logo
Gary Puckett sings on at 82: ‘In 1968, we sold more singles than the Beatles'

Gary Puckett sings on at 82: ‘In 1968, we sold more singles than the Beatles'

Miami Herald14-07-2025
SAN DIEGO - Scoring in academia or on the Top 40? Striving for pop stardom or learning psychoanalytic therapy? The Union Gap or the synaptic gap?
When Gary Puckett moved to San Diego in 1960 - seven years before he and his band scored their first hit single with "Woman Woman" - it was to enroll at City College, not to pursue music. Fate had other things in store for him.
"I was into psychology and thought about maybe getting a medical degree," recalled Puckett, who spent two years at City College but couldn't afford the tuition to attend SDSU or UC San Diego. "I was tired of school and truly more interested in music, so I started playing in small bands."
And not so small bands.
The Ravens, his first San Diego group of note, was an 11-piece ensemble with a brass section and backing singers. In 1964 Puckett became the lead singer in the Outcasts, a four-man band that performed frequently at the Quad Room in Clairemont. They released two singles, "Runaway" and "I Can't Get Through To You," which gained local radio airplay.
His next band, Gary and the Remarkables, soon morphed into Gary Puckett & The Union Gap. With his soaring - at times almost operatic vocals - at the fore, the vintage military uniform-clad group scored a slew of hit singles between 1967 and 1969, including "Woman, Woman," "Young Girl," "Lady Willpower," "Over You" and "This Girl Is A Woman Now."
"In 1968, we sold more singles - not albums - than the Beatles. We sold more singles than anyone, so that's a little badge of honor," said Puckett, now 82, speaking from his Florida home in the coastal city of Clearwater.
Those hit singles will be featured when Puckett performs as part of the 2025 Happy Together Tour. The lineup also features Little Anthony and the current iterations of the Turtles, the Cowsills, Jay and the Americans, and the Vogues. While his appearance is billed as Gary Puckett & The Union Gap, he acknowledged that he will be accompanied by the same four-man house band that backs all the Happy Together Tour acts.
A Minnesota native, Puckett shares the same hometown as Bob Dylan, whose song, "The Mighty Quinn," was covered with brassy verve on The Union Gap's second album. The title of another Dylan song, "Changing of the Guards," best conveys what happened to Puckett and the members of the Union Gap, which disbanded in 1971, two years after the singer signed a solo recording deal with Columbia Records.
'Some slim times'
His 1971 release, "The Gary Puckett Album," fared so poorly it didn't even make it onto the bottom of the national Billboard Top 200. After selling millions of records, touring the nation and appearing multiple times on some of the most-watched TV shows of the time with The Union Gap, Puckett's career in music evaporated almost overnight.
"People were moving on and people in my generation were having families," Puckett said. "The new generation was paying attention to David Bowie and T. Rex. Radio wouldn't play our music. I found myself going through some slim times.
"I studied acting and made a film in the Philippines, 'Dynamite,' that didn't succeed. You will never find it. It was about a band that was successful because of the death of one of its members …."
After he completed filming, Puckett returned for a few years to Los Angeles where he had moved in the late 1960s. He came back to San Diego in 1978 and began playing in a duo with guitarist Paul Martin at the Anchorage Fish Company in La Jolla. Their repertoire consisted of Union Gap favorites, classics by the Beatles and Buddy Holly, and then-current hits by such acts as Little River Band and Exile.
In 1980, Puckett began working with SRO, a San Diego lounge band, and asked Kicks magazine publisher Tom Arnold to manage him despite the fact Arnold had never managed any music acts. In early 1981, Puckett launched a new band with the goal of fueling a comeback and obtaining a recording contract.
After doing some warm-up gigs in Las Vegas, the group did a homecoming show at the Bacchanal in Kearny Mesa. The performance received such a tepid review in the San Diego Union that, after reading it, Puckett fired the band, fired his fledgling manager and shelved his comeback attempt.
"We did play at the Bacchanal, which I think was a mistake," Puckett said. "All these years later, Tom and I are still friends."
Puckett maintained a low profile until 1984, when the Turtles launched their first Happy Together Tour and invited Puckett and a reconstituted Union Gap to be one of the acts in the multi-band lineup. His star rose significantly higher in 1986 when he and The Union Gap joined the Grass Roots and Herman's Hermits on the Monkees' 20th anniversary reunion concert trek.
That tour included a show at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium, making Puckett the only artist in memory to go from playing at the Anchorage Fish House to the home of the San Diego Padres baseball team.
"It was a spectacular tour, the biggest of the year," he said. "And it was our good luck that radio stations began playing the music of our generation again. The Monkees certainly put us back on the map."
In a Union-Tribune interview previewing the San Diego tour stop of the 2012 Happy Together Tour, the then-69-year-old Puckett referred to himself as "an old man." Had anyone told him then that he'd still be touring 13 years later, how would he have reacted?
"I would not have believed it!" Puckett replied. "I would have said: 'You've got to be kidding.' This year I'm doing 59 or 60 Happy Together Tour shows and about 40 more on my own.
"There are times when I honestly want to say: 'OK, I am done touring. I want to spend time with my family and swim with my grandkids.' There are other times when I am so inspired being on stage and inspired by the enthusiasm of the audience shaking my hand and thanking me. So, I have no idea how long I'll keep doing this. I'll let go of the reins when the time comes."
Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Five-year-old 'runs away' from home to avoid bath
Five-year-old 'runs away' from home to avoid bath

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Five-year-old 'runs away' from home to avoid bath

This is the hilarious moment a five-year-old tried to run away from home to avoid taking yet another bath. London Bird, from Utah, had endured daily baths to tame her coarse, curly hair during a busy school week. On day five, she silently packed essentials and marched out—only to return minutes later, claiming her mum had said they were off to the park. Mom Shannon, who filmed the drama, said London was 'completely resolute' until she changed her mind.

Pusha T Gets Candid About Fallout With Ye Ahead Of Clipse Album Release
Pusha T Gets Candid About Fallout With Ye Ahead Of Clipse Album Release

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Pusha T Gets Candid About Fallout With Ye Ahead Of Clipse Album Release

Pusha T is done holding his tongue when it comes to Kanye West, now simply known as Ye. In a candid new interview with Ebro Darden for Apple Music, the Virginia lyricist opened up about his public fallout from Ye, and the unraveling of their once-close friendship. Ahead of The Clipse's highly anticipated reunion album Let God Sort Em Out set for relase tomorrow (July 11), Pusha sat down to reflect on why his relationship with Ye is no longer what it used to be. 'I feel like me and Ye, we don't gel,' he admitted to Darden. 'Where I am right now in my life, I'm not with anybody who ain't on my team — especially when I've been on your team.' Pusha explained that Kanye's habit of aligning with people who don't support him was the final straw. 'He champions and stands next to anybody and everybody who don't f**k with me,' he said, clearly frustrated. 'And I don't get that. I don't understand that.' The former G.O.O.D Music president, who helped shape some of Ye's most iconic records and vice versa, didn't hold back on how much the shift has stung, especially as their musical collaborations remain undeniable. 'Why would you ever say anything negative about the music we created when you know it slaps?' Pusha said, adding that while Kanye may have his reasons for the distance, he no longer cares to figure them out. Watch at the 45:11 mark below. This isn't the first time Push has spoken out on their fallout. In an earlier GQ interview, he made it clear that the respect he once had for Ye had faded — not just professionally, but personally. 'We made some great sh*t, bro,' he told the outlet. 'He's a genius. But that's why me and him don't get along, because he sees through my fakeness with him. He knows I don't think he's a man. He's shown me the weakest sides of him, and he knows how I think of weak people.' Their creative bond helped produce career-defining tracks like 'Runaway,' 'Mercy,' and the classic track 'Infrared' — which led to Pusha's infamous feud with Drake in 2018. Push officially stepped away from G.O.O.D Music in 2022 after Ye's antisemitic comments caused widespread backlash. 'He's not speaking to me now,' Pusha told XXL at the time. 'If you ain't with it, you ain't down. And I ain't with it. I'm not budging on that.' Still, Ye has had moments of regret. When Clipse released their comeback single 'Say Less' earlier this year, the Vultures artist took to X to post: 'I miss me and Pusha's friendship.' But that nostalgia didn't stop him from going on frequent rants including one recent livestream where he questioned Pusha's loyalty. 'Pusha T, all that tough guy sh*i. Where the tough guy sh*t?' Ye said. 'I bled for you. I asked for one thing: use your voice, your stability.' He then took credit for helping Pusha take down Drake in 2018, calling himself the foundation of Pusha's most notorious diss track. The comment left fans wondering if Kanye genuinely wanted reconciliation or just recognition. In the years since their fallout, Ye has thrown jabs from afar, even telling Akademiks that Pusha should stay quiet about his political beliefs given all he's done for his career. 'If you ain't gonna speak on my behalf with the situation I'm in right now with my children, don't talk about my political views,' Ye said. Aside from the on-and-off antics of Ye and his split from his bromance with Pusha T, The Clipse are gearing up for one of Hip-Hop's biggest drops of the year. More from Ye Fans Demand Refunds Following Chaotic Shanghai Concert Did Travis Scott Diss Pusha T On His New 'Jackboys 2' Album? Ye Hit With New Sex Trafficking Allegations From Former Assistant

Ron Dante, voice of the Archies, now sings with the Turtles: ‘Honor the songs'
Ron Dante, voice of the Archies, now sings with the Turtles: ‘Honor the songs'

Miami Herald

time14-07-2025

  • Miami Herald

Ron Dante, voice of the Archies, now sings with the Turtles: ‘Honor the songs'

SAN DIEGO - Few singers have been as widely heard but remain as little known as Ron Dante, who is now on the "Happy Together Tour" as the lead singer in the Turtles. Fewer still scored their biggest successes - completely uncredited - in the 1960s as the fictional lead singer in the highest-rated Saturday morning cartoon TV series in history, then became the voice of Coca-Cola, Campbell's Soup, Dr Pepper, McDonald's and Budweiser in ubiquitous national TV jingles. That series, "The Archie Show," debuted in 1968 as an adaptation of the popular comic book, "Archie." Both iterations featured the titular teenage character and his pals Jughead, Betty, Veronica and Reggie, who were also the members of the animated band the Archies. The nonexistent group's frothy 1969 song, "Sugar, Sugar," was the biggest-selling single of the year in the U.S., topping the Rolling Stones' "Honky Tonk Women," Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Proud Mary," the Beatles' "Get Back" and a slew of other classics. The song was later recorded by Wilson Pickett, Ike & Tina Turner and Bob Marley, among others. Dante was the lead singer on nearly all the singles and albums released under the Archies' moniker, including "Sugar, Sugar." It also rose to No. 1 in Mexico, Norway, South Africa, Brazil and 10 other countries. "Sugar, "Sugar" did so, even though the Archies only existed in cartoon form and never performed a single concert or even a single song live. "It's very interesting when your song goes No. 1 and they play it on TV on 'The Ed Sullivan Show,' and all they play is the cartoon!" said Dante, who will celebrate his 80th birthday on Aug. 22. He is performing with the current iteration of the Turtles, who headline the annual Happy Together Tour's 2025 edition. The lineup also includes Little Anthony and the current iterations of Jay and the Americans, the Vogues, Gary Puckett & The Union Gap and the Cowsills. "I was a journeyman singer and went where the work was," he explained. "I was fine with the anonymity. When I took on the job with the Archies, it was right up front that I would not be credited or promoted as having anything to do with them. But all in all, it's been great for my life." Was it easy or difficult for Dante to create a musical personality for cartoon characters? "I was well-versed with the Archies because I'd read all the 'Archie' comics and I knew what they were going for with the TV series," he replied, speaking from his Los Angeles home. "The show had two new songs each week and was produced by Don Kirshner, who had achieved great success with 'The Monkees.' He had a great team with (songwriter) Jeff Barry, and I knew what voice to bring to 'Sugar, Sugar,' 'Bang-Shang-A-Lang' and the other Archies' songs." Dante laughed. "I knew we were not Led Zeppelin!" he said. 'We were going for a younger market, a 9- to-13-year-old bubblegum market, of kids who were just discovering pop music. So, I put myself in that mindset and I knew I had to be respectful and sound clean cut." In 1969, the year the Archies peaked, Dante also did all the vocals - again uncredited - on "Tracy," a No. 9 hit that was credited to another nonexistent group, the Cuff Links. To cash in on the song's success and a subsequent album for which Dante recorded all his parts in barely two days, a band called the Cuff Links was hastily assembled and sent out on tour without him. Dante was all of 23 when the Archies hit it big. But he was already a music-biz veteran who had written songs recorded by Jay and the Americans ("Raining In My Sunshine") and Gary Lewis & the Playboys ("Ice Melts in the Sun"). He went on to co-produce all of Barry Manilow's albums between 1973 and 1980, as well as albums by Ray Charles, Cher and others. He also contributed backing vocals to albums by Steely Dan and the hard-rocking power trio Mountain. 'Caravan of Stars' Dante was just 18 when he co-founded a short-lived trio, the Detergents, which made one album. The group's lone hit, "Leader of the Laundromat" - a parody of the Shangri Las' 1964 chart-topper, "Leader of the Pack" - rose no higher than No. 19 on the national Billboard charts. But before they washed out, the Detergents did a national Dick Clark "Caravan of Stars" concert tour. It also featured Little Richard, the Animals and Little Anthony and the Imperials, whose lead singer, Anthony Goudine, is part of this year's Happy Together Tour and, at 84, the oldest artist in the lineup. "Anthony is four years older than me and he still sounds like his 20-year-old self," Dante said. "We played cards together on the 'Caravan' tour bus in 1965. Now, we've come full circle and we're on the bus together again." The Happy Together Tour debuted in 1984 and was named after the Turtles' chart-topping 1967 hit, "Happy Together." The tour ran through 1987 with a rotating cast of artists and the Turtles as the headliners. It resumed in 2010, again with the Turtles topping the bill each year. After he toured as an opening act on the 2017 Happy Together tour, Dante returned the next year to replace the ailing Howard Kaylan as the lead singer in the Turtles. He has retained that role on each subsequent tour, singing alongside Turtles' co-founder Mark Volman, who continued touring after being diagnosed in 2020 with Lewy body dementia. The same disease afflicted comedian Robin Williams before he died by suicide. A number of bands that rose to fame in the 1960s continue to tour. But few of them still have any original members left in their current iterations. "People don't really know who is in the Association or the Grass Roots. They know the songs," said Dante, who performs several Archies' hits during the Turtles' Happy Together Tour sets. "When Mark called me in 2018 and asked me to be the lead singer in the Turtles, he said: 'You have to be true to the music. You're not Howard; we're not going to dress you up in costumes and have you do comedy. So, honor the songs and do them the way we recorded them.'" Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store