According to cover and sleeve of the LP, the Moosknukkl Groovband consisted in Mike Lewis (keyboards, percussion) Tommy Graham (Guitar, Percussion, Vocals), Brother Josh (Drums, Vocals) and John Morton (Bass, Vocals). Were they british? From US? The producer was well known though: Conny Plank, german krautrock-mastermind and later the man behind the mixing desk for Ultravox and the Eurythmics. Recorded in 1972 in Windrose-Dumont Studios in Hamburg, the album appeared on Spiegelei, a sub-label of the Intercord company specially installed for krautrock. But the Groovband’s music was neither electronic nor experimental but ordinary early-70s-bluesrock.
Nearly 30 years later, the internet opened up new possibilities for research. Some sources said Mike Lewis was Canadian. He studied composition in Munich in the mid-60s and later initiated several projects in the German avant-garde music scene. Alongside the American percussionist Michael Ranta and the German composition lecturer Karl-Heinz Böttner, Lewis released two compositions under the project title "Wired" for a sampler titled "Free Improvisation", to find here on youtube. At the mixing desk: Conny Plank. Several months later, Lewis, Ranta, and Plank recorded "Mu" - a recording session that wouldn't be released by Ranta on the Belgian label Metaphon until 40 years later.
However, how the Moosknukkl Groovband came to be and why five Canadians produced an unknown record in Germany remained a mystery on the internet. So, we had to do our own research. Spiegelei Records didn't exist anymore and Conny Plank couldn't be asked, the legendary producer passed away in 1987. Lewis' old friend Michael Rantal, however, was living in Cologne, according to Wikipedia. In response to an email, Ranta said that he had tried to find out what had happened to Mike Lewis himself years ago, but in vain. "It's very likely he's dead, but we have no confirmation for that."
On the Groovband LP, musician Tommy Graham was credited „In Courtesy of Capitol Records". Internet provided a Tom Graham, who was contracted at Capitol. The canadian (!) had recorded a LP with the title „Whole Earth“ in 1970. And currently google listed a worldmusic producer based in toronto with name Tom Graham. I sent him a Mail.
In parallel, we followed another lead. In the text on the LP cover, the musicians express their gratitude to Mr. Spitalney, their music teacher. Did the members of the Groovband already know each other long before the band was formed? Yes! In the archives of "The Ottawa Journal" newspaper, we found an article about a student band called the "Big Town Boys" from the year 1965. The musicians: Tommy Graham, Peter "Josh" Collins, and Mike Lewis! Further searches for the Big Town Boys led us to an article about the band in a blog about the Canadian Beat era. Here is mentioned that Mike Lewis had left Canada in 1964 to study music in Munich. The missing link to the time before the Moosknukkl Groovband was found.
And with the real name of "Brother Josh," his career could now be illuminated a bit more closely. In 1973, he recorded the LP "Garden of Delight" with the later Udo Lindenberg guitarist Andy Marx, with Josh also appearing as the drummer in this work. And the article from the blog confirmed something else: Today's producer Tom Graham was indeed Tommy Graham from the Moosknukkl Grooveband LP.
Tom Graham confirmed this himself via email. Almost 30 years after acquiring a completely unknown record, I now had contact with the guitarist of the recording, who lives in Canada. "Yes, that's me," the Canadian explained in an email. Yes, he still remembered the recording of the record well, he wrote, and even provided two band photos that were not from the LP cover - so now I own two photos of the Moosknukkl Groove Band that no one else in the world knows about except the band members. With the information from these two pictures, it was now possible for the first time to correctly assign the members to the band photo on the record. Left to right: John Morton, Mike Lewis, "Brother Josh" aka Peter "Josh" Collins und Tommy Graham
Left to right: John Morton, Mike Lewis, "Brother Josh" aka Peter "Josh" Collins und Tommy Graham
What did Graham still know? He said he still keeps in touch with Josh Collins, who lives in Montreal - just like Mike Lewis does!
Even before we can ask if he can somehow establish contact, chance intervenes. We had published the initial results of our search on this website in the autumn of 2014. A few weeks later, I received an email. "Cool website," it said. "I told my father about it - he is very flattered." The sender was Julian Lewis - Mike Lewis' son. He explained that every two years, he would search the web for traces of his father's work. And yes, his father was indeed still alive and would receive my email address. Days later, I stumbled upon an email with a female French name amidst all the dubious contact offers in the spam folder. "Hello, this is Michael Mike Lewis writing," the text began.