Essra Mohawk

(Redirected from Sandy Hurvitz)

Essra Mohawk (/ˈɛsrə/; born Sandra Elayne Hurvitz; April 23, 1948 – December 11, 2023) was an American singer-songwriter who recorded a dozen albums.

Essra Mohawk
Birth nameSandra Elayne Hurvitz
Also known asSandy Hurvitz, Jamie Carter
Born(1948-04-23)April 23, 1948
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedDecember 11, 2023(2023-12-11) (aged 75)
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter
Instrument(s)Vocals, piano, guitar, mandolin
Years active1964–2023
LabelsElektra
WebsiteOfficial site as of 2017, via Wayback Machine

Her best-known songs include "Sufferin' Til Suffrage" and "Interjections!" (both from Schoolhouse Rock!), "Change of Heart" recorded by Cyndi Lauper and "Stronger Than the Wind" recorded by Tina Turner. Her second album, Primordial Lovers, was critically acclaimed.

Life and career edit

Sandra Elayne Hurvitz was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on April 23, 1948. Her first record, credited as Jamie Carter, was the single "The Boy with the Way", backed with "The Memory of Your Voice", issued on Liberty Records in 1964. As Sandy Hurvitz, she was then discovered by Shadow Morton, who placed her songs with both the Shangri-Las ("I'll Never Learn") and the Vanilla Fudge ("The Spell That Comes After"). While living in New York City in 1967 she met Frank Zappa, who persuaded her to perform for a short time with the Mothers of Invention and then signed her to his Bizarre Records production company. While he initially helped to produce her first album, he left the project and assigned it to woodwind player and keyboardist Ian Underwood after finding out that a Whisky a Go Go secretary he had slept with, Gail Zappa (then Gail Sloatman), was pregnant. After Hurvitz urged him to marry Sloatman, Zappa departed from the project. Hurvitz opened for Procol Harum when they performed at the Cafe Au Go Go in 1967. Keith Reid wrote "Quite Rightly So", which appeared on their second album, Shine On Brightly, for her.[3] Her first album, Sandy's Album Is Here At Last, was released on Bizarre/Verve in December 1968.

In 1969 she was signed by Reprise Records after executive Mo Ostin discovered her singing at a club in New York. The resulting album, Primordial Lovers, was later said to be "one of the best 25 albums ever made" in Rolling Stone magazine. The album featured contributions from CSN&Y drummer Dallas Taylor and former Rhinoceros members Doug Hastings and Jerry Penrod. Essra nearly joined Rhinoceros in its original line-up. While recording the album, she married her producer Frazier Mohawk (born Barry Friedman, 1941) and from then on was known as Essra Mohawk. "Essra" (S-ra) is an abbreviated form of "Sandra."

Mohawk claimed that she was scheduled to perform at the original Woodstock Festival, but her driver took a wrong turn on the way. “We got there in time to see the last verse of the last song of the last act of the first night, and then the stage went dark before we got to it from the parking lot. I’d been telling her (Joni Mitchell) about our people being together and how incredible that was and what it might mean for the future. I read her a poem I wrote about it. She came back the next day to play me the song (Woodstock).”

Members of Generation X may recognize her distinctive voice from the Saturday morning TV series Schoolhouse Rock!, as she lent her voice to "Interjections!", "Mother Necessity" and "Sufferin' Till Suffrage" in the mid-1970s. In addition, Mohawk sang the theme song to "Teeny Little Super Guy", a regular segment on Sesame Street during the 1980s.

Her third, eponymous, album ‘’Essra Mohawk’’ came out on Asylum Records (Mooncrest in the UK) in 1974. Produced by Tom Sellers, the album contained a hot roster of musicians, including members of the Crusaders, but was panned by Village Voice critic Robert Christgau, who wrote in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981): "Here is a vocalist who should throw away all her Leon Russell records. When she calls herself a 'full-fledged woman,' it sounds like 'pool player's' woman, which given her persona makes more sense."[4] The next album, Essra, was released on yet another label, Private Stock, in 1976. Legendary songwriter and producer Jerry Ragovoy provided significant uncredited work on the record, which took on a more pop and funky direction. During that period, she also worked as a session and background singer, for John Mellencamp and Carole King. In 1979 Paul Kantner wanted to sign on Essra, a fellow science fiction fan, as the new female singer in Jefferson Starship - replacing Grace Slick who left to care for her alcoholism, but he was ultimately outvoted in favor of Mickey Thomas. Later, in 1981/82 she performed as a harmony vocalist with the Jerry Garcia Band, and wrote with Dead members Bob Weir and Brent Mydland. Additionally, she recorded and arranged background vocals for Kool & the Gang. In 1982 after recording another album (“Burnin’ Shinin’”) in L.A., she worked with McFadden and Whitehead in Philadelphia, penning "Not With Me" for their Capitol album, Movin' On. She released another solo album, the new-waveish E-Turn, before Cyndi Lauper had a hit with her song "Change of Heart" in 1986.[5]

In 2011 she provided the lead vocal for an animated short film produced by TDA Animation, about the struggle for gay rights, called "Sufferin' Till You're Straight". The spot featured former Supremes Scherrie Payne and Susaye Greene on background vocals.

Mohawk wrote songs for other artists including co-writing a song entitled "Infinite Eyes" with blues artist Keb Mo as well as recording and performing in concert. She released six more albums after moving to Nashville in 1993; the most critically acclaimed work being “You’re Not Alone” from 2003, along with the independently released fan favorite, “Love Is Still the Answer.” Essra's songs have been featured on the TV series Joan of Arcadia and the soap opera All My Children. Rhino released a special limited edition of her second and third albums, Primordial Lovers MM, in 2000. Mohawk was a longtime advocate of peace and environmental protection. She was a member of the board of Musicians and Artists for Peace and was their Nashville coordinator.

She died of liver cancer at her home in Nashville. [6]

Discography edit

Albums

  • Sandy's Album Is Here At Last!Bizarre – 1968 (as Sandy Hurvitz)
  • Primordial LoversReprise – 1970
  • Essra MohawkAsylum – 1974
  • EssraPrivate Stock – 1976
  • Burnin' Shinin' – San Francisco Sound – 1982
  • E-TurnEclipse – 1985
  • Raindance – Schoolkids – 1995
  • Essie Mae Hawk Meets the Killer Groove Band – Mummypump – 1999
  • Essra Live at Genghis Cohen – Mummypump – 2001
  • You're Not AloneEvidence – 2003
  • Love Is Still the Answer – Mummypump – 2006
  • Revelations of the Secret Diva – Mummypump – 2007
  • 1979: The Supersound Sessions and More – Mummypump – 2017
  • The One and Only – Mummypump – 2019

Singles

  • "The Boy with the Way" / "The Memory of Your Voice" – Liberty – 1964 (as Jamie Carter)
  • "Spiral" / "Image of Yu" – Reprise – 1970
  • "Jabberwock Song" / "It's Up to Me" – Reprise – 1970
  • "Full Fledged Woman" / "Magic Pen" – Asylum – 1974
  • "Man of Mystery" / "Summertime" – Black Cat – 2009 (with Pacific Eardrum)

Compilations

References edit

  1. ^ "Rockasteria: Essra Mohawk - Primordial Lovers (1970 us, wondrous avant jazz painted with psych colors)". March 20, 2012.
  2. ^ "Essra Mohawk Biography, Songs, & Albums". AllMusic.
  3. ^ "The Secret Diva".
  4. ^ Christgau, Robert (1981). "Consumer Guide '70s: M". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 089919026X. Retrieved March 8, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
  5. ^ Williams, Alex (December 22, 2023). "Essra Mohawk, Self-Described Flower Child Singer-Songwriter, Dies at 75". New York Times.
  6. ^ Essra Mohawk, eclectic singer and prolific songwriter, has died at 75. Retrieved December 27, 2023

External links edit