The Travel Agency formed in San Francisco and released their self-titled LP, produced by Bread's James Griffin, on LA's Viva Records in 1968. Drummer Frank (real name Francisco) Lupica joined a little later, prior to the LP. Lupica had previously been in Us, a Bob Segarini-led garage band who'd recorded for the Autumn label in 1965 but whose sole 45 was not released due to a dispute over arrangements between Segarini and the label they split soon after and Segarini went on to lead a succession of more successful bands (Family Tree, Roxy, Wackers).
Side One is the stronger; the haunting and stately neo-prog keyboard intro which blossoms into the poppy What's A Man, strong fuzztone on Cadillac George, and gentler love songs Lonely Seabird and So Much Love. There are fast commercial rockers (Make Love and Old Man) and catchy pop (That's Good). Perhaps because of this diversity and the lack of band identity, thanks to the absence of any member info or credits, the album was overlooked and remains underrated.
Steve Haehl and Frank Lupica reappeared a couple of years later in Shanti, whose eponymous Eastern-influenced LP was released in 1971. Two tracks thereon were composed by non-member Mike Aydelotte, aka Michael Sage when he was in Travel Agency. Lupica went on to a solo career and, billed as Francisco, performed one-man shows all over California playing numerous exotic instruments including a self-built electrified I-beam; adorned with keyboards and other devices, he dubbed it the Cosmic Beam. In 1976 he released his proto-new age LP, Cosmic Beam Experience.
In the same year he was musician and composer for Tanka, a very short animated film about Tibetan thank gas (images from the Tibetan Book Of The dead) alongside former Shanti bandmates Ashish Khan and Pranesh Khan;
in 1979 he was sound effects creator for Star Trek The Motion Picture; and in 1998 his music was used and sampled in the film The Thin Red Line. He played viola the Deep Song CD by Ranee Lee.
by Max Waller with thanks to Jeff Jarema.
Tracks1. What's A Man - 5:06
2. Sorry You Were Born - 3:08
3. Cadillac George - 4:42
4. Lonely Seabird - 3:21
5. So Much Love - 3:02
6. Make Love - 2:25
7. That's Good - 6:57
8. I'm Not Dead - 2:17
9. She Understands - 3:10
10.Come To Me - 3:16
11.You Will Be There - 2:16
12.Old Man - 2:12
13.Time – 2:35
14.Made For You – 2:09
15.Emit – 2:34
16.What's A Man – 3:08
17.She Understands – 3:07
All songs by Steve Haehl, Michael Sage, Frank Lupica
Bonus Tracks 13-17
The Travel Agency
*Steve Haehl - Guitar, Vocals
*Michael S. Aydelotte aka Michael Sage - Bass
*Francisco (Frank) Lupica - Drums
Eyxaristw poly Marie!!! To epsaxna poly kairo...
ReplyDeleteI have the album on vinyl. Now where´s the link to the digital???
ReplyDeletein the cloud larry, in the cloud... just beyond your vinyl entitlement :-D
ReplyDeleteGreat album. Thank you very much!!!!
ReplyDeleteThe link was blocked by Mozilla- switched to Chrome and Im AOK. I dont have a turntable at the moment and am replacing some of my vinyl with digital.
ReplyDeleteJust another geezer in cyber space- anyway thanks for the tunes havent heard these in years.
A really cool album and a very underrated one I think.
ReplyDeleteI would certainly recommend it!
Thanks for posting this.
ReplyDeleteI just listened to it. Did you rip it from the Chrome CD included in the pictures of the artwork? That would mean the CD is actually transferred from vinyl :-/
I had the LP but sold it a couple of months ago, as I believed the various CDs were made from the master tapes, so now I get a transfer from vinyl instead...
Oh Mario, this is the vinyl version that sounds like shit. Any chance you could pick up the 2012 remastered CD?
ReplyDeleteCraig Smith, new links added.....
ReplyDeleteThanks dude! :)
ReplyDeleteA GREAT ALBUM. its to bad they didnt follow it up with a second album. With out strong backing many 60s Bands struggled to get noticed outside of local and regional air time.
ReplyDelete