Butch Engle & the Styx were a very minor mid-'60s San Francisco Bay Area band that issued just three singles (the first, in 1964, under the name
the Showmen). They played moody garage-folk-rock with a similarity to
the Beau Brummels that was not coincidence: all of their material, except for
the Showmen single, was written or co-written by
Ron Elliott of
the Beau Brummels.
The Beau Brummels were a fine group, and Elliott was an excellent songwriter. But the compositions
Butch Engle & the Styx were granted access to were weak by Elliott's own high standards and in fact were basically leftovers that were not deemed strong enough for
the Beau Brummels to record. As Engle himself recalled in the liner notes to The Best of Butch Engle & the Styx: No Matter What You Say, "Ron,
Sly Stewart, [and Autumn record executives]
Tom Donahue and
Bobby Mitchell would choose which songs would go on [a
Beau Brummels] album, and then we could take what we wanted from whatever was left."
Butch Engle & the Styx released just two singles under that name and broke up in 1968. Both sides of those two singles, along with both sides of
the Showmen single and almost a dozen previously unissued cuts, were issued by Sundazed on The Best of Butch Engle & the Styx: No Matter What You Say in 2000.
–
Richie Unterberger, Rovi