A Progressive on the Prairie

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The passing of a musician

While I don’t want to downplay the loss of John Lennon 25 years ago, I’m not going to be one of the millions of bloggers commenting on that today. I want to recall another musician many people have never heard of.

Yesterday’s local daily brought the news that drummer Mark Craney, a Sioux Falls native, died Nov. 26 from longstanding health problems. Craney was more than just a local music standout. He toured with Tommy Bolin (a Sioux City, Iowa, native) and Jeff Beck and recorded with Jean-Luc Ponty< and Gino Vannelli in the late 1970s before joining Jethro Tull. (Ian Anderson, who initiated the idea of a Craney 1997 compilation CD on which Craney and many recognizable artists perform, has posted a tribute at the band’s website.) Craney also toured with Tower of Power before kidney problems forced him out of the business. Following a kidney transplant, Craney ended up touring again, this time with the Eric Burdon Band. A few years later, though, the transplanted kidney failed and Craney was forced off the road for good in 1996.

Yet those credentials aren’t why I remember Mark Craney. And, to the best of my knowledge, I never met Mark. Yet he and a few of his friends had a dramatic impact on my musical interests.

One of the local bands Craney played in was Zero Ted, a jazz/rock-oriented band. One night back in 1971 or 1972, the band played at the Watertown Auditorium. I went more for the hell of it than anything else. At this time northeast South Dakota still was largely a music wasteland if you wanted much beyond the Top 40 occasionally played on local radio. Word of mouth, music magazines and late night megawatt radio stations like KOMA out of Oklahoma City or KAAY out of Little Rock were your options to find something a a tad more innovative.

Now, nearly 35 years later, I still recall watching Zero Ted play Traffic’s “The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys” that night. It may be a rock classic today but it was, to my knowledge, the first time this particular teenage kid heard it. Why that particular song on that particular night sticks out in my mind today I can’t really say. I think maybe seeing such top notch musicians in a South Dakota band perform such powerful and intricate music helped reinforce a broader musical horizon, one I was already starting to stretch via other sounds of that era. I know I bought the album of the same name at my first opportunity.

Sure, it was kind of neat to pull out Ponty’s Imaginary Voyage in college and see Craney’s name. Still, whenever I hear “The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys” I think of Zero Ted. Whenever I have heard Mark Craney’s name, I think of that night. I know it immediately came to mind when I read of his death Wednesday morning.

Mark Craney’s passing is surely a loss to his friends, family and fellow musicians. Yet I am sure I am far from being the only person he unknowingly affected with his life and talents, affected in a way that made my life better and which I will always remember. That says a hell of a lot about his life.

Thanks Mark.


And the thing that you’re hearing is only the sound
Of the low spark of high heeled boys

Traffic, The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys

One Response to “The passing of a musician”

  1. 1
    BH in Black Hawk:

    I remember Zero Ted. Thanks for the update. Wow. What a guy Mark Craney was.

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