John Spreier
has played in a variety of bands since the spring
of 1976. The musical oddessey began with a band
named Minas Tirith.
It was named after J.R.R. Tolkien's mythical
citadel. Dave Lieber
played guitar & sang harmonies, Marty Mele
provided the bass, Tony Miceli mastered the drums, and John strummed
guitar and sang his songs of unrequited love in
New Jersey. The band broke up when Dave moved to
Altoona, Pennsylvania. A second invention of the
band included Tim Waller holding down the bass
& singing harmonies, Brad Egner thumping his
mighty double Rogers kit (white of course like
Bonham's), Bob Hollinger attacking his Gibson SG
(red of course like Page's). Tim decided to
return to his brother's band, which left the trio
without a bottom. The third and final form of the
band included Brad Egner continuing to bang the
drums, Bob Hollinger still wailing on guitar, and
Marty Mele returning with a barrage of bass angst
that had not been felt before. The band was
dissolved by John when he
moved to Japan in August of 1979.
When John returned
to New Jersey from Japan in the spring of 1980,
he joined Rael featuring
Michael Birnbaum and Kenny Birnbaum who played
guitar and drums respectively with the legendary
Pete Kogler holding down the bass.
In the autumn of
1980 John ended up in Rhode Island following his
girlfriend who studied architecture at RISD. He
left his musical friends in New Jersey so he
spent his time honing his recording craft on his
Akai 4 track, which he bought in Japan.
In the spring of
1983 John joined The Tim Turner Band. In the summer of 1983 Tim broke up
the band and introduced him to a young drummer
named John Guadagni and a punk bassist named
Jimmy Mulligan. Tim sang songs
from the heart but it didn't work out with Tim and Jimmy.
Guadagni turned out to be a long term musical
companion and friend.
In the autumn of
1983 an Englishman named Jon Jelleyman arrived to
the shores of Rhode Island just in time to
astound all with his guitar pyrotechnics, skank
& bubble, soulful vocals, frightfully funky
bass, impressive songwriting, and expert
engineering. Guadagni, Jelleyman, and Spreier formed
a band named Allagash.
Jelleyman became a musical mentor for Guadagni
and Spreier leading them on a musical trip to
Jamaica for reggae with frequent syncopated stops
in Great Britain for roots rock. It was
essentially a musical Zen philosophy. The absence
of sound in music was taught to be the most
important of all. Rhythm is made up of the spaces
between the notes. It is the sound of one hand
clapping that allows one to appreciate the sound
of two hands clapping in time. Jelleyman joined
Maasai in 1984. Guadagni and Spreier became
the audio engineers for Maasai's live
performances. Guadagni and
Jelleyman joined the Wilson Blue and the Blue
Roots Reggae Band in 1985. Blue proved to be more
efficient at getting gigs so the band split up.
Their last performance was at The Rustic
Well in Smithfield, R.I. on March 3, 1986.
In the summer of
1986 a trio called The Units was
formed which featured David Chandler on keyboards and vocals; John Spreier
on drum machine, bass, guitar, and vocals; and
the artist formally known as Arna Zucker on
trombone, guitar, harmonica, keyboards,
percussion and vocals. The band proved that
"humor and music can mix as long as the
proper amount of bozons, free radicals, and
photons are in play and abundant." John began
studying Occupational Therapy at Boston
University in September of 1986, two weeks after
his daughter Caila Spreier was born. The music
lasted a year and burned out at the end of August
in 1987 like Hale-Bop in the summer sky.
During a snowstorm
in March of 1987 John began
what has become an enduring recording
relationship with John Guadagni, forming the
partnership called Beta Brunette.
Their blend of reggae & rock is indebted to:
Alpha Blondi (the inspiration for their name),
Bob Marley (the king of Reggae and perhaps the
true king of pain), Sly & Robbie (for their
drum & bass concept), Joni Mitchell (for her
sense of vocal melody), Bruce Cockburn (for his
spiritual and physical resemblance to Jelleyman
and the message of his music), and the heart beat
which is common to all of us, sustains us &
unites our lives on this planet every day.
The autumn of 1987
started out with John filling
in on bass for Wilson Blue and the Blue Roots for
a couple of months and playing solo gigs to pay
the bills while he continued to work on his
degree in Occupational Therapy at Boston
University. It was there that he had the
opportunity to play with the legendary Lloyd
Nibbs from Studio One fame in Jamaica. It was
Lloyd who was a co-founder of the Skatalites and
is credited with inventing the reggae beat.
If The Units were
minimalist, then the end of 1987 with Nick Smith
as the entity Mirage was
minny. The band was comprised of a Fostex 4-track
tape machine, Nick Smith & John sharing
bass, guitars and vocals. It was a short strange
trip.
In March of 1989 David Chandler called John asking
him to play bass in a new age band called Red
Road. Maryanne plucked an Irish harp, David provided spacey synth patches, and
Steve Copel coaxed an echo drenched midi guitar
with an ebow. Some confusion about the lineup at
the Temple to Music caused Red Road to hit some
bumps in the pavement.
In the autumn of
1989 David Chandler brought together Kenny Johnson on drums,
Fred Wilkes on guitar & vocals, and John on bass
& vocals for a band called Newbird which
was founded as a showcase for Fred 's talent.
They blended Grateful Dead, Bob Dylan, and Eric
Clapton influences with original tunes from David and John. The Dead
Heads twirled and danced to the infectious rhythm
for a couple of years.
In the beginning
of 1992 John formed a
trio called Zen Chefs with
John Guadagni on drums, John on vocals
& guitar, and Steve Smith on vocals &
bass. The band blended reggae with rock with a
solid bass, strong harmonies, and the foundation
of Guadagni. The music abruptly ended when the
witch kicked John out of
the house and all of them out of the barn they
were practicing in. John got the
equipment out of the barn with the help of a
sympathetic police officer in South County but it
was all over for the band. The barn that they
were rehearsing in is the origin of the name Barnyard Sounds. The neighbors used to say that there
were sounds coming from the barn.
In the summer of
1993 John became a founding member of Seek First at
St. Andrews Lutheran Church in Charlestown, RI.
He plugged away at the bass for a couple of years
until the commute from Lincoln to the beach got
to be too much.
After being kicked
around in the R.I. Family Court for too many
years John participated in the WRX Acoustic
Challenge held in Newport, Rhode Island during
March of 1998. He met a gifted guitarist and
songwriter named Steve Hodge. They each were impressed by each other's
Guinness, performing, and songwriting ability.
In May of 1998 John was asked
to join the band Fable by its
founder John Crafton Jr. The band played New
American Folk Music with John Crafton Jr on
six & twelve string guitars, banjo &
vocals; JQ Crafton on vocals; Anthony Gavoli on
bass & vocals; Joshua Willis (Josh) on
percussion & vocals, and John on six
& twelve string guitars & vocals. It was
a vocal powerhouse with five-part harmony and
equally powerful clashes between the members of
the band named John. Their last performance with John was
September 19, 1998.
In October of 1998
John formed a duo with Michele Jeffrey
called Essential Harmony. The duo continued until a lack of
venues made it non-essential at the end of the
summer of 1999.
John and Joe Casinelli
started out working as therapists in an
outpatient clinic. They quickly became friends
outside of work and enjoyed playing music
together. John played
acoustic guitar & provided harmony vocals and
Joe belted out
huge lead vocals to the blues & Springsteen
covers. They got semi-serious in November of 1998
and amused themselves at open mikes around the
state of confusion for the next couple of years.
In August of 1999 John teamed up
with Steven Hodge and John Guadagni to form a three-piece
rock band named Barnstormers.
Their mission was to provide a good strong
dose of rock and roll to the working masses in
Rhode Island. Classic rock without attitude guaranteed
to make you dance and temporarily forget about
your problems.
On October 27,
2001, John's father died so he packed up his cares
and woes and moved to Florida to be closer to
family. Life is short and you can't make it up
when you have some spare time. "Live each
moment as if it were your last" became his
creed.
In an effort to
archive his musical contribution to the planet
for posterity John began
digitizing the masters of his live and studio
performances in 2002. He developed this web site
with the philosophy that the internet should be
free (like radio) and tangible recordings (like
CDs) should be reasonably priced. The major
record companies have been involved with payola
for too long and have strangled the life and love
of music out of talented artists. At long last
technology is benefiting the average person.
John joined The
BLC Band in the autumn of 2005
at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Jacksonville
Beach. The grew tremendously over the next couple
of years but people move in and out of a parish
and eventually it came down to two
instrumentalists and one wannabeavocalist. Three
years seemed like a good ride so he decided to
retire the horse.
John continues
to perform to showcase his songs and bring his
musical message to all who take the time to stop
and listen to the voice within all of us.
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