Arthur Lee and Love (Part 3 -- last one, I promise!)
By the time Lee was ready to make music again, grunge was in full swing and there was little interest in an older act whose best-known works did not resemble that in the slightest. Starting with
Forever Changes, Lee and Love had been more popular in Europe than in the U.S., so perhaps it was fitting that his first music in more than a decade was released on a French label, New Rose. Like its predecessors, the record, initially released as
Arthur Lee and Love and later reissued as
Five String Serenade after Mazzy Star covered the song of the same name, made little impact in the States.
Lee resumed touring in the early '90s, using two self-contained bands, Baby Lemonade and Das Damen, as Love at various times. My first time seeing Lee was in March 1994 in Asbury Park with Das Damen serving as Love. The venue, not large to begin with, was maybe half full, and the band played only three songs from
Forever Changes, instead focusing more on
Da Capo and some of the faster post-
Forever Changes songs. Lee was game but came off a bit laconic.
In 1996, Lee's life changed dramatically. He was convicted of negligent discharge of a firearm, which was his third felony after prior convictions for arson and assault. Under California's "three strikes" law, this meant mandatory jail time, and he was sentenced to 12 years (in his characteristically stubborn way, he had turned down a plea deal of 9 months). Lee was released in 2001 after serving slightly less than half of his sentence, and his conviction was later overturned after the prosecutor was found to have committed misconduct. Original Love members MacLean and Forssi died during Lee's prison term, ending any chance of a reunion of the 1965-67 lineup.
By this point, trends had shifted and there was interest in Lee and Love's music again, along with publicity surrounding Lee's release from prison. He spent much of 2002 and 2003 on the road with Baby Lemonade -- Rusty Squeezebox (birth name: David Ramsey) on guitar and vocals, Mike Randle on lead guitar, David Chapple on bass and David Green on drums -- as Love. In August 2002, I saw Lee for the second time in NYC, and the vibes could not have been any different from the 1994 gig. The show was sold out, the crowd was energetic and enthusiastic and the band was on fire. In keeping with the celebratory feeling, nine of
Forever Changes' 11 songs were played. However, we were also treated to Lee's other side -- he sounded downright threatening when he spotted a fan videotaping and started yelling at them. (Accounts of this night can be read at
http://love.torbenskott.dk/tour/20020810_newyork.asp). This period culminated in a series of shows in Europe where the band performed
Forever Changes in its entirety; one of these nights in London was released as
The Forever Changes Concert in 2003.
Between mid-2003 and 2005, Lee's childhood friend and original Love collaborator John Echols joined the touring band, bringing Love's history full circle. Lee skipped some of the 2005 dates, leaving Squeezebox to step up as lead singer, but, typically for him, didn't tell anyone why. The truth was only known to his wife Diane and his doctors: He had acute myeloid leukemia. Once he finally made his condition public, a series of benefit concerts were organized in the spring of 2006. Shortly thereafter, on August 3, 2006, Lee passed away in Memphis.
Echols and the members of Baby Lemonade have continued to play together after Lee's death (James Nolte replaced Chapple on bass in 2021), touring under the name The Love Band; they have a few gigs this month, in fact.
2025 turned out to be a good year for me to do this exercise, because this year, the final chapter in Lee and Love's musical legacy will be written. High Moon is scheduled to release
Just to Remind You, which consists of some of Lee's previously unreleased recordings between 1990 and 2005; just before his death, he presented Diane with a CD of 17 songs and told her they were the ones he wanted released after he was gone. Four songs were arranged by Angel, Lee's collaborator on the
Forever Changes arrangements.
“Where does it fit in the canon? I’m not sure it does,” High Moon's George Wallace told Mojo. “But I see it as the actual follow-up to
Forever Changes. When Arthur did that, for some reason, he felt like he was going to die, and that these would be his last words. With this album, he knew he was going to die. This is his last musical gift to the world.”