The
Tripsichord Music Box was one of the many San Francisco bands managed and produced by self-styled psychedelic svengali
Matthew Katz -- despite a slim body of recorded work that stands among the most atmospheric and cosmic to emerge from the Bay Area scene in the post-Summer of Love era, they are sadly best-known as one of the so-called "fake
Grape" units unleashed on unsuspecting audiences after
Katz lost control of his former protégés, the legendary
Moby Grape. Originally dubbed the Ban,
Tripsichord Music Box formed in Lompoc, California in 1963 -- the group was founded by singer/guitarist Tony McGuire, bassist Frank Straight, keyboardist Oliver McKinney, and drummer Randy Guzman (sometimes credited as Randy Gordon to avoid conflict due to his parents' management of the act). According to the book Acid, Fuzz & Flowers, the Ban signed to the Brent label to release their lone single, the garage rock stomper "Bye-Bye," splitting soon after when McGuire was drafted to serve in Vietnam; the remaining threesome then recruited singer/bassist David Zandonatti, with Straight moving to lead guitar. Rechristening themselves the Now, they relocated to Los Angeles, sharing Sunset Strip stages with local acts including the
Seeds and the
Strawberry Alarm Clock before signing to
Milton Berle's Embassy label for the 1967 effort "I Want." The single attracted little attention, however, and the Now relocated to San Francisco. There they connected with
Katz, who essentially discovered
Jefferson Airplane along with
Moby Grape --
Katz soon signed the band to his San Francisco Sound label, rechristening them the
Tripsichord Music Box. In late 1967 the group recorded three tracks -- "You're the Woman," "It's No Good" and "The Family Song" -- later included on the
Fifth Pipedream: The San Francisco Sound, Vol. 1 compilation. When
Moby Grape severed ties to
Katz, he laid claim to their name, forcing
Tripsichord Music Box to play a series of live dates under the
Moby Grape aegis -- the deception ultimately prompted McKinney to quit the band in 1969, with guitarist Bill Carr signing on in his place. Around this same time, Zandonatti's high school friend Ron McNeeley also began sitting in on vocals, and after a 1969 single, "Times and Seasons,"
Tripsichord dropped the "
Music Box" from their name in time to cut their sole full-length, a self-titled cult classic issued in 1970. Their dark yet ethereal music found few takers, however, and the band relocated to Utah, splitting when Zandonatti and McNeely joined the Sons of Mosiah, a Mormon musical troupe managed by future U.S. Senator
Orrin Hatch. Ironically, Guzman later played drums in a legitimate incarnation of
Moby Grape.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi