Stan Szelest | |
---|---|
Born |
Buffalo, New York, United States |
February 11, 1943
Died | January 20, 1991 , New York, United States |
(aged 47)
Genres | Country rock, rhythm and blues, rock and roll, country |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Vocals, piano, keyboard |
Years active | 1958–1991 |
Associated acts |
The Band Ronnie Hawkins Stan and the Ravens Lonnie Mack |
Stan Szelest (February 11, 1943 – January 20, 1991) was an American musician, known for founding an influential blues band in the 1950s and 1960s, Stan and the Ravens, and later as a keyboardist with The Band.
Born in Buffalo, New York, in 1958 Szelest formed Stan and the Ravens, a blues group that became popular in western New York. In 1960, at the age of seventeen, he started to work with Ronnie Hawkins and his backing group, the Hawks. Calling Szelest "a living fountain of rock and roll piano", Hawks bass player Rick Danko claimed to have developed his bass style by copying Szelest's left-hand work on piano. Szelest left the Hawks a little over a year later and was replaced by Richard Manuel. The Hawks later left Hawkins to form an act of their own, which eventually came to be named The Band. In 1967, Stan and the Ravens broke up, and two of its members, Calandra and Mallaber, joined the group Tony Galla and the Rising Sons, which in 1968 changed its name to Raven.
With the help of the band's manager, Marty Angelo the newly formed Raven went on to sign a recording contract with Columbia Records after turning down an offer from the Beatles' Apple Records.
David Lucas a New York producer, recorded a demo tape of the Raven which was used along with a live recording from the Glen Park Inferno nightclub, helped secure the Columbia contract. Lucas is also credited for recording the song, "Farmer's Daughter" a song written by Szelest. Lucas also recorded a song entitled, "Howlin' for My Darlin" and b-side, "It Won't Long Now" using the name, the Rivals instead of Stan and the Ravens for the Spector/Wand label.
Szelest also recorded with King Biscuit Boy (Richard Newell), the noted harp player, slide guitarist and singer from Hamilton, Ontario, about 50 miles from Buffalo.
In the summer of 1984, Szelest and Levon Helm played together again as members of the short-lived septet the Woodstock All-Stars. After Manuel's death in 1986, Szelest was called back to The Band, playing live with them in 1990 and participating in rehearsals and writing for their new record deal with CBS Records. He died of a heart attack in 1991 while in recording with Levon Helm, Rick Danko and Garth Hudson. His piano playing can be heard on The Band's album Jericho, released in 1993, on "Blind Willie McTell" and "Atlantic City". The album also features the song "Too Soon Gone", co-written by Jules Shear after Szelest handed him over 16 bars of a melody, which sat around Shear's Woodstock home. When Szelest died, Shear was called by both Levon Helm and Rick Danko and was asked to finish the song as a tribute Szelest; apparently Szelest had begun the song as a tribute to the late Richard Manuel. The album is dedicated to Manuel and Szelest with the caption "Too Soon Gone" in the liner notes. Szelest was also in Lonnie Mack's band during the 1980s and Played on Mack's albums Strike Like Lightning and Attack of the Killer V; he can also be seen in several videos playing in Mack's band during that period.