Wind in the Willows

Formed
 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by Richie Unterberger
This seven-member, late-'60s New York group is almost exclusively remembered because one of their two female vocalists was a dark-haired Deborah Harry, nearly a decade before she became a star with Blondie. The Wind in the Willows' music could not have been much more different than Blondie's. It was twee folk-psych-rock, largely comprised of original material, though none of it was penned by Harry. The range of tunes was fairly diverse, getting into slightly spacy sunshine pop, bad vaudeville rock, covers of songs by the Everly Brothers and Roger Miller, an eight-minute reading (titled "There Is But One Truth, Daddy") from Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows with muted ambient psychedelic backing, and pastoral ballads with echoes of the Mamas & the Papas and Donovan. Yet the songwriting was not strong and the attitude way too precious. Harry, an almost unrecognizable brunette on the cover photos, took a very subdued role.

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