| It only took one song, the organ-driven number one smash "96 Tears," 
        to make ? & the Mysterians into garage rock legends. Eccentric frontman 
        Question Mark (actually spelled "?," once he had his name legally 
        changed) cultivated an aura of mystery by never appearing in public without 
        a pair of wraparound sunglasses; he frequently claimed he had been born 
        on Mars and lived among the dinosaurs in a past life, and that voices 
        from the future had revealed he would be performing "96 Tears" 
        in the year 10,000. On a more earthly level, the Mysterians' sound helped 
        lay down an important part of the garage rock blueprint, namely the low-budget 
        sci-fi feel of the Farfisa and Vox organs (most assumed that "96 
        Tears" had featured the former, but ? later remembered using the 
        latter). What was more, they were one of the first Latino rock groups 
        to have a major hit, and ?'s sneering attitude made him one of the prime 
        suspects in the evolution of garage rock into early punk. The Mysterians were formed in 1962 by bassist Larry Borjas, his cousin, 
        guitarist Bobby Balderrama, and drummer Robert Martinez; they soon added 
        vocalist ? (the general consensus is that he was actually Rudy Martinez, 
        Robert's brother, though a few sources identified him as Reeto Rodriguez) 
        and organist Frank Rodriguez. By most accounts, all the musicians were 
        born in Texas, of Mexican descent, and grew up in Michigan in the Saginaw/Bay 
        City area. Taking their name from a Japanese science fiction film, the 
        band played its first gigs in the small Michigan town of Adrian in 1964, 
        and soon moved its home base from Saginaw to Flint. Larry Borjas and Robert 
        Martinez were both forced to leave the band for military duty, and were 
        replaced by bassist Frank Lugo and the Martinez brothers' brother-in-law, 
        drummer Eddie Serrato. Shortly afterward, ? wrote the lyrics a song he 
        called "Too Many Teardrops" and showed them to the rest of the 
        band; the title was changed first to "69 Tears," and then the 
        less suggestive "96 Tears." The song became a hit at the Mt. 
        Holly ski lodge/dancehall, where the band played regularly, and in early 
        1966 they recorded it for the small local label Pa-Go-Go, owned by the 
        band's manager. It became a regional hit in Flint and Detroit, attracting 
        interest from several major record companies; ? decided to sign with the 
        Philadelphia-based Cameo-Parkway, chiefly because their label was his 
        favorite color, orange. Now blessed with national distribution, "96 Tears" raced up 
        the pop charts and went all the way to number one in the fall of 1966, 
        becoming one of garage rock's all-time classics. The band's first album, 
        naturally also titled 96 Tears, was released by the end of the year, as 
        was its follow-up single, "I Need Somebody," which just missed 
        the Top 20. Released in early 1967, "Can't Get Enough of You Baby" 
        was a minor hit, but the group's second album, Action, sold disappointingly; 
        moreover, Cameo-Parkway was experiencing financial difficulties, and was 
        later taken over by ABKCO chief Allen Klein. The Mysterians departed, 
        recording singles for Capitol in 1968 and Tangerine and Super K in 1969, 
        to no commercial avail (during this period, bassist Mel Schacher served 
        a short stint in the group prior to joining Grand Funk Railroad). They 
        also cut an album for Ray Charles' TRC label that went unreleased. ? regrouped the band in the early '70s and tried again, recording singles 
        for Chicory in 1972 and Luv in 1973 to no response. Bobby Balderrama formed 
        a short-lived band called Inflight during the '70s, and ? left music to 
        become a dog breeder. ? & the Mysterians reconvened in 1978 to cut 
        some demos with producer Kim Fowley, and played a reunion concert in Dallas 
        in 1984, the tapes of which were later released by ROIR; that year they 
        also opened some gigs for Tex-Mex rocker Joe "King" Carrasco. 
        In 1997, ? was directed by the voices he heard from the future to reunite 
        the group again, with a lineup of Balderrama, Rodriguez, Lugo, and brother 
        Robert. Since Allen Klein refused to reissue any of the group's original 
        recordings (or even license "96 Tears" for compilations -- hence 
        its absence from Rhino's mostly comprehensive garage rock box set Nuggets), 
        they re-recorded their debut album for Collectables and released it as 
        Question Mark & the Mysterians. In 1998, they issued a live album 
        on Norton Records, Do You Feel It Baby?, that was recorded at Coney Island 
        High and received warmly by their cult fan base of garage rock aficionados. 
        1999 brought the release of another, somewhat better-produced two-disc 
        set of re-recordings, More Action, this time released on Cavestomp (it 
        was later condensed into the 2001 single-disc release Feel It!: The Very 
        Best of Question Mark & the Mysterians). Meanwhile, Balderrama formed 
        the Robert Lee Band, a blues outfit that played around Michigan and recorded 
        an eponymous album for the local Bullfrog label. Unfortunately, there 
        remains no official CD release of the Mysterians' original recordings. 
      (by Steve Huey, AMG) |