This video is for the purpose of entertainment only.
All images used within this video are taken from photos of my own personal original vinyl promotional white label LP jacket/cover etc - Troyka "Troyka" (1970) on Cotillion Records SD 9020.
A Troyka isnt just a type of sled drawn by three horses across the Steppes of Russia and Eastern Europe. Its also the name of a Canadian rock band driven by 3 musicians from Edmonton, Alberta. Robert Edwards, Michael Richards and Ron Lukawitski formed Troyka in 1967 while living in Montreal. Since all three musicians shared the same ethnic heritage, they decided to create a hard driving rock sound mixed with a flavor of music from their ancestral past.Robert Edwards (guitar, mandolin)
Michael Richards (drums, vocals)
Ron Lukawitski (bass, bongos)
Late-sixties power trio Troyka combined some frenetic post-Cream guitar thrills with gruff, hyper-macho vocals on their lone long-player.
Troyka were originally from Edmonton Alberta Canada, which has a huge Ukrainian Canadian population. Many people here in Alberta laughingly refer to Edmonton as 'Edmonchuck'.
The group comprised of Robert Edwards, Michael Richards, and Ron Lukawitski.
They moved to Montreal and performed as a quartet in 1966, then regrouped back in Alberta as a trio. There, in an homage to their shared Ukrainian heritage, they dubbed themselves Troyka (though whether their namesake was a powerful triumvirate or an antiquated three-horse cliche has certainly blurred with the passage of time).
Troyka even comes speckled with Slavic elements (two tack-on instrumentals, the lilting 'Introduction' and the closer 'Troyka Finale', bookend the record), but for the most part it relies on crotch-heavy amplification to counter the relative paucity of ideas here. 'Natural' for instance, sports some prime virtuosic guitar work, though the constipated vocals reek of facile sexism -- as if an axe and some fine chops weren't enough to get you laid without pubescent posturing like, "Hey mama, won't you come down by the river, and give me some". 'Rolling Down the Road', with its nearly proto-speed metal, fares better, channelling frantic hyper blues into an almost MC5-like abandon. Other tracks hint at a more delicate side, especially the wistful soft-psych instrumental 'Dear Margaret (Malagosia)', with its Spanish tinges and flecks of John Williams-ish guitar.
Troyka were often hailed for their legendary live sets -- one particularly raucous set at New York's Fillmore East saw them flagged back for a triple encore. By 1970 they seemed to be hitting their stride, scoring a coveted support slot in Toronto for the mother of all troikas, Leslie West's Mountain.
But alas, while poised to secure a page in history alongside the Band, the Grateful Dead and Janis Joplin, aboard the infamous bourbon-LSD- and-barbiturate-laced 'Festival Express' cross-Canada train tour in the summer of 1970 (great movie now on DVD) , guitarist Rob Edwards left to tend to family concerns, and thus fame turned to footnote for Troyka.
Additional information regarding this great Canadian band can be found here at the "Troyka' website. The site includes a complete band bio, along with individual band members bios, a guest book, tons of great band photos and much more:
http://troyka.ca/
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