Folk rock duo probably from California, who struggled in the music business for five years, and were married since 1963. The couple relased two albums "Mr. & Mrs. Garvey" in 1968 and "Songs: 1965 - 1971" on their own Mud label. The debut self-titled album was produced by Bob Johnston (Dylan, Cash) and featured top Nashville sessionmen like Kenneth Butrey, Norbert Putnam, Wayne Moss, Charlie McCoy, and a young Charlie Daniels. Though the album had a folk-rock base, it mixed that with early songwriter influences and dashes of baroque pop, psychedelia, and country-rock. All songs were written by Pat and Victoria, with fantasy-tinged lyrics.
Victoria Garvey, Pat Garvey - vocals. Charlie Daniels, Wayne Moss - guitars. Charlie McCoy - harmonica, guitar, trumpet. Craig Doerge - celeste, harpsichord, piano. Tommy Jackson - violin. Eddy Tinch - French horn. Joseph Robinson - oboe. Don Tweedy - flute. Warren Tweedy - saxophone. Wayne Butler - trombone, tuba. Bob Moore, Bobby Dobson, Norbert Putnam - bass. Kenny Butler - drums.
Fugacity. Supermarkets. It's quite a lovely painting, Mrs. Custer, I'm sorry things turned out of way for George. Ghost towns. Orange nickelodeon. Inside a paper stagecoach, slowly. Fifi O'Toole. Pick the weeds. A millionaire with a jazz band playing. Street of joy. Bon voyage, Miss Tichhauser.