THE EVIL I – ’LOVE CONQUERS ALL’/’CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT YOU’ (FROG RECORDS FR-02) 1968
According to ’Sounds From The Woods’, The Evil I hailed from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and it’s safe to say that The Evil I were probably unknown outside of their domain and cast as outsiders within.
’Love Conquers All’/’Can’t Live Without You’ was released on Bridge Society Records. Sources claim a 1966 release but judging by the sound this outfit had I’m not convinced. I hear a much later vibe. If it was ’66, well, The Evil I were ahead of their time.
’Love Conquers All’ is laced with fluid acid lead guitar and loner, moody vocals. The ’singer’ sounds like he’s in a psychotic trance from an overdose of peyote or other chemicals. Very laid back psych greatness.
Copies on Bridge Society Records never turn up and the late 80s/early 90s re-issue on Frog Records was limited to 300 copies and is now long gone.
In December 2014 I was contacted by Evil I member Jim Lehrman who kindly supplied the following information:
Jim: Here is some accurate info: I played bass on this record, the drummer’s name is Ed Belden who now lives in Newville, PA. and Geoff McCabe, wrote both songs and plays rhythm guitar on them. His brother Tim McCabe played lead and John Dereamer sang.
We were from Harrisburg, played in the mid-state area (from private parties to Universities) from 67-69 and recorded the record in Philadelphia late summer 68. The name of our band was Pandora’s Box and it’s a long story as to why that name does not appear on the record.
By the way, we were 15 and 16 when we made the
record. And our manager told us the recording studio we used in
Philadelphia was one that Jimi Hendrix used. Which, of course,
impressed us.
As Pandora’s Box, we played at our
school (the Harrisburg Academy), at private parties, at the Rescue
Fire Company’s dances and splash parties, the travelling “Reach
Out” coffeehouse, concerts at the band shell at Reservoir Park in
Harrisburg, Dickinson College and some other schools, and we were the
“house band” at the teen dances at the Colonial Park United
Church of Christ. We had no association with the church so I don’t
know how we got that gig.
We eventually got a manager, John Ulrich, who was
also managing another local band, The Legends, who had Danny Hartman
as their lead guitarist and singer.
The only times
Pandora’s Box played with other bands was in various “Battles of
the Bands” (we won some and lost some) and at the summer concerts
at Reservoir Park bandshell, which were put on by Reach Out (which I
was the “art director” of, and made all the posters).
We were “the” psychedelic band in the area, doing Grateful Dead type jams, often with what we considered an “Indian raga” vibe. At the time, we had never heard of the Grateful Dead. People occasionally asked us if we copied the Doors or if they copied us. Ha – we loved that!
This shot is from our high school yearbook. Timmy is the guy playing guitar at the bottom left and I’m at the top right.
As to why we changed our name from Pandora’s
Box to Evil I, it appears that after we had recorded the 45, the
step-mother of the songwriter/rhythm guitarist and lead guitarist
told her stepsons that now would be the time to change the name to
something less “sexual”, before becoming known (with the “success
of the record”) as Pandora’s Box. I, myself, didn’t know the
name was NOT Pandora’s Box until I saw the printed vinyl record.
These days, Geoff McCabe (rhythm guitar and
songwriter) is in Los Angeles, doing music and also promoting some
tremolo bar innovations he invented as well as additions to the
bridge to make guitars more acoustically brilliant and powerful —
he has at least 10 patents for this side of his work.
In
the 70s and 80s, after a stint at Berklee School of Music in Boston,
he focused on his music career in NY and produced two albums of his
own jazz fusion compositions — Teseract Complicity which won 3&1/2
stars from DownBeat magazine for his freshman effort, and Fractal
Architecture which he performed under his own name at the Montreaux
Jazz Festival in the later 80s.
This picture is Geoffrey, it was taken after he left Harrisburg and went to Hofstra University, this is how he looked back in the band.
He has a third jazz album written, Cartoons and
other Heiroglyphs, and moved to LA in 2000 to pursue his
non-instrumental work, where his new band, The Geofferson Lightship,
was well received.
His brother, Tim McCabe (lead
guitar) was not so lucky. He is in Sacramento, unfortunately living
with schizophrenia in an institution. John Dereamer (lead singer) is
in Harrisburg, mostly retired from doing contracting. He’s married
and has grown kids. John was the oldest and, unlike the rest of us,
went to Susquehanna High School.
As for myself, Jim Lehrman, I played bass, having previously played drums in another band, The Statesmen. After Harrisburg, I played guitar in the Guru Blanket Band in Boston (Ram Dass’ “back up” band) and have done little musically since.
I’ve been a psychotherapist for about 40 years and have been CEO and COO of the cutting edge educational centers Omega Institute in New York and Interface Foundation in Boston.
Geoff and me about a year ago here in LA. He’s on the right and I’m on the left.
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