- Rick Berlin
Rick Berlin (born Richard Gustave Kinscherf III, in
Sioux City ,Iowa in 1945) is aBoston -basedsinger-songwriter , formerly the frontman ofOrchestra Luna , Luna, Berlin Airlift, Rick Berlin: The Movie, and The Shelley Winters Project.A
Yale graduate, Berlin has been writing and performing a distinctly theatrical form ofrock and roll since the early 1970s. He achieved much of his early success withOrchestra Luna , whose eponymous debut was released onEpic Records in 1974. "Orchestra Luna," co-produced byRupert Holmes , captured many of the dramatic eccentricities that made the band a renowned live act, particularly on "Heart" (a cover of the "Damn Yankees " tune). That year,WBCN started an annual tradition of playing this particular cut for theBoston Red Sox on thebaseball team's opening day. Album sales proved disappointing to Epic, though the tour for the record was successful (including an opening slot forRoxy Music ). The label dropped the band, but Berlin (then Kinscherf) continued to compose and perform with Orchestra Luna, becoming a part of theCBGB scene inNew York City and playing with acts likeTalking Heads andThe Ramones . In 1976, Orchestra Luna was offered a recording contract fromSire Records , which they turned down. Unfortunately, they found themselves unable to find a better offer. In 1978, the band's name was changed to, simply, Luna. A hit single, "Hooray For Hollywood" was released, but litigation with a former producer prevented a full album from following.In 1982, a new band, Berlin Airlift, released its eponymous debut on Handshake/
CBS Records . The album was given little chance to succeed, however, as Handshake declared bankruptcy less than two months later. Nonetheless, two of the album's singles, "Don't Stop Me From Crying" and "Over The Hill" were hits on local Boston radio. In 1983, Berlin Airlift opened forJ. Geils Band and released the "Professionally damaged" EP.Rick Berlin: The Movie was formed in 1985. Berlin won Indie Songwriter of the Year at the Boston Music Awards for the single "Rock 'n Roll Romance" in 1987, and continued to perform in Rick Berlin: The Movie until 1989. He briefly fronted a band called Rome Is Burning in 1990, but by 1991 was performing as a solo artist. In 1994, Berlin began playing Monday nights at a Boston transvestite bar called Jacques. This weekly gig continued through 2003.
In 1999, Berlin formed one more band, The Shelley Winters Project. An eponymous, six-track CD was released on
Orchard Records in 2001, followed in 2002 by the full-length "I Hate Everything But You" onWindjam Records . In 2003, The Shelley Winters Project opened forThe B-52's , and in 2004 the band folded.Berlin currently records as a solo artist, and released an album "Me & Van Gogh" in early 2006 on
Hi-n-Dry . He is also employed at historicDoyle's Cafe inJamaica Plain, MA .External links
* [http://rickberlin.com/ Rick's official website] includes MP3s, bio, and reviews.
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:hpfuxqrjld6e Allmusic Guide Entry]
* [http://www.unterzuber.com/ol_bios.html Orchestra Luna fan site]
* [http://www.cbgb.com/shrine/shriners/orchestraluna.htm Orchestra Luna at CBGB]
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