Eddie
Converse ~ Bass
Steve
"Steve Green" Donaldson ~ Guitar
Dave
Krone ~ Guitar
Dewey
Martin ~ Drums
Gary
Parmenter ~ Drums
J.
C. Rieck ~ Keyboards
Jim
Sherwood ~ Bass
Lyall
Smith ~ Drums
Lynn
Ware ~ Saxophone
Edward "Lynn" Ware, Jr
Dewey
Martin
30
September 1940 - 31 January 2009
As the drummer with Buffalo Springfield, Dewey Martin provided the backbeat to some of the most enduring and influential American rock music of the 1960s.Often referred to as "America's answer to the Beatles", the Springfield were a showcase for the early songwriting talents of Neil Young and Stephen Stills, with additional support from Richie Furay. But with bass player Bruce Palmer, Martin formed a rhythm section that perfectly suited the group's pioneering style of West Coast folk-rock.
After little more than two years and three albums, the group split up in 1968. Martin's career stalled and he was reduced to playing in what were, in effect, Buffalo Springfield tribute bands. But by providing the beat to such seminal tracks as For What It's Worth, Mr. Soul and Rock 'N' Roll Woman, he had already secured his place in rock history.
Born Walter Milton Dwayne Midkiff on September 30, 1940 in Chesterville, Ontario in Canada, he was known as 'Dewey' from a young age due to his inability to say 'Dwayne'. His first instrument at school was the saxophone but he took up drums at the age of 13 and learnt to play along to Everly Brothers songs on a rented drum kit ,set up in his parents' kitchen.
His first high school band was called the Jive Rockets and he made a name himself on the local dance band scene before moving to the US, where he joined the army. After his discharge he moved to Nashville and backed various country singers on an ad hoc basis, before getting a gig in 1963 in Faron Young's touring band. When the tour reached Los Angeles, he decided to stay.
He recorded his first single in 1964, taking the lead vocal on a rocked up version of The White Cliffs of Dover, released under the name Sir Raleigh and the Coupons and intended to cash in on the hysteria for all things British in the wake of the Beatles' invasion of the American charts.
Two further singles followed under the same name in 1965, during which time he also played in a number of other bands, including The Sons of Adam, the Modern Folk Quartet, the Standells and country act the Dillards.
When in 1966 the Dillards decided that their acoustic bluegrass music did not really require a drummer, the band's manager gave him the telephone number of a new group that was looking for a drummer. The phone number turned out to belong to Stephen Stills, who invited him to audition. With Martin completing the quintet, the group adopted the name Buffalo Springfield, after they had seen the name on the back of a steamroller.
Martin had enjoyed singing lead with Sir Raleigh and the Coupons and insisted the band find him a vocal showcase, so Wilson Pickett's In The Midnight Hour was added to their live set, the only cover the group ever played.
Buffalo Springfield's rise was rapid. Within weeks they were supporting the Rolling Stones at the Hollywood Bowl and had signed to the Atco label.
Martin's uncluttered drumming style contributed memorably to the band's self-titled 1966 debut album, particularly Stills' classic For What it's Worth, on which his atmospheric bass drum introduction set the mood for the entire song.
An immensely versatile drummer, he adopted a more frenetic, soul-influenced style on Young's Mr Soul on the follow-up, 1967's Buffalo Springfield Again. He was also heard singing the refrain of Mr Soul incorporated into another Young composition on the album, Broken Arrow.That same year the band played the Monterey Pop Festival but cracks were beginning to appear in the group. Palmer was arrested for possession of marijuana and deported back to Canada. Young and Stills were at loggerheads over the leadership of the group and at one point there was a failed coup to replace Martin - who was noted for his somewhat abrasive personality - with Skip Spence of Moby Grape.
By May 1968, the group had fallen apart and by the time of the release off the third and final album, Last Time Around, Buffalo Springfield no longer existed.
Stills and Young subsequently teamed up again in Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young and Riche Foray formed Poco. Martin, sadly, sunk into obscurity. For a while he ran a band he called New Buffalo Springfield, until Stills and Young took legal action to prevent him using the name.
He then recorded the 1970 album Dewey Martin's Medicine Ball, which featured former Buffalo Springfield bass player Bruce Palmer and recorded a number of tracks with Elvis Presley's backing band. But due to some dubious dealings by the band's management, he had made little money from Buffalo Springfield and by 1972 he had retired from the professional music industry in disillusionment and was working as a car mechanic.
He re-emerged in the 1980s to play with the Meisner-Roberts Band and to form Buffalo Springfield Revisited with Palmer. But a planned reunion of the full original line-up collapsed in 1988 when Young "forgot" to show-up for the scheduled rehearsal.
When Martin and other members of the original Buffalo Springfield were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997, Young again failed to show. Three years later, however, he appeared to suggest a reunion was on the cards when he recorded a song called Buffalo Springfield Again on which he sang that he would like to "see those guys again and give it a shot" . The reunion had still not happened when Palmer's death in 2004 put an end to the possibility.
Dewey Martin, drummer, was born on September 30, 1940. He died on January 31, 2009, aged 68
From Times Online, February 6, 2009
February 6, 2009 - Buffalo Springfield drummer Dewey Martin dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dewey Martin, the muscular, gregarious drummer and singer who helped found the pioneering country rock band Buffalo Springfield with Neil Young and Stephen Stills, has died. He was 68.
Martin was found dead Sunday by a roommate in his Van Nuys apartment, longtime friend Lisa Lenes said. She said Martin had health problems in recent years and she believed he died of natural causes.
Martin, along with Young, Stills, singer-songwriter-guitarist Richie Furay and bassist Bruce Palmer, formed Buffalo Springfield in Los Angeles in 1966 and quickly became one of the hottest live acts on the West Coast, helped in part by the grinning, blond Martin.
Their self-titled debut album included the hit "For What It's Worth," a solemn observation of 1960s turmoil. They would later produce such classics as "Bluebird" and "Rock & Roll Woman" and Martin's husky vocals were featured at the start of another Springfield favorite, Young's "Broken Arrow."
The band broke up in 1968 amid tension between Young and Stills, but several members went on to even greater success and Buffalo Springfield's stature grew over the years, with Young often expressing regret they didn't stay together longer.
Young has had a highly successful solo career and also joined with Stills in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Furay formed Poco, another early country rock band. Jim Messina, who replaced Palmer on bass, teamed with Kenny Loggins and had several hits as Loggins and Messina.
Martin continued performing under various incarnations of the band. He and Palmer toured as Buffalo Springfield Revisited in the mid-1980s, and for a time in the 1990s he played shows as Buffalo Springfield Again. (Palmer died in 2004.)
Martin also formed other groups, including Medicine Ball, which released one album.
Born Walter Milton Dwayne Midkiff in Chesterfield, Canada, he began playing drums as a teenager and settled in Nashville in his early 20s, playing for Patsy Cline, Charlie Rich and other country artists. He then moved West and joined the influential bluegrass band, the Dillards, before Young helped bring him into Buffalo Springfield.
Lenes said Martin will be buried in his native country.
August
1964
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