conducting reunion tours since 2012.

Contents

The sloths one way out official music video


History

Founding members Michael Rummans (lead guitar) and Jeff Briskin (rhythm guitar), both students enrolled at Beverly Hills High School, initially showed interest in forming the Sloths after a few months of jam sessions in 1963. Student transfer Hank Daniels (lead vocalist), who was receiving attention for his proto-hippie hairstyle, joined the band and was soon followed by Steve Dibner (bass guitar) Sam Kamarass (drums). Inspired by the more hard-edged R&B groups of the British Invasion, the Sloths encompassed cover versions of songs recorded by the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, and Them into their repertoire, which the band adamantly rehearsed at Dibner's house. After performing at social gatherings and school concerts, the Sloths made their professional debut at the Stratford on Sunset club on the Sunset Strip.

By 1965, the band was deeply intertwined in the Strip's live scene, appearing regularly at venues such as Pandora's Box, the Hullabaloo, and the Whisky a Go Go, and sharing the bill with highly-influential Los Angeles acts, including the Seeds, the Doors, and Love. Later in the year, Impression Records approached the Sloths to record their debut single at CBS Studios. Described by music critic Jonny Whiteside as a "masterpiece of overstimulated teenage arousal", it featured the two original songs "Makin' Love" and "You Mean Everything to Me". Although the single was not too commercially successful, largely due to a lack of promotional support, another garage band, the Dirty Shames, covered "Makin' Love" a year later on the same record label. In 1966, Briskin left the band to enroll in law school; thus, causing the Sloths to disband by the end of year. Rummans found the most immediate success after the group's break-up by joining the Yellow Payges.

The Sloths may have languished in obscurity had it not been for their recording of "Makin' Love" appearing on the compilation album Back from the Grave, Volume 4 in 1984, reigniting interest in the group. Other albums the song is featured on includes Back from the Grave, Volume 2 (CD version) and Gravel, Volume 5. When an original copy of "Makin' Love" was reported to have sold for $6,500 in 2011, writer Mike Stax of Ugly Things magazine tracked down Briskin to conduct an interview and release a limited-edition of the Sloths' lone single. Stax commented "Makin' Love" was the standout of Back from the Grave, Volume 4: "So primal, so elemental. It had that caveman primitivism about it". In turn, Briskin reached out to surviving member Rummans, and though he discovered Daniels and Kamarass had died, the two arranged reunion concerts in Los Angeles by recruiting a new line-up consisting of Tommy McLoughlin (lead vocals), Dave Provost (bass guitar), and Jose Rendon (drums) in 2012.

In 2015, the latest version of the Sloths, featuring McLoughlin, Mark Weddington (guitar), Patrick DiPuccio (guitar), Rummans, and Ray Herron (drums), released the album Back from the Grave on the indie rock label Burger Records. Music critic Alyson Camus praised it for "a large diversity throughout the album" and compared McLoughlin's vocal delivery to Iggy Pop. The group followed the distribution of Back from the Grave with tours in 2015 and 2016, focused mostly in Los Angeles.

Single

  • "Makin' Love" b/w "You Mean Everything to Me" - Impression Records (#IMP-104), 1965
  • Album

  • Back from the Grave - Burger Records (#BRGR623), 2015
  • Songs

    Makin' LoveBack from the Grave · 2015
    One Way OutBack from the Grave · 2015
    Never Enough GirlsBack from the Grave · 2015

    References

    The Sloths Wikipedia