Lotti Golden’s Motor-Cycle Reissued by High Moon Records

by | Mar 31, 2025

Courtesy High Moon Records

Courtesy High Moon Records

    By Harvey Kubernik © 2025   

    I remember in late 1969 when an acquaintance of mine, Heather Harris, an editor at the UCLA Daily Bruin Entertainment Section received a copy of the Bob Crewe-produced Lotti Golden debut LP Motor-Cycle on Atlantic Records. 

    Harris, and another concert pal of mine, Nancy Rose Retchin at Palisades High School, were big fans of Laura Nyro, and both knew I liked female singers and poets. 

     In winter of 1969 I first heard Golden’s Motor-Cycle on KPPC-FM in Pasadena, CA., and got my own copy of the album at Wallichs Music City in Hollywood. I had read reviews of her in Newsweek and The New York Times when I stocked shelves in the library at West Los Angeles Junior College in Culver City.  

   Golden’s stream of consciousness lyrics was influenced by the beat generation and Jack Kerouac. Motor-Cycle wasn’t Brill Building pop music, but songs about narcotics, gender identity,  the ramifications of involvement and urban alienation from a Thrill Building tunesmith who was the landlord doing the reporting.  

    In 2025, Harris, now a noted music photographer and journalist, http://heatherharris.net, emailed me after we heard the High Moon reissue of Motor-Cycle

    “Ahmet Ertegun and Atlantic were thrilled with their own new Laura Nyro, the young Ms. Golden circa the late 1960s/early 70s, insofar as she was literate, intelligent, captivating looking, way past the confines of hipster/alternative conformity with a hella holler when that soprano wanted to reach the stratosphere. Atlantic dutifully provided me with its own copy wherein of course we all loved its excesses. After all, this era begat the nascent Alice Cooper Band….

     “Back then, I noted some of the young lady’s social acquaintance crowd name-checked in those harrowing songs, like Silky Silkman (and her baby, also eponymously named Silky.) Now a hard to Google name, in 1970 Silky warranted a whole chapter in the famed Rolling Stone paperback Groupies and Other Girls book of gorgeous studio photography by Baron Wolman, with snippets and outtakes of RS’ notorious 1969 issue on groupies, which featured the better known GTOs, Catherine James, assorted NYC and SF ladies plus the Plaster Casters. 

    “The song in which Silky appears, ‘Space Queens’ is about Golden’s outrageous gay male Greenwich Village playmates, although the same might apply to the interview of Ms. Silkman in the Wolman book. Therein she dismisses various partners as being ‘too heavy’ (not a reference to weight) and ‘a Pisces!’), while dressing in mannish caps, trench coats and short short hair while complaining that her men are not sufficiently butch. Maybe not a lot of self-awareness going down here.

     “This is mentioned because in the late 60s, most all my contemporaries were far better at self-analysis than Ms. Silky, and far more like Lotti Golden with her diamond-hard, confessional songwriting as here in this fascinating form on the CD.  I knew lots of accomplished, pretty young women like Ms. Golden, just few with those Laura-Nyro-esque pipes, and the bravery to write of transgressive fun like enjoying drugs. 

    “This CD will set the Wayback Machine to place you in the late 1960s world of Warhol hangers on, East Village others, and all your wild friends of your youth. It’s still hard to top Pavement’s Stephen Malkmus’ description of one of Golden’s eight-minute story tunes as ‘The song keeps building and she’s screaming about drugs.’”    

  George Wallace’s High Moon Records is a boutique reissue record label, with a catalog comprised of essential releases featuring deluxe packaging, extensive liner notes by writers and authors, impressive artwork with never-before-seen archival photos, and re-mastered audio often with rare bonus tracks.

   The Motor-Cycle High Moon package includes lavish, 32-page LP and 48-page CD books with extensive liner notes detailing the story of how the teenage Lotti Golden came to make an album as singular and audacious as Motor-Cycle. With exclusive essays by Richard Hell and David Toop, and a wealth of archival photos, including more than 30 never-before-seen photographs by pioneering rock photographer, Baron Wolman. 

    “Motor-Cycle transported me back to the ’60s in a way not many records do…There’s no irony or second-guessing: Golden’s all in, a psychedelic daughter of the Beat generation, among her equally hippie cohort, in swirls of free-loving, drug-chasing, multiracial, pan-sexual abandon… The album is a mother lode, not unlike Daniel Johnston or The Shaggs, say, for its multi-level fascination.” – Richard Hell. 

   Along with the original album track listing, the Motor-Cycle CD includes the rarely heard Atlantic single “Sock It to Me Baby/It’s Your Thing” b/w “Annabelle with Bells (Home Made Girl).”

     Golden’s 2025 vinyl, CD and digital download has earned praise:     

     “An extraordinary song suite provoked by a teenager’s six months immersed in New York’s late-’60s underground…visionary, hypnagogic” -– UNCUT 9/10 Reissue of The Month – February, 2025.

    “The LP features big downtown production and Golden’s awesome vocals – she can really belt. Imagine if Ronnie Spector made a bonafide psych LP later in the ‘60s and that gives you some idea.” —-POPSIKE.

          Motor-Cycle is a singular record of the singer-songwriter era. The combination of Golden’s poetic temperament and Crewe’s bold vision was truly original.  

   A High Moon Records announcement provided additional information on their teaming.   

    “Crewe wanted the vocals raw and real, true to Motor-Cycle’s story, and Golden unflinchingly held her own in the studio. Crewe insisted on recording Golden’s vocals live in one take, an experience she had described as akin to ‘performing an entire Broadway musical, live in the studio.’ By pushing Golden’s voice to its emotional limits, Crewe achieved the desired effect, a spontaneous authenticity that remained true to her poet-outlaw narrative. From her R&B inflections and velvety rock intonations to gospel riffs, Golden’s vocals are nimble and dynamic, giving every song exactly what it needs.

Courtesy High Moon Records
Lottie Golden, New York City, 1969. Courtesy High Moon Records.

    “An ambitious suite of phenomenal pop power and originality, Motor-Cycle chronicles Lotti Golden’s immersion in New York City’s late-sixties counterculture. Underscored by a genre-bending soundscape, the action plays out on New York’s East Village and Lower East Side, populated with a coterie of philosopher-lovers, faux gurus, grifters, malcontents, and groupies. 

    “Born in Brooklyn, Golden inherited a passion for music and art from her parents. As a teen, she began writing original songs, discovering a distinctive talent as both wordsmith and vocalist. In 1966, 16-year-old Golden landed a publishing deal with Bob Crewe’s Saturday Music as a staff songwriter – a dream gig which would give her the opportunity to hone her songwriting skills and produce song demos. Even with this early success, Golden had other plans. She was not just a songwriter – she was an artist, with her own story to tell.

   “In early fall of 1967, Golden was singing in an elevator on her way to a recording session. The door opened and Golden immediately recognized the owner of Saturday Music, producer-arranger-songwriter Bob Crewe. Renowned for his uncanny pop sensibilities and innovative productions, Crewe had worked with the Rays, the Four Seasons, Diane Renay, the Toys, and Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels.  

    “Intrigued, Crewe set up a meeting. Golden brought her material to Crewe, who upon hearing the outrageous characters populating her songs, exclaimed, ‘Good God, who are your friends?’ Crewe was sold on the project and began shopping demo tapes to a major label with just the basic rhythm tracks and Golden’s vocal. 

    “Though only 16 when she started writing the songs that would become part of Motor-Cycle, Golden wrote candidly and compellingly about a world quite different from the fading norms of 1950s America and the flower-power clichés of the 1960s, with vividly personal accounts of street life that presaged urban troubadours like Jim Carroll, Bruce Springsteen, and Patti Smith.

        “After just one listen, Ahmet Ertegun and Jerry Wexler, industry giants and execs at Atlantic Records, bought the demo tapes, with Wexler declaring that Golden would be the greatest single pop artist since Aretha Franklin. Golden’s impromptu elevator audition had netted her a high profile, major label signing, and sky-high expectations.”  

     Lotti Golden penned every song on Motor-Cycle, except for one with Bob Crewe. 

     In May of 1975, I interviewed Crewe for the now defunct UK music periodical Melody Maker. 

     He explained his songwriting collaborations and record productions.

     “I try and get the most from al the artists I work with. That’s the secret of how someone who doesn’t have the big voice or the big facility can get a unique sound and make the record sound like it belongs to them. I write from experience. How else can you do it? I like to write for certain people. Sometimes you come up with a song that doesn’t have anybody’s name on it.”      

    After signing the deal, Golden and Crewe set to work at the famed Studio A at Atlantic Recording Studios, 1841 Broadway, completing the LP in eight sessions. Though Golden had worked out the songs with a “sparser concept of what would be added to basic guitar and vocals,” Crewe had something far bigger in mind. The producer brought a sprawling, multi-dimensional approach to the Golden’s grand songcraft, layering funk grooves, rock riffs, psychedelic soul, Southern blues guitar, big band sounds and myriad of other stylistic elements along with horns, strings, bells, timpani, a boys’ choir, and more.

     In certain respects, in 1969, Motor-Cycle was meant to challenge the listener, especially during an era when pop singles rarely topped the three-minute mark or strayed from a handful of well-worn song structures. All of the original album’s seven tracks are over five minutes and none contain a typical verse/chorus/bridge structure, instead employing radical changes in tempo, genre, and mood. 

    With its ambitious and eclectic musical arrangements, extended instrumental interludes, vivid cast of characters, and storylines that span multiple songs, Motor-Cycle may well be the first rock concept album by a female artist, chronicling the ecstasies and tribulations of a scrappy cohort of outsiders as a metaphor for resurrection and redemption. 

    Needless to say, I was delighted to learn High Moon Records was re-releasing Motor-Cycle in 2025.     As for the saga of Motor-Cycle, perhaps Michael Fremer in March 2025 at https://trackingangle.com › sums it up best.  

      “If you’ve not heard this album—and I hadn’t heard it or heard of it until it arrived and I put it on my turntable, you won’t believe your ears. Golden is a supercharged original soul-singer who by age of 19 had absorbed the vocal and rhythmic essences of everyone from Otis Redding to Aretha Franklin to Martha Reeves, to Carla and Irma Thomas—you’ll hear what you hear when you hear— to invent her own sound. And yes, you’ll hear Laura Nyro too, but the relationship there is more in the rhythms and song writing than the voice, which is far more brute force.

    “Why and how this album was orphaned and abandoned by Atlantic and why it failed—the whole story—is brilliantly told in great and appropriate detail with photos and printed ephemera in the attractively-produced and well-annotated 32-page booklet with additional essay by Richard Hell and David Toop (perhaps known to some readers as the author of the ambient/techno music book Ocean of Sound).

   “Perhaps you’ll come away from first listen thinking ‘How did I miss this for more than fifty years? And how did this record not become a sensation when first release?’ Well, for one thing, it takes a lot of luck and for another, it didn’t fit in a Sam Goody or Tower Record slot. The other reasons are found in the outstanding annotation.” 

      In the years since it was initially shipped to retailers in summer of 1969, Motor-Cycle has found popularity via fanzines, the Internet, social media and in 2025 from High Moon Records.  

    As for Lotti Golden’s career the last half century, don’t feel sorry for her as a criminally neglected solo recording artist whose major label debut disc wasn’t a commercial success.    

   Many decades ago, guitarist, keyboardist and vocalist Golden wisely transitioned from songwriter/recording artist to record producer and achieved RIAA certified Gold and Platinum record success in various musical genres. 

   Golden with Richard Scher wrote, produced or remixed hits by Diana Ross, the Manhattans, and Brenda K. Starr. 

    In the eighties Lotti established a productive studio relationship with producer Arthur Baker, co-producing a Jennifer Holiday chart record. Golden worked with Baker and Steven Van Zandt on the multi-artist landmark anti-Apartheid recording and video, Artists United Against Apartheid, Sun City, singing on the endeavor and also appearing in the video.  

    Last century Golden was introduced to songwriter and record producer Tommy Faragher, after signing with MCA Music. Later she re-inked with Universal Music Publishing Group. The Golden/Faragher team wrote hit singles for the Jets, Brenda K. Starr and Taylor Dane. Celine Dion, Al Green, and B.B. King also cut their tunes.  

   As record producers, Golden and Faragher produced the British R&B girl band Eternal, the first female group to sell one million album sales in the United Kingdom. 

  Journalists and authors have pointed to Golden’s groundbreaking and innovative work in urban dance, electro and hip-hop music. Lotti is featured in David Toop’s The Rap Attack: African Jive to New York Hip Hop. Golden’s contributions to hip-hop as part of electro pioneers Warp 9, Motor-Cycle has been sampled by producer Madlib, Amon Tobin, and Eels singer/songwriter Mark Oliver Everett, pka “E.”    

 (Harvey Kubernik is the author of 20 books, including 2009’s Canyon Of Dreams: The Magic And The Music Of Laurel Canyon, 2014’s Turn Up The Radio! Rock, Pop and Roll In Los Angeles 1956-1972, 2015’s Every Body Knows: Leonard Cohen, 2016’s Heart of Gold Neil Young and 2017’s 1967: A Complete Rock Music History of the Summer of Love. Sterling/Barnes and Noble in 2018 published Harvey and Kenneth Kubernik’s The Story Of The Band: From Big Pink To The Last Waltz. In 2021 the duo wrote Jimi Hendrix: Voodoo Child for Sterling/Barnes and Noble.       

Otherworld Cottage Industries in 2020 published Harvey’s Docs That Rock, Music That Matters. His book Screen Gems: (Pop Music Documentaries and Rock ‘n’ Roll Television Moments) is scheduled for 2025 publication.         

Harvey wrote the liner notes to CD re-releases of Carole King’s Tapestry, The Essential Carole King, Allen Ginsberg’s Kaddish, Elvis Presley The ’68 Comeback Special, The Ramones’ End of the Century and Big Brother & the Holding Company Captured Live at The Monterey International Pop Festival.   During 2006 Kubernik spoke at the special hearings by The Library of Congress in Hollywood, California, discussing archiving practices and audiotape preservation. In 2017 he appeared at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio, in their Distinguished Speakers Series).

By Harvey Kubernik
Harvey Kubernik is the author of 20 books. His literary music anthology Inside Cave Hollywood: The Harvey Kubernik Music InnerViews and InterViews Collection Vol. 1, was published in December 2017, by Cave Hollywood. Kubernik’s The Doors Summer’s Gone was published by Other World Cottage Industries in February 2018. It was nominated for the 2019 Association for Recorded Sound Collections Awards for Excellence in Historical Recorded Sound Research.
Harvey Kubernik ©
2025
By Harvey Kubernik
Harvey Kubernik is the author of 20 books. His literary music anthology Inside Cave Hollywood: The Harvey Kubernik Music InnerViews and InterViews Collection Vol. 1, was published in December 2017, by Cave Hollywood. Kubernik’s The Doors Summer’s Gone was published by Other World Cottage Industries in February 2018. It was nominated for the 2019 Association for Recorded Sound Collections Awards for Excellence in Historical Recorded Sound Research.

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