Saturday 20 February 2021

Rick Evans born 20 February 1943


Rick Evans (20 February 1943 – February 2018)  and Denny Zager (born 1944, Wymore, Nebraska) were known as the American rock-pop duo Zager & Evans who were active during the late 1960s and early 1970s. They are best known for their 1969 No. 1 hit single "In the Year 2525", which earned them one-hit wonder status. 

Rick Evans (left) & Denny Zager (right)

Denny Zager and Rick Evans met at Nebraska Wesleyan University in 1962. They were joined by drummer Danny Schindler (later of the Benders) in the Nebraska band the Eccentrics until Schindler's tour of Vietnam in 1965. Evans also left in 1965 and reunited with Zager in 1968. 

The Eccentrics

As Zager and Evans, the duo were backed by another Nebraska native, Mark Dalton, on bass. Their first drummer, Paul Maher, was later replaced by another Nebraskan, Dave Trupp. Trupp and Dalton were also the rhythm section in the Liberation Blues Band and backed Evans on some solo demo material prior to Zager and Evans's recording of "In the Year 2525" in 1968. 

Written by Evans, "In the Year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus)" warned of the dangers of technology, portraying a future in which the human race was destroyed by its own technological and medical innovations. The last stanzas of the song suggest mankind undergoes a continuing cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. 


                              
"In the Year 2525" hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1969, ultimately claiming the top spot for six weeks. It also hit #1 in the UK. "2525" topped the charts at the time of two major cultural events: the first moon landing on July 20, 1969 and the Woodstock Music Festival a month later. The record sold over four million copies by 1970 and was awarded a gold disc by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in July 1969. 

"2525" was originally written in 1964, but not recorded or released until 1968 on the Truth Records label. After radio stations in Lincoln and Omaha made "2525" a regional "break-out" hit record, RCA Records signed the duo and released the song with "Little Kids", also written by Evans, as the B-side nationwide. Zager and Evans also immediately recorded an album of the same name, again using Trupp and Dalton as the primary rhythm section. "In the Year 2525" remains popular on oldies stations; sales of the original hit recording, including singles sales, album usage and compilation inclusions, are estimated at over ten million worldwide. In Italy, the duo released an Italian version on RCA Victor 1583: "Nell'anno 2033" b/w "Donna" ("Woman"). 

Zager and Evans are considered to be the prototypical one-hit wonder artists. Despite the success of "2525" (it was even nominated for a special Hugo Award), the follow-up single, "Mr. Turnkey", failed to chart in the US and UK, as did subsequent releases. As of 2019, the duo remains the only act to have a chart-topping hit on both sides of the Atlantic and never have another chart single in Billboard or the UK. Their third single, "Listen to the People", appeared on the Cashbox chart at #100, while "Mr. Turnkey"/"Cary Lynn Javes" (double A-side) and "Help One Man Today" both charted in Australia, at #86 and #94 respectively. 

After the success of "2525", White Whale Records released an LP titled The Early Writings of Zager & Evans and Others featuring recordings of the Eccentrics on side one and a band called J.K. and Co., who had no connection to Zager and Evans, on side two. After releasing two albums on RCA, Zager and Evans moved to Vanguard Records in 1971 for a final record. 

Evans later released an album for Truth Records titled I Need This Song, a duet with Pam Herbert. In the late 1970s, he formed his own label, Fun Records, and released an album titled Fun Songs, Think Songs containing both new material and re-recordings of Zager and Evans material. He played his last gig somewhere around Lake Tahoe on New Year’s Eve 1984, but continued to write songs. 

Drummer Dave Trupp died in November 2015 at the age of 72. Mark Dalton still performs on bass in the Pacific Northwest of the United States.. Zager now builds custom guitars at Zager Guitars in Lincoln, Nebraska. Evans was largely retired from public life but he continued to chat online with Dalton and his best friend, Nashville producer Gary Earl, until his death of natural causes at his home in February 2018. Recordings from Evans' private collection of original tapes began appearing on eBay in the spring of 2019, as his estate was apparently being disposed of by relatives. There was no official announcement of his death in the national media.

(Edited mainly from Wikipedia)

4 comments:

boppinbob said...

OpenDrive not working at the moment, So i didn't bother in putting in a mp3 player. Will do so when they are back in business.

For “ Zager & Evans - In The Year 2525
- THE RCA MASTERS 1969-1970 (2016)” go here:

https://krakenfiles.com/view/55076fbf9f/file.html

2525 (Exordium & Terminus) LP
1 In The Year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus)
2 Woman
3 Bayoan
4 I Remember Heide
5 Fred
6 Cary Lynn Javes
7 Less Than Tomorrow
8 Taxi Man
9 Self
10 In The Land Of Green
Bonus Track
11 Little Kids
Zager And Evans LP
12 Overture
13 In My House
14 During Rem
15 Reginald Ludwig
16 The Plastic Park
17 The Candy Machine
18 Mr. Turnkey
19 She Never Sleeps Beside Me
20 Crutches
21 Listen To The People
Bonus Tracks
22 Help One Man Today
23 Yeah 3²
24 Mr. Turnkey (Censored)

Tracks 1-10 from In the Year 2525 (Exordium and Terminus), RCA LP LSP-4214, 1969
Track 11 from Truth single (no cat. no.)/RCA single 74-0174, 1969
Tracks 12-21 from Zager and Evans, RCA LP LSP-4302, 1970
Tracks 22-23 from RCA single 47-9816, 1970
Track 24 from RCA single 74-0246, 1970

rntcj said...

Hi!

Thanx for this one. Know their Hit but rest are "new" hears here. Why is trk. 24 "Mr. Turnkey" censored? Presently listening to their YT tracks @ their Discogs page here:

https://www.discogs.com/artist/269086-Zager-Evans

Cheers!
Ciao! For now.
rntcj

boppinbob said...

Hello mtcj,

Zager and Evans’ first hit had addressed rather chilling subject matter, so RCA may not necessarily have balked when the subject of second single “Mr. Turnkey” came up all about an imprisoned rapist. Never mind its ironically perky melody, gentle arrangement, and harmony-laden delivery.
The graphic imagery of “Mr. Turnkey” didn’t catch on with the public perhaps eager for more sci-fi drama from Zager and Evans. (A version with censored lyrics was issued to radio, which is also included on this CD for completeness’ sake.)
Regards, Bob

rev.b said...

I liked the Mr. Turnkey single back in the day, though it seemed I might well have been the only one.