J.D. Blackfoot

J.D. Blackfoot is a rock musician from Ohio, United states who has been recording since the early 1970s. Along with a couple of hit singles, he won an award for his album The Song of Crazy Horse.

J.D. Blackfoot
Born1944
GenresRock
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsVocals, guitar
Years active1970–present
LabelsPhilips, Mercury, Pye, Fantasy, Family, Sisapa Record Co., Yonder Music
Associated actsThe Ebb Tides, Tree
Websitehttp://jdblackfoot.com/

Background

The name J.D. Blackfoot applies to both the singer and the group.[1] Blackfoot was born Benjamin Franklin Van Dervort. Before he made his way in music, he worked in various occupations which included pest extermination, insurance sales and also as a driver.[2] In relation possible confusion about his ethnicity, Blackfoot is not Native American. He is a convert to their plight as a result of discovering it in books while in his 20s.[3]

Career

1960s to 1990s

Early in his career Blackfoot was going by the name Benny Van and was fronting The Ebb Tides, an Ohio band formed in 1963.[4] For a period of time, around 1967 to 1968, the band became known as Tree.[5][6] In 1969, he reformed the band around his name and the single "Who's Nuts Alfred" was released.[7] The single was backed with "Epitaph For A Head" and had its release in the US in 1969 on Philips 40625.[8]

In 1970, his album The Ultimate Prophecy was released on Mercury SR 61288. It contained the songs "One Time Woman" and "Angel".[9] It was also released in twenty countries.

With his album behind him and a couple of hits, he headed to New Zealand. In 1972, he arrived there with his wife. Whilst employed by Pye, he got the director Tim Murdoch to allow him to record an album The Song of Crazy Horse.[10] The title track, which ran for 18 minutes, was recorded at Stebbing Studio in Auckland. Musicians who played on the album were Frank Gibson Jr. on drums, Billy Kristian on bass, Mike Walker on piano, Bob Jackson on guitar and Jimmy Sloggett on saxophone. Tony Baker produced the album as well as handling the conducting chores. Producer Baker also contributed saxophone and organ.[11] The album became the Album of the Year, picking up 1974 RATA award.[12]

2000s

In the early 2000s Blackfoot returned to New Zealand and while there he recorded the Co-Dependent Dysfunctional You double album. Around the mid-2000s he was still performing throughout the Midwest.[13]

In 2007 The Ultimate Prophecy was re-released.[14]

In October, 2016 he was inducted into the “St. Louis Classic Rock Hall of Fame. Even though he was from Columbus, Ohio, the category he was inducted in was the "Outside Influence" category for those who have had a great influence on the St. Louis music market. After 50 years of performing, he was calling it quits for performing live. The JD Blackfoot Farewell Concert was announced for May 20, 2017 at the Touhill Anheuser-Busch Performance Hall.[15] Also in 2017, the documentary Never Say Goodbye was released. Along with Rusty Young and Jesse Colin Young, J.D. Blackfoot appeared in it.[16]

Discography

Singles US discography except for unique to New Zealand releases
Act Title Catalogue Year Notes #
J. D. Blackfoot "Who's Nuts Alfred" / "Epitaph For A Head" Philips 40625 1969
J. D. Blackfoot "One Time Woman" / "I've Never Seen You" Philips 40679 1970
J. D. Blackfoot with Uncle Billy "Wonderin' Where You Are" / "It Don't Mean A Thing" Peace 50944 1970
J. D. Blackfoot Savage / Almost Another Day Peace 61776 1972
J. D. Blackfoot "Every Day" / "Every Night" Peace 82941 197?
J. D. Blackfoot "Almost Another Day" / "Every Day - Every Night" Family FAY 1039 1972 NZ Release
J. D. Blackfoot "I've Been Waitin'" / "One Man's Story" Pye PZS 1004 1973 NZ Release
J. D. Blackfoot "Ride Away" / "Part Three From The Song Of Crazy Horse" Pye PZS 1005 1973 NZ release
J. D. Blackfoot "I've Been Waitin'" / "Hey Johnny D.J." Pye PZS 1007 1974 NZ release
J. D. Blackfoot "Twilight" / "Dove On The Ocean" Fantasy F-741 1975

[17][18][19]

EPs
Act Title Catalogue Year Notes #
J. D. Blackfoot Nobody's Business
Side A 1. "Nobody's Business" 2. "Let Her Go"
Side B 1. "Stay The Night Away" / "He Walks On Past"
Bison Record Co. B-77-EP 1984 12" vinyl EP
J. D. Blackfoot Ohio Dream

1. "Missing You In St. Louis", 2. " I Should Have Told You", 3. "Ballerina"
4. "The Ballad Of OB-1 Applewhite", 5. " All Alone", 6. "Ohio Dream", 7. "Black Widow"

Sisapa Record Co. 5948-2-EP 1997 CD EP

[20]

Albums
Act Title Catalogue Year Notes #
J. D. Blackfoot The Ultimate Prophecy Mercury SR-61288 1970 LP
J. D. Blackfoot The Song Of Crazy Horse Pye PZL 2001 1974 LP, NZ release
(Released on Fantasy F-9468 in the U.S.)
J. D. Blackfoot Southbound And Gone Fantasy F-9487 1975 LP
J. D. Blackfoot Live In St. Louis•July 16,1982 Bison Record Co. B-44 1984 2 LP
J. D. Blackfoot Tokala Tokala 5944-2 1992 CD
J. D. Blackfoot Co-Dependent Dysfunctional You Yonder Music Y-2001-2 DBL 2001 2 CD
J. D. Blackfoot Yellowhand Yonder Music Ltd 2005-2 2005 CD

[21]

gollark: Squid made a thing with metatables to make it so you could basically never run into those errors, so combine that with `error` overrides and your code will "never" break.
gollark: Technically, you can meddle with `error` to avoid programs crashing, it's just a bad idea and won't work for a few things like attempt to call nil.
gollark: Hmm, probably a Cobalt thing. As far as I know native Lua has a limit of a few thousand.
gollark: ```lualocal function copy(tabl) local new = {} for k, v in pairs(tabl) do new[k] = v end return newend```
gollark: I just define a `copy` function somewhere.

References

  1. Isthmus, December 5, 2010 - Vinyl Cave: "The Ultimate Prophecy" by J.D. Blackfoot by Bob Koch
  2. Something Else Reviews, May 9, 2012 - Forgotten series: J.D. Blackfoot – The Ultimate Prophecy (1970) by Beverly Paterson
  3. Elsewhere.co.nz, Oct 9, 2017 - RECOMMENDED REISSUE: JD Blackfoot; The Song of Crazy Horse (Sisapa/Border) - Graham Reid
  4. AllMusic - Ebb Tides Artist Biography by Jason Ankeny
  5. Isthmus, December 5, 2010 - Vinyl Cave: "The Ultimate Prophecy" by J.D. Blackfoot by Bob Koch
  6. Buckeye Beat - Tree
  7. AllMusic - J.D. Blackfoot Artist Biography by William Ruhlmann
  8. Goldmine Standard Catalog of American Records: 1950-1975, Tim Neely - Krause Publications, 1 Aug 2002 - Page 129, BLACKFOOT, J.D., 45s
  9. Billboard, August 8, 1970 - Page 20 Billboard Album Reviews
  10. AudioCulture, 16 Dec 2014 - Immigrants - strangers on the shore - John Dix
  11. Elsewhere.co.nz, Oct 9, 2017 - RECOMMENDED REISSUE: JD Blackfoot; The Song of Crazy Horse (Sisapa/Border) - Graham Reid
  12. Audio Culture, 16 Dec 2014 - Immigrants - strangers on the shore - John Dix
  13. Buckeye Beat - J. D. Blackfoot (band)
  14. PopMatters, 28 Jun 2007 - J.D. Blackfoot: The Ultimate Prophecy By Tom Useted
  15. Touhill Performing Arts Center - JD Blackfoot Farewell Concert
  16. We Are Movie Geeks, October 19, 2017 - General News, NEVER SAY GOODBYE: THE KSHE DOCUMENTARY – Red Carpet Screening and DVD Release November 1st at The Moolah By Tom Stockman
  17. Discogs - J. D. Blackfoot, Discography, Singles & EPs
  18. 45Cat - J. D. Blackfoot - Discography, All Records
  19. Buckeye Beat - J.D. Blackfoot (band)
  20. Discogs - Discography, Singles & EPs
  21. Discogs - Discography, Albums
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