Blue Ash – No More No Less (1973)

FrontCover1.jpgBlue Ash is a United States band, formed in Ohio in the summer of 1969 by bassist Frank Secich & vocalist Jim Kendzor. Guitarist Bill Yendrek and drummer David Evans were recruited later that summer.

The band debuted at “The Freak Out”, a club in Youngstown, OH on October 3, 1969. They gained a loyal following playing an endless stream of one-nighters over that year. In October 1970, Bill Yendrek, was replaced by guitarist/songwriter Bill “Cupid” Bartolin.

Blue Ash continued playing 250-300 dates a year throughout Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio and West Virginia, while the songwriting team Frank Secich and Bill Bartolin accumulated an enormous amount of original material. In June 1972, Blue Ash signed a production contract with Peppermint Productions of Youngstown and started recording and sending out demos. In late 1972, they were signed to Mercury Records by A&R man Paul Nelson. Their first album No More, No Less was released in May 1973 and received rave reviews in the rock press. It is considered a power pop classic, and is regarded as highly collectible among fans of that genre (it was finally released on CD on the Collectors’ Choice label in September 2008). Blue Ash toured and opened for such acts as the Stooges, Bob Seger, Aerosmith, Ted Nugent and more but for lack of sales they were dropped by Mercury Records in May 1974.

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Blue Ash continued to play live and record, adding drummer Jeff Rozniata who replaced David Evans in 1974. They were signed to a singles deal with Playboy Records in 1977. The first single, “Look At You Now” became a regional hit in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Mississippi, as well as in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Playboy then offered an album deal. The LP Front Page News was recorded in Los Angeles in August 1977 and released in October of that year. It was selling well, but in early 1978 Playboy International pulled the plug on Playboy Records and Blue Ash was once again without a label. They called it quits in 1979.

A few audience-recorded live tapes of the band exist (including one of the original lineup from January 31, 1974 at the Packard Music Hall in Warren, OH) but are of generally poor recording quality. Other tapes recorded by a fan who followed Blue Ash to many of their gigs are rumored to exist, but have yet to surface on the collectors circuit.

In the summer of 2003 original members Frank Secich, David Evans, Bill Bartolin and Jim Kendzor got together privately in Ohio to play once again and decided to reform the band. On November 8 they played the International Pop Overthrow at the Khyber Pass in Philadelphia.

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In the late 1990s, renewed interest toward the band was given a boost as a large cache of unreleased Blue Ash recordings fell into circulation amongst collectors. In the summer of 2004 an official release of that material—a two CD retrospective called “Around Again”—was released on Not Lame Records. It contains 44 songs of unreleased material spanning their career.

For their “reunion” gigs from 2003–2009, Frank Secich moved from bass guitar to rhythm guitar, and former members Brian Wingrove (piano) and Jeff Rozniata (drums) completed the band along with Bobby Darke (bass).

On October 3, 2009, guitarist Bill “Cupid” Bartolin died from complications of cancer, thus bringing to a sad end the story of Blue Ash.

Frank Secich is now a member of Deadbeat Poets, who have released three critically acclaimed CDs: Notes From The Underground (2007), Circustown (2010) and Youngstown Vortex Sutra in 2011.

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In the late 1990s, Jim Kendzor’s nephew, guitarist Leonard Crist, and Bill “Cupid” Bartolin’s son, drummer Sean Bartolin, formed Cork, a short-lived band based out of Youngstown while Crist played in the Youngstown indie rock bands Savage Pastry, Isabella the Brave, You Are The War That I Want and Abortopotamus Rex.

In 2016, original Blue Ash members Frank Secich and Jim Kendzor began performing as Blue Ash, backed by Secich’s current band Deadbeat Poets. Sometimes jocularly referred to as Half Ash, this configuration toured Spain, a hotbed of power pop fandom, to great acclaim in June 2016. Secich, Kendzor and Deadbeat Poets member Pete Drivere have also performed several acoustic shows.

No More, No Less is the first album by the Youngstown, Ohio band Blue Ash, released in 1973 on Mercury Records SRM1-666. (see 1973 in music). The album is composed mostly of originals with two covers, “Dusty Old Fairgrounds” by Bob Dylan and “Any Time at All” by The Beatles. The album remained out of print for many years until re-released on CD by Collector’s Choice Music in late 2008. (by wikipedia)

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Hailing from Ohio just like the Raspberries, Blue Ash are the great forgotten power pop band of the early ’70s. Actually, “forgotten” may be too strong a word, for any power pop fan worth their salt knows of Blue Ash even if they’ve never to score either of their two LPs, whether in their original pressing or traded on cassette or CD-R. They were known as one of the key early power pop bands, standing alongside the Raspberries and Badfinger in how they drew equally from the Beatles and the Who. If anything, Blue Ash leaned on that Who influence harder than the Raspberries, rocking a vigor rarely heard in power pop and also opening themselves up to the lyrical vistas of Bob Dylan by covering the rarity “Dusty Old Fairgrounds,” a move rarely made by power poppers. All this indicates that Blue Ash were a rock band first and foremost, placing the sheer rush of sound over hooks, something that a lot of their progeny never did. That’s what gives their debut No More No Less — finally reissued by Collectors Choice in 2008, a full 35 years after its release — such a punch: they are one of the few groups that truly put some power in their pop.

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This much is evident by the raucous album-opener “Abracadabra (Have You Seen Her),” a song with all the melodic rush of “Go All the Way” but leaner and meaner. Not all of the album keeps up at this same furious pace, as the guitars jangle as much as they roar and the group occasionally dips into a loping country-rock groove — not on the Dylan cover, which again sounds a bit like the Who, but on “Just Another Game” — and they do get sunbleached and mellow on “What More Can I Do.” But most of No More No Less filters old-time rock & roll (the big-time boogie “Let There Be Rock”) and ’60s guitar pop (“Plain to See” evokes the Searchers, “I Remember a Time” the Byrds, and “Anytime at All” is a Beatles cover) through the outsized amplification of ’70s hard rock. It’s an addictive sound — and one that hinted at the power pop that was to come even if it didn’t directly influence it — and it still carries a mighty punch all these years later. (by Stephen Thomas Erlewine)

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Personnel:
Bill “Cupid” Bartolin (guitar, background vocals)
David Evans (drums, background vocals)
Jim Kendzor (vocals, guitar)
Frank Secich –(bass, background vocals)

BackCover1.jpgTracklist:
01. Abracadabra (Have You Seen Her?) (Secich/Bartolin) 3.06
02. Dusty Old Fairgrounds (Dylan) 2.48
03. Plain To See (Secich/Bartolin) 2.41
04. Just Another Game (Secich/Bartolin) 2.56
05. I Remember A Time (Secich/Bartolin) 2.56
06. Smash My Guitar (Secich/Bartolin) 3.17
07. Anytime At All (Lennon/McCartney) 2.20
08. Here We Go Again (Secich/Bartolin) 3.25
09. What Can I Do For You? (Kendzor) 3.47
10. All I Want (Secich/Bartolin) 2.57
11. Wasting My Time (Secich/Bartolin) 2.53
12. Let There Be Rock (Secich/Bartolin) 2.32

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