The leader of the Los Angeles band Love can rightly be considered one of classic rock music’s stars who should have been, admired by such other artists as Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Neil Young, to name but a few. A native of Memphis, Tenn., who grew up in Los Angeles, Arthur Lee played in a number of bands and wrote songs recorded by other artists before Love emerged onto the mid-1960s Sunset Strip scene that also yielded such legendary acts as The Doors, Byrds and Buffalo Springfield. Love’s sound was a diverse mix of folk-rock, psychedelia, proto-punk and more.
The group featured both Lee and Bryan MacLean as singers and songwriters and guitarist Johnny Echols, and was the first rock band signed to the folk label Elektra Records. Its 1966 self-titled debut album included its single of Burt Bacharach’s “Little Red Book” that remains a cult favorite but was not liked by the song’s writer. The second Love album, De Capo, contained the band’s highest-charting single, “7 and 7 Is” (which reached #33), a precursor of the punk movement a decade later. The group’s third release in 1967, Forever Changes, was a commercial flop on release but has come to be considered a visionary masterpiece of late 1960s rock.
Related: Our Album Rewind of Love’s “brilliant” Forever Changes
Lee led a variety of versions of Love following the dissolution of its primary original line-up after Forever Changes and also recorded and performed under his own name. He did a five-and-a-half year stint in prison after being convicted on a weapons charge in 1996. Lee enjoyed a bit of a career revival when he toured after his release from jail in a new version of Love that included Echols. He suffered from acute myeloid leukemia for a number of years before he succumbed to the disease in his hometown of Memphis.
The band’s recordings are available here. Forever Changes: The Authorized Biography of Arthur Lee is available here.
Related: Love is on our list of crucial Rock Hall omissions
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3 Comments so far
Jump into a conversationI remember buying this album in 1966 when I was 16 years old. It was the first time I heard “Hey Joe” not like Hendrix played it but just a way bit faster. At the time this was a new kind of raw rock and I played this album quite a bit. Little did I know that I would be a teenager in the middle of the greatest rock era. the amount of rock to emerge in the next five years was just about to hit me. there’s never been a more creative time like that since. Boy, were we lucky..
Wow, ‘Forever Changes’ was a flop!? I remember listening to this beautiful album at various friend’s pads at the time. Great tunes with highly original arrangements. I guess “Alone Again Or” was a single? Not as strong as “7 & 7 Is”; not punchy enough, the whole album was wonderfully laid~back and reflective actually, perfect for stoney days and nights in late ’67. “The Red Telephone’ was my fave track.
“Forever Changes,” is an incredibly emotional album and I would recommend it to everyone.
Arthur and Love’s other recordings are great too. In fact, all the albums are worthy of spending on.