Gerry Markman, 19 ans, guitariste de Max en prestation à l'Hotel Nelson (collection personnelle).
Je vous avais sommairement présenté ce mystérieux simple hard rock montréalais dans un article de 2010. Entre temps, j'ai pu retracer le guitariste de Max, Gerry Markman, qui a généreusement accepté de répondre à quelques questions qui nous brûlaient tous les lèvres depuis. Nous sommes toujours à la recherche d'une photo d'époque du groupe. Si vous souhaitiez partager quelque document, écrivez-nous ici.
S.D. : You
wrote earlier that the band included Ian Lebofsky (singer), yourself
(guitars & vocals), Sam Borsuk (bass), Colin Jacques
(drums) and Ed Borsuk (sound &
lights). Where did you guys come from and how did you first met?
Gerry Markman : The band was formed in 1969 as a
blues trio called Dawn. I had known Sam since high school where he
played with The Kreatures. I had been living in Val David at Jazz et
Cafe playing blues during the week. On the weekends the jazz band was
The Peter Leitch quartet. I have been friends with Peter ever since. Sam
had been living in New York for a while with a band whose name I can't
remember. They recorded an album but soon disbanded. Sam came back to
Montreal and wanted to play and knew Colin Jacques from another band
called The Fyve. I was the blues guy, Colin was the hard rock/Stones guy
and Sam just made it all work. Eddy was Sam's brother and he was into
sound and lights. We made such lousy money dividing it into 4 didn't
make much difference from dividing it into 3! By 1970 or 71 we were
played out and needed something. Ian was intorduced to us by a friend
(?) and we tried it out. His wonderful Morisson-like baritone and stage
presence was the last ingredient. My guitar playing freed up and the
band's sound evolved.
Did
Max performed regulaly on the Montreal scene or outside the province?
If so, what other bands played with you on the same bill?
Dawn
played mostly in Montreal and Quebec City in the Centre de Loisirs and played at McGill on the campus and in the big
ballroom a lot. This was the era of liquid light shows and psychedelia.
We also played at the Gallery Café in Old Montreal and the Hotel
Nelson. Other bands I remember were Higgins Hill and the Mike Jones Group.
Jones (aka Michael LaChance) also engineered a session at Studio 6 for my future band, Dandy Batt for the song Play On, written by Ian and me. It that was produced by Frank Marino from Mahogany Rush.
Jones (aka Michael LaChance) also engineered a session at Studio 6 for my future band, Dandy Batt for the song Play On, written by Ian and me. It that was produced by Frank Marino from Mahogany Rush.
Which
songs would be played live (originals, covers) ?
When
Tony Orlando and Dawn came onto the scene we had to change our name
even though I had registered it exclusively in Quebec. Couldn't afford a
lawyer and we were nobody. We called ourselves The Max Band after my
cat. Ian and I were writing original songs that were folky in origin but
quite dynamic when played live. Our sound was influenced by Led
Zeppelin and The Who and Colin's drumming was awesome. The band
collaborated on Run Run, Up The River, Young and Strong. Ian and I were
the song writers for Flying Dutchman, Black Willow, Melinda, and Grey
Havens. We covered Babylon by Blue Cheer, South California Purples by
Chicago Transit Authority and had a long band-arranged version of I Can't Keep From Crying, sometime incorporating classical themes that Sam
wrote and Colins 'heavy music' drumming style that later was known as
metal. And we played blues.
How
did you get to record your lone single for the TransWorld label?
We
met Hilly Leopold through some mutual friends and he decided to produce
the band. He was also our personal manager....sort of.
Where
was this single recorded? Can you tell me who exactly was Hilly Leopold,
your producer? I don't recall
seeing his name on other 45s from the era...
We
recorded The Flying Dutchman at Montreal's Studio 6 in 8 tracks.
Hilly's neighbour was Lori Zimmerman (Sweet Lorraine) whose husband
Danny was the bass player in Life. Lori's voice voice can be clearly
heard in the background vocals although she was standing 6 feet away
from the mic. What a voice. Hilly had made the Trans World deal without
any of our signatures. I still don't know what the deal was or why Ian
and I aren't credited as writers although the song(s) were registered
with BMI (CAPAC). Hilly abruptly left us to pursue managing a band called Alabama (no, not THAT Alabama) and produced a country single called Highway Driving.
I
love the bands energy on Run,
run. It's raw and hits
the spot! What was the medias response? Was your 45 played
over local radios?
We were another great band that
nobody heard of....little or poor management, no agent, no prospects.
We started to argue over the usual stupid things and the band just fell
apart. I don't remember any newspaper reviews but we were featured in
event promotions and somewhere there must be some posters of Dawn and
The Max Band. The Flying Dutchman did get a little airplay overseas and
earned a few dollars in writers royalties but it was always a popular
song played live. Run Run was fun fun....lots of posturing and loud
guitar....
Was
there any plans to record some more?
No. We couldn't agree on much anymore and Ian and I wanted to try working as a duo but that didn't get very far.
How
long did the band last? Where are your fellow musicians right now?
The
band split up around 1972 or 73 and by then nobody noticed but us. Ian
is a respected voice teacher, singer/performer and choir master. He
lives in Hudson Quebec and we're still in touch every few years. I heard
that Colin had moved to England but I don't know if he continued
playing music. Sam lives somewhere in Ontario and I don't know what
became of him. Eddy stayed doing sound and lights and was a member of
another of my bands called Dandy Batt (nee Sunrise) with Danny and Lori
Zimmerman.
Thanks for your time and for setting the record straight on Max.
Thank you for your interest. It's wonderful that you are doing this. I still have our original single... the only record I made as an artist.
Thank you for your interest. It's wonderful that you are doing this. I still have our original single... the only record I made as an artist.
La carrière musicale de Markman ne faisait que commencer lorsque Max publia son unique simple. Au cours des décennies suivantes, il participerait à de nombreux groupes canadiens (Dandy Batt, The Cameo Blues Band, The Lincolns) en plus d'accompagner des artistes tels le groupe Tapestry ou les chanteurs Jeff Healey et Alannah Myles, notamment. De nos jours, il réside en Ontario et performe avec son plus récent groupe, The Sensations (à droite, dans la vidéo ci-dessus). Rock on!
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