| The songwriter. The guitarist. The
unmistakable voice that powered
Grand Funk Railroad to 12
platinum and 15 gold albums.
A true rock 'n roll legend, Mark
Farner found fame and success
at 20 years of age as the leader
of one of America's biggest
bands, Grand Funk Railroad. The
band recorded 17 albums with
total sales of more than 25 million
records, and toured the world,
which isn't bad for a guy who only
had three formal guitar lessons.
Mark played the usual dates a teenage band would play - high school
dances, VFW halls, wedding receptions and the like. Upon leaving high
school, Mark turned professional, working with Terry Knight and the
Pack, The Bossmen (with Dick Wagner), back to Terry Knight and the
Pack, then just the Pack (this time with no Terry Knight, but with
drummer Don Brewer).
In 1969, Mel Schacher, who had been a member of Question Mark and
the Mysterians, was invited to join Mark and Don, and Grand Funk
Railroad - one of the first American power trios - was born.
Then came the Atlanta International Pop Festival in July 1969. The only
unsigned act on the show, Grand Funk Railroad played before 180,000
people in 110-degree heat and the acclaim was instantaneous.
Following their Atlanta appearance, the band was signed by Capitol
Records and their first album On Time, was recorded and released
within four months.
The saga of Grand Funk Railroad is well documented. The albums
included such titles as Grand Funk Railroad, Survival, Live Album,
Closer To Home, E Pluribus Funk, Phoenix, Good Singin' Good
Playin', Caught In The Act and All The Girls In The World Beware,
among others. The hit singles included "I'm Your Captain (Closer To
Home)," "Foot-Stompin' Music," "Loco-motion," "Mean Mistreater,"
"Bad Time" and "Some Kind Of Wonderful," among others. In 1971
they set the attendance record at New York's Shea Stadium for a
concert, surpassing the record set by The Beatles in 1966, and a
record that still stands today, some 17 years later.
In early 1977, Grand Funk Railroad called it quits, and after taking a
year or so off, Mark Farner signed a solo deal with Atlantic Records
and issued two critically acclaimed albums: Mark Farner and No Frills.
In 1981, a reunited Grand Funk Railroad recorded a new album, Grand
Funk Lives for Full Moon/Warner Bros. Records, and a second album,
What's Funk, shipped in 1982.
Mark released 4 contemporary Christian albums from 1983 through 1994, earning a Dove nomination and reaching the #2 chart position with the John Beland composition "Isn't it Amazing". His continuous touring schedule kept him in contact with both his longtime Grand Funk fans, and the new fans that first noticed Mark during his solo years.
In 1995, Mark toured with Ringo Starr's All-Star Band, then toured with
The Northwest Airlines All-Stars in 1996 before reuniting with Don
Brewer and Mel Schacher to record their Bosnia album for Capitol-EMI.
Grand Funk Railroad toured in 1996, 1997 and 1998 and was named
to Pollstar's Top 100 Tours of 1998. VH-1's "Behind The Music" on
Grand Funk Railroad has been airing since early 1999, as well as the Grand Funk Railroad Anthology album released on Capitol Records.
Today, Mark is still traveling the world with the N'rG band, pleasing GFR fans everywhere and continuing the legend begun with Grand Funk Railroad!
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