Los Angeles Times

Founded campy ’ 60s rock group

- By Claire Noland

Paul Revere, a teenage businessma­n who found an outlet for his entreprene­urial spirit in the form of a campy rock ’ n’ roll band that capitalize­d on his name, wore Revolution­ary War- theme costumes and cranked out a string of grungy hits in the mid- 1960s, has died. The founder of Paul Revere and the Raiders was 76.

Revere died Saturday of cancer at his home in Garden Valley, Idaho, his longtime manager, Roger Hart, told the Associated Press. After a near- constant touring schedule in recent years, Revere retreated six months ago to his adopted home state because of health issues, said his tour manager, Ron Lemen.

Along with singer and saxophonis­t Mark Lindsay, Revere, a keyboard player, formed a band called the Downbeats in Boise in 1959. Within a few years they would become Paul Revere and the Raiders, string together top- 10pophits including “Kicks,” “Hungry” and “Good Thing” and become

fixtures of Dick Clark’s weekday afternoon TV show “Where the Action Is.”

“Just Like Me,” a 1965 hit written by Revere and Lindsay, made the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s list of Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll.

Born Paul Revere Dick on Jan. 7, 1938, in Harvard, Neb., he grew up on a farm near Boise, wherehe learned to play piano. While still a teenager he opened a barbershop. At18, with three barbershop­s to his name, he sold them to buy a drive- in restaurant and put together the band to attract young customers.

After some local success the Downbeats moved to Portland, Ore., in 1960 and with encouragem­ent from their new manager, radio disc jockey Hart, renamed themselves Paul Revere and the Raiders. They recorded a 1963 version of “Louie Louie” that was eclipsed by another Portland garage band, the Kingsmen, but the Raiders were on theirway to Hollywood.

Joined by early core members Drake Levin on guitar, Mike Smith on drums and Phil Volkon bass, the group performed a choreograp­hed show in elaborate outfits complete with tri- cornered hats, brightly colored frock coats, white hose and knee- high black leather boots. In 1964, they signed a contract with Columbia Records as the label’s first rock act and caught Clark’s eye.

“From day one, we’ve always been a party band that accidental­ly had some hit records and accidental­ly got on a hit television series,” Revere said in a 2000 interview with the Associated Press. “We were visual and fun and crazy and were America’s answer to the British music invasion.... We just happened to be at the right time and had the right name and had the right gimmick.”

Producer Terry Melcher honed the band’s hardedged, guitar- driven sound with Lindsay, the front man, providing the vocals. The blond Revere was content to remain in the background playing organ.

Besides performing as the house band on “Where the Action Is” beginning in 1965, Paul Revere and the Raiders appeared on Clark’s later “Happening” shows as well as “The Ed Sullivan Show,” “The Tonight Show” and as themselves on the “Batman” TV show in 1966.

The band had 20 consecutiv­e hits and reached its peak with John D. Loudermilk’s “Indian Reservatio­n” at No. 1 in 1971, but a revolving door of band members and changing musical tastes led to its decline. Revere maintained a busy pace of touring and appearing at state fairs, casinos and clubs.

“After you’ve had some success, you’re afraid it’s gonna go away and you need to take advantage of it, so you work as hard as you can, because it might disappear tomorrow,” he told the Associated Press in 2000.

Revere’s survivors include his wife of 35 years, Sydney.

claire. noland@ latimes. com

 ?? Associated Press ?? COUNTERING BRITISH INVASION Paul Revere and the Raiders had a string of hits
in the ’ 60s, including “Kicks” and “Hungry.”
Associated Press COUNTERING BRITISH INVASION Paul Revere and the Raiders had a string of hits in the ’ 60s, including “Kicks” and “Hungry.”

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