Toy Matinee

Toy Matinee
Studio album by
Toy Matinee
Released28 June 1990
GenreProgressive rock
Length45:44
LabelReprise
ProducerBill Bottrell
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Toy Matinee was a short-lived American rock band, which released one eponymous album. Their sound featured an array of influences, including progressive rock, album-oriented rock and pop reminiscent of both the Beatles and the Beach Boys.

Around the end of 1988, Patrick Leonard approached bassist Guy Pratt about forming a band and helping him audition and recruit members, as the two had become friends through working on Madonna's "Like a Prayer" song and I'm Breathless album, and other material previously. Pratt agreed and from then through the beginning of 1989, they recruited singer/lyricist/multi-instrumentalist Kevin Gilbert, drummer Brian MacLeod, and guitarist Tim Pierce to complete the ensemble. Pratt recalls that for various legal reasons he never signed up as a full member of the band despite being in at the start of the project and co-writing half of the songs on the band's only album, which featured guest appearances from other musicians including Julian Lennon. The album was engineered and produced by Bill Bottrell, and released by Reprise Records in 1990.

The album's themes covered a broad ground. The lead single and album opener "Last Plane Out" came from a long standing fascination Pratt had with the idea of the last flight out of a war zone, and the tracks "Turn It On Salvador" and "Remember My Name" were dedicated to painter Salvador Dalí, and Czech poet and political figure Václav Havel respectively. "Queen of Misery" is about Madonna;[2] Leonard was the singer's longtime songwriting and producing partner, and he and most of the other members of Toy Matinee had worked on Madonna's I'm Breathless album—Leonard as producer/writer/keyboardist, Pratt on bass, Gilbert and Bottrell as producers and engineers, and Pierce on guitar.[3]

After the album was released, Pratt played bass on Pink Floyd's A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour, a commitment he had made prior to the project beginning (and being engaged at the time to Gala Wright, daughter of Pink Floyd's keyboard player Richard Wright, one he was loath to break). MacLeod and Pierce moved on to other session work, and Leonard was not interested in being part of a tour that involved replacing so many of the original members.[4] Gilbert took on that role himself instead, assembling a promotional band for the album which featured Gilbert's soon-to-be girlfriend, Sheryl Crow, on keyboards, Marc Bonilla on guitar, Spencer Campbell on bass and Toss Panos on drums.

Starting in late 1990, the group engaged in heavy radio promotion wherever possible, most notably frequent appearances on The Mark & Brian Show on Los Angeles-area station KLOS. There was short tour in the spring of 1991 around mostly the west coast. A live recording of Gilbert and this touring band performing songs from the album on May 1, 1991 at The Roxy was released in 2010 as Kevin Gilbert Performs Toy Matinee Live.[5] That same year, Toy Matinee Acoustic was released, consisting of a compilation of rehearsals in 1990 and three songs recorded at the Ventura Theatre on April 21, 1991. In 2024, the latter concert was released in its entirety as Troy Manitee: Men Without Pat. The promotional tour ended because of a legal action taken by band co-founder Pat Leonard.

Two of the songs on Toy Matinee—"The Ballad of Jenny Ledge" and "Last Plane Out"—received wide play on AOR stations partly due to Gilbert's promotional work, both of them peaking at No. 23 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.[6] Despite the chart success of the singles, the album's highest U.S. chart position was No. 129, and sales were enough below expectations that many unsold copies of the CD were widely available as cut-outs in the early 1990s.

Gilbert went on to do additional work with Bottrell, including Sheryl Crow's debut album and solo projects. In 1994, Leonard and former Mr. Mister frontman Richard Page released the album Meanwhile as Third Matinee. Leonard has revealed that he spoke to Gilbert about doing "another project" shortly before Gilbert's untimely death in 1996 ended any possibility of a second Toy Matinee album.[7] Retrospectively, Tim Pierce has called Toy Matinee "the greatest band he ever joined",[8] while Guy Pratt has dubbed it "one of the coolest projects he was ever involved with."[9]

  1. ^ Allmusic review
  2. ^ Rolling Stone, August 1991, "True Confessions: The Rolling Stone Interview With Madonna, Part One Archived 2013-02-15 at archive.today" by Carrie Fisher, in which Madonna says "Pat Leonard, this guy that I write music with, wrote a song about me called 'Queen Of Misery.'"
  3. ^ Discogs entry for I'm Breathless
  4. ^ Wayne Perez Interviews Brian MacLeod
  5. ^ Kevin Gilbert Performs Toy Matinee Live
  6. ^ AllMusic Toy Matinee Awards
  7. ^ Toy Matinee - Bonus Footage | Pat Leonard | Guy Pratt | Brian MacLeod | Bill Bottrell, retrieved 2021-03-14
  8. ^ The GREATEST Band I EVER Joined | The STORY of TOY MATINEE, retrieved 2021-03-14
  9. ^ Guy Pratt Lockdown Licks Episode 7 Last Plane Out (Toy Matinee), retrieved 2021-03-14

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