Jobriath was born in
King of Prussia,
Pennsylvania, and raised in
Houston, Texas. He played organ in his local church and it was during this time he was introduced to
Eugene Ormandy as a
child prodigy. While he was a high school student, he became further interested in
classical music, and favored composers such as
Sergei Prokofiev, and
he wrote the first two movements of his first symphony by his senior
year in high school, but for reasons unknown chose not to complete it. In 1964, he took an interest in folk music and formed the trio, The Last Three.
He was drafted into the military in the mid-1960 but went
AWOL within months. Renaming himself
Jobriath Salisbury, he relocated to
Los Angeles.
He auditioned for the musical
Hair
as a piano player but impressed producer and director,
Tom O'Horgan, with his
singing and talents on the piano and was cast into a leading role as 'Woof', a gay teenager; however, in 1969 he was fired from the production for "upstaging" the other actors.
When he left
Hair he joined the folk-rock band Pidgeon as their lead singer and guitarist; the group was signed to
Decca Records.
The band recorded a debut album originally titled
First Flight From
the Forest which was re-titled by their label as the self-titled
Pigeon. and shortly after the album's release the group disbanded. At this time he was traced by the
military police and arrested, spending nearly six months in a military psychiatric hospital after suffering a breakdown. During this period he began writing the songs that would lead to his next musical incarnation.
album cover with embossed title detail
In mid-December 1972
Jerry Brandt overheard a demo tape made by
Jobriath. Brandt located him in California, where he was living in an unfurnished apartment and working as a
prostitute. Brandt: "In walked this beautiful creature dressed in white. I said, Why don't you come out to Malibu and hang out?" Brandt signed
Jobriath, now calling himself
Jobriath Boone, to
Elektra Records for a reported $500,000, in what was allegedly the most lucrative recording contract of its time.
The label's president
David Geffen signed Jobriath for a two-album deal. A huge marketing campaign and media blitz ensued, including full-page advertisements in
Vogue,
Penthouse, and
Rolling Stone magazines, full-length posters on over 250
New York City buses and a huge 41' by 43' billboard in
Times Square.
All featured the forthcoming debut album sleeve design by noted
photographer
Shig Ikeda, which featured a nude Jobriath, made to
resemble an ancient Roman statue.
Plans were announced for a lavish three night live debut at the
Paris Opera in
France that December, at a cost of $200,000 and a subsequent tour of European opera houses.
Jobriath informed the
press
that the show would feature him dressed as "
King Kong being projected
upwards on a mini
Empire State Building. This will turn into a giant
spurting penis and I will have transformed into
Marlene Dietrich."
Elektra, concerned about spiraling production costs, postponed the
Paris Opera shows until February, later canceling them due to expense.
The debut album
Jobriath was released, garnering mostly positive reviews. Rolling Stone stated that Jobriath had "talent to burn",
Cashbox called it "truly one of the most interesting albums of the year" and
Record World hailed it as "brilliantly incisive", referring to
Jobriath as "a true Renaissance man who will gain a tremendous following".
Esquire disagreed, calling it "the hype of the year".
The album was co-produced by
Eddie Kramer and
Jobriath, featuring string arrangements by
Jobriath, recorded at
Olympic Studios with the
London Symphony Orchestra. Kramer described Jobriath in
Mojo
as "a romantic soul, really. He wanted orchestrations like old film
music, though he knew nothing about scoring. So he bought a book on
orchestration and within a week he'd come up with scores of a haunting
quality".
Peter Frampton is also credited on the album.
Brandt continued making extravagant statements such as "Elvis, the
Beatles, and Jobriath" and declaring that both he and
Jobriath had
booked flights on the first
Pan American passenger flight to the moon. Meanwhile,
Jobriath declared
himself "rock's truest fairy", a comment that did little to increase his
popularity at the time but has since confirmed his status as the first
openly
gay rock singer to be signed to a major record label.
The debut public performance by
Jobriath was made on television, when Brandt secured him an appearance on the popular show
The Midnight Special. The costumes were designed by
Jobriath and the choreography was by
Joyce Trisler, of the
Joffrey Ballet.
Two songs were performed:
I'maman and
Rock of Ages, the latter
substituting for
Take Me I'm Yours which was pulled after the producer
objected to its overtly
sado-masochistic theme. The long-awaited live performance finally came in July 1974 with two sold-out shows at the New York
The Bottom Line club. Sales for the album however, were poor and it failed to secure a chart placing.
In January 1975 he announced his retirement from the music
industry and moved into a pyramid topped rooftop apartment at the
Chelsea Hotel in
New York City. He attempted to resume his acting career, and was invited to audition for the role of
Al Pacino's lover in the film
Dog Day Afternoon. According to keyboard player
Hayden Wayne, Jobriath had the script for
Dog Day backstage at a concert at
Nassau Coliseum,
and claimed he didn't want to do the film due to the character's
wearing of a dress. Calling himself "Cole Berlin" (a play on both
Cole Porter and
Irving Berlin), he worked as a cabaret singer at a restaurant called
The Covent Gardens, as well as clubs and cabarets, augmenting his income with occasional prostitution.