Don Stevenson

Don Stevenson (born October 15, 1941, Seattle, Washington)[1] is the American drummer and a singer and songwriter for Moby Grape, a band which was formed in San Francisco in 1966 and continues to perform occasionally today.

History

Don Stevenson first obtained local recognition as a member of The Frantics,[2] a band based in Seattle and including fellow Washingtonian Jerry Miller (from Tacoma) on guitar. The band relocated to San Francisco in 1966 and formed the nucleus of what became Moby Grape.

Stevenson's position in Moby Grape is similar to, but predates that of Don Henley of The Eagles, in that Stevenson was a drummer and a principal songwriter and lead singer.[3]

With Jerry Miller, Stevenson is the co-writer of three of Moby Grape's best known songs, "Hey Grandma" and "8:05", both from Moby Grape's self-titled first album (1967) and "Murder In My Heart for The Judge", from the Wow album (1968). The latter song was covered by both Three Dog Night and Lee Michaels, while Robert Plant covered "8:05" and The Move covered "Hey Grandma". He continued to write with Jerry Miller during the course of Moby Grape's four albums with Columbia Records (1967-1969). In later years, such as on Moby Grape's Legendary Grape album (1989) and beginning with 20 Granite Creek (1971), Stevenson contributed songs that were solely composed.

Stevenson is the only member of Moby Grape to continue in music while at the same time developing occupational interests outside of music. Stevenson has become well known in real estate circles, such as in relation to the sale of time shares in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada, a resort location where he maintains a residence.[4] As of 2006, Stevenson, with over twenty years of industry experience, was the National Sales Director of Club Intrawest, owned by the Intrawest Corporation[5]

In 2007, Stevenson appeared with Moby Grape at the 40th anniversary San Francisco "Summer of Love" reunion.[6] In 2010, Stevenson performed with Jerry Miller and Omar Spence (son of deceased Moby Grape bandmate Skip Spence) at the South by Southwest festival. Stevenson shared lead vocals with Miller and performed a number of Moby Grape "classics", in addition to new material developed and recorded with Miller in 2009.[7][8]

Despite success as a singer, songwriter and musician, Stevenson was, until 2010, the only member of Moby Grape not to have released a solo album. In late 2010, his first solo album was released. As described by noted critic David Fricke, "(t)he music is an engaging blend of country, blues and R&B, like Jerry Garcia's solo records, but with a rougher-timber feel in the singing and playing, plus Miller contributing guitars and harmonies."[9]

gollark: Technically possible but it would look weird.
gollark: That's absolutely not how it would work, and it would be harder to use because of stuff obscuring stuff behind it.
gollark: It can also do 3-dimensional diagonals.
gollark: You can use the "rotate view" button, or just watch for that.
gollark: It's probably doing 3D stacky things.

References

  1. "Don Stevenson | Discography". AllMusic.com. 1942-10-15. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  2. Sam Carlson (1997-06-04). "Frantics - Seattle (1955-1966)". Pnwbands.com. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  3. This position is exemplified in his 1967 performance, with Moby Grape, of "Omaha" on the Mike Douglas Show. The performance is accessible here
  4. Frank Goodman, Interview with Jerry Miller, puremusic.com, June 2007; accessed December 31, 2015.
  5. Much of Stevenson's business career has been with Intrawest. See News Release of the Intrawest Resort Club Group, November 6, 2006, as reprinted in "The Timeshare Beat". Archived from the original on 20 November 2006. Retrieved 2008-08-18.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  6. See performance lineup here . Don Stevenson's performance with Moby Grape is accessible via YouTube, being a rough personal videorecording released into the public domain.
  7. The three performed as "New Wine"; see SXSW Events: New Wine (Jerry Miller, Don Stevenson and Omar Spence of Moby Grape); mysxsw.com. Peter Lewis appeared separately at SXSW, on the same day, but at a different venue, which is assumed to be why the Moby Grape name was not used by Stevenson and Miller. See Raul Hernandez, Live Shots: SXSW Music 2010, Austin Chronicle, March 26, 2010; austinchronicle.com
  8. SXSW Events: The Explosives with Peter Lewis and Stu Cook, my.sxsw.com; accessed December 31, 2015.
  9. David Fricke, The Continuing Saga of Moby Grape - The Drummer Steps Out, rollingstone.com, October 13, 2010; accessed December 31, 2015.
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