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London, who lives in Gainesville and goes to school at the University of Florida, was unavailable for comment.
Based solely on their chaotic, impassioned, and intense live shows, Fay Wray's dissolution is sad enough. It's even harder to deal with, though, because that dissolution comes just as the band's debut album was set to be released any day now on Blindspot, an indie label based in Gainesville. The twelve original songs span the gamut of punk-rock frustration and release, from the ablutionary anthem "Father to Son" to the rambunctious drive that propels "High & Outside," "Pot Pie," and "Baywatch."
Although Graquitena says Blindspot is still going to release the disc, its commercial faring will be severely hampered by there being no Fay Wray to go out and tour in support of it. The album will most likely make it on to the local radio playlists and therefore generate enough posthumous interest to guarantee at least a smidgen of sales. Still, it deserves a better fate.
Whatever happens with the album, the remaining Miami-based members of Fay Wray -- Graquitena, Coe, and bassist Tony Rocha -- have enlisted ex-Quit guitarist Bobby Henion and reactivated their old band Cell 63 for a few as-yet-unscheduled shows. Cell 63 were around for about four years and issued a pair of discs on their Cellout imprint (Cell 63 and Once Upon a Drunk) and drew some critical notice in South Florida before breaking up in early '95. Expect their live sets to include songs pulled from the Fay Wray archive, at least until Cell 63 work up some new stuff.
"We're hoping to wipe the slate clean," Graquitena reflects. "I really liked what we were doing with Fay Wray but ... I don't know. Jeff just left a bad taste in our mouth."
If you don't mind, a digression of sorts: In my final years of teendom, as a goofy high-schooler paying more attention to records than to the selection of a higher learning facility, I was burrowed deeply in the history of rhythm-and-blues. Not so much the raw, pre-war acoustic blues from the Mississippi Delta (that obsession would come later), but the raucous, hard-swinging stuff from the Forties and Fifties -- the salacious, entendre-packed shouters by Wynonie Harris, Roy Brown, and Big Joe Turner; the honking instrumental classics by sax greats Big Jay McNeely, Paul Williams, and Maxwell Davis; the piano-boogie workouts by Amos Milburn, Pete Johnson, and Ivory Joe Hunter; and the urbane swing of Roy Milton's and Jimmy Liggins's outstanding jump-blues combos. It was the greatest stuff my young ears had ever heard, music that conjured images of swank cocktail dens and rough moonshine roadhouses, of two pairs of hips grinding closely to the swinging rhythms, lost in a boozy kind of sexual bliss.
Shimmying right through the middle of this adenoidal musical history lesson came "Honky Tonk," a two-part instrumental by a pianist named Bill Doggett. The song -- a huge hit in 1956 for the famed King label -- had been mentioned in a lot of the books I was reading at the time, and when I found a copy of the single in an oldies bin at a downtown Memphis record store, I was elated. When I got home and played the record, though, my elation turned to wild jubilation: "Honky Tonk" was the supreme distillation of every weird, exotic R&B sound I had been poring over. From the subtle opening vamp of Billy Butler's guitar (working a twelve-bar riff worthy of the finest Las Vegas strip bars) to the hard-blowing sax of Clifford Scott that brings the song to its side-two close, "Honky Tonk" was a masterpiece of tension and release held together by the low rumble of Doggett's slinky organ work and some of the greatest handclaps ever recorded.