Carmelo Esteban "Steve" Martin Caro, originally known as Steve Martin, was an Americanrock musician. He is best known as the original lead singer of the 1960s baroque pop band The Left Banke. The son of flamenco guitarist and vocalist Sarita Heredia, he added his family surname, Caro, in the 1980s to avoid confusion with the comedian of the same name.
Early years
Steve Martin Caro was born in Madrid, Spain, on October 12, 1948. His mother was Sarita Heredia, the only female flamenco guitarist in the world during the 1950s and 1960s. His father, Pedro Martin Caro, was a Representative from Spain to New York. Steve Martin Caro attended school in Madrid before coming to the United States as a teenager. His father died six months after moving the family from Spain to New York City. In 1965, Steve Martin Caro happened to meet another future bandmate, Tom Finn, in front of the City Squire Hotel in New York after a Rolling Stones concert. Finn told Martin Caro about a mid-town recording studio which needed singers for session play. The studio was owned and operated by violinist Harry Lookofsky, father ofMichael Brown, and the foundation was laid for the collaboration soon to be known as The Left Banke.
The Left Banke
With The Left Banke, Steve Martin scored chart hits with "Walk Away Renée," "Pretty Ballerina" and "Desiree" in the 1966-68 period. In addition to providing most of the lead vocals on Left Banke recordings, he occasionally made instrumental contributions, playing guitar or bass and tambourine on various songs. He was credited for the tracks "Two by Two" and "Love Songs in the Night," written and recorded with Left Banke members. They appear on the Buddah Records soundtrack for the 1972 adult filmHot Parts. In January 2018, it was announced on the official Facebook page compiled by Steve Martin Caro and George Cameron that they were planning a tour. Several photos of Steve Martin Caro rehearsing with George Cameron and guitarist Sam Kogon were posted with a message which stated "it was Steve's first time behind the microphone in over 15 years. We went through and workshopped much of the Left Banke catalog." However, no public appearances occurred before George Cameron died five months later.