Scott McKenzie
Wikimp3 information about the music of Scott McKenzie. On our website we have 7 albums and 70 collections of artist Scott McKenzie. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Scott McKenzie represents Pop genres.
Biography
[Edit]Scott McKenzie was the perfect example of a one-hit wonder, although his talent and voice made him worthy of (and ultimately did earn him) somewhat more. Born Philip Wallach Blondheim in Jacksonville, Florida, in 1939, he was raised in Virginia, and was drawn to music and singing from an early age. Among the friends and acquaintances of his youth was John Phillips, who — in addition to being a rebel from the military family in which he grew up in Alexandria, Virginia — was also pulled toward music. The two ended up together in a late-'50s folk-influenced vocal group called the Smoothies, whose harmony-singing owed a lot to the Four Freshmen, and who enjoyed one minor hit (authored by Phillips) entitled "Softly," on the Decca label. His stage name came about from an incident while performing with the Smoothies in Ontario, as he related in a 1991 interview with Spencer Leigh. They were on a bill with a pair of comedians, and the latter suggested — perhaps picking up on one corner of his Anglo-Scottish ancestry — that Blondheim resembled a Scottie dog, and started calling him Scott. Phillips added the "McKenzie" from the name he'd given to his daughter MacKenzie (born 1959) — the two names seemed to fit together.
McKenzie and Phillips worked together again in the Journeymen, a New York-based folk trio that got far enough to cut a short string of albums for Capitol in the early '60s, none of which gave them the breakthrough they needed for a sustained living. They'd parted full-time company by the time that Phillips put together the New Journeymen, which eventually morphed into the Mamas & the Papas. McKenzie kept active in New York, even performing at one of the pavilions at the 1964 World's Fair, while the latter group assembled and later headed west to fame and fortune in 1966 and 1967 — Phillips did produce a single for McKenzie on the Epic label that failed to chart, and the singer also failed an audition for a role as one of the Monkees (he apparently looked too old, at 24). McKenzie joined in helping to put together what was then known as the First Monterey International Pop Music Festival (there never was a second), organized by Phillips and producer Lou Adler, and at his suggestion Phillips wrote a song commemorating the event but, more importantly, embodying what it meant to celebrate. The result was "San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," perhaps the most successful pop/hippie anthem ever recorded. With McKenzie's smooth yet passionate and piercing vocal delivery (backed by the same band that had played behind the Mamas & the Papas on their records, and creating the same illusion of a unified group sound), a seductive melody, and vivid lyrics behind a languid overall tone and lush textures, the song soared to number four in America and hit number one in England and much of Europe.
And McKenzie became an overnight success that summer. Indeed, the single's success was so swift and unexpected that it caught McKenzie and those around him unawares. Lou Adler had used "San Francisco" to launch his new Ode Records label, and as a new operation, with a new artist whose work was roaring up the charts, the company was slower than it otherwise might have been getting the accompanying album recorded and released. It turned out that McKenzie was much more than a one-song artist, but by the time anyone who knew him from just the one record on the radio could find that out, interest in the song had cooled, and the album never reached the audience that it should have. Additionally, he suffered from bouts of stage fright of varying degrees at different points in his life, and never concertized as much as someone with a Top Five single might have. He charted once more with "Like an Old Time Movie," a beautiful but much more introspective, angst-ridden Phillips song that was backed by one of McKenzie's own songs, "What's the Difference - Chapter II," which made the Top 30 but never had the impact of "San Francisco." Despite a prodigious singing talent and serious (albeit oft-overlooked) ability as a songwriter, McKenzie never seemed to go out of his way to capitalize on his huge success — he and Phillips collaborated on one more single, "Holy Man," late in 1967, which went into much more serious and complex pop/rock territory, and failed to chart. And that was most of what anyone heard from him on record until 1970.
He re-emerged that year with a country-rock album, Stained Glass Morning, that passed relatively unnoticed. He dabbled in acting but was missing in action as a pop/rock artist across most of the decade that followed. In 1984, however, John Phillips gave a concert at the Bitter End in New York where, near the end, he announced an appearance by a special guest — and lo and behold, Scott McKenzie walked on-stage and, with Phillips strumming along on acoustic guitar, the two performed "San Francisco" to a two-thirds-filled room of mostly longtime fans. McKenzie was subsequently part of a revamped, re-formed Mamas & the Papas put together by Phillips, taking Denny Doherty's old role in the vocal mix (as Doherty had more or less finished with his role in the transition from the Journeymen to the Mamas & the Papas). And he co-wrote the latter-day chart-topping Beach Boys hit "Kokomo." He was still one of the Mamas & the Papas at the end of the 1990s, but after 2001 — the year of Phillips' death — was officially retired from the music business. McKenzie himself died just over ten years later, at home in Los Angeles, in August of 2012 at the age of 73.
Title: San Francisco (Live) - Single
Artist: Scott McKenzie
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Rock & Roll, Punk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Title: Stained Glass Morning
Artist: Scott McKenzie
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Collections
Title: Woodstock Generation Forever
Title: Million Sellers Woodstock '69
Genre: Rock
Title: Yasgur's Farm 60s Hits
Genre: Pop
Title: Out of Your Head: More 60s Classics
Genre: Pop
Title: FORREST GUMP 2 CD
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: The No. 1 Hits - 1967
Title: Compact Disc Club - I Love Shake CD 4
Genre: Pop
Title: 100 Oldie Collection CD 4
Genre: Pop Rock
Title: 100 Oldie Collection CD 27
Genre: Pop Rock
Title: Summer In The Sixties CD 1
Genre: Pop Rock
Title: Golden Love Songs Vol. 6 - Need Your Love So Bad
Genre: Pop
Title: Pacha Ibiza Flower Power CD1
Genre: Pop
Title: 100 Movie Hits (CD1)
Genre: Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Peace & Love - The Woodstock Generation (CD1)
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Pop, Pop Rock
Title: Las 101 Canciones Del Cine (Disc 4)
Genre: Pop
Title: Greatest Hits From The Movies (CD1)
Genre: Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Best Of 10 Jahre Radio Arabella
Genre: Pop
Title: Bau Do Dj (CD1)
Genre: DJ/Remixes
Title: Absolute 60s (CD2)
Title: Impresindibles M80 (CD4)
Title: Schmusesongs Vol. 2 (CD3)
Genre: Pop
Title: Sounds Of The The Sixties - 1967 (CD2)
Genre: Pop Rock
Title: Rock Legends (CD2)
Genre: Rock, Alternative Rock, Hard Rock, Rock & Roll
Title: Pure 60s (CD1)
Genre: Pop
Title: Cinema Songs
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Das Beste Aus Dem Musik Laden
Genre: Pop
Title: Das Beste Aus Dem Musik Laden Die Legendaeren Pop Hits
Genre: Pop
Title: Die Hit - Giganten - Flower Power (CD1)
Genre: Blues, Rock, World Music, Latin, Pop
Title: Absolute Sixties
Genre: Pop
Title: La Saga Des Tubes De L'ete (CD1)
Genre: Dancefloor, Pop
Title: Q - Music Top 500 Van De Zomer (CD2)
Genre: Dancefloor, Pop
Title: Super Oldie Hits (CD2)
Genre: Rock, Dancefloor, Pop
Title: 100 Hits For Ever (CD3)
Title: Monterey Pop Festival 1967 (CD1)
Genre: Blues, Rock, World Music, Pop
Title: Top 100 Hits Forever Hits 70s 80s 90s (CD3)
Genre: Pop
Title: Pure... Singer Songwriters (CD2)
Genre: Pop
Title: Golden Retro Hits 3 (CD2)
Genre: Pop
Title: Golden Retro Hits (CD6)
Title: Oldies - 100 Hits Of 70s And 80s (CD2)
Genre: Rock, Country, Pop, Pop Rock, Theatre/Soundtrack, Retro
Title: RocknRoll Vol 7 (Best Love Songs) (CD2)
Genre: Rock & Roll
Title: The 70s
Genre: Dancefloor, Disco, Pop
Title: Top 40 - Sixsties (CD1)
Genre: Pop
Title: Kuschelrock Vol. 2 (CD1)
Genre: Rock
Title: Bremen Eins Bulli Power (Die Hoerer Kult Hits)
Genre: Rock & Roll, Pop, Pop Rock
Title: American Highway (CD3)
Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative Country, Alternative
Title: 100 Nr. 1 Hits Vol. 1 (CD4)
Featuring albums
Title: Pop Music: The Golden Era 1951-1975
Artist: Various
Genre: Blues, Rock, Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack, Vocal & Symphonic
Title: Rock Artifacts, Vol. III - from the Vaults of Columbia and Epic Records
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Pop
Title: Flower Power (CD3)
Artist: Fetenhits
Genre: Soul, Blues, Rock, Rock & Roll, World Music, Country, Funk, Folk, Fusion