28 January 2022

The Left Banke

The Left Banke, 1965 in a photo from KRLA Beat, a newspaper published
for KRLA Radio in the mid-1960s., Public Domain, Link

The Left Banke was an American rock band formed in New York City in 1965. They are best known for their two songs "Walk Away Renée" and "Pretty Ballerina."

Due to keyboardist Michael Brown's classical background, they had a sound that was labeled by critics as "baroque rock," or "Bach rock." Not all their songs featured string arrangements and classical-sounding piano and harpsichord, but enough did that the labels stuck. Their vocal harmonies were reminiscent of the "British invasion" bands like the Beatles and the Zombies.

The original lineup was keyboards/composer Michael Brown, drummer/singer George Cameron, bass guitarist/singer Tom Finn, lead singer Steve Martin and drummer Warren David-Schierhorst. It was Brown's father, Harry Lookofsky, who got them into a recording studio. Harry was a well-known session violinist and ran a studio in New York. He ended up as their initial producer, manager and publisher.

"Left Bank" is the Anglicized version of the French Rive Gauche which is the southern bank of the river Seine in Paris. The river cuts the city into two parts and if you're looking downstream, the southern bank is to the left, and the northern bank (or Rive Droite) is to the right. The appeal to the band of the name Left Bank is its association with writers and artists, particularly after WWI. The area was known as the haunt of Colette, Djuna Barnes, Erik Satie, Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Anaïs Nin, Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas, Edith Wharton, Pablo Picasso, Arthur Rimbaud, Paul Verlaine, Henri Matisse, Jean-Paul Sartre, and the "Lost Generation" of American expatriates such as Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and James Baldwin. The Left Bank became a phrase associated with bohemianism, counterculture, and creativity. The band added an "e" which is not French. (The French form of bank is banque.)

"Walk Away Renee" was a huge hit in late 1966 and their second single, "Pretty Ballerina", (both written by Brown) charted in early 1967. They appeared on The Left Banke album Walk Away Renee/Pretty Ballerina. Rolling Stone magazine put "Walk Away Renée" at number 220 in its list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time."

The band went through personnel issues and broke up, reformed, and recorded with other members.  The songs recorded by various incarnations of the group in 1967 and 1968 were assembled into a second LP, The Left Banke Too, which was released in November 1968.

The single from the second album that is most like the original "baroque" sound of the first two singles is "Desiree."


The band's story gets complicated at this point. Here's a capsule summary. The band continued playing live in 1969, but without Steve Martin. They disband but Brown and Martin reunite in the studio to record another single as The Left Banke, "Myrah" b/w "Pedestal." Brown, Cameron, Finn and Martin reunite to record two songs for the movie Hot Parts but due to legal issues with the name "Love Songs in the Night" and "Two by Two" are released as being by Steve Martin solo recordings.

There are a number of odd one-off recordings, some of which have been collected on other albums or passed along bootleg style. One of those came out of a 1971 recording session at Bell Records with Les Fradkind. "I Could Make It Last Forever" (not written by any band members) was released on Fradkin's Goin' Back solo CD in 2006 and features Caro, Finn, Cameron and Brown and Brown's father, violinist Harry Lookofsky. 

Martin, Cameron and Finn reunited as The Left Banke in 1978 to record an album's worth of songs but an album was not released. One single, "Queen of Paradise" (b/w "And One Day"), was released in late 1978 with some airplay. The album was issued by Relix Records in 1986 under the title Strangers on a Train (Voices Calling in Europe) but gained little attention or sales.

For fans, several of Michael Brown's post-Banke bands are collectible. Those bands include Montage, Stories, and The Beckies.

The 1992 Mercury Records compilation, There's Gonna Be a Storm: The Complete Recordings 1966–1969 collected almost all of their recorded output from those years.

None of the band members are still alive.

For more details see the band's Wikipedia entry and check out the fine video history below.


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