The Motels
In 1971, a young Martha Davis joined The Warfield Foxes, a band from Berkeley California. In 1975 they moved to Los Angeles and changed the band name to The Motels.
The new name was inspired on the way to the band’s first show at Barney’s Beanery. Guitarist Dean Chamberlain noted the motor inns as they drove down Santa Monica Boulevard and suggested “What about The Motels?”
The band broke up then reformed in 1978 with guitarist Jeff Jourard who brought in his brother Marty on keyboards and saxophone. Michael Goodroe on bass and Brian Glascock on drums rounded out the quintet. This lineup played around L.A. for six months before signing with Capitol Records on May 13, 1979—Mother’s Day.
The Motels released five albums on Capitol Records between 1979 and 1985, two of them earning gold record status and generating two Top Ten singles, “Only the Lonely” and “Suddenly Last Summer.” When the band broke up in 1987 Martha released Policy, a solo album that charted in Australia.
The Motels Meet & Greet:
- Meet Martha Davis and The Motels
- Photo Opportunity (taken on the patron's camera)
- Autograph on 1 item of your memorabilia (cd, poster, album, etc)
The new name was inspired on the way to the band’s first show at Barney’s Beanery. Guitarist Dean Chamberlain noted the motor inns as they drove down Santa Monica Boulevard and suggested “What about The Motels?”
The band broke up then reformed in 1978 with guitarist Jeff Jourard who brought in his brother Marty on keyboards and saxophone. Michael Goodroe on bass and Brian Glascock on drums rounded out the quintet. This lineup played around L.A. for six months before signing with Capitol Records on May 13, 1979—Mother’s Day.
The Motels released five albums on Capitol Records between 1979 and 1985, two of them earning gold record status and generating two Top Ten singles, “Only the Lonely” and “Suddenly Last Summer.” When the band broke up in 1987 Martha released Policy, a solo album that charted in Australia.
After leaving Capitol Davis spent years working in different musical genres with multitudes of players. Recently it became apparent that one particular configuration generated the same feeling as the original band concept.
The new lineup includes guitarist Clint Walsh, drummer Eric Gardner, bassist Nic Johns and as of 2011, original member Marty Jourard. Apocalypso, a previously unreleased version of 1982’s All Four One was released in 2011 on Omnivore Records, thirty years to the day after the intended original date.
In Spring of 2018 the Motels will release their new record The Last Few Beautiful Days.
Motels Discography
The Motels 1979
Careful 1980
All Four One 1982
Little Robbers 1984
Shock 1985
Apocalypso 2011
The Last Few Beautiful Days 2018
Waldo Bliss plays acoustic based music with organic vocal harmonies.
The current lineup of the band for live playing includes, Dan Carlson, Randy Ray Mitchell, Gia Ciambotti, and Dan Rothchild
Dan Carlson: vocals, acoustic guitar
Randy Ray Mitchell: electric & acoustic guitar, slide, eboe and more...
Gia Ciambotti: vocals
Dan Rothchild: vocals, bass
This LA-based band features shimmering three part vocal harmonies that live on top of acoustic and electric guitars, as well as bass, with some light and tasty percussion topping it off. They do original songs written by them, along with classic covers by such great writers as Brian Wilson, Laura Nyro
and Dan Hicks.
Waldo Bliss has opened for a lot of great bands including The Bangles, America, Ian Hunter and Petula Clarke.
The band would like their ID line... “Music for the Inside of Your Body”, to be true for you when you listen, as much as it is for them when they are playing.
Waldo Bliss wants their sound to seep in and percolate, all around, you…