The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States |
Genres | |
Years active | 1966 | –1968
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Past members |
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The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 were an American garage rock band formed in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1966. Experimenting with inventive vocal arrangements and fuzz-toned guitar melodies, the group was a forerunner in the musical genre of psychedelic rock. The band released what is commonly agreed by music historians as the first psychedelic single by a native New Mexican group, with their debut "I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)".
Formed in 1966, the band was originally known as the Playmates, and included members Victor Roybal (organ), Eddie Roybal (drums), Mike Layden (lead guitar), Joe Abeyta (rhythm guitar, backing vocals), and Ernie Gonze (bass guitar). The group soon recruited Danny Houlihan (lead vocals), and replaced Abeyta with Eddie James, who already had prior experience performing with the Champs. With the addition of two members, the Playmates decided a name change was in order. It was initially suggested by Houlihan to rechristen the group the Fe-Fi-Fo-Fum, as a reference to the phrase said by the giant in the fairy tale "Jack and the Beanstalk"; however, feelings toward the proposal were split and, as a compromise, they agreed on the Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 (equating to the total number of band members).
The band performed around New Mexico, developing a sizable following and hiring Tommy Bee as their manager in the process. Bee arranged a recording contract with Lance Records, resulting in the Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 being guided through the recording process with record producer Norman Petty, who had past successes with Buddy Holly and the Fireballs. The group entered Norman Petty Studios in late 1966 to record Houlihan's "I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)", a song about an individual struggling to escape the horrors of a bad LSD trip. With bone-chilling wails and distorted guitar melodies, "I Wanna Come Back" has all the elements of early psychedelic rock. Speaking about the band's hallucinatory sound, keyboardist Victor Roybal explained why the group was eager to branch out from usual pop music: "We were looking for a new and original sound. Much of what we had been doing [was] performing top 40 sounds which people requested to hear".