Genya Ravan is an important rock & roll personality and influential vocalist and record producer. Born Genyusha Zelkowitz on April 19, 1945, in Lodz, Poland, her mom later changed her first name to Goldie. Born during WWII, her parents left Poland and were interred in a Russian camp. Of her experiences during the war, she said, "We lost everyone. I never had an aunt or an uncle, I had two brothers, they died. I never met my grandparents, it was me and my sister and my mom and dad. They came from big families and saw all of them die. We escaped to the U.S. via a ship. We were DPs and went straight to Ellis Island."
Young
Goldie Zelkowitz didn't know she could sing until she was in her late teens. In the summer of 1962, she asked to sing with the Escorts, who were performing at the Lollipop Lounge in Brooklyn, New York. Soon she was rehearsing with the band and became
Richard Perry's first girlfriend (he was the bass vocalist in the group and the man who would go on to produce
Ringo Starr,
Carly Simon,
Leo Sayer,
the Pointer Sisters, and so many others). The Escorts recorded and released a few singles on Coral Records in 1962 and 1963: "Somewhere" b/w "Submarine Race Watching," "I Can't Be Free" b/w "One Hand, One Heart," and "Something Has Changed Him" b/w "Back Home Again."
After she left the Escorts,
Zelkowitz formed
Goldie & the Gingerbreads, an all-female band and a daunting task in a male-dominated industry.
The Gingerbreads released singles on Decca and Immediate in the U.K., with "Can't You Hear My Heart Beat," produced by
Alan Price of
the Animals, hitting on the British charts. (Their manager,
Michael Jeffries, also worked with
the Animals.) Atlantic Records founder
Ahmet Ertegun signed
Goldie & the Gingerbreads to his Atco imprint and released their singles in the U.S. After
the Gingerbreads,
Zelkowitz formed the electric and brass rock group
Ten Wheel Drive and took the name
Genya Ravan.
A drummer named
Les Demerle turned
Ravan on to
Bill Takas and
the Brecker Brothers. She met
Aram Schefrin and Mike Zager through her manager
Billy Fields, and the electric and brass rock group
Ten Wheel Drive was born.
Ten Wheel Drive recorded three albums for Polydor with the rhythm and horn sections changing constantly.
Judy Collins' bassist
Bill Takas and
Buzzy Linhart/
Bette Midler drummer
Luther "Leon" Rix were members of the original
Ten Wheel Drive, playing on the band's first album, Construction #1.
Midler used
Ten Wheel Drive's signature tune,
Jerry Ragovoy 's "Stay with Me," in her movie The Rose.
After leaving
Ten Wheel Drive for a solo career,
Ravan had philosophical disagreements with
Clive Davis at
Columbia; he felt her self-titled album debut, like
Ten Wheel Drive's, went in too many directions for his taste. Not content to be the new
Janis Joplin,
Ravan instinctively knew her value as an extraordinary vocalist and music pioneer. Her first album features the band
Baby backing her, and she worked with myriad producers, though she felt more comfortable with Zager and
Schefrin handling that chore. The 1972 non-album single, "Morning Glory," is a fine example of her talent at the time. It is important to note, though, that this was not
Ravan's solo debut -- she had released an Island Records 45 rpm in 1966 under the name Patsy Cole. "This is a whole other story" she said. "I walked in on a session in London to do background with
Dusty Springfield. When she left, the session was over. I started to play piano and sing an old song that
Baby Washington & the Hearts did and
Chris Blackwell loved it, so he said 'Let's roll tape' and he had to give me another name, I was under contract, and that single went on to be a hit in Jamaica and I believe it got to number one. I had
Spencer Davis,
Georgie Fame horns, and
Stevie Winwood playing on that single and used the name Patsy Cole."
Zager &
Schefrin re-formed another iteration of
Ten Wheel Drive and released an album in 1974 on
EMI with latter-day
Rascals vocalist
Annie Sutton performing a
Ravan co-write, "Why Am I So Easy to Leave." Meanwhile,
Ravan went on to cut more solo records, the brilliant
Goldie Zelkowitz (Janus Records) with the underrated
Gabriel Mekler producing, and They Love Me, They Love Me Not with the late
Rolling Stones producer
Jimmy Miller and
Stones' engineer
Joe Zagarino producing. Her incredible body of work kept building albeit with no Top 40 chart recognition that songs on the albums warranted. She reunited with
Miller in 1986 for the unreleased
Buddy Guy tapes that also feature
Nils Lofgren,
Aerosmith's
Joe Perry, singer Jo Jo Laine, and others. During the sessions in Warren, Rhode Island, both she and
Miller got on-stage to jam with
Buddy Guy while he performed an evening show at one of the city's nightclubs. It was absolutely magical.
Ravan took things into her own hands and the "significant projects (are) Urban Desire and ...And I Mean It! (both on 20th Century)...because I wrote most of it and I got to produce it. (They were) also the best-sellers for me." Indeed,
Ravan began producing for other acts, most notably the groundbreaking punk band
Dead Boys on Sire Records, and then
Ronnie Spector's Siren album for
Ravan's own imprint, Polish Records, with the handle "Who Do I F*** to Get Off This Label?"
In addition to producing female artists,
Ravan was one of the very first woman to produce significant male artists.
Dead Boys' "Sonic Reducer" is an underground classic and one of the better-sounding albums that Sire heralded as part of the new wave rock movement.
Ravan produced numerous groups, from Joy Rider,
Crumbsuckers, and
Certain General to
Long John Baldrey,
Kool & the Gang,
Tiny Tim, and others. Her visibility as a vocalist is at times overshadowed by the huge amount of production and industry work she took on.
In 2001, she released For Fans Only, a collection of songs recorded over the years and then available only from her website. She has been a painter and a recording artist, and at the dawn of the new millennium was busy writing a book/screenplay about her incredible life in the music industry. From major girl group and blues vocalist to pioneering record producer and performances with
Steve Winwood,
Dusty Springfield,
Buddy Guy,
Kool & the Gang, and so many others, the music industry would be a different place without the vast contributions of
Genya Ravan. ~ Joe Viglione