Question Mark + the Mysterians’ 96 Tears: The Riff

by
Share This:

Question Mark Mysterians 96 Tears LP CoverIn the beginning, there was the riff: a mere eight blues-infused notes, one of the most memorable in the history of riffs, played on a Vox Continental organ. Then came the melody line, so giddily repetitious, so simple a child could play it, so hypnotic, so beautiful in its utter lack of pretense.

And then…the voice:

“Too many teardrops for one heart to be cryin’, too many teardrops for one heart to carry on.”

The tale that follows is one that’s been told a million times before and since: You did me wrong, but you will get yours yet. Oh, will you get yours! The chorus:

“And when the sun comes up I’ll be on top
You’ll be right down there looking up
I’m gonna get to you but I know now
You’re gonna cry 96 tears
You’re gonna cry 96 tears”

But had it ever been told in quite this way? By a group quite like this? No. Never. Not then, not since.

This ad for “96 Tears” appeared in the Sept. 3, 1966 issue of Record World

In the summer of 1966, when all of the rules were being broken—Pet Sounds, Revolver, Blonde on Blonde—there was something so primal about ? and the Mysterians’ “96 Tears.” Like many other tunes that year by fellow one- or two-hit garage-incubated wonders—the Seeds, the Count Five, the Syndicate of Sound, the Standells, the Shadows of Knight—it was tough and direct. It hit you in the gut; it didn’t ask you to interpret: “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands” this was not. Instead, it asked you to surrender to the beat, to dance, to revel in its pure rock ’n’ roll heart.

And millions did, even if they had no idea who they were listening to. Who were these mysterious Mysterians? And who the #%*@ was ? Someone really called himself Question Mark? What kind of crazy person dared use a punctuation mark as his name?

Rudy Martinez, that’s who—not that he’d ever confess to that moniker ever having belonged to him. Their leader, their singer, dark shades omnipresent, swears not only that ? is his real name but that he was born on Mars, that he’s been around since the dinosaur days, that he converses regularly with people from the future. This band that he had, says the main Mysterian, “came together out of the clear blue sky.” He says all this not in an ironic way but knowing that it is true. Disbelieve him if you want, but that’s his story and he’s sticking to it.

The single reached #1 on Oct. 22, 1966 on Record World

Maybe they did come together out of the blue. Maybe not. Who can be sure? Some say they were from Bay City, Michigan. And the others, they had names that didn’t end inquisitive sentences, so at least some of the musicians were from our world: Larry Borjas (bass), Robert Martinez (drums) and Bobby Balderrama (guitar) were original 1962 members. ? (yes, it is his legal name, although sometimes he will allow you to call him Q) showed up around 1964. At some point. Frank Rodriguez joined on keyboards. Robert and Larry left, replaced by Eddie Serrato on drums and Frank Lugo on bass.

Mysterians? A 1957 Japanese sci-fi movie in which alien Mysterians from the planet Mysteroid come down here looking for our women.

? didn’t write “96 Tears,” he swears. He channeled it—it came to him; it was just there. It was there long before there was a ? and the Mysterians, in fact, around for years before any of them had seen the inside of a recording studio. It was called “Too Many Teardrops” at first. Then “69 Tears.” Someone told the boys that radio stations wouldn’t play a song with 69 in the title. They flipped it. Their manager issued 750 copies on her own Pa-Go-Go label. Someone at Cameo-Parkway Records—where Bobby Rydell, Dee Dee Sharp and Chubby Checker all lived—heard it and thought, hmm, hit.

That someone was right. In August 1966, it was re-released on the larger label. It went to #1 on October 29 in Billboard, and one week earlier in Record World.

Watch a TV performance from ’66

Related: See where the song ranked overall in 1966

Fifteen years later Garland Jeffreys had a top 10 hit with his version. U.K. prog punks the Stranglers covered it and so did blues singer Big Maybelle and R&B diva Thelma Houston.So did Aretha Franklin. Think about that before you watch this bonus video: “96 Tears,” by Aretha Franklin. We live in a wonderful, mysterious Mysterian world.

Bonus video: Aretha Franklin covers “96 Years”

Best Classic Bands Staff

15 Comments so far

Jump into a conversation
  1. M. B Goode
    #1 M. B Goode 22 August, 2016, 21:00

    Always one of my favorite songs as a kid. First time to see this video. Awesome!!

    Reply this comment
    • Melf
      Melf 14 December, 2021, 02:08

      Thanks for the Billboard single charts, 1966.
      An amazing variety of artists, 96 years was good, but look at the artists, Eric Burdon with See see rider, the Stones.
      The Stones have defied being mortals, and are still giving it what they got!
      Monkees very Memorable, sad only one monkee is left.

      Reply this comment
  2. Soledad
    #2 Soledad 27 August, 2016, 01:15

    I love every article: Badfinger, Richard Barone, Pete Townshend, ? Mark … Thank you!!

    Reply this comment
  3. Litsi
    #3 Litsi 28 August, 2016, 21:08

    This song definitely holds up

    Reply this comment
  4. Billy K.
    #4 Billy K. 25 February, 2018, 20:58

    Speaking of the Continental, KORG has a new updated version of that keyboard, and it is super cool!

    Reply this comment
  5. Rick
    #5 Rick 30 October, 2019, 15:38

    Love this Website!

    Reply this comment
  6. Hal
    #6 Hal 15 July, 2020, 00:32

    The show “Where The Action Is” teased ? for weeks before finally having them on the show! Yes I do remember that!

    Reply this comment
  7. Blondie
    #7 Blondie 15 July, 2020, 01:23

    The original Q

    Reply this comment
  8. Timflyte
    #8 Timflyte 16 July, 2020, 02:04

    I’ve read where it was a Hammond on record and the Vox was just used for live performances. Great story though. Im enjoying these articles.

    Reply this comment
  9. Alias Pink Puzz
    #9 Alias Pink Puzz 29 October, 2020, 15:18

    Aretha’s version of “96 Tears” is amazing! I got to see her in one of her final concerts in Ft. Wayne, Indiana. When she sat at the grand piano and starting singing gospel — the concert climbed to heaven!

    Reply this comment
  10. Andy Cahan
    #10 Andy Cahan 30 October, 2020, 14:09

    Well as it is in my autobiography, in My Demo doctor recording studio in 1998,
    ? Told me that the organ was broken. And the only notes that were working were the three notes that were used on 96 Tears.

    Reply this comment
    • Batchman
      Batchman 29 October, 2022, 19:36

      That can’t be true. I count 6 notes used on the organ: G, B, B flat, D, E, D sharp. And that’s not even counting the intro.

      Reply this comment
  11. Goldy
    #11 Goldy 30 October, 2021, 08:45

    I read somewhere that Mel Schacher, original bass player for Grand Funk Railroad (and currently their lead guitarist and vocalist), played with ? and the Mysterians. Any truth to it?

    Reply this comment
  12. SHE WHO DANCES
    #12 SHE WHO DANCES 30 October, 2022, 02:43

    saw them on channel 13 an oldies concert..my mom loved this song. he came out in a bare midriff top..tight pants..a kooky hat and shades..i was shocked..my mom remembered that he dressed and sounded exactly the same as he did when she was young…the music today..trash!! i love the 50’s 60’s 70’s…guess that is why i keep listening to it…

    Reply this comment

Your data will be safe!Your e-mail address will not be published. Also other data will not be shared with third person.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.