Thomas Richard Frost recorded a handful of classic pop singles for Imperial from 1968 through 1970, including She's Got Love, which charted at number 83 on Billboard's Top 100 singles chart. In November 1969, they appeared on TV's #American Bandstand, performing the song. Each subsequent single was a step toward what was sure to be their artistic tour de force, an album they envisioned as Visualize. For these fantastic 1969 recordings, the duo were backed by Kim Fowley's usual Imperial session gang, including Skip Battin (ex-Skip Flip, the Byrds, the Flying Burrito Brothers, and the New Riders of the Purple Sage), Steppenwolf guitarist Mars Bonfire, and legendary drummer Hal Blaine. Unfortunately for all concerned, this album was also -- and somewhat inexplicably -- canceled in the 11th hour by the powers-that-be at Imperial, even though the group's master recordings were in the can, and the album had been assigned a catalog number and was being prepared for release. The only explanation Imperial gave at the time was that they were undergoing reorganization after being acquired by Liberty Records; their album simply wasn't a priority to the new suits, and, so, Visualize was indefinitely shelved.
All of this resulted -- as you might expect -- in Thomas Richard Frost becoming disillusioned with their record company. In 1972, they recorded a few additional tracks to get out of their record deal, then moved over to UNI, where they eventually released an accomplished country-rock flavored singer/songwriter album, the self-titled Thomas Richard Frost, produced by Joe Saraceno. In 1996, the Distortions label issued a collection by Powder, entitled Biff! Bang! Powder, which was comprised mostly of their 1968 demos. In 2002, Rev-Ola reissue maven Joe Foster happily negotiated the release of not just the complete Visualize album (tracks one through 12), but additional outtakes and all of the duo's original mono singles, released prior to the album sessions. ~ Bryan Thomas, Rovi