They had names like the Velveteens, the Sir Guys, and the Pace Setters, and they were the soundtrack of youth in the Pomona Valley in the 1950s, 鈥60s and early 鈥70s.
Now, they鈥檙e getting a second day in the sun, thanks to a new exhibit organized by 麻豆影视 Associate Professor of History Tom谩s F. Summers Sandoval and community partners, many of whom played in the bands of the time. 鈥淪ounds of Pomona: The Golden Era of Music 1955-1975鈥 will run free of charge from Nov. 11 through Feb. 24 at the dA Center for the Arts, 252 S. Main St. in Pomona. An opening reception will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. on Nov. 11, and related events will take place over the next three months.
鈥淭his was a very particular time in the music industry where it was still local,鈥 says Summers Sandoval. He has been collecting oral histories with those involved in the Pomona music scene for the project for the past year and has involved students in his Oral Histories class at 麻豆影视 in the research. 鈥淭his is mostly Mexican American and African American youth coming of age in Pomona who found their identity as young people through music鈥攔hythm and blues and rock 鈥榥鈥 roll,鈥 he says.
Wanting to tell the story
Excitement about the exhibit has been growing for the past year among musicians from the era, many of whom still live in the region. The idea 鈥済ot started in the back yard,鈥 says Martin Perez, whose connections as a board member at the dA got things rolling. Sharing memories led to a 鈥渨e should get the band back together鈥 vibe. 鈥淲e wanted to tell the story,鈥 says Perez, who was not in a band but was friends with the musicians who were. 鈥淲e want our grandkids and great-grandkids to see what we did in those days and inspire and motivate them to pick up an instrument and become musicians or directors or promoters or songwriters.鈥
Whether the bands鈥攐r rather, musicians from the plethora of bands of that period鈥攁ctually get back together for a reunion concert is still up in the air. Ernie Padilla, who played in local bands from 鈥63 to 鈥77, is hosting jam sessions every other Sunday at his home, and there鈥檚 no telling where it will lead. 鈥淭his last Sunday, there were like 14 of us here,鈥 he says, adding that some of the guys 鈥渉aven鈥檛 played for about 50 years.鈥
Up until it burned to the ground in 1965, Pomona鈥檚 huge Rainbow Gardens venue attracted major acts like Little Richard, Nat King Cole and the Beach Boys. But while it was probably the largest, it was far from the only place attracting young people in the Cold War era in one of Southern California鈥檚 growing cities.
Rudy Carrasco, who still plays trumpet at the age of 72, recalls playing with local bands at the VFW Hall or the American Legion. 鈥淥nce you got your foot in there, it was pretty good,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou鈥檇 have a band that people wanted to listen to.鈥 The next step was the Sacred Heart Hall. 鈥淭hat was the big leagues,鈥 he says.
Carrasco took up the trumpet at the age of 11. He might have preferred saxophone or drums, but they were all taken by other students at school, where many learned to be musicians in marching band. Sixty years later, he鈥檚 still playing.
As a seventh-grader, Carrasco and some friends formed a group they dubbed the Sir Guys. Garage bands were everywhere in Pomona, he recalls, at 鈥渁lmost every other house.鈥 We would listen to each other, says Carrasco, 鈥渁nd get inspired to be one-up on them.鈥
鈥淏ands were popping up everywhere鈥
David Reyes describes the period from 鈥65 to 鈥70 as a time when music exploded in Pomona. 鈥淏ands were popping up everywhere,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 joined a band when I was about 14 years old. I played saxophone. My very first band was called the Silver Tones.鈥
Reyes went on to a career in music and coauthored Land of a Thousand Dances: Chicano Rock 鈥橬 Roll from Southern California. He played in bands like the Pace Setters. Eventually, he notes, the Pomona music scene began to dissipate. 鈥淪ome of the guys got drafted for Vietnam, and a lot of the guys got married,鈥 Reyes says. And then 鈥渢he venues closed. That was the big thing. The venues weren鈥檛 around anymore.鈥
Looking back at the time before iPods, Spotify and the internet, the Pomona musicians credit the local bands with being the glue that kept them together, that helped them to find community with each other and to head in a positive life direction. 鈥淚t kept me out of the gangs,鈥 says Padilla, who still owns an auto upholstery shop in Pomona. 鈥淚t kept me busy on the weekends, and it made me a little bit of money.鈥 That it wasn鈥檛 hugely lucrative for him doesn鈥檛 matter in retrospect. 鈥淎t the time, we didn鈥檛 need a lot of money,鈥 he says. 鈥淕as was only 24 cents a gallon.鈥
Events to bring community together
The three-month-long exhibit also involves a calendar of events meant to bring the local community together and celebrate the role of music in our lives, notes Summers Sandoval. Among the events will be guided tours for youth, concerts and dances, and panel discussions about the history celebrated in the exhibit. Visitors can experience the music of early rock 鈥榥鈥 roll through recordings, videos, photos and memorabilia that Summers Sandoval, a scholar of Chicano and Latino history and former resident of Pomona, has curated. He specializes in oral history and previously staged an exhibition at the dA on Chicano/Latino Vietnam veterans.
Support for the exhibit comes from California Humanities, a nonprofit partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional support is provided by the Ena H. Thompson Fund and the Department of History at 麻豆影视.
Perez hopes that by the time the exhibit and events wrap on Feb. 24, the grandchildren of the Pomona musicians will recognize that 鈥渕y grandpa used to play in the Little Latins!鈥 or that 鈥渉e was one of the Sir Guys!鈥
鈥淚 can鈥檛 stop saying it,鈥 says Perez. The goal is 鈥渢o inspire and motivate the youngsters to become all they can be.鈥