Flagpole. (Athens, Ga.) 1987-current, May 11, 2011, Image 15
thens rock lifers Mike and Herb Guthrie are well known for their decades of dedi cation to The Michael Guthrie Band. But theirs is a story that stretches back to the '60s, back to a band called Arnold Bean. Now billing themselves as "one of Georgia's first underground bands," the coun terculture faves will reunite this weekend for the first time in 38 years. When the teenage Guthrie brothers returned to the U.S. in 1966, after living in Germany where their father was stationed in the Army, they were pretty well-seasoned as musicians. The pair had already started their first band overseas. The Illusions, and it wasn't long before they formed their first band in the States, The Bitter End, in Columbus, GA with friend Gary Burnette. Their father's accep tance of a civil service job in the Augusta sub urb of Grovetown moved the pair briefly, but it was long enough for their new Augusta-area presence to have a significant impact on the band that would become Arnold Bean. "There was a kid at school that was for ever saying, 'My brother plays in [legendary Southern pop group and Roy Orbison's backing band] The Candymen, blah blah blah' Later, they came to Augusta, and he introduced us!" explains Mike. "They knew we were in a band because we dressed like one—of course we were in awe because The Beatles had opened for them with Roy Orbison and they had just finished a package tour with the Small Faces. They suggested we get up and play a short set during their break... We did, and ripped through some Jimi [Hendrix]-style feedback jams and made a mark, somewhat." Fast-forward a year, and The Candymen were booked for a two-week stand at Mr. K's Klassic Kat, a Saigon-themed club and, as Mike puts it, "sleaze hole Columbus nightspot," and the Guthries' band, now known as Arnold Bean (a thumbed-nose response to what Mike calls the then-popular "Bill & the So-and-So" type of band name), convinced the owner of the club to let them play the 15-minute intervals between The Candymen's sets. He went for it and offered the group S50 a night. The Candymen remembered Arnold Bean from the previous year and, impressed with their sound, suggested they travel to Valparaiso, FL to play their stuff for Playground Studios owner and known Southern producer Finley Duncan. Duncan thought they had something, and secured a two-LP deal through SSS International Records, a divi sion of Sun Entertainment (i.e., Memphis' Sun Records) best known for releasing Jeannie C. Riley's "Harper Valley P.T.A." The label's staff, who didn't seem to have much love for Arnold Bean, chose the album title Cosmic Bean instead, and assembled suitably spacey artwork for the band's 1970 debut without any input from any of the bandmembers. A couple friends of the band managed to push the album steadily to hipper customers at Columbus, GA record shop Dr. Jive's, but, needless to say, it didn't catapult the band to fame. They never recorded that second LP ("The label didn't 'get' my new songs," says Mike), although Cosmic Bean has become something of a collector's item in the 41 years since its release. In the beginning, Arnold Bean played school dances, army bases (including a riotous gig that got them banned from Ft. Benning), frat parties, etc., but as the era of outdoor festivals spread across the country and into the South, the band played more events of that type. A favorite venue, though, was the short-lived underground Columbus club The Electric Toadstool. "Arnold Bean was very eclectic. We were counterculture... and it was also the outlet for my first original songs. [That's] no big deal now, but in 1971 we would show up and play hours of unheard originals," says Mike. "We were a bit radical and ahead of our time, so trouble often ensued." When Burnette decided to take a break from the band in 1973, bassist Ritchie McNally took his place, and the group evolved into The Michael Guthrie Band. Although the Guthries and Burnette (Herb on drums, Mike on guitar and Gary on bass) were the sole constants of the group, they also had several keyboard players (John Aiken, Mike Griffin, Tommy Lambert, Brad Robertson, Ed Locke and Todd Christiansen), each of whom are invited to participate in the upcoming reunion. Barring the 11 songs on Cosmic Bean, Mike says, "Most of this stuff was never recorded. [For the reunion show] I'll try to pull out some that have never been heard." Gordon Lamb HOW MUCH: TB* CAU FOR DESIGNS Athens Cultural Affairs Commission is seeking designs for metal panels and fabric banners to be installed on downtown's newest parking deck. Entry Peadline Monday, May 23, Z011 *500 awards to selected designers www.atbenselarkeeoonty.eoiN/SFlOST or call: (706) 613-3025 MAY 11, 2011 • FLAGP0LE.COM 15