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Happily together at Ruth Eckerd: Susan Cowsill and her brothers
Happy Together, the touring oldies show visiting Ruth Eckerd Hall Wednesday, features â60s acts the Association, the Turtles, Gary Puckett & the Union Gap, the Buckinghams, the Vogues and the Cowsills. Each with an original member or two.
Susan Cowsill was 12 years old when her familyâs career as a pop singing group ended in 1971, after four big hit singles and a handful of albums – and she has never stopped looking forward, creating new music as a solo artist and with new bands.
But Happy Together is all about looking back. And sheâs fine with that.
âWhatâs so uniquely fun about this is, the audience comes because they want to hear those hits,â Cowsill told the Catalyst. âItâs kind of like a ride â weâre a big â60s music amusement ride. Youâre going up the thing … then we hit the button and go. Itâs the songs that carry our show. People are singing along â I donât even know if theyâre hearing us lots of times!â
With her brothers Bob and Paul, and a backup band that includes her husband Russ Broussard on drums, Cowsill will perform âThe Rain, the Park and Other Things,â âIndian Lake,â âHair,â âWe Can Flyâ and others from the years 1967 to 71, when the Cowsills were on the pop charts alongside the likes of Three Dog Night, Creedence Clearwater Revival and the Jackson Five.
âItâs a love-fest, itâs an amazing vibe of a show,â she enthuses. âAnd I for one canât believe we get to do it again. Iâm so grateful. I truly am.â
The Cowsills were never cool. Consisting of brothers Bill, Bob, Barry, Paul and John, plus little sister Susan and â gasp â their mother Barbara, they were a clean-cut, TV-friendly pop group, managed with an iron fist by their image-conscious father Bud.
And TVâs The Partridge Family series was actually conceived as a vehicle for the Cowsills. They pulled out when it was explained to them that Barbara was to be âplayedâ by Shirley Jones. Deal-breaker.
They appeared on all the variety shows of the era; the brothers dressed alike, with the same sort of wholesome post-Beatles mop top. Mom generally stood at a microphone in the back, adding harmonies – and out front, always, was Susan. Pageboy haircut, frilly clothes, adding oohs and aahs while she banged a tambourine, and doing groovy dance steps. At 10, she sang a medley of love songs with a creepily leering Dean Martin.
So not cool.
Yet the Cowsills’ harmonies were intricate, the musicianship solid, the melodies engaging. Eldest brother Bill, the groupâs lead singer, had a knack for vocal arrangements. He was a good songwriter and an innovative record producer, too.
Bill, Barry, Mom and Dad are gone now. Brother John isnât on this tour â he has a full-time gig with the Beach Boys. The surviving members of the family have stayed close.
Susan Cowsill can look at the old videos now â well, most of them â and remember fondly. “Embarrassed,” she said, is not a word in her vocabulary.
âIâm an authentic person, at any age youâre going to find me,â Cowsill explained. âI was so into it, I was so happy to be performing. I didnât have a psyche about who I was; I wasnât some deep-hearted artist at that point, I was just a kid, in a family that happened to do this thing.
âAnd it was fun. And I was having fun. If Iâm goofy, Iâm goofy. If Iâm good at it for that one minute, Iâm good at it. I was in it for all the right reasons.â
She even has kind words for the groupâs 1968 TV special, A Family Thing, which featured, among other horrors, duets with Buddy Ebsen.
âLook at us on that show â we are so goofy,â she laughed. âIf you were talking to one of the boys, youâd get a different answer â âwe wanted to shoot ourselves the day after that aired.â Look at those yellow pants in one of those dance scenes! This was not the rock ânâ roll plan.
âBut I couldnât have cared less. I was having a good time. I thought we were actors â âIâm acting right now!â I thought it was hilariously fun, and it beat the heck out of what I saw everybody else doing.â
There is a new Cowsills album in the works, for this fall. Until then, thereâs Happy Together. And they are.
âThe most beautiful appropriate place to be is exactly where we are, on a Classic Rock oldies tour,â she said. âBecause we were a 60s band.
âAnd whether we make new music or not, I think thereâs a certain point where that doesnât matter any more. Youâre mature enough to understand that this doesnât disqualify you from making current music.
âItâs a really beautiful payday, itâs a great camaraderie with all of the people weâve known all of our lives. I donât know, man â itâs a love fest! Everyone who goes to Happy Together is there to feel amazing.â
Details and tickets are here.
A little extra
Below: From a Carl Reiner special, March 1969. The Cowsills’ biggest-ever hit was this Bill Cowsill-arranged version of the title song from the Broadway musical Hair. It lodged at No. 2 on the Billboard chart – ironically upstaged by the 5th Dimension’s recording of “Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In,” also from Hair. The Cowsills never had another successful record after this one.
scott williamson
March 24, 2023at5:41 pm
Susan is gorgeous
Rhonda Byer
August 16, 2022at7:17 am
It is good to see members of the Cowsills together and performing their great songs from the 1960âs. Susan’s down to earth personality is a breath of fresh air. In fact that was one of the reasons I enjoyed the band. I am Susanâs same age and I can sure relate to embracing the wonderful memories of our youth, but being able to get another chance to relive those times again is fantastic and I can tell from her words in this article that she is loving every minute of it. What a gift.