Rebecca and the Sunnybrook Farmers were a psychedelic-influenced band  from Pittsburgh, PN, whose music was an interesting blend of country  rock, folk rock, and sunshine pop. Featuring Ilene Rappaport on vocals,  guitar, harmonica, and recorder, Ilene Novog on vocals, viola, and  harpsichord, Mickey Kapner on guitar, sitar, organ, and backing vocals,  Ernie Eremita on bass guitar and backing vocals, and Clifford Mandell on  percussion and backing vocals, the group was a popular live act in  Pittsburgh and was signed to Musicor Records, an outfit that specialized  in country artists but was dabbling in rock sounds in the late '60s.
Rebecca and the Sunnybrook Farmers released one album, Birth, for  Musicor in 1969, recorded in New York City in either a week or a  weekend, depending on who is telling the tale. While the album sold  poorly, it became a cult favorite among collectors of rare psychedelia  and was reissued by the British Fallout label in 2007. However, the  group failed to reach a significant audience outside Pittsburgh during  their lifespan, and they split up in 1971. Ilene Rappaport changed her  name to Lauren Wood and recorded two albums with the trio Chunky, Novi  & Ernie, as well as several solo albums; her song "Fallen" appeared  on the soundtrack album to the film Pretty Woman, she sang the end title  theme on the television series Just Shoot Me, and her duet with Michael  McDonald, "Please Don't Leave," became a Top 20 hit in 1979. Ilene  Novog continued to work as a session musician, performing on albums by  the Indigo Girls, the Violent Femmes, and the Flat Duo Jets. Mickey  Kapner eventually quit music and moved to the Boston area, where he  enjoyed a successful career as a salesman. Kapner later had a religious  awakening and changed his name to "Brother Nathaniel," and became a  well-known street evangelist in both Massachusetts and Colorado.
 
