Family affair
The Stone Coyotes were Born to Howl
by Mal Thursday
One fateful night a few years back, best-selling author
Elmore Leonard (Get Shorty, Out of Sight, Mr. Majestyk, etc.) walked
into LA's famed Troubador nightclub to find a hard-rock-
ing trio on stage. The Stone Coyotes, who make their first Worcester appearance
at Ralph's this Saturday in support of their new disc Born to Howl,
immediately caught the hardboiled novelist's fancy, and became the inspiration
for Be Cool, the sequel to Get Shorty. Leonard dedicated the book
to the band, and incorporated singer-songwriter Barbara Keith's lyrics
throughout the narrative.
Upon publication of the novel, Elmore and the Coyotes made a series of
appearances around the country to promote both the book and the band. Be
Cool, as they say in Hollywood, is soon to be a major motion picture, with
the porcine John Travolta reprising his portrayal of Chili Palmer, and the
songs of the Stone Coyotes on the soundtrack.
Although the band provided inspiration for the novel, the plot and characters
were entirely Leonard's creation, and not based on the Coyotes' story. That's
too bad, because theirs is quite an intriguing tale. For one thing, they're a
family unit: the group consists of Keith on guitar and vocals, her husband Doug
Tibbles on drums, and his son John (her stepson) on bass. However, unlike, say,
Hanson, the Osmonds, or the Cowsills, this band rocks, churning out a
sound that's best described as AC/DC fronted by a female Dylan. Barbara's
buzz-saw guitar is part Keith Richards, part Johnny Thunders, and 100 percent
rocking. The Tibbles' rhythm section is no-frills, straight-ahead and
Stone-solid, providing the foundation for the band's tales of rock and roll
redemption.
Their story begins back in the '60s, when Barbara was a Greenwich village
folkie playing regularly at the legendary Café Wha?, which played host
to, among others, Lenny Bruce, the Fugs, and a young Jimi Hendrix. "It was
actually a total dive," she admits, "but it was a famous dive."
In 1970, after being scouted by Columbia Records exec Clive Davis, she was
invited to come out to the West Coast to audition for Warner Brothers mogul Mo
Ostin. At that point, two major events occurred: she was signed to Warners, for
whom she recorded an album, and she met Doug. "The album came out, but was
pulled off the shelves when I ended up giving back my advance and going
underground." Although the record was dead in the water, the songs themselves
garnered insider buzz, and were subsequently covered by artists ranging from
rock acts like Delaney & Bonnie and Little Feat's Lowell George, to country
artists like Tanya Tucker and Hank Snow, to Barbra Streisand.
Meanwhile, Doug was working as a television writer on such shows as The
Munsters, My Three Sons, and Love, American Style. "My dad [George
Tibbles] was a TV writer, and he taught me how to write, but I had to go out on
my own to prove he wasn't writing my scripts. Nobody in Hollywood trusts
anybody."
Eventually, Doug got fed up with the business. "I'd done Bewitched and
Family Affair and Andy Griffith and all that, and I finally quit
after working on Happy Days for five hours. I came in at 9:30 in the
morning and Garry Marshall said, `There's a writer's meeting at 10:30,' but he
meant 10:30 at night. I decided that it was too much time, no matter what they
paid you, to give away to someone else's idea of what's funny. It got to be
like geometry, you just didn't want to do it."
At age 37, he took up the drums. "I always wanted to be a drummer ever since I
was a little kid. I actually had a kit when I was five, but I got frustrated
because I couldn't play like Gene Krupa and I got so mad I kicked a whole in
the bass drum," he laughs. "I didn't play again for another 32 years."
With Doug out of the TV game, and Barbara estranged from the music business,
the couple began to collaborate at a quintessential California locale: the
beach. "We got an old van, and we'd park on a little cliff overlooking the
ocean. Barb would play guitar, and I'd bang out sixteenth-notes on the drums,"
Doug recalls. "I didn't know how to play, but I had good time. We did this for
like five years."
Eventually, the couple relocated to Barbara's hometown of Greenfield, Mass.,
along with John, who had taken up the bass guitar. Before long, the band,
dubbed the Stone Coyotes, had developed a local following, playing many
memorable shows at such clubs as Northampton's Bay State Hotel and Iron Horse
Music Hall. Working with studio whiz Mark Alan Miller, they produced a series
of fine, honed-to-the-bone full-lengths.
On their latest, Keith sings, in her deadpan style, a semi-autobiographical
epiphany: "Let me tell you the story of a girl/All she ever wanted was to rock
the world. . ./Mommy said to Daddy, `Did you hear what she said?'/She
said `I like Black Sabbath and Motorhead'. . . /Sorry, Mom and Dad --
this might come as a shock/I just want to be the First Lady of Rock."
Born to Howl is both true to the group's stripped-down aesthetic and a
refinement of their sound. "The albums are bit like having children," Barbara
says. "Once born, they have their own identity. Church of the Falling
Rain was a girl and Situation Out of Control was a boy. I'm not sure
what the new one is. It's still a Coyote, that much we know."
The Stone Coyotes join the Unband, the Probates, and the Tims at Ralph's, 95
Prescott Street, Worcester, on Saturday, April 28. Call (508) 753-9543.