Puneet Varma (Editor)

The Wackers

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Active until
  
1974

Genre
  
Rock

Active from
  
1970

Record label
  
Elektra Records

The Wackers 1bpblogspotcomai7hKoTxvWAUR9B8YUl2pIAAAAAAA

Albums
  
Wackering Heights, Hot Wacks, Shredder, Rhino Hi-Five: The Wackers

Similar
  
Bob Segarini, The Family Tree, Brian Greenway, Jerry Mercer, David Henman

The wackers travelin time body go round wait see i hardly know her name lawdy lawdy day night


The Wackers were an American Elektra Records group formed in 1970 out of another Elektra band Roxy. Singer/songwriter Bob Segarini and multi-instrumentalist Randy Bishop disbanded Roxy and joined with singer-guitarist-keyboardist Michael Stull to form the new group. Bassist Bill 'Kootch' Trochim and drummer Spencer Earnshaw completed The Wackers lineup to record the debut album Wackering Heights, produced by Gary Usher. Following the success of the tracks "Travelin' Time" and "Body Go Round", the band toured Canada and the US.

Contents

The Wackers The Wackers Segarini Don39t Believe a Word I Say

The next year (1972), the band moved to Montreal, Canada around the time that they released their sophomore LP Hot Wacks to very good reviews. The album, recorded at Andre Perry Studios, featured "I Hardly Know Her Name" and a cover of John Lennon's "Oh My Love". Billboard, April 15, 1972, had this to say about "Hot Wacks":

The Wackers The Wackers Hot Wacks 1970 Rising Storm Review
The Wackers have been wackering around for a long time with only a modicum of success; this album may well rectify that state of affairs. Their music is penetratingly electrifying, their songs possessing an unusual built-in compulsion. This album contains some lingeringly lovely efforts, ("Oh My Love" and "Do You Know the Reason") as well as ripplingly up-tempo numbers ("I Hardly Know Her Name" and "Breathe Easy.")
The Wackers Bite It Deep The Wackers Hot Wacks 1972

Comparing them favorably to the Hollies, the Beatles, and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, Bill Mann, Montreal Gazette, called The Wackers, "one of the tightest singing groups around," adding, "theirs is a vocal alphabet soup with a little bit of everything thrown in (with the letters spelling "Sho good listening")."

The Wackers The Wackers Wackering Heights Vinyl LP Album at Discogs

Most of side two of the album was the six-song "Time Will Carry On" suite which reminded the listener of side two of The Beatle's "Abbey Road. Mann says,

The Wackers The Wackers The Buck Duckdog Memorial Jam YouTube
The next six cuts on Side Two are a fast-moving melody, and The Wackers' transitions from one melody to another are the best I've heard since Sergeant Pepper's. . . . [the title cut] is distinguished by a tough slashing guitar line that is the most distinctive and interesting thing on the album."

Many references to the Hot Wacks LP erroneously refer to songs that do not appear on any Wackers LPs including "Windy Days", "I Got My Friends" and remakes of "New York City" and "Rock and Roll Circus", which were songs from the Roxy album in 1970. The third album, Shredder, was released in 1973 and featured "Day and Night" (a chart single) (#50 Can.), "Beach Song", and "Last Dance".

Despite Michael Stull leaving the group shortly after the move to Montreal, and April Wine drummer Jerry Mercer and guitarist JP Lauzon playing on several of the "Shredder" tracks, Segarini, Trochim, Bishop, and Earnshaw went on to record an unreleased fourth album, "Wack 'n' Roll." Soon after, Earnshaw returned to California and Randy Bishop began a solo career. The Wackers soldiered on for a time with new additions—Leon Holt, Norman Vosko, and Wayne Cullen—and released one single on Polydor Records, "All I Want To Do Is Love You." Segarini, Trochim, and Cullen would then form The Dudes, with original April Wine members David and Ritchie Henman, and future April Wine guitarist Brian Greenway for one album. Bob Segarini went on to enjoy a critically acclaimed solo career and later ventured into TV and Radio broadcasting.

The wackers ride


Songs

I Hardly Know Her NameHot Wacks · 2005
Travelin’ TimeWackering Heights · 1971
Body Go RoundWackering Heights · 1971

References

The Wackers Wikipedia