Singer/songwriter Cody Hubach, who also recorded an unreleased
single with Sonobeat in 1969 and an unreleased album with Sonobeat
in 1972.
Read
more and hear sound bites from Cody's unreleased recordings.
Austin rock band Plymouth Rock. The
single,
Memorandum backed
with
Just a Start, was Sonobeat's most successful
commercial release in 1969.
Read
more.
Sonobeat made its first experimental
recordings in early 1967 with popular Austin band Leo and the
Prophets. Only months later, the band had a regional
hit single,
Tilt-a-Whirl, on the Totem label, urging
Sonobeat founders Bill Josey Sr. and Bill Josey Jr. forward with
their plans to launch their own record label.
Read
more.
Depending on how you count, either
three or four: The first, on Northeast Drive in Austin, is often
overlooked and not counted as a "studio", because only
one artist,
Roy
Headrick, recorded there and because it was a makeshift home
studio. The second, and the first truly "permanent" facility
Sonobeat had was on Western Hills Drive in northwest Austin.
The third was at the KVET radio building on North Lamar in Austin.
The fourth and final studio was in an old AME stone church just
outside Liberty Hill, Texas.
Base was
a studio recording group and began as Sonobeat owner Bill Josey
Sr.'s experiment in quadraphonic recording techniques. In 1972,
Bill enlisted a group of top Austin musicians for the experiments
and probably called the constantly-changing group Base as a double-play
on words: first, the group formed a base for Bill's experiments
and, second, Bill used three bass players, and in some sessions
two bassists performed together on the same tracks. A year later,
Bill brought together another group of luminary Austin musicians
for a reconstituted version of Base, but this time, Bill intended
to produce commercial releases in quad. Nonetheless, none of
the Base quad recordings was ever commercially released.
The double-sided black and white
sleeve features psychedelic-style artwork and lettering by
celebrated Austin illustrator Gilbert Shelton and a truly cool
photo by another Austin icon, Belmer Wright. The sleeve reads,
in small type appearing in the "OO"s in Conqueroo, "Recorded
Live at the Vulcan Gas Co." Although the single indeed
was recorded at the Vulcan Gas Company in downtown Austin,
it was not recorded before a live audience; Sonobeat frequently
rented the Vulcan during hours it was closed to the public
for use as a remote recording studio. Read
more.
Recording of the classical-jazz fusion
album
Mindbender by
the
David Flack Quorum started
in 1970, but because of Sonobeat's disruptive studio move in
'71 and David's departure shortly thereafter for a 2-year stint
in the military, the album wasn't completed until '74. It wasn't
released until '76.
Four: The first recorded but last
pressed was by singer/songwriter
Roy
Headrick. The first and
third pressed were of
Herman
M. Nelson's rich catalog of pop,
rock, and folk songs. The second pressed was of singer/songwriter
Bill Wilson's original songs. Bill
Wilson also performed and sang Herman M. Nelson's second song
demo album;
Jim
Chesnut, who also recorded a Sonobeat stereo single,
performed and sang Herman's first song demo album. All four song
demo albums, which were intended only for distribution to major
record company A&R departments in hopes of attracting
covers by well-known artists, were pressed in monaural.
Four years. From 1967 to 1971, Sonobeat
issued at least one single per year and in 1968 peaked with 11
singles. However, after releasing two singles by the same
group in 1971, there were no further Sonobeat releases until 1975.
Check
out Sonobeat's discography.
Wildfire is
the band and
Smokin' is
the album, consisting of eight songs produced and engineered
by Sonobeat owner Bill Josey Sr. in 1970. What made
these sessions particularly unusual is that they represent the
first time Sonobeat offered its studio and producing services
on a "work-for-hire" basis, meaning that the album was not recorded
as a potential Sonobeat release but, instead, was commissioned
by and belonged to the band.