With an upper vocal range that rivals
Kate Bush's and a lower span that runs alongside
Annie Lennox's, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and studio engineer
Happy Rhodes possesses a four-octave instrument that sets her apart from most of her peers. Her self-produced progressive, moody, and unique dream pop recordings from the mid-'80s to the late '90s (best exemplified on the albums
Warpaint and
Ecto) showcase her unique brand of dreamy, multi-textured, progressive pop that has drawn the appreciation of listeners all over the globe due in no small part to an active, devoted fan base -- who refer to themselves as Ectophiles -- and the internet. Though she took a hiatus from solo recording after 2007's Find Me, in 2016 she joined
Security Project, an all-star
Peter Gabriel tribute band (their repertoire is drawn almost exclusively from his recordings).
Rhodes also builds pro audio equipment for Dangerous Music. In 2018, Numero Group issued
Ectotrophia, a retrospective compilation drawn from her first four albums.
Rhodes was born Kimberly Tyler Rhodes in 1965. Her childhood nickname became her legal one at 16. As a preteen adolescent heavily under the sway of
Queen, she began emulating
Freddie Mercury and practiced expanding her vocal range to sing along with him in key. She was also taken with the multi-layered approach the band employed on recordings. Her other musical influences included
Wendy Carlos' Switched on Bach,
Yes,
Peter Gabriel-era
Genesis, and
David Bowie. As a teen she began playing the guitar and writing songs in earnest.
Rhodes saw
Kate Bush's December 9, 1978 performance on Saturday Night Live and it shifted her focus forever. After being bullied in high school,
Rhodes dropped out in the 11th grade -- with the consent of her mother, who supported her dreams -- to pursue music full-time. She was mentored by Pat Tessitore, who founded the Cathedral Sound Studio in a nearby town. She initially interned as a recording engineer, but after her boss heard her sing, all focus was on her singing and original songs. In 1985 he gave her a Roland Juno 106 synthesizer, altering the way she made music. She created a small studio in her apartment and began experimenting with sound, production, writing, and arranging. From 1984-1986, Tessitore recorded
Rhodes performing her original material. These early tracks were later issued on a series of cassettes released by Kevin Bartlett and his Aural Gratification Records label: (
Happy Rhodes, Vol. 1 and Vol. 2, and
Rearmament), and followed them a year later with
Ecto. As a duo named Bartlett/Rhodes, she played many live shows during 1987, but no recorded material resulted from the time.
In 1988, fans of
Bush, on an internet bulletin board, read about Rhodes from DJ Vickie Williams, who'd discovered her music through a tape-trading network. She began playing it on her radio show Suspended in Gaffa on Kansas City, Missouri's KKFI. The emerging
Rhodes' fans had to eventually find their own home apart from the
Bush BBS and started their own hub called Ecto. This small group was responsible for expanding
Rhodes' cult of fans across the globe.
Happy Rhodes returned to solo status in 1991 with
Warpaint, an album that expanded her listening base thanks to heavy airplay of its single "Feed the Fire" on WXPN, Philadelphia's public radio station. She later played a sold-out concert at the city's University Museum Auditorium for her "Ectophiles" and newer fans. A year later,
Rhodes' first four albums were given compact disc releases through Aural Gratification. The year 1993 saw the issue of two new albums,
Equipoise and RhodeSongs. After the 1994 album Building the Colossus,
Rhodes released a full-length of live and unreleased acoustic music as The Keep.
Given the spread of her reputation and the devotion of her growing fan base, the major labels came sniffing.
Rhodes entertained a number of offers, but rejected them all due to her insistence on maintaining the rights to her material. She assumed production and engineering duties on her next album, 1998's Many Worlds Are Born Tonight. She signed with the large independent Samson Music to release and distribute the recording. She was able to tour the northeastern United States with a serious touring stage show. "Roy," her single from the set, reached number 42 on Club Play/Dance Music chart. Sales figures were better than most of her previous albums combined, but Samson's owners were more adept at running their successful film division, Gold Circle Films. They dropped
Rhodes but their parting was amicable -- Samson returned her unsold records and placed the rights to the masters under her ownership.
Rhodes fans produced a small festival called Ectofest in Danbury, Connecticut and Santa Cruz, California in 2000 and 2001, where she headlined the day-long event. In 2001, she self-recorded the album Find Me, which remained unreleased until 2007. A limited-edition, eight-song sampler from the record was sold at a 2005 concert. Musicians on Find Me include guitarist
Bon Lozaga and bassists
Hansford Rowe and Carl Adami, guitarists
Ted Kumpel and Jon Cather, and pianist
Rob Schwimmer.
Rhodes worked her day job for most of the early 2000s, but continued to write and demo music privately. She also did some studio work with artists ranging from
Will Ackerman and
Jeff Oster to
Han Rowe before officially coming out of retirement to join
Security Project as its lead vocalist in 2016. The band--whose other members include Trey Gunn, Jerry Marotta, Michael Cozzi, and keyboardist David Jameson--issued the two-part
Live in 2016, and the digital-only Five and the studio album
Contact the following year.
In 2018 the Chicago-based record label the Numero Group released a retrospective compilation of 18 songs titled
Ectotrophia, drawn from her first four albums, the package includes lyrics and an extensive critical and biographical essay by Erin Osmon. In addition,
Security Project's label, 7D Media, reissued her back catalog digitally through Bandcamp. ~ John Bush