William Penn Fyve aka William Penn V | |
Background: | group_or_band |
Genre: | Rock, garage, psychedelic rock |
Years Active: | Mid to late 1960s |
Label: | Thunderbird Beatrecords.com |
Associated Acts: | William Penn and His Pals |
Past Members: | Ron Cox Mike Dunn Neil Holtmann Dave Lovell Steve Sweet Gregg Rolie |
William Penn Fyve were a garage rock group from Palo Alto, California who recorded the psychedelic classic "Swami". Their membership included Gregg Rolie and Mickey Hart.
The group started out in late 1964 at the College of San Mateo calling themselves The DiscCounts. The original founding lineup was made up of Ron Cox on drums, Mike Dunn on guitar, Neil Holtmann on vocals, and Steve Sweet on bass.[1] The group had a similar visual style to that of Paul Revere & the Raiders revolutionary attire.[2] [3] With the exposure by Radio KYA, KFRC and KLIV, the group was one of the San Francisco Bay Area's most well-known popular groups at the time and were star attractions in their own shows. They opened for some major national as well as international acts. One long term member was Gregg Rolie who would later be in Santana and Journey. Mickey Hart was also a member of the band at one stage.[4] The one single they released, "Swami" is considered a pop / psychedelic classic.[5] [6] They are also referred to as William Penn and His Pals.[7]
There may be some confusion over similarly named groups from the same era. There was one group around at the same time with a similar name, William Penn & the Quakers who had a few singles including "California Sun" released on Len Stark's Philadelphia based Melron label. It is apparently a different group.[8] [9] [10] [11] There was also another similarly named band, Wm Penn and the Quakers who recorded for Twilight Records and for the Duane Records label from Sunnyvale, California.[12] [13]
In early 1965, with the current line up of Ron Cox, Mike Dunn, Neil Holtmann, and Steve Sweet, they added another member, keyboard player Dave Lovell. A few months after that, there were some changes to their line up and guitarist Mike Shapiro and bassist Steve Leidenthal came on board, replacing Mike Dunn and Steve Sweet. Then they changed their look to the revolutionary style.[14] In 1966 Gregg Rolie came into the group, replacing Dave Lovell.[15] [16] Also that year, they auditioned for Scorpio Records but were unsuccessful in their bid. Neil Holtmann was also fired from the group that year.[17] [18] [19] A song about a guru during a hallucination was written and became the song "Swami".[20] In 1966 or 1967, their single "Swami" / "Blow My Mind" was released on Thunderbird 502.[21] [22]
They broke up around 1967 / 1968 after having an argument with Vern Justus over finances.[23] [24]
Greg Rollie later joined The Santana Blues Band after Carlos Santana caught them at the Longshoremen's Hall in San Francisco and asked him to join the new band he was putting together.[25]
A CD album with early recorded material was released in the 2000s which included an alt-version of "Blow My Mind". It is believed that Mickey Hart plays drums on that version.[26] Two of their songs, "Blow My Mind" and "Swami" are included on the Trash various artists CD compilation.[27]
Act | Release | Catalogue | Year | Featured track | Notes # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Various artists | Pebbles Volume 3 "The Acid Gallery" | BFD Records BFD-5020 | 1979 | "Swami" | as William Penn V LP |
Various artists | Sounds Of The Sixties San Francisco Part 2 | Phantom PLP-1005 | 1985 | "Swami", "Blow My Mind" | as William Penn Fyve LP |
Various artists | Pebbles, Volume 2 | ESD Records ESD-80262 | 1990 | "Swami" | as William Penn V CD |
Various artists | Great Pebbles 31 Original '60s Punk & Psych Classics | Bomp MSI 13868 | 1993 | "Swami" | as William Penn Fyve CD[32] |
Various artists | The Essential Pebbles Collection Volume One | AIP Records AIP CD 1058 | 1998 | "Swami" | as William Penn V 2 CD |
Various artists | Trash Box: Wild Psychotic Garage Punk!!! | Hit Records CD BOXX 1 | 2004 | "Blow My Mind", "Swami" | as William Penn Fyve[33] [34] [35] |
Indexes, Volume 10, Colin Larkin - Page 476