The band that became
Quicksilver Messenger Service originally was conceived as a rock vehicle for folk singer/songwriter
Dino Valente (b. Nov. 7, 1943, d. Nov 16, 1994), author of "Get Together." Living in San Francisco,
Valente had found guitarist
John Cipollina (b. Aug. 24, 1943, d. May 29, 1989) and singer Jim Murray.
Valente's friend
David Freiberg (b. Aug. 24, 1938) joined on bass, and the group was completed by the addition of drummer
Greg Elmore (b. Sep. 4, 1946) and guitarist
Gary Duncan (b. Sep 4, 1946). As the band was being put together,
Valente was imprisoned on a drug charge and he didn't rejoin
Quicksilver until later.
They debuted at the end of 1965 and played around the Bay Area and then the West Coast for the next two years, building up a large following but resisting offers to record that had been taken up by such San Francisco acid rock colleagues as
Jefferson Airplane and
the Grateful Dead.
Quicksilver finally signed to Capitol toward the end of 1967 and recorded their self-titled debut album in 1968 (by this time, Murray had left).
Happy Trails, the 1969 follow-up, was recorded live. After its release,
Duncan left the band and was replaced for
Shady Grove (1970) by British session pianist
Nicky Hopkins. By the time of its release, however,
Duncan had returned, along with
Valente, making the group a sextet.
This version of
Quicksilver, prominently featuring
Valente's songs and lead vocals, lasted only a year, during which two albums,
Just for Love and
What About Me, were recorded.
Cipollina,
Freiberg, and
Hopkins then left, and the remaining trio of
Valente,
Duncan, and
Elmore hired replacements and cut another couple of albums before disbanding. There was a reunion in 1975, resulting in a new album and a tour, and in 1986
Duncan revived the
Quicksilver name for an album that also featured
Freiberg on background vocals. ~ William Ruhlmann