Erik Braunn - Touch My Heart, Lift My Soul - 2011
Erik Keith Brann (August 11, 1950 – July 25, 2003), also known as Erik Braunn, was an American guitarist with the 1960s acid rock band Iron Butterfly. He is featured on the band's greatest hit, the 17-minute In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida (1968), recorded when he was 17.
A Boston, Massachusetts native and a violinist, Brann was accepted as a child into the prodigy program at the Boston Symphony Orchestra, but was soon lured away to become a rock guitarist, joining first Paper Fortress, then Iron Butterfly at 17. He played with Ron Bushy, Lee Dorman and Doug Ingle from late 1967 to December 1969. The first album from this lineup, In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, sold over 30 million copies, was awarded the first platinum award and stayed on the Billboard magazine charts for nearly three years. With arrangement assistance from Dorman, Brann wrote the song "Termination", which was featured on the album. He also provided the lead vocal for the track.
The album's mini-bio, written when he was 17, tells of an acting ambition he once had, clothing and food preference and the ease with which rock 'n roll artists were able to arrange sexual encounters (usually with groupies). It reads: "Although music has always been his one great love, Erik studied drama and before joining the Butterfly, his acting ability had landed him the lead role in a local play.
In 1970, Brann and former Iron Butterfly member Darryl DeLoach formed Flintwhistle. This band performed live for about a year before breaking up. Between 1972 and 1973, Brann worked solely in the studio on various demos. In 1973, he recorded a couple of demos with MCA Records which can be found on bootleg sites. Notable songs from these demos include early versions of "Hard Miseree", "Am I Down" and "Scorching Beauty".
In 1974, he was contacted by a promoter about reforming Iron Butterfly, so he reunited with Ron Bushy to form a new version of the group, signing with MCA. The 1975 LP Scorching Beauty featured Brann on guitars and vocals, Bushy on drums, Philip Taylor Kramer (Bushy's friend) on bass and Erik's friend Howard Reitzes (who worked in a music store frequented by Brann) on keyboards. The band also released Sun and Steel in late 1975 with Bill DeMartines replacing Reitzes on keyboards. Neither album sold well, and the band disbanded shortly afterward (around summer 1977).
Between 1979 and 1990, Brann occasionally reunited with Iron Butterfly for concerts. He died in 2003 of a cardiac arrest related to a birth defect that he had struggled with for years.
01. Heart Misery
02. Break This Heart Of Mine
03. Don't Give Up
04. Give Me Some Of Your Love
05. Going Back Home
06. Can't Make It Without You (Scorching Beauty)
07. Guitar Interlude
08. Evoree Day
09. Beneath The Laughing Sun
10. Can't We Just Be Friends
11. Beautiful Lady
12. Another Guitar Interlude
13. Wait
14. So Sad I Have To Leave
15. Touch My Heart, Lift My Soul
16. Reprise
Wow!!! I did not know this existed. Many many thanks
ResponderExcluirThanks for one I have missed Hope it is a good one Bill @24HR
ResponderExcluirNice post, thank you! I was totally unaware of Eric Brann's work after Iron Butterfly.
ResponderExcluirVery cool! Thanks.
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