The Sparrows

Barely Appreciated

THE SPARROWS
 
 
The Sparrows  (or The Sparrow) was a Canadian blues rock band that existed in the 1960s and had evolved out of Jack London & The Sparrows.  Notable for being the first group to break out musician John Kay into the mainstream, The Sparrows later morphed into the popular heavy rock group Steppenwolf.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

That brings me back to the original topic at hand:  If Germans and Dutch could fluently speak the language of rock and roll, how much easier is it for Canadian rock musicians to blend in seamlessly with the larger rock world.  Canadian rock stars are common, even if not everyone knows that they are Canadian:  Neil Young is a long-time favorite of mine who is from Toronto, Ontariothe Guess Who, from Winnipeg, Manitoba, had numerous hits in the 1960’s and 1970’s and had a spinoff band as well called Bachman-Turner Overdrive, with lead singer Burton Cummings also having a lucrative solo career; Steppenwolf evolved from a Canadian rock band called the Sparrows (Mars Bonfire, a former Sparrow wrote their massive hit Born to be Wild); and the band that Janis Joplin headed for her final album, Pearl (after she left Big Brother and the Holding Company), the Full Tilt Boogie Band is from Stratford, Ontario.  Even the seemingly quintessential American band called The Band was actually composed of Canadians with the exception of Levon Helm; they once released a single under the name the Canadian Squires

 

(April 2013)

 
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The writer of the first hit song for SteppenwolfBorn to be Wild is listed as Mars Bonfire; but that is clearly no one’s birth name.  It is not even the man’s first stage name; when he was a member of the predecessor band to Steppenwolfthe Sparrows, he used the name Dennis Edmonton.  He was born Dennis McCrohan; he and his brother Jerry Edmonton (born Gerald McCrohan), who was also in the Sparrows, had changed their surnames at the same time.  Interestingly, Mars Bonfire had his song shopped to other bands before Steppenwolf got their shot at it; one was a Los Angeles psychedelic rock band called the Human Expression.  Front man Jim Quarles chose one of Bonfire’s songs, “Sweet Child of Nothingness” as the “A” side for the band’s third single; but he wasn’t impressed with Born to be Wild and passed on that song. 

 

(August 2013)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021