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About the Author

Howard Kaylan is the lead vocalist of '60s rock legends the Turtles, whose hits include "Happy Together," "Elenore," "She'd Rather Be with Me," and "You Showed Me." He sang with Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention and was half of the popular duo Flo and Eddie. Kaylan's voice can also be heard show more on classic recordings by Bruce Springsteen, Alice Cooper, T. Rex, and many others. He lives in Seattle, Washington. Jeff Tamarkin has been a prolific music journalist for more than thirty-five years. He has served as the editor of Goldmine, Relix, and CMJ and has contributed to dozens of publications and websites, including MOJO, Playbill, JazzTimes, Creem, Billboard, and the All Music Guide. Tamarkin is the author of the biography Got a Revolution! The Turbulent Flight of Jefferson Airplane. He lives in Hoboken, New Jersey. show less

Works by Howard Kaylan

Associated Works

Forbidden Acts (1995) — Contributor — 44 copies, 1 review
Phantoms of the Night (1996) — Contributor — 30 copies
Christmas Party (2018) — Composer, some editions — 13 copies
The Adventures of the American Rabbit [1986 film] (1986) — Composer — 3 copies

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Reviews

4 reviews
I read many rock biographies and this is one of the best. It has inside scoops without mere name dropping. it is all the second and drugs without being merely salacious. Kalan's (and Volman's) camaraderie and partying with rock royalty was parlayed into longevity and pioneering roles. Still "Happy Together" over the years, I learned the group was the first to sue over sampling and also very innovative as radio talent augmented by their famous friends as guests. now I need to hear some of show more that! Kaylan's closeness to upper echelon rock stars provides some interesting insights. for instance, the documentary "Who is Harry Nilsson and Why is Everybody Talking About Him?" makes the Lennon - Nilsson studio screaming matches to be friendly rivalry, but Kaylan says shortly before his death Nilsson characterized the incident as cruel peer pressure that ruined his voice.

Narration by the self-effacing and honest Kaylan along with an over-the-top intro by Penn Jillette himself really makes this audiobook.
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Enjoyable, breezy memoir by the former lead singer of the Turtles, who wound up with Frank Zappa as part of the duo Flo and Eddie. As a native of LA, Kaylan's Turtles and their first big hit when he was about 19, and that sent him into rock history, as maybe a minor player with some big hits. A bunch of the fun is his incessant name dropping -- and what names they are. The bit set piece is the evening the Turtles meet Graham Nash, Eric Clapton, The Beatles, Brian Jones, and at the close of show more which he vomits all over Jimi Hendrix. Kaylan is pretty open about how he treated his wives, the girls on the road, and career lows. Entertainng stuff, though as with most celeb autobios, it does get a bit perfunctory and repetitive towards the end. show less
As a founding member of 60s rock greats, the Turtles ("Happy Together") who moved on the be a member of Frank Zappa's Mothers of Invention during their most outrageous and entertaining period, later toured as an opening act for Alice Cooper, wrote music for Strawberry Shortcake and the Care Bears, Howard Kaylan and seen and done it all (and pretty much done every female he came across as well.) This is an entertaining, name-dropping, occasionally jaw-dropping look at the excesses of rock show more star life in the 60s and 70s. Kaylan draws upon his diary to keep track of the dates of his constant travels (and travails), but the narrative often lacks a depth of details, other than the types of drugs Howard is taking at the time. There are some good insights into Frank Zappa and Marc Bolan, but there are no real insights into the mind of Howard's musical and business partner for over close to 50 years, Mark Volman, nor any explanation about why they have been so close and so successful over the years. This book really needs to be about twice as long. Given some of the cruel judgments Howard makes about himself, his first four wives, and a few other people who have passed through his life, there is certainly no indication he was holding anything back. It's just a shame that there aren't more of those scenes that really illuminate character, such as John Lennon's merciless putdown of the Turtles' rhythm guitarist that drove him out of a London bar, back to the United States, and out of the music business entirely.

As seems to be the case with all rock star biographies, there are a few lawsuits along the way, but thankfully Kaylan doesn't dwell too much on them. In fact, in the end he and Volman come out ahead, getting back the right to call themselves the Turtles and even control of their song catalog, resulting in untold royalties from its use in advertisements! There's a lot to learn in this book about the music business. I just wish it were as entertaining as I expected it to be. Maybe he should write a sequel?
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