It's a Beautiful Day by Jason Ankeny
San Francisco psychedelic folk-rock unit
It's a Beautiful Day was primarily the vehicle
of virtuoso violinist David LaFlamme, born April
5, 1941 in New Britain, CT but raised in Salt
Lake City, UT. After beginning his musical
education at age five, LaFlamme later served as
a soloist with the Utah Symphony, following an
army stint by settling in the Bay Area in 1962.
There he immersed himself in the local
underground music scene, jamming alongside the
likes of Jerry Garcia and Janis Joplin; after
his short-lived Electric Chamber Orchestra
splintered, LaFlamme also co-founded an early
incarnation of Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks before
assembling It's a Beautiful Day in mid-1967. The
group - which originally included LaFlamme's
keyboardist wife Linda, vocalist Pattie Santos,
guitarist Hal Wagenet, bassist Mitchell Holman,
and drummer Val Fuentes - issued its self-titled
debut LP on Columbia in 1969, scoring their
biggest hit with the haunting FM radio staple
"White Bird." Linda LaFlamme left It's a
Beautiful Day soon after, going on to form
Titus' Mother; keyboardist Fred Webb signed on
for the follow-up, 1970's
Marrying Maiden, while Holman exited prior to
1971's Choice Quality Stuff, recorded with new
guitarist Bill Gregory and bassist Tom Fowler.
In 1973, ongoing disputes over royalties forced
LaFlamme out of the group he created, and upon
installing new violinist Greg Bloch, the
remaining members issued
It's a Beautiful Day...Today before dissolving in
the wake of 1974's 1001 Nights. LaFlamme mounted
a solo career in 1977 with
White Bird, continuing his protracted legal
tussle with ex-manager Matthew Katz for years to
follow; sadly, Pattie Santos died in a December
14, 1989 auto accident.
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