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Heart And Mind

Sister Double Happiness

Biography

Sister Double Happiness formed in San Francisco in 1986 and immediately became the city's favorite concert draw before they even released their first album of over-the-top, white blues-rock. Gary Floyd and Lynn Perko, who'd played together in the punk group the Dicks, joined Ben Cohen (from Pop-o-Pies and Polkacide) and Mikey Donaldson on bass. The foursome recorded a self-titled album of hard-driving songs for SST in 1988, the bulk penned by Floyd and Cohen. Owing much to Floyd's Texas roots as a blues/punk belter, the band played a fiery mix of blues-inflected hard rock and punk, the likes of which were incomparable. Subject matter was primarily confined to the human condition and spirituality in the face of AIDS and urban decay. The band's promise earned them a contract with Reprise in 1991 for Heart and Mind, but it failed to find them a wider audience. That same year, they won a Bammie (Bay Area Music Award) for Outstanding Club Band, and Jeff Palmer replaced Donaldson on bass. A Sub Pop single and two albums for the label's German arm, 1993's Uncut and 1994's Horsey Water, followed. Danny Roman was added as a guitarist, and Miles Montalbano replaced Palmer on bass. A video release, Greetings from Zurich, is a lasting testament to their live prowess. The band also contributed to a number of tribute albums that were popular in the early '90s and paid homage to artists as diverse as Roky Erickson, Dead Kennedys, and Frank Sinatra. The band broke up in 1995 -- none of their recorded work ever quite captured the heat they were capable of live. Floyd immediately formed the Gary Floyd Band, Perko formed Imperial Teen with Faith No More's Roddy Bottum, and Cohen worked as a guitarist with El Destroyo, among others. The posthumous Stone's Throw from Love: Live and Acoustic at the Great American Music Hall appeared in 1999. Gary Floyd died on May 2, 2024, at the age of 71. ~ Denise Sullivan, Rovi