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A cult waiting to happen, musician and performance artist
Peter Ivers was born in Boston in 1946. During the mid-'60s, while a classics (ancient Greek) major at Harvard University, he launched his performing career playing harmonica in the local band Beacon Street Union, one of a number of Boston-area psychedelic bands influenced by San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury scene. Signing to MGM, Beacon Street Union issued the little-noticed LP The Clown Died in Mervin Gardens before dissolving;
Ivers then surfaced as a member of the Street Choir before mounting a solo career.
He signed to Epic in 1969 to issue
Knight of the Blue Communion, certainly one of the strangest major-label releases of its time: combining rock with classical instrumentation (oboe, contrabass, and bassoon) and electronics (an intermodulator), the disc also featured opera singer
Yolande Bevan, profoundly spiritual lyrical themes, and, to top it all off,
Ivers' own piercingly nasal vocals. Suffice to say it was not a hit, and a second Epic LP,
Take It Out on Me, was completed but shelved by the label; only a single, "Ain't That Peculiar," ever saw commercial release.
Signing to Warner Bros. in 1974,
Ivers and his co-producer, free jazz bassist
Buell Neidlinger, delivered
Terminal Love, which at times suggests the work of
Captain Beefheart; indeed,
Magic Band/
Frank Zappa collaborator
Eliot Ingber appears on several tracks. A self-titled album for Warner followed in 1976, and a year later,
Ivers earned arguably his most enduring fame, writing and recording "In Heaven (The Lady in the Radiator Song)" for
David Lynch's classic film Eraserhead. (The song was later covered by another Boston act of some note,
the Pixies.) A 1980 single, "Love Theme from Filmex," closed out his recording career, and during the early '80s,
Ivers hosted New Wave Theatre, broadcast on the fledgling USA cable network as part of their Friday evening Night Flight anthology; the series provided the first (and in some cases only) national TV exposure for Los Angeles area bands like
the Blasters,
Dead Kennedys, and dozens of others. With his outrageous wardrobe, philosophical interview questions, and rapid-fire social commentaries,
Ivers was a most unconventional host, and many of the artists featured on the show made their distaste for him painfully clear.
Ivers was bludgeoned to death in his L.A. apartment in 1983, and many suspected the murderer was a member of the local punk scene. The killer was never found, but in
Ivers' memory, Harvard University initiated the Peter Ivers Visiting Artist Program. The retrospective
Nirvana Peter appeared on Warner in 1985. ~ Jason Ankeny