The Castiles
The Castiles | |
---|---|
Origin | Freehold, New Jersey |
Genres | Garage rock |
Years active | 1964 | –1968
Website | www |
The Castiles were a garage rock band that featured vocalist/lead guitarist/harmonica player Bruce Springsteen, and was formed by rhythm guitarist/vocalist George Theiss, with various lineups during its existence. They recorded two songs, and performed throughout New Jersey and New York before disbanding in 1968.
Springsteen went on to a successful recording and touring career, while Theiss continued in various non-notable New Jersey bands. Theiss died on July 13, 2018.
History
[edit]In 1964, Theiss saw the Beatles perform on The Ed Sullivan Show, and decided to form a band called the Castiles, named after the shampoo brand he was using at the time.[1] He was romantically interested in Springsteen's sister, Virginia,[2] and when Theiss would go to her house, her brother was playing guitar. Theiss asked Springsteen to join the Castiles in 1965 as lead guitarist.[3] They were students at Freehold High School at the time.[4]
"I was sitting in my South Street home one afternoon when a knock came at our front door," Springsteen wrote in his autobiography Born to Run. "It was George Theiss, a local guitarist and singer who’d heard through my sister that I played the guitar. I’d seen George around the Elks. He told me there was a band forming and they were looking for a lead guitarist. While I hesitated to call myself a lead guitarist, I had been hard at it for a while and worked up some very rudimentary 'chops.' We walked across town to Center Street and into a little half-shotgun house fifty feet up the block from where the metal-on-metal war of the rug mill spilled out open factory windows onto the streets of Texas. In Texas I'd slip on my guitar and join my first real band."[5]
Theiss and Springsteen were joined in the Castiles by original members Paul Popkin, guitar/vocals; Frank Marziotti, bass; and Bart Haynes, drummer. Haynes joined the Marine Corps, and fought in the Vietnam War where he was killed in action on October 22, 1967. While in the USMC, Bart was replaced by Vinny Maniello. Marziotti left, and Curt Fluhr became the bassist.[1][6]
The Castiles practiced in half of a duplex home belonging to Haynes. Gordon "Tex" Vinyard lived in the other half of the two-family home, and he became the band's manager.[7] They played gigs in local spots of Freehold from junior high school dances, roller rinks, drive-in theaters, supermarket openings, even clubs in the area and places like Cafe Wha? in Greenwich Village, and Asbury Park, New Jersey.[8] They wore white pants, Beatle boots, and Beatle haircuts, and performed cover songs.[9]
The Castiles played their last show in August 1968 at the Off Broad Street Coffeehouse in Red Bank, New Jersey.[10]
When the band disbanded in 1968 due to tension between Springsteen and Theiss, the two remained friends.
Recordings
[edit]In May 1966, Vinyard paid for a demo record made at Mr. Music in Toms River, New Jersey. These songs, "Baby I" and "That's What You Get", were both written by Theiss and Springsteen. The former was finally released in 2016 on the album Chapter and Verse, a companion album to Springsteen's Born to Run autobiography, along with a live recording of Willie Dixon's "You Can't Judge a Book by the Cover".[7][11]
The Bruce Springsteen Story Vol. 1: The Castiles was released in 1993.[12]
Of his 2020 album, Letter to You, Springsteen has said that the music was inspired by Theiss' death in 2018. Songs "Ghosts" and "Last Man Standing" were written by Springsteen because he was the last living member of the Castiles. Two other tracks with the same theme, "I'll See You in My Dreams" and "One Minute You're Here", were also included.[13]
"The songs reminded me of a debt that I still owed to my Freehold brothers in arms," he said in the Thom Zimny-directed documentary, Bruce Springsteen's Letter to You, which aired on Apple TV+ in 2020. The film includes Springsteen teaching his cousin to play the Castiles' song "Baby I".[14]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Wineka, Mike (January 28, 2018). "George and the Boss: Theiss is forever linked to his glory days of playing, writing songs with Springsteen". Salisbury Post. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
- ^ Lustig, Jay (July 15, 2018). "George Theiss, an early Springsteen bandmate, dies at 68". njarts.net. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
- ^ "GREETINGS FROM ASBURY PARK". Los Angeles Times. September 23, 1984.
- ^ "LOEW'S "35"". The Daily Register. July 27, 1966.
- ^ Springsteen, Bruce (2017). Born to Run. Simon & Schuster. p. 68. ISBN 9781501141515. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
- ^ "THE CASTILLES". The Daily Record. July 27, 1966.
- ^ a b Jordan, Chris (July 20, 2018). "Springsteen's former bandmate has died". The Central New Jersey Home News.
- ^ ""Back on E Street"". The Record. October 23, 2020.
- ^ "Springsteen: Rock and roll was his ally". Journal Gazette. October 14, 1985.
- ^ Dalton, Joseph (October 10, 1985). "Bruce Springsteen, Made In The U.S.A." Rolling Stone. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- ^ "Recensie: Bruce Springsteen – Chapter And Verse". Blues Magazine. October 20, 2016. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ "The Castiles – The Bruce Springsteen Story Vol.1: The Castiles". discogs.com. 1993. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
- ^ "MUSINGS ON MORTALITY". Ottawa Citizen. October 27, 2020.
- ^ "Springsteen". Philadelphia Inquirer. October 18, 2020.