17 Pygmies
 

Biography

17 Pygmies officially began in 1982 when then Savage Republic member Jackson Del Rey (aka Philip Drucker) began jamming in a garage with keyboardist and guitarist Michael Kory (Radwaste) and drummer, soon to be singer, Debbie Spinelli from Food & Shelter and Radwaste. The group’s first composition was an odd, kind of surf-a-delic, Emerson Lake & Palmer inspired cover version of the theme music to David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia. Since no one was around to say stop, the band quickly devolved into a kind of spooky instrumental and 80’s style techno-pop band, and by the time the Pygs, as they were now known to the five people including the band members who knew them, started covering Brazilian sambas (and just before the release of their first EP) Robert Loveless, now a member of Savage Republic, signed on as bass player/keyboardist.

That “Hatikva,” EP quickly led (minus Kory, who left to pursue an alternate path to obscurity) to 1984’s full length LP “Jedda By The Sea.” “Jedda” was an album short on the letter “h” but long on musical innovation and is still considered a “post-punk” masterpiece by those same five people including the band members who though “Hatikva” was worth releasing. Next came 1985’s “Captured In Ice” which interestingly contained the non-hit “Chameleon” which made a very influential list called the 100 greatest unknown techno songs. All this obscurity led to several personnel changes (the only permanent idiot,,,er band member is Del Rey) which of course led to the release in 1989 of “Welcome” on the Island Records subsidiary Great Jones label. And they say contrary thought won’t get you anywhere. Well, it didn’t and the band was dropped the next year (1990) that saw the self- release of the last demos for Island as the EP “Missyfish”.

Ironically (or is it iconic) 17 years later, the “13 Blackbirds/13 Lotus” double CD was released under the indie record label Trakwerx, with original member Del Rey and Welcome era singer Louise Bialik in tow. Another fine fellow worth mentioning, guitarist Jeff Brenneman from White Glove Test also joined the fray. Soon after, there were more personnel changes, and the band reformed as The 17th Pygmy with Meg Maryatt (a contributor on 13 Blackbirds/13 Lotus) on vocals, guitar and accordion, Tony Davis, from White Glove Test on bass and Dirk Doucette, also from White Glove Test, on drums.

Thus, in October 2007, “Ballade of Tristram’s Last Harping” was released, which reflected a retro ‘60s Psychedelic-‘70s Classic Rock direction under the name "The 17th Pygmy". Ballade is also a visual tribute to the Art Nouveau movement. The Art Nouveau style is probably best exemplified by the works of Gustav Klimpt and Aubrey Beardsley both of whose works were liberally borrowed from (but never credited) on the covers of many, many, many ‘60s albums.

With Jackson Del Rey’s newfound creativity writing experimental prog rock scores to classic silent films (“Battleship Potemkin”,“Nosferatu” & “Tarzan of the Apes”), he had the idea to record a concept album, “Celestina” (loosely based upon the classic 15th century Latin novel La Celestina, a timeless tale of love and betrayal). 17 Pygmies return to their original name, perhaps for good, and continue on in the tradition of their signature sound that was first explored and presented on their classic 1984 release “Jedda By The Sea”.

Not to rest on their laurels, 17 Pygmies have just released their newest concept project “The Outlaw J.D. Ray”. This time around, Blind Lemony Pledge Fresh Jackson and his posse (western, not rap) use post-civil war folk music and pre-WWII blues as the backdrop to a story of ambition, deceit, and of course love lost and found (you know, basic tragedy stuff) and of course, redemption. With of course, a washboard.

Continuing in the Trakwerx tradition from 13 Blackbirds/13 Lotus remixes of “Lotus”, 17 Pygmies have joined the ‘Trakwerx Collectiv’ and contributed 2 short film scores: “Lightwerx: Georges Melies” DVD (released in November 2009) : “Princess Nicotine” & “L’Artiste Et Le Mannequin”. 11 other contributors have joined in the fray with wildly different musical efforts, combining alternative, folk, hip hop and experimental elements.

17 Pygmies perform the last song (Stay With Me) for Jackson Del Rey’s original film score set to the 1918 silent film “Tarzan of the Apes”, based on Edgar Rice Burroughs’ story, directed by Scott Sidney.

CII: Second Son was released Jan. 1, 2011 and has already garnered attention worldwide as a forward-thinking symphonic prog rock work of art.

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Music

CIII: Even Celestina Gets the Blues (A Tale of Love and Quantum Physics)
2012
Musically, CIII is clearly reminiscent of Celestina and CII, but also an obvious departure into additional genres. Originally conceived as music for a string quartet, it incorporates simplified classical structures and sounds.
MP3: $9.99 CD: $12.97
Reviews
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CII: Second Son
2011
Part Two in a three part series based on the story Celestina. Musically the album is a tribute to all of the unique 1950s-60s era science fiction motion pictures, perhaps reminiscent of early Tangerine Dream, with more experimental space rock sounds.
MP3: $9.99 CD: $12.97
Reviews
0
 
Jedda By the Sea
2010
Experimental post-punk soundscapes, from '80s synthetic pop to tribal instrumentals
MP3: $9.99
Reviews
0
 
Captured In Ice
2010
1985 College radio success - 'new wave' and synth pop songs featuring the still popular "Chameleon" and "Suit Of Nails"
MP3: $9.99
Reviews
0
 
The Outlaw J.D. Ray
2009
Partly blues, partly folk, partly Americana, partly indie rock, partly progressive, partly (you get the picture) the Pygmies utilize the Brian Wilson "whatever works" aesthetic to get their musical vision(s) across.
CD: $12.97 MP3: $9.99
Reviews
0
 
Celestina
2008
Part One in a three part series based on "Celestina", a space rock concept album about a doomed space flight by a bunch of astronauts getting high on pure oxygen while exploring a giant gas nebula in the constellation Cassiopeia. Really.
MP3: $9.99 CD: $12.97
Reviews
0
 
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