A pop savant who fastidiously avoided easy categorization throughout the course of his career, Todd Rundgren straddled the gap separating a mainstream star from a cult figure. Rundgren had plenty of hits in the 1970s and ’80s, many of them becoming enduring contemporary standards, such as the Carole King pastiche “I Saw the Light,” the ballads “Hello, It’s Me” and “Can We Still Be Friends,” plus the goofy novelty “Bang on the Drum All Day.” These hits displayed his sharp commercial instincts, impulses he’d wind up subverting and tweaking on such heady ’70s LPs as Something/Anything, A Wizard, A True Star, and Todd, records at the core of a discography that attracted a cult audience and stayed faithful for decades. His dedicated following allowed him to pursue a number of different creative avenues, whether it was leading his art-rock-cum-AOR side band Utopia, pioneering music video and computer software, or dabbling in electronic music. Rundgren balanced these explorations with scores of productions for artists as diverse as Badfinger, Meat Loaf, Grand Funk Railroad, the New York Dolls, and XTC. Collaborations remained a key component of his work even in the 21st century: he often toured as part of Ringo Starr’s All-Star Band, teamed with electronica artist Lindstrom for Runddans in 2015, and polished off unfinished tunes by the likes of Rivers Cuomo, Neil Finn and Sparks for 2022′s Space Force.
A native of Upper Darby, Pennsylvania — a suburb of Philadelphia — Rundgren learned how to play guitar as a child, teaching himself after his initial round of lessons ceased. As a teenager, he absorbed pop music from Motown to Liverpool and formed Money, his first band, when he was 16. Following his high school graduation, he moved to the resort town of Wildwood, New Jersey, where he regularly sat in with a number of bands. Eventually, he became a member of the blues group Woody's Truck Stop, which soon became based in Philadelphia.
Rundgren stayed with the band for several months, but when the group began to move toward hippie psychedelia, he and Carson Van Osten bailed to form the Nazz in 1967. Taking their name from an obscure Yardbirds song and inspired by a variety of British Invasion groups, from the omnipresent Beatles to cult favorites the Move, the Nazz were arguably the first Anglophiles in rock history. There had been many groups that drew inspiration from the Beatles and the Stones, but none had been so self-consciously reverent as the Nazz. Playing lead guitar and bass, respectively, Rundgren and Van Osten were joined by drummer Thom Mooney (formerly of the Munchkins) and lead vocalist/keyboardist Stewkey (born Robert Antoni). By September 1967, the group had received some financial support from local record store Bartoff & Warfield, who also put them in touch with John Kurland, a record promoter who was looking for a guitar pop band. Kurland took a shine to the Nazz and signed on as their manager.
Kurland and his associate, Michael Friedman, had the Nazz sign with SGC Records — an offshoot of Atlantic Records and Columbia-Screen Gems — in the summer of 1968. Their debut album, Nazz, appeared in October, supported by the single “Hello, It’s Me.” Although the song would later become a major hit for Rundgren as a solo artist, the dirgey original version barely scraped the national charts. Despite the lack of success, the record — particularly the Nazz’s self-production of “Open My Eyes” and “Hello, It’s Me” — attracted some good notices. Taking these as a cue, the group began work on an ambitious, self-produced double album, Fungo Bat. By the time it was released in April 1969, it was trimmed down to a single album, Nazz Nazz. In the process of editing, much of Rundgren’s newer, Laura Nyro-influenced material — which he had sung himself — was left on the shelves. Neither the management nor his bandmates gave Rundgren much encouragement to sing, nor was his new introspective direction warmly received by his colleagues. Faced with a no-win situation, Rundgren left the group not long after their summer 1969 tour. Stewkey took control of the Nazz, erased Rundgren’s vocals from the album sitting in the vaults, and replaced them with his own. The result was released as Nazz 3 in 1970, but it stiffed.
Rundgren, meanwhile, became an in-house producer and engineer for former Bob Dylan manager Albert Grossman’s fledgling studio and label, Bearsville Records. Around the same time, Rundgren formed a band called Runt. In reality, Runt was little more than a front for his burgeoning solo career. He played all of the instruments except drums and bass, which were usually handled by brothers Hunt and Tony Sales. Runt — either Runt’s first album or Rundgren’s first solo album, depending on your point of view — was released on Ampex Records in the fall of 1970. The record slowly earned an audience, with the single “We Gotta Get You a Woman” climbing into the Top 20 in early 1971. His modest success was enough to convince Grossman to sign Rundgren to a long-term contract with Bearsville.
Apart from a re-release of Runt, the first Rundgren album to appear on Bearsville was Runt’s final record, The Ballad of Todd Rundgren, a set that was reminiscent of such melodic singer/songwriter peers as King and Nyro, yet it had a subtly bizarre sensibility and quirky sense of humor that gave it a distinctive character. As he pursued his solo career, Rundgren quickly earned a reputation as a talented producer/engineer. His first production was for American Dream, but he quickly graduated to the big leagues thanks to his association with Grossman. In 1970, he engineered the Band’s Stage Fright and Jesse Winchester’s acclaimed eponymous debut. These two productions set the stage for Rundgren to take the production seat that George Harrison left vacant; the result was Badfinger’s Straight Up, which gave him a huge hit with “Baby Blue.” It wasn’t long until Rundgren had a huge hit of his own. He abandoned the Runt concept before beginning his third album, deciding to record the entire record himself.
The result was Something/Anything?, a double-album that cemented Rundgren’s reputation as a near-genius producer and gifted songwriter. Apart from the fourth side, which was constructed as a tongue-in-cheek operetta about a bar band, he played every instrument, sang every part, and produced the entire album. Hailed in the rock press as some sort of masterpiece upon its early 1972 release, it also won Rundgren a wide audience. The King tribute “I Saw the Light” reached number 16, and while its follow-up (the terrific power pop classic “Couldn’t I Just Tell You”) stiffed, the third single, a superior re-recording of the Nazz’s semi-hit “Hello, It’s Me,” climbed all the way to number five. In all, Something/Anything? reached number 29 and went gold, spending nearly a full year on the charts. He found stardom with Something/Anything?, but Rundgren rejected it. He would later state that he had mastered pop songcraft and had no interest in simply repeating himself through endless recyclings of “I Saw the Light” or “Hello, It’s Me.” That’s certainly not what he delivered with A Wizard, A True Star, his 1973 follow-up to Something/Anything? A weird sonic collage encompassing everything from psychedelia and Philly soul to Disney show tunes and vaudeville, the record may not have been an intentional move to shed his mainstream audience, but that was the ultimate effect.
As the legions of listeners who loved “Hello, It’s Me” departed, Rundgren’s cult following — the fans who did consider him “a Wizard, A True Star” — intensified. Rundgren played the role to the hilt, dyeing his hair in a rainbow of colors and turning in extravagant concert performances. His appearance may have flirted with glam or glitter, but his music was getting increasingly progressive. His next album, 1974′s Todd, may have had the occasional full-fledged pop song, such as the near-hit “A Dream Goes on Forever,” but it had more than its share of lengthy experimental instrumentals. This was the direction he decided to pursue, and he needed a full-fledged band to help him continue in this progressive direction. And so Utopia was born. Initially, the group consisted of three keyboardists (Moogy Klingman, Ralph Schuckett, and Jean Yves “M. Frog” Labat), a bassist (John Siegler), and a drummer (Kevin Elliman).
Balancing Utopia with his solo career, Rundgren became one of the most prolific artists of the decade. Released just months after Todd, Todd Rundgren's Utopia consisted of only four tracks, all of which were mainly instrumental and none of which were less than ten minutes. Rundgren continued in that direction on his next solo album, Initiation, which was released in the spring of 1975. Its radio-ready hit, “Real Man,” became one of his concert staples, but the true heart of the album lay in the half-hour-long synth experiment to which the entire second side was devoted. Mere months later, Utopia released Another Live, a wild live album devoted to long synth-driven instrumentals, and the band’s first release to feature synth player Roger Powell and drummer John “Willie” Wilcox. Another Live proved to be the culmination of the synth experiments and, in some ways, the stretch of willfully difficult records Rundgren made during the mid-’70s.
He kicked off 1976 with Faithful, an album that split into original pop material and re-creations of ’60s chestnuts from the Yardbirds, Bob Dylan, the Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, and the Beach Boys. His resurrection of “Good Vibrations” brought him his first Top 40 hit in three years. He also revamped Utopia, stripping away two of the keyboardists (Klingman and Schuckett) as Elliman and Siegler left. Kasim Sulton joined as the new bassist. Although the new Utopia’s first album, Ra, was a prog rock album by any measure, it was less overtly experimental and heavier than before. Ra was released early in February 1977 and was followed seven months later by Oops! Wrong Planet, a record that found the quartet abandoning progressive music for streamlined pop/rock, with a mainstream hard rock bent. By the time The Hermit of Mink Hollow was released in April 1978, it had been two years between Rundgren’s solo albums, yet it had been six years since he had delivered an album as unabashedly pop and accessible as Hermit. On the strength of the Top 30 success of the ballad “Can We Still Be Friends,” the record became a big hit, spending 26 weeks on the charts and peaking at number 36. He followed the record with the double-live album Back to the Bars, which was split between Utopia and solo material.
As his solo career received a shot in the arm, his production career reached a pinnacle of commercial success with Meat Loaf’s Bat Out of Hell. The shamelessly bombastic record became an unexpected blockbuster, due in no small part to Rundgren’s cinematic production. Not only did it reap financial rewards, but it also opened the doors for a variety of production gigs; over the next year, he kept extraordinarily busy, working with everyone from old friend Patti Smith (Wave) to new wave pub rocker Tom Robinson (TRB Two), as well as arena rock goofs the Tubes (Remote Control). Given that Rundgren had been releasing records at such a rapid rate throughout the ’70s, it comes as a shock to note that neither he nor Utopia released an album in 1979. That’s not to say he wasn’t busy. Not only did he have his production work, but during 1979 Rundgren opened Utopia Video Studios, a cutting-edge video production enterprise. Utopia Video Studios’ first project was a version of Gustav Holst’s The Planets, a demonstration disc for video disc by RCA SelectaVision. It was a harbinger.
Throughout the next decade, Rundgren began to devote more time to technological developments than his own music. Nevertheless, the early ’80s were a robust time for him — his last great period of commercial success. He came back swinging in 1980, releasing two albums with Utopia: the shiny pop/rock opus Adventures in Utopia and the cutting Beatles parody Deface the Music. He also released “Time Heals,” the first music video to combine computer graphics and live action; it would later be the second video played on MTV. The following year, he released his first solo album in three years, the spiritually inclined Healing. By this point, his relationship with Bearsville Records had become increasingly rocky. Utopia delivered one last album for the label, 1982′s Swing to the Right, before departing for the fledgling Network label, releasing Utopia that same year. After completing a groundbreaking solo tour in 1982, which alternated acoustic sets with sets featuring taped backings and video backdrops, he released The Ever Popular Tortured Artist Effect. Despite the presence of a moderate novelty hit with “Bang the Drum All Day,” the album didn’t eclipse Healing on the charts.
As he attempted to leave Bearsville, Rundgren found himself in further record company difficulties when Network folded. Utopia then moved to Passport, yet another new record label. In 1983, after he devoted some time off to do technological work, he reconvened Utopia, which released Oblivion in 1984. The album did respectably on the charts, peaking at 74, but the next year’s follow-up, POV, tanked — it reached only 161. Part of the problem was that Utopia’s sound had indeed changed, but it was no longer contemporary. Following POV, Rundgren effectively pulled the plug on the group, although he would later reunite the band for an occasional tour. His next solo album, A Cappella, featured nothing but his voice, albeit multi-tracked and sometimes processed beyond recognition. Negotiations with Bearsville held up the release of A Cappella for months. Once the deals were completed, Rundgren was finally free of Bearsville, and he signed to its new parent company, Warner, which released A Cappella in September 1985. It did fairly well on the charts, but it was treated more as a novelty than a full-fledged record by both critics and fans.
Rundgren spent the next few years working on computers, as well producing. In 1986, he was hired to produce the cult British pop band XTC. Over the course of the recording sessions, tensions grew between Rundgren and the group’s main songwriter, Andy Partridge, eventually spilling over into outright hostility. Nevertheless, the resulting album, Skylarking, revitalized XTC’s career and Rundgren’s producing career. Although he had a few high-profile gigs afterward — such as with Bourgeois Tagg and the Psychedelic Furs — he decided to continue with his own technological and musical endeavors. In 1989, he finally released Nearly Human, his soul-spiked follow-up to 1985′s A Cappella. Staying on the charts for 11 weeks, it was Rundgren’s last album to come close to a mainstream hit, thanks to the radio single “The Want of a Nail.” Several songs on Nearly Human were also used in his musical score for the off-Broadway production of Joe Orton’s Up Against It, which was originally the script for the unfilmed third Beatles movie.
A collection of new material recorded live, 2nd Wind, appeared in 1991. It was Rundgren’s final album for Warner and the last record he would make for a major label. The following year, he reunited Utopia for a tour of Japan, then he set to work on his first album for Rhino’s new music division, Forward. Released under the moniker TR-I — from this point on, he used TR-I to distinguish his technologically innovative work — No World Order was an ambitious project. Not only was it released as a conventional CD, it was also released as an interactive CD-ROM through Philips and Electronic Arts. It certainly earned him press, but the reviews didn’t lead to sales. Frustrated, he left Rhino, releasing The Individualist on ION in November 1995. Like its predecessor, the album was designed as a groundbreaking technological innovation — this time, however, it was an enhanced CD. The Individualist earned better reviews than No World Order, particularly among computer-based publications.
During this time, Rundgren also worked as a DJ on the acclaimed syndicated radio program The Difference with Todd. The show was nominated for several awards, but its production was ceased in November 1996 due to an altered show format. He also did several television and film soundtracks, including the hit Farrelly Brothers movie Dumb and Dumber. In 1997, the fledgling Angel Records offshoot Guardian Records offered Rundgren a significant amount of money to re-record many of his hits and cult favorites as a bossa nova record. Clearly, Guardian was attempting to capitalize on the lounge fad of the mid-’90s, but Rundgren took the bait, supporting the resulting record, With a Twist, with a full-fledged tour. Prior to hitting the road in the U.S., he was one of the first Western artists to perform for the Chinese during the summer Shanghai Festival. That year saw the first release of his Up Against It songs through the Japanese label Pony Canyon. He also inked a deal to host a weekly online radio program called Music Nexus for the EnterMedia network.
In fact, the Internet became the main focus of Rundgren’s career by the end of the ’90s. In 1996, he launched Waking Dreams, a collective that developed creative ideas in marketable commodities. Perhaps more importantly to the music industry, Rundgren also founded PatroNet, an innovative device that lets users subscribe to music offered directly from his site — with no record company middlemen at all. During all this, Rundgren continued to work on new music — intending to distribute his new material a song at a time through PatroNet — as well as write his much-delayed autobiography (despite short previews on his official website, it’s yet to be published). The late ’90s saw Rundgren return to the road for several different tours — both as a solo performer and as part of Ringo Starr's All-Starr Band, as he also continued to produce other acts (Splender’s Halfway Down the Sky, Bad Religion’s The New America, etc.).
The emergence of numerous archival projects began to surface in the early 21st century, such as The King Biscuit Flower Hour Presents in Concert and a slew of Japanese-only rarity sets as part of the ongoing Todd Archive Series (by mid-2001, 11 different sets had been issued — comprised of outtakes, demos, and full concerts over the years featuring Rundgren solo, Utopia, and even the Nazz), as well as a compilation of tracks that has only been available previously on his PatroNet service, titled One Long Year. In the summer of 2001, Rundgren participated in the A Walk Down Abbey Road: A Tribute to the Beatles tour, which also included Ann Wilson (Heart), John Entwistle (the Who), and Alan Parsons (the Alan Parsons Project).
Three years later, Rundgren issued his first rock album in over a decade. Liars, a politics-heavy concept record, was issued on Sanctuary in spring 2004. After a brief sojourn where he fronted the New Cars, Rundgren returned to the solo arena with Arena in 2008. Over the next few years, he spent some time touring, playing some of his classic albums in their entirety — separate tours consisted of A Wizard, a True Star, Todd, and Healing — and in 2011, and releasing two albums: a collection of Robert Johnson covers called Todd Rundgren’s Johnson and (Re)Production, where he offered electronic reworkings of songs he’d produced for other artists. Following these two curious detours, Rundgren released the arty pop album State, his first collection of original material in five years; it appeared in April 2013.
Less than two years later, he returned with his 25th studio album, Global, a typically anachronistic fusion of classic rock, soul, and contemporary dance music. Shortly after its release, the Smalltown Supersound label issued the 12-part, 39-minute Runddans, a collaboration with revered Norwegian musicians Emil Nikolaisen (of Serena-Maneesh) and Hans-Peter Lindstrøm, which Rundgren likened to a train ride. Rundgren continued to indulge his yen for collaboration on 2017′s White Knight, which featured appearances by Trent Reznor, Robyn, Joe Walsh, Donald Fagen, and Daryl Hall. Cleopatra released White Knight in May 2017, and by the fall, Rundgren was touring again with Ringo Starr.
Rundgren published a memoir called The Individualist: Digressions, Dreams, and Dissertations in 2018, then embarked on a celebration of the Beatles’ 1968 double album with the tour It Was Fifty Years Ago Today: A Tribute to the Beatles’ White Album that featured Micky Dolenz, Christopher Cross, and Joey Molland. At the end of 2020, he released an English version of the grotesque 1978 Dutch Christmas novelty “Flappie” but it was “Down with the Ship,” a collaboration with Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo released earlier that year, that pointed toward Space Force, a 2022 set where Rundgren solicited colleagues to complete some of his unfinished songs. The resulting album also featured material from Sparks, Adrian Belew, Rick Nielsen, the Roots, and Neil Finn. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Greg Prato