Gary Puckett (born October 17, 1942) is an American singer. He is best remembered for being the lead vocalist for Gary Puckett & The Union Gap, who had six consecutive gold records in 1968, including "Lady Willpower", "Young Girl", "Woman Woman", and "Over You".
After the Union Gap disbanded in 1971, Puckett signed to Columbia and embarked on a solo career, and, after a decade-long hiatus in 1972, returned to music in the early 1980s, and has since released a handful of studio albums since the 1970s.
Early life and education Puckett was born in Hibbing, Minnesota. When he was six his family moved to Yakima, Washington (not far from Union Gap, Washington), where he grew up. Puckett learned how to sing and play guitar during his teens. He went to college for two years in San Diego, California, majoring in psychology, then dropped out to work in a band called the Outcasts. The Outcasts Gary's first group was The Outcasts, which included Bobby Brown (bass), Dwight Bement (saxophone; Also later member of the Union Gap), Bob Salisbury (saxophone), and Willie Kellogg (drums). Originally formed as a Righteous Brothers styled duo by Puckett and Brown, their manager, Yale Kahn, owner of the Clairemont Bowl, added Bement, Salisbury, and Kellogg into the lineup. Meer... |
After releasing two singles, "Run Away / Would You Care" (1965) and "I Can't Get Through To You / I Found Out About You" (1966), the group split up in 1967.
Formation In January 1967, Puckett and Dwight Bement formed Gary and the Remarkables with Kerry Chater (August 7, 1945 – February 4, 2022, bass) Gary 'Mutha' Withem (born August 22, 1944, keyboards), and Paul Wheatbread (born February 8, 1946, drums). The break came for the group when Jerry Fuller, a former country music artist and a producer for Columbia Records in Los Angeles, heard them at a small bar where they were performing in a bowling alley complex. Fuller liked their sound and signed them to a contract. Initial success They were now going under the name Gary Puckett & The Union Gap and would be known for hits such as "Lady Willpower", "Young Girl" and "Woman, Woman". They sold more records in 1968 than any other group and had six consecutive gold records as well as making two appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show (1968, 1971). Their song "Woman, Woman" was an adaptation of the country hit by the Glaser Brothers called "Girl, Girl". On records, they wore Civil War outfits, as suggested by Puckett, and called themselves the Union Gap after the Union Gap area where Puckett had lived. The band were nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 1969, losing out to José Feliciano. Split and reformation The group eventually grew unhappy with doing material written and produced by others, leading them to stop working with Fuller, and they disbanded in 1971. Gary re-formed the band sometime in the early 1980s and, since signing to them in 1984, has performed with them at the yearly "Happy Together" tours, alongside Howard Kaylan and Mark Volman of The Turtles (who started up the tour), The Association, The Cowsills, Ron Dante of The Archies, Chuck Negron of Three Dog Night, The Buckinghams, The Box Tops, The Vogues, and The Classics IV. As of around 2012, their current line-up consists of Puckett, Woody Lingle (bass), Jamie Hilboldt (keyboards), and Mike Candito (drums). The Union Gap's "Greatest Hits" album was one of CBS' best selling "Collector Series" albums. In 1974 "Young Girl" was reissued in the UK where it reached number five and achieved a Silver Record Award for the second time. Solo career After the Union Gap split, Puckett released a solo album titled The Gary Puckett Album that same year. He released a few singles from 1970 to 1972, with his first two being a cover of Dusty Springfield's 1964 song, "I Just Don't Know What to Do with Myself" and a cover of Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge over Troubled Water" and "Keep The Customer Satisfied" (a song Puckett would later perform as a solo artist on the Ed Sullivan Show in January 1971).[10] After the release of his 1971 album, Puckett's contract was terminated. Afterwards, he lived a private life throughout the rest of the 1970s, studying acting and dance and working in theatrical productions in and around Los Angeles, before he made a comeback in the music industry as a solo artist in the 1980s. Puckett was on the bill for the first Monkees reunion tour in 1986, along with the Grass Roots and the then line-up of Herman's Hermits. After a decade out of the public eye, Puckett released Melodie (1982) followed by Love Me Tonight (1992), As It Stands (1995), Time Pieces (1996), and Is This Love (1997), as well as a Christmas album in 2001. Puckett's latest album is This Is Love (2006). Puckett, along with Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers fame, joined Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band in San Diego as a guest to sing the Beatles song With a Little Help from My Friends on June 26, 2000. Union Gap: Classic Line-up Gary Puckett - Lead vocals (1967–1971) Dwight Bement - Guitar, brass instruments (1967–1969), bass (1969–1971) Kerry Chater - Bass (1967–1969; died 2022) Gary "Mutha" Withem - Keyboard (1967–1969) Paul Wheatbread - Drums (1967–1969) Later Members Barry McCoy - Keyboard (1969–1971) Richard Gabriel - Brass instruments (1969–1971) |