Flo & Eddie

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Flo & Eddie are Mark Volman (19 April 1947, Los Angeles, CA) and Howard Kaylan (born Howard Kaplan, 22 June 1947, the Bronx, New York City, NY). Kaylan is Herb Cohen's cousin.

They joined Zappa as vocalists in 1970 having attended the Pauley Pavilion concert:

"Somewhere in that mass of spectators were Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan, a.k.a. Flo & Eddie.

They came backstage after the show, said they liked it, and told me that the Turtles had split up and they were looking for something to do. The rest is history.

We worked together for about two years after that on several albums and tours as well as the film 200 Motels."[1]

Because of legal wrangling with their record company they were prevented from using the name of their former band The Turtles or using their own names if working in a music related position. They therefore adopted the names The Phlorescent Leech, shortened to Flo, and Eddie.


Moving to California as a child Kaylan met Volman at school. Volman joined Kaylan's band The Nightriders which soon evolved into The Crossfires. They then became The Tyrtles, adopting the then trend of misspelling as in The Byrds and The Beatles, but this name was soon replaced by The Turtles. They had early success with a recording of Bob Dylan's "It Ain't Me Babe" in 1965 and two further hits in 1966. In 1967 their "Happy Together" knocked The Beatles from the number one spot. Their album The Turtles Present the Battle of the Bands saw them performing as if different bands in a range of styles. It was released at the end of 1968 around the same time as Zappa's Cruising With Ruben & The Jets. The former bass player with The Turtles, Jim Pons, followed them into The Mothers in 1971.

They had known Zappa since the mid-1960s. After performances in New York they would join the audience at the Garrick Theatre to see The Mothers. In his film My Dinner with Jimi Kaylan recounts how, at the height of their success with The Turtles, they sought advice from Zappa about avoiding being drafted into the army. He advised them to ask Herb Cohen. Successfully using Cohen's advice they were able to continue performing and toured in England were they met The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix.

Following Zappa's injuries at the Rainbow in London, December 1971, the band was dissolved. Flo & Eddie decided to continue working as a duo and released the album The Phlorescent Leech & Eddie in 1972 using former Mothers Don Preston, Jim Pons and Aynsley Dunbar. This was followed by "Flo & Eddie" (1973) and "Illegal, Immoral and Fattening" in 1975. In 1976 they were the opening act for Zappa at a concert in Detroit. They continued to record and worked as backing vocalists on numerous recordings during subsequent decades.

Gaining a degree in 1999 Volman teaches Music Business & Industry courses in the Communications and Fine Arts department at Loyola Marymount University, and has conducted seminars for the music departments at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, University of Indiana at Bloomington, High Schools, Jr. High Schools, and many others.


Flo & Eddie can be heard with Zappa on:

and can be seen in:

Notes

  1. The Real Frank Zappa Book
  2. On side 4 of the original vinyl LP or Disc 2 of subsequent CD issues.
  3. Bootleg of the 1976 Detroit concert

External links