Oz Bach was one of the more ebullient and outgoing talents in 1960s folk and pop music. Apart from having a name that was impossible to forget, he was also one of those ubiquitous figures that just kept turning up either at or near lots of really neat musical phenomena. Bach studied at the Actors' Workshop in Coral Gables, FL, and attended college in Miami during the late '50s and early '60s. He entered music professionally in 1962 as a guitarist, singer, and comic, switched to playing bass in 1963, and spent a good part of the next couple of years working as a backup musician to the likes of
Fred Neil,
Tom Paxton,
Odetta,
Bob Gibson, and
Josh White. In 1965, while back in Florida,
Bach and his friend
Nigel Pickering made the acquaintance of
Elaine Spanky McFarlane, a singer from Chicago, and the three later hooked up in the Windy City in a hastily assembled act that relied as much on comedy (which was still very much Bach's forte) as music. That trio became
Spanky Our Gang, and Bach's musical sensibilities and sense of humor were integral parts of the group's debut album in 1967. Bach left Spanky & Our Gang prior to the recording of their second album, and from 1969 through 1972, he played sessions and worked as an arranger for artists such as
Linda Ronstadt,
Steve Miller, and
Sergio Mendes, as well as forming two groups,
Wings (not the
Paul McCartney outfit, but a folk/country-rock group on ABC-Dunhill) and Tarantula, neither of which made any lasting commercial impression.
From 1972 onward, he moved into theater and film and was involved in the writing of jingles and television commercials and also directed variety shows on stage in Las Vegas and other locales. He had his own talk show in Florida for a time, did some serious dramatic acting, and also directed an award-winning short film, #Froggy Went A-Courtin', that was released in 1977. Over the course of his career, Bach worked with any number of comic and musical figures (some combining both fields as he did), including Milton Berle, Jerry Lewis, George Segal, Mama Cass Elliot, although his most recognizable impact on popular culture was as a member of Spanky Our Gang, with whom he appeared on two LPs, the debut and the live album (which was taken from an early performance by the group). He died of cancer in 1998. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi