Ram Jam Explained

Ram Jam
Origin:New York City, U.S.
Years Active:1977–1978
Label:Epic, Rock Candy
Past Members:
  • Bill Bartlett
  • Howard Arthur Blauvelt
  • Pete Charles
  • Jimmy Santoro
  • Nick “Nick” Turani
  • Myke Scavone

Ram Jam was a short-lived American rock band formed in New York City and active in 1977 and 1978, mainly known for their hit single "Black Betty".

Overview

The band consisted of Bill Bartlett (guitar and lead vocals), Howie Arthur Blauvelt (bass), Pete Charles (drums), and Myke Scavone (lead vocals).[1] Jimmy Santoro, who toured with the band in support of their debut album, joined on guitar for the follow-up album. Bartlett was formerly lead guitarist for the Lemon Pipers, while Blauvelt played with Billy Joel in several bands: the Echoes (also renamed the Lost Souls and then the Commandos), the Hassles and El Primo.[1] The band was originally known as 'Creekside Killshack'.

History

Early days

Bill Bartlett went on from the Lemon Pipers to form a group called Starstruck. Starstruck originally included Steve Walmsley (bass) and Bob Nave (organ) from the Lemon Pipers. Walmsley left the band and was replaced by David Goldflies (who later played for years with Dickey Betts and Great Southern, and the Allman Brothers). While in Starstruck, Bartlett took Lead Belly's 59 second long "Black Betty" and arranged, recorded and released it on the group's own TruckStar label.[1] "Black Betty" became a regional hit, then was picked up by producers in New York who formed a group around Bartlett called Ram Jam. They re-released the song, and it became a hit nationally. The Ram Jam "recording" was actually the same one originally recorded by Starstruck (albeit significantly edited to rearrange the song structure), the band at that time comprised Bartlett (lead guitar and vocals), Tom Kurtz (rhythm guitar and vocals), David Goldflies (bass), and David Fleeman (drums). The rest of the tracks on the first studio album containing "Black Betty" were played by the Ram Jam lineup. Even though the song was credited to Huddie Ledbetter, the NAACP and Congress of Racial Equality called for a boycott due to the lyrics.[1] [2] [3] The boycott failed, however, and "Black Betty" reached number 18 on the singles chart in 1977 in the U.S., top ten in the UK Singles Chart and Australia, and number 46 in Canada, while the Ram Jam album reached the U.S. top 40. It was also a hit in the Netherlands, reaching number 4. In Canada, the album reached number 33.[4]

Later

Their subsequent album Portrait of the Artist as a Young Ram achieved little success, despite the addition of Long Island, New York, lead guitarist Jimmy Santoro. The Portrait album was re-issued on Rock Candy Records from England in 2006. It is listed in the Top 100 lists in Martin Popoff’s book The Collector’s Guide to Heavy Metal Volume 1: The Seventies.

Post-hits

In the 1990s, both studio releases by Ram Jam were packaged together as a German import record entitled The Very Best of Ram Jam.[5] [6] However, the cover of the album features the same artwork as their self-titled debut, and The Very Best of Ram Jam album starts with the ten titles from Ram Jam. This is followed by all ten titles from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Ram. The titles from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Ram are slightly re-ordered. The first two songs ("Gone Wild", "Pretty Poison") are moved to the end on The Very Best of Ram Jam.[5] [6]

In 1991, producers Kasenetz and Katz released a hip-house single called "We Rock the Mansion" as Ram Jam, which failed to chart. In 1994, they released an album called Ram Jam in France with a group of session musicians fronted by vocalist Don Chaffin, which failed to chart as well. Two singles were released from the album, "Ram Jam, Thank You Mam" (under which title the album was reissued in Germany in 1995) and "Black Betty '95", a cover of the 1990 "Rough 'n Ready" remix of the original Ram Jam song, both of which didn't chart. A 12" single of "Ram Jam, Thank You Mam" was also released in 1994, featuring a 7-minute rearrangement of the song.

A remix of "Black Betty" by Ben Liebrand reached number 13 in the UK Singles Chart in 1990.[7] Cover versions of the song also appear on the 2002 album Mr. Jones by Tom Jones and on the 2004 album Tonight Alright by Australian rock band Spiderbait.

Bill Bartlett still plays guitar, but in the early 1990s transformed himself into a boogie-woogie piano player. He also plays banjo, harmonica, and has written dozens of songs. Santoro still plays professionally in various bands in New York, and teaches music at an elementary school on Long Island. Scavone, who now resides in New Jersey, after many years detached from the music industry, recorded an album of 12 songs, both originals and cover versions with his former teenage garage rock band called the Doughboys. It was featured at the 40th Reunion of John Zacherle's Disc-O-Teen in 2004, which coincided with Zacherle's 84th birthday. The album, entitled Is It Now, included liner notes by John Hawkins, the original keyboard and piano player for the Nashville Teens.

Howie Blauvelt died in 1993 at age 44, and Pete Charles (full name Peter Charles Picardio) died in 2002 at age 49 from unknown causes.[8] Scavone continues to write and record original music with the Doughboys. In 2015, Scavone was recruited to play harmonica, percussion and backing vocals with his longtime heroes, the Yardbirds.[9]

Band members

Final lineup

Touring musicians

Timeline

Discography

Studio albums

YearAlbumChart positionsLabel
US 200
[10]
AUS
[11]
CAN
1977Ram Jam341633Epic
1978Portrait of the Artist as a Young Ram
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.

Compilation albums

Singles

YearTitlePeak chart positionsCertifications
US Pop
AUS
[12]
UK
[13]
1977"Black Betty"align=center 18align=center 3align=center 7
"Keep Your Hands on the Wheel"align=center align=center align=center
1978"Pretty Poison"align=center align=center align=center
"Hurricane Ride"align=center align=center align=center
1990"Black Betty" (Ben Liebrand remix)align=center align=center 17align=center 13
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Guinness Who's Who of Heavy Metal. Colin Larkin. Colin Larkin (writer). Guinness Publishing. 1995. Second. 0-85112-656-1. 290.
  2. Web site: UNH's 'Black Betty'bam-ba-lams its last. 29 November 2014. dead. https://archive.today/20141130091233/http://www.concordmonitor.com/article/unhs-black-bettybam-ba-lams-its-last. 30 November 2014.
  3. Book: Big Bang, Baby: Rock Trivia. Dundurn. Crouse, Richard. 2000. 187.
  4. Web site: RPM Top 100 Albums - November 19, 1977.
  5. Web site: Rasputin Music & DVDs-Music: Ram Jam (Portrait of the Artist as a Young Ram). Rasputin Music (online catalogue). 2019-12-17.
  6. Web site: Rasputin Music & DVDs-Music: Ram Jam (The Very Best of Ram Jam). (online catalogue). 2009-02-27.
  7. Book: Roberts, David. 2006. British Hit Singles & Albums. 19th. Guinness World Records Limited. London. 1-904994-10-5. 449.
  8. Web site: The Dead Rock Stars Club. Thedeadrockstarsclub.com. 2019-11-20.
  9. Web site: Yardbirds.US: Home. Yardbirds.us. 2017-09-20.
  10. Web site: Ram Jam - Awards. AllMusic. 18 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20160508015203/http://www.allmusic.com:80/artist/ram-jam-mn0000392553/awards. May 8, 2016.
  11. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 246.
  12. Web site: Discography Ram Jam. australian-charts.com. September 9, 2022.
  13. Web site: Ram Jam full Official Chart History. Official Charts Company. 18 June 2022.
  14. Web site: Ram Jam - Black Betty. bpi.co.uk. 9 September 2022.