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All The Leaves Are Brown...
Remembering Papa John Phillips
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John Edmund Andrew Phillips-
August 30, 1935-March 18,
2001
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Denny Doherty, Michelle Phillips,
Scott McKenzie
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In foreground Michelle Phillips
kisses Denny Doherty. In
the back, from left are Spanky McFarlane, Owen Elliot, Bijou
Phillips, Jeffrey Phillips and Shane Baracan (John's grandson) |
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Mackenzie and Bijou Phillips
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Mackenzie Phillips and Denny Doherty
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Owen Elliot Kugell and Mackenzie Phillips |

Bijou Phillips and Sean Lennon.
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Scott McKenzie and Michelle
Phillips
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Shane Baracan, John's grandson.
At rear left
on electric guitar is Shane's father, Shane Fontayne
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John's
son Tamerlane |

Lou Adler at the sound check
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From The Los Angeles Times,
Thursday, March 29, 2001
--Dear John--
A gathering of friends, family and fans mark the rock
'n' roll life of Mamas and Papas founder John Phillips, who died last week at 65.
By RANDY LEWIS, Times Staff Writer
Death and even "Destruction" were reasons for
celebration rather than commiseration Tuesday night at the Roxy,
the scene of a musically and emotionally powerful rock 'n' roll wake for
the Mamas and the Papas leader John Phillips, who died March 18 of heart failure at
65.
Close to 300 fans, friends, fellow musicians and
members of his large and scattered family turned out for a hastily assembled memorial for a man whose music evoked an image of
California as seductively idyllic as his own life was wildly
stormy.
The event, which was open to the public at no charge,
began with film footage of the Mamas and the Papas at their '60s peak
and ended with an all-star performance of the folk-rock band's signature
hit, "California Dreamin'." In between, a parade of many key names in
the California folk-rock movement offered anecdotes and musical
tributes to Phillips through many of his best-known songs and several of
their own.
"It's an unbelievable night," Phillips' oldest
daughter, actress-singer Mackenzie Phillips, said offstage after the
show ended near midnight. "We didn't know what kind of turnout we would
have."
In keeping with the spirit of John Phillips' own
freewheeling life, participants acknowledged his estimable musical contributions as a songwriter and vocal arranger as well as the
tumultuous lifestyle that led to a nasty breakup with his wife,
the Mamas and the Papas' Michelle Phillips, and his struggles with alcohol
and drugs. He had received a liver transplant
in 1992.
"The reactions I heard a lot when he died were, 'Oh,
no' and, 'I can't believe he lasted this long,' " singer-songwriter John Stewart said after the tribute.
"He did absolutely everything one person could do,
with the possible exception of a sex-change operation,"
Stewart said with a laugh, adding, "I guess he just ran out of
time."
Earlier, Stewart followed the opening film
retrospective, which included a recently taped performance by Jose
Feliciano of "California Dreamin'," with the only speech
during the three-hour event that could be considered a eulogy.
Following his remarks, one performer after another
took the stage in various combinations. Some backed themselves on guitar, while others used a house band put together by Mackenzie
Phillips' ex-husband, singer-songwriter Shane Fontayne.
Their 14-year-old son, named Shayne, sang a song of his own and helped
with vocals on some of the Mamas and
the Papas songs that came later.
The proceedings were conducted largely by veteran
record executive and Roxy owner Lou Adler, who gave the Mamas and
the Papas their first contract in 1965 and produced their records, and by
original Mamas and Papas singer Denny
Doherty.
Doherty's demeanor was upbeat while he was on stage,
but he got dewy-eyed while looking on from the back of the room midway
through the show.
Although John and Michelle never fully set aside
their animosity, she smiled often while watching and snapping pictures of
the performances from the side of the stage, then drew appreciative gasps
from the crowd when she strode on stage
twice to sing alongside Doherty.
The coterie of '60s folk rockers on hand included
Barry McGuire, who updated his quintessential '60s protest-rock hit "Eve of Destruction" with an electrifying, all-star sing-along that
galvanized the other musicians and the audience.
Phillips' other children also helped out vocally,
including sons Jeffrey and Tamerlane and singer-actress-model Bijou. "Mama" Cass Elliot's daughter, Owen Elliot, sang several parts
originally sung by her mother, who died in 1974.
Singer-songwriter Chynna Phillips, onetime member of the group Wilson
Phillips with Beach Boy Brian Wilson's daughters
Carney and Wendy, was the only one of Phillips' children who didn't turn
up on stage--because she was in New York for
a Brian Wilson tribute she'd previously committed to, according to
Adler.
* * *
The Beach Boys, however, were represented by Bruce
Johnston, and Mike Love, who told the audience, "Nobody
loved the Mamas and the Papas more than the Beach Boys." They sang
"Kokomo," their 1988 hit that was written by Phillips, McKenzie, Love and Terry Melcher, who jumped in gamely on the unrehearsed
rendition of the song.
Spanky McFarlane--the Spanky & Our Gang singer
drafted by John Phillips when he reconfigured the Mamas and the
Papas with Mackenzie and '60s folkie Scott McKenzie to resume touring in
the 1980s--also assisted in re-creating the Mamas
and the Papas sound for one more night.
McKenzie joined in on several Mamas and Papas tunes
and took the spotlight to sing his biggest hit, "San Francisco
(Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)," another John Phillips
composition.
The many baby boomers who turned out reveled again in
Phillips' harmonically rich vocal arrangements, which played a key role
in the emergence of a California rock sound in the '60s.
Others on hand included Sean Lennon, who sang and
played guitar and drums over the course of the night, and songwriter
P.F. Sloan, composer of "Eve of Destruction" and "You Baby," another song
the Mamas and the Papas recorded, though it was the Turtles who had a
Top 20 single with the song.
"I felt like John was here," said Stewart--who had
known Phillips since 1960--as he headed for the door after the
show. "I think we gave him a good send-off, one that also brings some
closure. I spent a lot of years with John,
and what I saw here tonight was his legacy--his children and his music,
and realizing how terrific and beautiful
those songs were."
Added another friend, actor Ed Begley Jr., as he rose
from his seat when the music had ended, "What stood out for me is
what a great, great songwriter John was--Sammy Cahn-level songwriting, in
my opinion--and those songs are going to
last for a long, long time."