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Goddo - They were formed in the mid seventies by ex-Fludd bassist and vocalist Greg Godovitz and featured guitarist Gino Scarpelli and drummer Doug Inglis. Don't be fooled by our featured track - this stunning, laid back bluesy tune is hardly what Goddo were all about! They were actually an incredibly hard rocking outfit, sometimes even sounding a bit like AC/DC. Scarpelli was a really good guitarist, and this fact is well demonstrated on a track like "Under my Hat", from their "Live, Best Seat in the House" album, which came out in 1981. Their debut, self-titled album, was released on Polydor Records in 1977, and they went on to release a further two albums for the label before moving to Attic Records. Their albums are actually quite difficult to find, but if you do happen to spot one or two in your favourite CD store, they really are worth a spin.
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Biography by Darryl Sterdan
"If indeed it is lonely at the
top, who cares," quipped Goddo
on its second album. "It's
lonely at the bottom, too." That
rusty one-liner could have been
the band's motto. It succinctly
sums up not only the tumultuous
career of this long-serving,
hard-rocking Canadian power
trio, but also the fatalistic
humor with which the group
viewed the whole affair. Goddo's
technicolor dreams of global
domination never came true, but
that never seemed to stop the
band from enjoying its
decades-long rollercoaster ride
through the Canadian music
industry. Goddo's long, arduous
slog to the middle began in
1975, when bassist Greg Godovitz
left Toronto pop outfit Fludd.
Intent on forming a
harder-rocking group, Godovitz
recruited Hendrix disciple Gino
Scarpelli (of glitter rock
outfit Brutus) on guitar and
former school chum Marty Morin
on drums. Adding a consonant to
Godovitz's nickname for clarity
— too many people said Go-do
instead of God-o — the trio
braved the Canadian bar-room
grind, playing three shows a
night, six nights a week, with
day-long drives between gigs. A
year in these trenches was
enough for Morin, who became a
school bus driver, making room
for Ottawa drummer Doug Inglis,
a rock-solid timekeeper who also
happened to be a dead ringer for
Morin, thus saving the group the
cost of new publicity photos.
With a secure lineup in place,
the group's career began to
accelerate. A self-titled debut
album (featuring "Bus Driver
Blues," Godovitz's parting shot
at Morin) appeared in 1977,
introducing the group's hybrid
of meat 'n' potatoes rock,
poignant balladry, and
lascivious lyrics. It was
followed in 1978 by the
outstanding Who Cares. Produced
by Godovitz under the pseudonym
Thomas Morley-Turner — reputedly
to snow label execs who wanted a
"proper" producer — Who Cares
was Goddo's high-water mark. An
ambitious album for its time,
Who Cares fused poppier hooks,
classical passages, and comic
vignettes with libidinous
rockers such as "Sweet Thing," a
groupie ode that became the
band's signature song. Who
Cares' success spiked the band's
popularity. But as their income
and touring increased, so did
their drug intake and egomania.
While cutting their third CD,
1979's An Act of Goddo, at the
Bee Gees' studio, Godovitz
supposedly rebuffed
collaborative overtures from
Maurice Gibb by calling his
music "disco crap." Godovitz cut
his throat deeper by including
the anti-music biz screed "Sign
on the Line" on the album. An
Act of Goddo garnered little
critical or commercial
attention, and not surprisingly,
Goddo was soon label-less. The
band landed briefly at Attic
Records, which issued 1981's
Lighve: Best Seat in the House,
followed later that year by a
fourth studio album, Pretty Bad
Boys. Its poppy title-cut earned
Goddo its first (and only) hit
single, along with a Juno Award
nomination in 1982 — ironically,
for Most Promising New Group.
But it was too little too late.
Continually broke and at each
other's throats, the band
imploded in 1983. Scarpelli and
Inglis went on to other bands,
while Godovitz unsuccessfully
tried to float a new version of
the band (now called Godo) with
different members. By 1989,
tensions had eased and the trio
reunited, joined by original
drummer Morin on percussion. In
1990, Goddo issued the best-of
CD 12 Gauge Goddo, followed in
1992 by the studio album King of
Broken Hearts. When it tanked,
the group split again. In the
late '90s, Goddo regrouped once
more. In 2001, Goddo issued its
first CD in a decade, 2nd Best
Seat in the House: 25th
Anniversary Lighve, on Canadian
label Bullseye. After terrorist
attacks in the U.S. that year,
the band wrote and released a
single, "New York City's
Burning," to raise funds for the
Red Cross.


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Lita Ford
Blackfoot

If you
have any contribution to make to
this band or something to add,
email me - Japie Marais.


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