Michael "Cub" Koda (born October 1, 1948 – July 1, 2000) was an American rock and roll singer, guitarist, songwriter, disc jockey, music critic, and record compiler.
Koda was born in Detroit, Michigan, and graduated from Manchester High School, in Manchester, Michigan. He became interested in music as a boy, learning drums by the age of 5, and by the time he was in high school he had formed his own group, the Del-Tinos, which played rockabilly, rock and roll, and blues. The band released its first single, "Go Go Go" (a version of a Roy Orbison recording), in the fall of 1963. They released two more singles but broke up in 1966, when Koda wanted to pursue other options.
The Del- Tinos (Cub at left) |
Koda spent a year attending Northern Michigan University in Marquette, Michigan. Koda formed and reformed several bands at this time with other musicians in the area, such as the Del-Tinos. His original songs and over the top performances drew crowds everywhere the band played. His habit of playing a guitar with a 'y' cord plugged into two Fender Twin Reverb amps gave him plenty of volume. He also played harp and slide guitar. After a year Koda decided college wasn't his thing and moved to Las Vegas where he worked as a sideman. This was his springboard to forming Brownsville Station. The last incarnation of his backing band regrouped as Walrus and became a local and midwest institution in their own right.
Koda then worked as a solo artist, releasing two singles, "I Got My Mojo Workin'" and "Ramblin' on My Mind", and working with a couple of bands, before forming Brownsville Station in 1969. Formed in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Brownsville Station also included drummer T. J. Cronley, bassist Tony Driggins, guitarist Mike Lutz, and later Bruce Nazarian and Henry Weck. The group was influenced by Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, the Who, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Link Wray.
The band began performing throughout the American Midwest and released several singles before getting noticed. They released their first album in 1970. The 1973 single "Smokin' in the Boys Room" remains their best-known song. It went to number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and eventually sold over two million copies. They continued to perform until disbanding in 1979.
Before the breakup of the band Koda purchased a multitrack recorder and started producing one-man-band tapes of rockabilly, blues, R&B, country, early rock and roll, and jazz, which he released as the album That's What I Like About the South. He became more focused on performing solo. He also began writing for numerous music magazines, notably his column "The Vinyl Junkie" for Goldmine Magazine (later for DISCoveries). He wrote three volumes of the acclaimed Blues Masters series. He also wrote reviews and contributed to books published by Allmusic.
From late 1979 to late 1980, Koda began playing with three members of a Detroit-based band, Mugsy, calling themselves Cub Koda and the Points. Their eponymous debut album was released in early 1980 by the Boston-based Baron Records on hot pink vinyl. Also released was an EP, "Shake Yo Cakes." Because of financial difficulties, the band broke up in late 1980 before releasing a second album.
By 1980, Koda was performing with Hound Dog Taylor's backing band, the Houserockers, with guitarist Brewer Phillips and drummer Ted Harvey. They performed and recorded together for 15 years. The group's first album was It's the Blues, released in 1981. Their second album, The Joint Was Rockin' , was released in 1996. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Koda continued his busy schedule of touring, recording, and writing. He recorded a solo album, Box Lunch, released by J-Bird Records in 1997, and recordings he made with the Del-Tinos were released by Norton Records in 1998. He also re-formed Cub Koda and the Points and released Noise Monkeys (one of his last works) in 2000.
In 1993, the twin release of "Smokin' in the Boy's Room: The Best of Brownsville Station", was released on the Rhino Record Label, and "Welcome to My Job," a retrospective of his non-Brownsville material was released on the Blue Wave Record Label, followed a year later by Abba Dabba Dabba: A Bananza of Hits on Schoolkids Records.
On June 30, 2000, while promoting his new album, he became ill. Although he had been recovering from kidney disease, which required dialysis, Koda died the next day in Chelsea, Michigan at the age of 51. He is buried in Mount Hope Cemetery in Waterloo, Michigan. His headstone features a Fender amp, with a microphone and harmonica resting on top of it. "I Will Always Love You, If Only in my Dreams" is inscribed on the tablet.
Cub Koda was inducted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends Hall of Fame in 2016.
(Edited from Wikipedia & AllMusic)
11 comments:
For “Cub Koda – Welcome To My Job - The Cub Koda Collection 1963 – 1993
(1993 Blue Wave)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/bziTe
1 Love Is A Damn Good Feelin'
2 Let's Get Funky
3 Cadillac Walk
4 Jail Bait
5 Welcome To My Job
6 Highway
7 Courtin' In A Cadillac
8 Feelin' Good
9 Two Handed Love Affair
10 Tight Jeans
11 Ace Of Spades
12 Bacon Fat
13 Scratchin' & Whammin'
14 Maybellene
15 Guitar Boogie
16 Mumblin' Guitar
17 Background To A Music
18 King Of The Surf
19 Go! Go! Go!
20 Ramblin' On My Mind
21 Old 98 Blues
22 If Only In My Dreams
23 Looks That Way To Me
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For “Brownsville Station - The Complete Albums 1970-1975 (2020 Digital download)” go here :-
https://workupload.com/file/nJnyYuq6tWV
1. Be-Bop Confidential (2:31)
2. Guitar Train (2:10)
3. Rockin' Robin (2:52)
4. Blue Eyed Girl (2:34)
5. City Life (3:07)
6. Do The Bosco (2:34)
7. Roadrunner (2:37)
8. Hello, Mary Lou (3:13)
9. Cadillac Express (2:35)
10. My Boy Flat-Top (2:08)
11. Rumble (3:09)
12. Rock With The Music (3:22)
13. I Got Time (2:46)
14. Lovin' Lady Lee (3:33)
15. Mad For Me (2:39)
16. Mister Robert (4:06)
17. Wanted (Dead Or Alive) (3:28)
18. Country Flavor (4:27)
19. Jonah's Here To Stay (6:48)
20. Leavin' Here (3:04)
21. The Man Who Wanted More (Saints Rock & Roll) (2:13)
22. Question Of Temperature (3:31)
23. Lightnin' Bar Blues (2:52)
24. Take It Or Leave It (3:00)
25. All Night Long (2:55)
26. Let Your Yeah Be Yeah (3:37)
27. Sweet Jane (3:02)
28. Love, Love, Love (2:55)
29. Go Out And Get Her (2:56)
30. Barefootin' (2:55)
31. Smokin' In The Boy's Room (2:58)
32. Kings Of The Party (4:16)
33. Mama Don't Allow No Parkin' (3:07)
34. Meet Me On The Fourth Floor (2:58)
35. Fast Phyliss (2:40)
36. I Get So Excited (2:55)
37. Ostrich (2:54)
38. I Got It Bad For You (2:32)
39. Hey Little Girl (2:04)
40. I Got Love If You Want It / I'm A King Bee (4:07)
41. I'm The Leader Of The Gang (3:20)
42. Automatic Heartbreak (2:56)
43. One That Got Away (5:32)
44. Self Abuse (2:53)
45. Crazy Legs (3:22)
46. Give It To Get It (3:24)
47. Combination Boogie (2:28)
48. Load Of Love (4:35)
49. You Know Better (3:24)
50. They Call Me Rock 'n' Roll, Pt. 1 / God Bless Rock 'n' Roll / Can't Wait For Friday Night / Welcome / They Call Me Rock 'n' Roll, Pt. 2 (9:25)
Thanks!
Thanks for the Cub Koda and Brownsville Station
thank you as always
Would you have Cub Koda Rockabilly Extras CD to share?
It's only available on Cub's website but the order form doesn't work, & I get no response from the snail mail address.
Hello Lordy I found six of the tracks, will keep a look out for the rest.
https://www.imagenetz.de/mdxgb
1. The Black Widow
2. Flying Saucers R'n R'
3. Rock Around With Ollie Vee
4. Tongue Tied Jill
5. Dear John
6. Rock 'N' Roll Ruby
Can you please you re-up the Cub Koda Links.They are dead. TIA
Many thanks Bob. Really appreciate your time & effort.
Bob...Cub Koda-Welcome To My Job~The Cub Koda Collection (1963 – 1993)-1994 is missing Track 12.Bacon Fat. Do you have that track? TIA
Hello LC, Here's a new link with missing track (After all these years I never realized it was missing. It has been downloaded 120 times which includes the original link, yet you are the only one to point out the error! Well spotted.)
Brownsville Station
https://www.imagenetz.de/j7kkn
Cub Coda 1963-1993
https://www.imagenetz.de/iUR4V
Bob...Many thanks for your continued efforts. And yes...a man needs his Bacon Fat. Lol
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