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Fifty Foot Hose

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American underground rock band
This article includes a list ofgeneral references, butit lacks sufficient correspondinginline citations. Please help toimprove this article byintroducing more precise citations.(August 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Fifty Foot Hose
OriginSan Francisco,California, United States
GenresPsychedelic rock[1]
Years active1967–1970, 1995–present
LabelsLimelight,Mercury,Big Beat, Weasel Disc
Musical artist

Fifty Foot Hose is an Americanpsychedelic rock band that formed inSan Francisco in the late 1960s,[2] and reformed in the 1990s. They were one of the first bands to fuserock andexperimental music. Like a few other acts of the time (most notablyThe United States of America), they consciously tried to combine the contemporary sounds of rock with electronic instruments and avant-garde compositional ideas.[citation needed]

History

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1960s

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The original group was formed in San Francisco in 1967 by bassist and electronic musicianLouis "Cork" Marcheschi, guitarist and composer David Blossom, and vocalist Nancy Blossom. The lineup was later completed by Kim Kimsey on drums and Larry Evans on rhythm guitar.[2]

Marcheschi (born 1945 inBurlingame, California) had played rhythm and blues during his teens with The Ethix, performing in Bay Area clubs and Las Vegas venues. The Ethix released one wildly experimental single, “Bad Trip,” in 1967, designed to be playable at any speed — an early example of proto-psychedelic irony and tape experimentation.[3]

Deeply influenced by the works of avant-garde composers such asEdgard Varèse,John Cage,Terry Riley, andGeorge Antheil, Marcheschi began constructing his own custom-built electronic instruments from oscillators, tone generators, fuzzboxes, a cardboard tube, and even a loudspeaker salvaged from a World War II bomber. His goal was to merge electronic sound with live rock performance at a time when few musicians had access to synthesizers or tape studios.[4]

David Blossom, a classically trained guitarist who had worked in jazz and folk ensembles, and vocalist Nancy Blossom — noted for her wide range and theatrical phrasing — joined Marcheschi after meeting him through mutual friends in the local scene. The trio shared an ambition to fuse psychedelic rock’s emotional immediacy with the abstract textures of modern electronic composition. They recorded an early demo that attracted the attention ofLimelight Records, a Mercury subsidiary best known for experimental and jazz releases by artists such asSun Ra andMoondog.[5]

The resulting album,Cauldron, was recorded in mid-1967 at Sierra Sound in Berkeley and released that December. It featured eleven tracks, including “Fantasy,” “Red the Sign Post,” “If Not This Time,” and a cover of Billie Holiday’s “God Bless the Child”. Critics have since described the record as an "innovative fusion of jazz-inflected psychedelic rock and handmade electronic sound effects", withSan Francisco Chronicle criticRalph J. Gleason remarking at the time, “I don’t know if they are immature or premature.”[6]

AlthoughCauldron sold poorly upon release, the group built a devoted local following and shared bills withBlue Cheer,Chuck Berry, andFairport Convention. Bassist Robert Goldbeck later joined for live shows. By late 1969 the band had disbanded; most members joined the San Francisco stage production ofHair, where Nancy Blossom played the lead role before later appearing inGodspell. Larry Evans returned to his hometown ofMuncie, Indiana, performing in regional groups until his death in 2008.[7]

The legacy of the original lineup persisted through underground reissues and the 1997 reunion albumReturn of Fifty Foot Hose, which saw Marcheschi revisiting many of the same sonic concepts with new collaborators, reaffirming the band’s influence on later generations of electronic and experimental rock musicians.[8]

1990s

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Interest in Fifty Foot Hose resurfaced in the 1990s, as they became recognized as precursors to the electronic rock sounds of groups likePere Ubu,Chrome andThrobbing Gristle, andCauldron was reissued on CD. By this time, Marcheschi had become a respected sculptor, specializing in public work using neon, plastic, and kinetic characteristics.

In 1995, Marcheschi reformed the group for live performances in San Francisco, with a new set of musicians. These performances led to the release of the albumLive & Unreleased, which was followed in 1997 by a new studio album,Sing Like Scaffold. On the latter album, Fifty Foot Hose essentially comprised Marcheschi (on echolette, twin audio generators, squeaky stick, white noise generator, theremin, spark gap, and saw blades), Walter Funk III (jokers Ulysses and Cupid constructed by Fred 'Spaceman' Long, Bug (Tom Nunn), vocoder, Hologlyphic Funkaliser, and other electronix), Reid Johnston (guitube, guitar, tools, horns, harmonium, hardware, bikewheel), Lenny Bove (bass, electronics, vocals), Elizabeth Perry (vocals), and Dean Cook (drums).[citation needed]

Funk and Johnston subsequently formed the avant-garde electronic band Kwisp, the first of whose two albums also featured Marcheschi.

In 2006, Marcheschi, Funk, Johnston, and Konstantine Baranov (producer ofSing Like Scaffold), known as CWRK Musical Environments, installed a public sound installation in an atrium in Hong Kong.

Discography

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References

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  1. ^Brend, Mark (2012).The Sound of Tomorrow: How Electronic Music Was Smuggled into the Mainstream. Bloomsbury. p. 186.ISBN 9781623561536.
  2. ^abColin Larkin, ed. (1992).The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music (First ed.).Guinness Publishing. p. 859.ISBN 0-85112-939-0.
  3. ^Breznikar, Klemen (March 2, 2012)."Fifty Foot Hose – Interview with Cork Marcheschi".It’s Psychedelic Baby! Magazine. RetrievedNovember 2, 2025.
  4. ^"Fifty Foot Hose – Time Machine".Electronic Sound Magazine. January 19, 2017. RetrievedNovember 2, 2025.
  5. ^"Signs of Change".Record Collector Magazine. March 22, 2013. RetrievedNovember 2, 2025.
  6. ^Stanley, Bob (July 16, 2014)."101 Strangest Records on Spotify: Fifty Foot Hose – Cauldron".The Guardian. RetrievedNovember 2, 2025.
  7. ^"Fifty Foot Hose Biography".AllMusic. RetrievedNovember 2, 2025.
  8. ^"Fifty Foot Hose – The Artistic Odyssey of Cork Marcheschi".It’s Psychedelic Baby! Magazine. April 17, 2024. RetrievedNovember 2, 2025.

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