This Barnes, southwest London band had started life as The Southbeats in early 1963.
As Roy Stacey notes, the group was part of the Bob Druce circuit with The High Numbers (later The Who) and performed regularly at The Goldhawk Social Club in Shepherd’s Bush, west London, Watford Trade Union Hall in Watford, Herts, the Railway Hotel in Wealdstone, Middlesex and the Glenlyn Ballroom in Forest Hill, southeast London.
Changing name to The Impacts in November 1963, they appeared in The Contact, a small budget film for the Spastics Society, in January 1964. An early outing for John Hurt, Pauline Collins and Wendy Richard, the film included a cameo performance by the group playing live in one scene, which can be seen on You Tube.
Later that year, actor Hugh Halliday, who had starred in The Contact and also played drums, took over from Chris Allen (who may be the same musician who went on to play with The Attack and The Syn among others).
The Impacts appeared at the 100 Club in Oxford Street, most notably on 21 April 1964 when they opened for The Art Wood Combo and The Pretty Things.
The group also played at Eel Pie Island in Twickenham, Middlesex (most likely in 1963/1964), supporting The Graham Bond Organisation on a Sunday. Stacey notes that John Platt’s book London Rock Routes features a photo of an unknown band who are in fact The Impacts.
“The shot shows Dave [Terry’s] old Vortexion pa amplifier,” he says. “Tony [Noble] was playing his early ‘50s blonde Fender Esquire.”
“The photo in the book is tiny and shows two of the band at a great distance,” adds Dave Terry (aka Elmer Gantry).
“Tony Noble on the left and Roy Stacey on the right. It’s a bit strange that guitarist John Reeves, the drummer and I are missing from the photograph. I don’t know why; you can’t even see the drum kit. Maybe Tony and Roy had just got on stage and were tuning up.”
The band also appeared at the Blue Moon, Hayes, Middlesex supporting Chris Farlowe & The Thunderbirds on 19 April 1964 and Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers on 26 April 1964.
The Impacts also played at the Jazz Cellar in Kingston upon Thames in Surrey, including on 29 July 1964 and 13 November 1964.
Stacey remembers that The Impacts were featured in the popular teen beat magazine Boyfriend on 10 October 1964 on its “Undiscovered British Groups” page.
That same month, the band participated in a two-day Belfast tour with Jerry Lee Lewis. Don Arden had booked The Impacts to back the rock ‘n’ roll legend and Stacey remembers they didn’t get paid.
“On the first night, Jerry Lee took a chunk out of my Precision Bass,” he recalls. “As he kicked his stool in my direction, whack! Then hammered the piano keys with his left foot.”
On 24 October 1964, the group joined fellow west London band The Second Thoughts for a show at Studio 51 in Leicester Square, central London.
Stacey says that back-up singer Heather Swinson became part of the group towards the end of 1964. Also, keyboard player Art Regis joined the line-up. He also remembers that Richard O’Sullivan jammed with The Impacts on organ at one point.
Art Regis had first joined Rupert & The Red Devils in 1963 replacing original keyboard player Mike Finney. Featuring future Spencer Davis Group guitarist Ray Fenwick and sax player Rupert Clahar (later in The Rick ‘N’ Beckers), Rupert & The Red Devils travelled to Nuremburg in West Germany to play some gigs that same year but broke up.
Regis then joined Dutch band The Defenders (later The T-Set) before returning to London and hooking up with The Impacts.
On 1 December, The Impacts joined The Grenades, The Fairlanes and Wainwright’s Gentleman for a show at Hammersmith Town Hall.
On 12 December 1964, The Impacts played at Studio 51 again, this time with The Loose Ends, returning for a second appearance on 16 January 1965 (also with The Loose Ends).
However, later that month (or in early February), The Impacts split up with Dave Terry/Elmer Gantry pursuing his blues/folk interests, working with guitarist Simon Lawrence. The duo landed a regular gig at Studio 51 in Leicester Square.
Tony Noble meanwhile joined The Derek Savage Foundation while John Reeves formed John Brown’s Bodies, a Hammersmith group not to be confused with Keith Emerson’s Brighton band of the same name.
According to Stacey, John Reeves and Tony Noble would reunite in 1968 in Othello Smith & The Tobago Bad Boys and recorded the LP The Big Ones Go Ska for CBS Direction. Derek Savage was also a member.
Stacey meanwhile joined The Mike Leander Band for a tour. “It was pure chance that I got to meet Mike Leander at his apartment,” says the bass player. “He was a co-producer of the Drifters’ ‘Under the Boardwalk’ the first record I ever had. Mike Leander worked as a producer and arranger with Ben E. King and The Drifters at Atlantic Studios, New York.
“On that tour was black ex-G.I. Ronnie Jones of The Nightimers’ fame, who Herbie Goins replaced. Leander’s band did loads of Motown and featured two drummers and a big horn section. It also featured Paul Gadd (aka Gary Glitter), a Ready Steady Go dancer.”
During this period, Stacey also did some session work with Unit 4 Plus 2 thanks to Hugh Halliday, who’d joined the Hertfordshire group in 1965.
A short while later, the bass player joined Arthur Brown & The Machines on the recommendation of Art Regis who had joined this outfit when The Impacts split up (and just before Arthur Brown came on-board). Former Impacts back-up singer Heather Swinson also became a part of this group during 1965.
Thanks to Roy Stacey, Art Regis, Elmer Gantry (aka Dave Terry) and David Else for helping with the story
Blues-rock aggregation Gethsemane was the final version of a group that guitarist Martin Barre (b. 17 November 1946, King’s Heath, Birmingham) had first joined in July 1966 before landing the “gig of his dreams” with Jethro Tull.
Bass player and leader Bryan Stevens (b. 13 November 1941, Lha Datu, North Borneo) and keyboard player/singer Mick Ketley (b. 1 October 1947, Balham, London) were there from the outset, having been integral members of Beau Brummell & The Noblemen from late 1964 to June 1966.
Returning to England after touring Europe, Stevens and Ketley had decided to put together a new version of The Noblemen, adding new musicians, including drummer Malcolm Tomlinson (b. 16 June 1946, Isleworth, Middlesex; d. 2 April 2016) from west London and Martin Barre.
All four musicians survived the group’s evolution from Mod/soul outfit Motivation through to psychedelic pop band The Penny Peep Show/Penny Peeps.
However, despite garnering plenty of work on the club scene in the first half of 1968, the emerging blues explosion headed up by Fleetwood Mac was starting to make psychedelic rock bands redundant.
That July, Canadian group The Band’s Music from Big Pink had been given a UK release and had turned musicians’ heads, The Penny Peeps included.
After playing at Nottingham’s Beachcomber Club on Saturday, 13 July; Leicester Rowing Club, two Saturdays later; and the Swan in Yardley, the West Midlands on Saturday, 3 August, the musicians realised another change in style was required.
The decision was influenced in part by the audience’s response at one particular gig (possibly the Walgrave in Coventry on Sunday, 4 August) where the group’s performance was poorly received.
In the interval, the band’s current singer Denny Alexander suggested that the band play some blues numbers in the second set and with Mike Ketley and Malcolm Tomlinson also helping out with lead vocals, the fresh approach went down a storm.
Taking on a new name, In the Garden of Gethsemane, which was soon shortened to Gethsemane, the group began to plough a more blues-based direction.
The decision to adopt a new style may also have been prompted by the Eighth National Jazz and Blues Festival held at Kempton Park racecourse in Sunbury-on-Thames on Sunday, 11 August.
Malcolm Tomlinson had attended and was blown away by Jethro Tull and its enigmatic front-man Ian Anderson whose mastery of the flute made an impression on the drummer. Both he and Martin Barre had recently started to play flute and Tomlinson came back raving about the group to Barre, urging the guitarist to check out Anderson’s inspirational group.
Around this time, however, Denny Alexander dropped out to pursue a non-musical career.
Reduced to a quartet, the new musical direction that Gethsemane took gave the band an opportunity to be more creative and to stretch out during live performances. One of the “features” of the band’s stage show during this period was a flute duet featuring Barre and Tomlinson.
Mike Ketley believes the genesis of Gethsemane began when the musicians played an (unadvertised) all-nighter at the Gunnell brothers’ Flamingo in Wardour Street around mid-to-late August.
“What I remember is Malc Tomlinson on drums, Bryan on bass, Martin Barre on guitar and me on Hammond. We were definitely a four piece there and by then Malc had decided to take up the flute. Martin by this time was becoming a much better flute player than he was a sax player.
“One of our set numbers was ‘Work Song’ made famous by Cannonball Adderley plus others. After we had played the main theme twice through with some ad lib from me and Martin, Malc said play some percussion rhythm on the keys and he came out from behind the drums flute in hand and between him and Martin, who by then had realised this was something completely spontaneous, we played some pretty bizarre stuff, completely unrehearsed with two flutes talking to each other, while Bryan did his own thing on bass in line with me just using the percussion tabs and hitting the keys to make a tempo. Having lost Denny Alexander it was almost like the start of a new direction for us.”
One of the first advertised gigs with the new name (albeit it as Gethsemane Soul Band) was at the Royal Lido Ballroom in Prestatyn, north Wales on Saturday, 24 August.
The next day, the group played the first of several shows at Eel Pie Island in Twickenham, west London. The popular island hangout had closed briefly in September 1967 and only reopened on 31 July. Ketley distinctly recalls opening for The Nice at the venue (who were billed to play there on Wednesday, 28 August).
One of the most significant dates during this period was Saturday, 31 August when Gethsemane (misspelt as Gethsemanie) opened the Van Dike Club in Plymouth, Devon, playing first before headliner Jethro Tull. It was the first opportunity that Martin Barre had to check out his future employers.
Interestingly, an advertised gig at the Cobweb at St Leonards in East Sussex on Saturday, 7 September (see above) reveals that the group was still occasionally billed as The Penny Peeps, which raises the question of whether Denny Alexander was still a member at this point. (Ed: Ketley says that Alexander had definitely left the band once they had redefined the music they wanted to play and chosen the name Gethsemane.)
Like the previous incarnations, Gethsemane had a busy diary, which increasingly took in blues clubs and the burgeoning university circuit.
On Sunday, 8 September, the quartet performed at the Aurora Hotel in Gillingham, Kent. That Saturday (14 September), the group (billed as Geth Semane) played one of its most prestigious shows – the Roundhouse in Chalk Farm on a bill that also featured The Scaffold, David Bowie, Junior’s Eyes and The Edgar Broughton Band.
DJ John Peel apparently was a huge fan and recorded the band’s set, which he played the following week on his radio show.
On Saturday, 28 September, Gethsemane played at the Stage Club in Oxford.
The following Saturday (5 October), the group landed an important gig, opening for blues trailblazers Fleetwood Mac at the Links in Borehamwood, Herts.
Without Alexander to front the group, the vocals were shared between Malcolm Tomlinson and Mike Ketley.
“Malc always had a great voice,” says Stevens. “We were doing cover versions of The Band as we had got hold of an early copy of Music from Big Pink. If I remember right, Malc sang ‘the Weight’ and ‘Chest Fever’. It was really good.”
Two days after the Fleetwood Mac support gig, the band headed for south Wales to play at the Landland Bay Hotel in Swansea (billed as Gethsemaney).
A few weeks later, on Wednesday, 16 October, the band (billed as Geth Semane) appeared at the Railway Hotel in Bishop’s Stortford, Herts. The group would return to play there on Wednesday, 6 November.
Later that month, Gethsemane appeared at popular blues haunt the Nag’s Head in Battersea on Monday, 21 October and then two days later returned to Eel Pie Island to share the bill with Alan Bown.
Around this period, Gethsemane piqued the interest of Bee Gees producer Robert Stigwood, and through this association signed with Dick James Music (Northern Songs). While the idea was to record an album, the band soon ran into problems in the studio.
“I have an acetate of Elton John. It’s just him playing at the piano singing ‘Lady Samantha’ which is all about a ghost,” says Ketley.
“Dick James Music, Elton’s publisher gave us a recording to try and do our own version but Elton paid a visit one recording session and said he didn’t like what we were doing with his song so it never went ahead.”
“Musical differences” erupted between the group, Northern Songs and Robert Stigwood. It seems the producer was looking for something much more “poppy” from the group, who also cut a version of “Grease Monkey”, allegedly with future Average White Band member Alan Gorrie providing the bass and lead vocals. At the time, Gorrie’s band Hopscotch were flat mates with Gethsemane.
The decision to cut Elton John’s “Lady Samantha” seemed a rather unusual choice for a blues band. Perhaps the decision was made following an Elton John radio session, taped on 28 October at BBC’s Agolin Hall.
On that occasion, John recorded three tracks – “Lady Samantha”, “Across the Havens” and “Skyline Pigeon”, abetted by a studio group comprising long standing guitarist Caleb Quaye, session bass player Boots Slade (formerly of the Alan Price Set) and Malcolm Tomlinson on drums. The three songs were played on BBC’s Stuart Henry Show the following week.
Whatever the reason, the disappointment and frustration surrounding the LP sessions, together with an aborted attempt to record with guitarist Jeff Beck (the most plausible recording date is 18 September), appears to have been a major factor in driving the band apart.
During November 1968, the band ploughed on but was soon running out of steam. After a show at the Industrial Club in Norwich on Friday, 8 November, the group travelled to Reading the following Wednesday to play at the Thing-A-Me-Jig before moving on to Wolverhampton the next evening (14 November) to play the Club Lafayette (billed as Gethsemany).
Back in London, the group landed a gig at the Hornsey Wood Tavern in Finsbury Park the following evening (Friday, 15 November), sharing the bill once again with Jethro Tull. Aware that Mick Abrahams was leaving, Martin Barre auditioned for the guitar spot but it didn’t go well and he worried he’d missed out on his dream job.
With a show at the Crown Hotel in Birmingham on Tuesday, 26 November, Gethsemane began winding down operations, agreeing to split that Christmas.
A highly memorable gig at Dundee College of Art on 12 December opening for headliners, Pink Floyd, followed before Gethsemane returned to London to fulfil a few final engagements, including a show at the Pheasantry on the Kings Road, before dissolving.
“The last gig we ever did was at a college in Brook Green, Hammersmith and a guy from Island Records asked if we would be interested in signing up,” says Stevens.
“We didn’t want to know. We had had so many people saying so many times, ‘sign here and we will make you famous!’ Anyway, by that time, we had all decided to go our separate ways.”
Martin Barre has different recollections about Gethsemane’s final gig. “Terry Ellis form Chrysalis approached me to invite me to audition for Tull, which I did a few days later. It was the first one… it took two [to get the position]. He had been sent by Tull to find me and wasn’t interested in the band.”
Having discovered that Mick Abrahams’ replacement Tony Iommi had been dismissed after only a month in the band, Barre phoned Jethro Tull’s singer Ian Anderson to see if he could try out a second time for the band. [Ed – Tomlinson also auditioned at the same time.]
Stevens continues the story: “He didn’t have a very good guitar at the time and mentioned he desperately wanted a Les Paul Gibson for the audition. The guy in the flat below us in our Chiswick flat offered to lend him the £500 – pretty good considering that was quite heavy money in the late ’60s.”
Invited round to Anderson’s flat for a second audition, Barre got the “gig of his dreams”. The rest as they say is history. But what about his former band mates?
Having led a succession of groups from Johnny Devlin & The Detours through to Gethsemane, Bryan Stevens decided to sell his bass and used the money to help finance his studies. Returning to college, he later became a surveyor and currently lives in Chiswick.
Mike Ketley meanwhile returned to the south coast. Switching from keyboards to bass, he joined forces with a several former Noblemen and for a couple of years worked in a local band called The Concords. He later abandoned live work and after leaving music retail, worked for the Hammond Organ Company, then joined Yamaha Music UK retiring as MD after 32 years.
Stevens and Ketley have remained firm friends and in June 2002 re-joined former band mates in a Johnny Devlin & The Detours reunion held in Bognor Regis. Among the guests at the reunion was former Soundtracks guitarist Ray Flacke, who later went on to play with Chet Atkins and Mark Knopfler. Ketley has also re-recorded “Model Village” with his son’s band called The Vybe.
Johnny Devlin and The Detours got together again in 2003 to headline a gathering of ’60s groups from Bognor for a sell-out night in aid of the hospice that looked after Barry Benson (P J Proby’s hairdresser) who had died of cancer a few months earlier. Called “Back to the ‘60s” such was its popularity that the annual event lasted for 10 years and raised nearly £70k for local charities in and around the Bognor Regis area.
Stevens and Ketley were involved in another significant reunion – after over 35 years, they finally met up with Penny Peeps singer Denny Alexander over the Christmas 2004 period. Another reunion took place on 29 March 2009.
They also renewed contact with Malcolm Tomlinson, who, aside from Martin Barre, was the only member of the band to maintain a significant musical profile.
After Gethsemane’s demise, Tomlinson reunited with his former Jeff Curtis & The Flames cohort Louis McKelvey and in February 1969 moved to Toronto, Canada where the pair formed Milkwood with future Celine Dion backing singer Mary Lou Gauthier. (McKelvey, incidentally, had also been one of the hopefuls who auditioned for Ian Anderson and the guitar slot in Jethro Tull).
During his first few months in the city, Tomlinson was called on to play drums and flute on ex-A Passing Fancy guitarist and singer/songwriter Jay Telfer’s ambitious solo album, Perch but unfortunately the recording was subsequently shelved, as was Milkwood’s own album, cut in New York that summer for the Polydor label with legendary producer Jerry Ragavoy.
However, Tomlinson did make a notable session appearance on label mate, Life’s eponymous lone album recorded in late 1969, providing a superb flute solo to the Terry Reid cover “Lovin’ Time”.
Milkwood’s greatest claim to fame was appearing at Toronto’s famous Rock ‘N’ Roll Revival concert on 13 September, just before John Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band. Yet despite garnering praise from Jimi Hendrix in Cashbox magazine after he’d spotted the quintet playing at the Penny Farthing club in Yorkville Village, Milkwood imploded shortly after a show in Ottawa in late October.
Next up, Tomlinson briefly played with McKelvey in the short-lived biker group, Damage. One of the band’s most high profile shows was an appearance at the Toronto Rock Festival on 26 March 1970, appearing on the bill with Funkadelic, Luke & the Apostles, Nucleus and Leigh Ashford among others.
When that group folded in late 1970, Tomlinson briefly teamed up with former Elektra Records band, Rhinoceros before joining Syrinx in October 1971 and recording material for True North Records under the name, JFC Heartbeat.
He then worked with Toronto-based groups, Rambunkshish and Zig Zag alongside Toronto blues guitarist Danny Marks, before signing up with Bill King’s band during 1972.
More impressive, in 1973, he recorded an album’s worth of material with Rick James and the original Stone City Band, which is still to see a release.
Versatile as ever, Tomlinson subsequently played drums with Jackson Hawke, did sessions for Jay Telfer and then joined Bearfoot before recording two solo albums for A&M Records in 1977 and 1979 entitled Coming Outta Nowhere and Rock ‘N’ Roll Hermit. He dropped out of the recording scene during the ’80s and ’90s.
However, in 2007, Tomlinson sang on Toronto group The Cameo Blues Band’s latest album. In June of that year, he played drums with ’60s folk-rock group, Kensington Market to celebrate the “Summer of Love” and also doubled up with Luke & the Apostles. Tomlinson died on 2 April 2016.
Denny Alexander has also passed away. He died on 6 December 2018 and both Mike Ketley and Bryan Stevens were pall bearers at his funeral in January 2019.
Thanks to Bryan Stevens, Mike Ketley, Martin Barre, Denny Alexander and Malcolm Tomlinson.
Joe Higgins – lead vocals (replaced by Sketto Richardson in February 1967)
Douglas West – vocals
John Wright – lead guitar
Nicholas Lait – bass
Steig Neilson – alto sax
Dudley Brown – tenor sax
Neil Willis – tenor sax
Jeffrey Brooksmith – drums
A Woolwich, southeast London band that was formed sometime in 1965, The Little Joe Set were profiled on page 2 of the South East London Mercury on 1 December 1966 and again on 2 March 1967.
Don Sheppard, who also played saxophone, managed the group and helped Joe Higgins form the outfit. The group apparently worked extensively on the club scene in London and had also played in the US and Denmark.
The Little Joe Set played at Tiles on Oxford Street on 24 November 1966 with The Quiet Five. They also played at the Location in Woolwich and the El Partido in Lewisham, southeast London as well as the London Cavern.
Of the musicians listed above, Jeffrey Brooksmith had previously worked with The Just Blues (and is rumoured to have also played briefly with The Pretty Things).
In February 1967, manager Don Sheppard replaced Joe Higgins with singer Sketto Richardson and the group continued to play the club scene.
The group went through further changes and evolved into Sketto Rich & Sonority, who included the singer plus Don Sheppard and John Wright alongside new members.
We’d be interested to hear from anyone who can add more information about the group in the comments below
Formerly known as The Heads, this short-lived Catford-based band added female singer Ruby James and sax player Austin Pigott and worked in Majorca during May-June 1967 before returning to London and signing with South East London Entertainments Agency.
During 1968 Richard London left to join Joe E Young & The Tonicks while Clinton Creary later formed Black Velvet with musicians from The Coloured Raisins.
We’d love to hear from anyone who can add more information in the comments section below.
Notable gigs
15 July 1967 – Conservative Club, Biggleswade, Bedfordshire with The Nemkons (Bedfordshire Times)
11 August 1967 – Concord Club, Bridport, Dorset (Bridport News)
18 August 1967 – White Tiles, Swindon, Wiltshire with The Change (Swindon Evening Advertiser) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
19 August 1967 – Princes Theatre and Ballroom, Yeovil, Somerset with The Safety Catch (Western Gazette) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
8 September 1967 – Riverside Club, Cricketers Hotel, Chertsey, Surrey (Woking Herald) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
7 October 1967 – White Tiles, Swindon, Wiltshire (Swindon Evening Advertiser) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
14 October 1967 – Ritz, Skewen, Wales with support (Neath Guardian) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
22 October 1967 – Sunday Club, Addlestone, Surrey (Woking Herald) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
5 November 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London with Simon Dupree & The Big Sound (Newham, West Ham & East Ham, Barking and Stratford Express) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
12 November 1967 – Hotel Ryde Castle, Ryde, Isle of Wight (Contract with Galaxy Entertainments Ltd)
3 December 1967 – Sunday Club, Addlestone, Surrey (Woking Herald) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
9 December 1967 – Newmarket Discotheque, Bridgwater, Somerset with Denise Scott & The Soundsmen (Central Somerset Gazette) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax with Glenroy
9 December 1967 – Glastonbury Town Hall, Glastonbury (Western Gazette) Billed as Ruby James, Glenroy and The Stax
10 December 1967 – Beat Centre Discotheque, Co-op Hall, Warrington, Cheshire with Eddie Floyd and Sounds Incorporated (Liverpool Echo) Billed as Ruby James & The Stax
24 January 1968 – St Matthew’s Baths Hall, Ipswich, Suffolk with The Herd, James Brown, The Healers and Delroy Williams (Ipswich Evening Star)
8 June 1968 – Queen’s Head, Six Ways, Erdington, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail)
Formed by musicians living in Catford in southeast London, The Heads formed in late 1966 and were featured on page 2 of The South East London Mercury on 20 April 1967 (see photo above).
Richard London may be the same musician who went on to Joe E Young & The Tonicks in 1968 while Clinton Creary, who was originally from Jamaica, definitely later played with Black Velvet.
Around June 1967, the band changed name to The Stax.
We’d love to hear from anyone who can add more information in the comments below.
Best known for containing future Jethro Tull guitarist Martin Barre (b. 17 November 1946, King’s Heath, Birmingham), London-based Mod/soul outfit Motivation began life as The Noblemen, changing name in November 1966.
The Noblemen (see earlier entry) originally hailed from Bognor Regis on England’s south coast and contained bass player and band leader Bryan Stevens (b. 13 November 1941, Lha Datu, North Borneo) and keyboard player Mick Ketley (b. 1 October 1947, Balham, south London).
Both musicians had previously played with local band Johnny Devlin & The Detours, who had linked up with South African singer Beau Brummell in late 1964 and become his support group, The Noblemen.
By June 1966, however, The Noblemen’s final line-up had returned to England after touring in Europe.
With drummer Bernie Smith opting out, Stevens, Ketley and guitarist Chuck Fryers had decided to form a new version and brought in two Londoners – singer Jimmy Marsh (b. 9 April 1941, Salem, Carmarthenshire, Wales; d. 13 April 2020) and drummer Malcolm Tomlinson (b. 16 June 1946, Isleworth, Middlesex; d. 2 April 2016).
They then advertised for a horn player in Melody Maker, which resulted in two musicians from the West Midlands auditioning – sax player Chris Rodger (b. 16 October 1946, Solihull, Warwickshire) and his friend Martin Barre, who joined, initially, as a second sax player.
However, when Fryers decided to leave in August to join The Warren J Five and later The Sorrows, Barre assumed lead guitar duties and The Noblemen moved up to London. Signing up with the Roy Tempest Agency, The Noblemen backed soul acts like The Vibrations, Edwin Starr and Alvin Robinson over the next few months.
Throughout 1965 and 1966, a south London R&B outfit from Norbury had been gigging as The Motivation but by the end of the year this band split up, leaving the name free.
With The Noblemen finishing up with work with Roy Tempest and increasingly lining up gigs under their own name, the decision was made to adopt a new moniker and Motivation was chosen (although promoters would sometimes bill them as The Motivation).
That November, The Noblemen were in the middle of supporting US soul act, The Coasters and one of the first gigs using Motivation took place at the Oasis in Manchester on Saturday, 12 November.
The new name remained for a double-nighter a fortnight later, on Saturday, 26 November at the Starlight Ballroom at the Boston Gliderdrome followed by the Burlesque in Leicester.
It was while backing The Coasters that Mick Ketley and Malcolm Tomlinson were invited to a party one evening by the singers to meet an American guitarist friend of theirs who’d recently arrived in London.
“I always thought we were backing The Coasters when one Saturday afternoon we played at an American Embassy type gig along the Cromwell Road then drove to Boston in Lincolnshire where the Move were on stage smashing up TV sets, then on to Leicester for an all-nighter,” says Stevens.
“On the journey back to London Cornell Gunter invited us to a party they were having at the Royal Lancaster on the Sunday evening and said we had to come and meet the most amazing guitarist who had just arrived in the country which turned out to be Jimi Hendrix.”
Stevens also remembers one particularly hair raising story while touring with The Coasters that took place on Sunday, 20 November in Greater Manchester.
“We were backing [them] on a seven-day tour of England and had a double-nighter in Manchester – two large working men’s clubs. It was the Princess and the Domino clubs, owned by the same promoter,” recalls the bass player.
“We went on the first venue and went down very well, in fact there were encores and it made us late leaving. Then we had to pack up the drums and amplifiers and follow the promoter’s car on a dash to the other club the other side of Manchester.”
Arriving nearly an hour late, the group set up its amps behind the stage curtain where it could hear the drunken crowd starting to get rowdy. With no time to waste the club’s manager said: “just bring The Coasters straight on, there’s no time for your lead singer to do even one number”.
The curtain was raised to a huge cheer and The Coasters were hurried on stage. The trouble started immediately. Unfortunately, the one number was not enough to quieten the audience, and when the lead singer Cornell Gunter politely asked the drunken crowd to quieten down, most took no notice and continued to shout out.
After a very loud expletive over the mic Gunter turned his back on the audience and walked back to the waiting band to start the next number. This was met with a torrent of boos, shouting, glass ashtrays and beer bottles. The place went into uproar and the manager shouted from the wings “play them off” and the curtains were closed. All four singers were in a headlong retreat to the dressing room, while the band, minus Jimmy Marsh packed up the gear and loaded the band wagon at the back door from the stage.
“The Coasters were being driven around the gigs by Chris Rodger and when it was time to leave he went to their dressing room where he found them checking their guns for ammunition – by this time some of the crowd were trying to force their way into the dressing room – they were pretty scared like we were,” remembers Ketley.
“While we were loading the gear, we heard screams and shouting coming from the back of the club. Looking through the curtains to our horror Marsh stood, smashed bottle in hand surrounded by five bouncers from the club. He was eventually bundled out the back door and into the band wagon. The police had been called by the manager and eventually we had a police escort out of Manchester, with Rodger driving The Coasters separately but as he said, ‘with their guns at the ready’. We got to the M6 with no further incident and everybody feeling very relieved.”
Jimmy Marsh adds that there is more to the story. “We got to the club and all the bouncers looked like Teddy Boys. They were nasty. One of the bouncers wanted to know what we were going to do. I chimed in and said, ‘Well, I’m the lead vocalist and I usually do half an hour before The Coasters come on’.
“The manager of the club had joined us by that time and said, ‘There’s only time for one song’ and my back went up. I always remember saying, ‘Well, fuck you, I’m not singing, and I headed off for the bar, so they’d have to bring The Coasters on straight away.”
It turned out that’s what the manager wanted anyway as the audience were becoming more and more hostile waiting for the show to start. Perched at the bar, Marsh remembers the beer bottles being thrown at the stage.
“The lead vocalist was so camp, it was outrageous and of course up there a man’s got to be a man,” he says.
“Then one of the bouncers came over to me and said, ‘We’re going to have you’. Well, I hadn’t done anything so I told him to f-off. Anyway, I finished my drink and headed for the stage door and several of them came up behind me and threw me through the door.”
Marsh remembers losing it completely and taking on about five or six bouncers.
“Finally, we got out and, nervous reaction, I’m sitting there in our converted ambulance laughing hysterically. Bryan said to me, ‘You’re mad’ and I said, ‘Well they started it’ and they did.”
As the singer points out, Roy Tempest later presented them with a bill for £30 to cover the damage! Perhaps not surprisingly, the musicians parted with the promoter a few weeks later and in early December 1966 began gigging independently.
A fresh batch of publicity photos were taken in London at Park Lane near Hyde Park and on Bognor Regis train station to mark the occasion.
During this period, Jimmy Marsh remembers [The] Motivation opening for The Tremeloes at Carlisle Town Hall.
Judging by newspaper adverts, [The] Motivation continued to gig across England in the lead up to Christmas, including performances at the Hotel Leofric in Coventry (not far from Barre’s home Solihull) on Sunday, 4 December; the Gala Ballroom in Norwich on Saturday, 10 December (billed as The Motivations); the Britannia Rowing Club in Nottingham on Saturday, 17 December; and the Concorde in Southampton on Tuesday, 20 December.
To add to the confusion, another group called The Motivation from Cheshire (sometimes billed as The Motovation) began gigging from late 1966 into late 1967.
Some of the northern gigs therefore may have been by this band, although the show at the Lion Hotel in Warrington, Cheshire on Saturday, 24 December was not one of them.
Judging by a gig in The Kentish Express, the band appears to have seen the year out with a gig at the ‘2 ‘B’s’ Club in Ashford, Kent with The Suspects, a venue they had previously played as The Noblemen on 29 August 1966.
Bryan Stevens kept a gig list of Motivation’s shows in January, February and early March, which reveal that the opening months of 1967 were no less frenetic on the touring front.
Appearances included the Winter Gardens in Penzance and the Blue Lagoon in Newquay, both in Cornwall on Friday, 6 and Saturday, 7 January respectively; a return to the New Yorker Discotheque in Swindon on Saturday, 14 January; the Bromel Club in Bromley, south London on Friday, 20 January; the Royal Links Pavilion in Cromer, Norfolk on Saturday, 22 January; and a return to the Concorde in Southampton on Tuesday, 24 January.
Of significant note are two dates at the legendary Marquee club in Wardour Street where they were billed to open for The Herd (featuring Peter Frampton) on both occasions.
The first took place on Monday, 6 February, followed by a second appearance the next month on Monday, 6 March.
On the second occasion, Marsh remembers surprising his band mates by announcing that he wanted to sing a Roy Orbison classic, “Running Scared” among the usual soul numbers. At first the band refused to play it but relented when he threatened to walk off the stage. Marsh notes that the song brought the roof down.
Stevens’ gig list reveals that February and early March were also packed with dates. These included the Carlton Ballroom in Erdington, West Midlands (later to become Mothers) on Friday, 10 February; RAF Benson in Oxfordshire on Thursday, 16 February; an Oxford College on Saturday, 25 February; and Tiles on Oxford Street on Saturday, 4 March.
One date stands out: Cooks Ferry Inn in Edmonton in north London on Friday, 17 February as the other act on the bill was none other than The John Evan Smash (later to morph into Jethro Tull!).
Newspaper adverts reveal quite a few missing dates from Stevens’ list so it’s not clear if these gigs took place or were by another version of The Motivation but they include venues that Barre’s group performed at.
These include the Kingfisher Hall in Redditch, Worcestershire on Friday, 3 February; Maidstone Corn Exchange the next day (4 February); and the Royal Ballrooms in Boscombe, Bournemouth, Dorset, which was a venue the band played extensively, on Wednesday, 1 March.
The Maidstone gig above does seem likely because on the same day, Motivation returned to the ‘2 ‘B’s’ Club in Ashford, Kent, which is listed on Bryan’s gig list for sometime in late January-early February.
Whatever the case, sometime around the second Marquee date with The Herd in early March, Motivation got a new set of publicity photos taken on the banks of the River Thames near Syon Park in west London.
Then, later that week on 8 March, the musicians headed off for Rome to perform at the famous Piper Club for around four weeks, playing six hours a night until 3am.
Chris Rodger remembers Motivation started playing on Saturday, 11 March, having driven non-stop for 60 hours to the Italian capital.
Jimmy Marsh vividly recalls Ray Charles’s dancers came in while they were there and asked the band to prolong their solo so they could dance to the music. The singer promptly leapt off the stage to dance with them!
More significantly, Marsh also remembers that The Rolling Stones’ entourage came into the club while they were resident band.
“I vaguely remember when The Rolling Stones’ ‘fixer’ Tom Keylock came to the Piper Club,” says Stevens.
“He invited some of our guys to his table and praised our set. He said he’d try and fix our band to be a warm up for The Rolling Stones when they played later that month in Italy but nothing happened.
“There were a lot of celebrities turning up at the Piper Club. One of The Beatles’ parents invited some of our guys to their table. I think it was George Harrison’s parents.”
The Rolling Stones did, in fact, play in Rome on Thursday, 6 April, so it seems likely the group was still performing at the Piper Club at this point.
“I know that we played for a few weeks at the Piper Club and then a week or two at a very small but smart nightclub, also in Rome,” says Martin Barre.
“After that we had no work but had met a really nice young man [Marco] with his fiancé while at this nightclub and he invited us to play at his club in Livorno.”
Ketley recalls that the ‘smart club’ in Rome was a bitter sweet experience.
“The owner was a friend of the owner of the Piper club Senor Boniga. Looking back, I think he got money from the owner of the dining club. It was a smart dinner club and all they wanted was very quiet dinner music. We were constantly told to ‘turn down’ and our music was not really suitable.”
Behind the scenes, however, the pressures of being on the road began to take its toll. “When we were in Rome I had to attend the hospital,” recalls Marsh.
“I punctured my vocal chords and to get it fixed, you would have to be a big time operator to foot that kind of bill.”
With his health failing, Marsh left the band in Rome and returned to England.
Jimmy Marsh subsequently dropped out of the music business, only resurfacing briefly in the early ’80s with the short-lived west London band, A Touch of Gold.
Looking back, he has this to say. “A big problem with Motivation was the rivalry. Martin [Barre] was my favourite; he was a lovely kid. I always thought good luck to him when he made it.”
He also remembers a story regarding the future Jethro Tull guitarist. “After I left them I was living in Notting Hill Gate in Pembridge Villas and Martin turned up at my place. I always remember the girl who lived in the room next to me had a lovely clarinet, which she was going to sell and he wanted it but didn’t have the money. I said, ‘Martin, do you want me to get it for you?’ He said, ‘No, thanks’. Next thing I know he’s worth millions!”
This author was in contact with the singer a few years ago but recently found out that he died on 13 April 2020.
With Jimmy Marsh out of the picture, Martin Barre remembers Mike Ketley took over all the lead vocals for the remainder of the Italian dates.
“Jimmy didn’t come to the club in Livorno,” says the guitarist. “We stayed at this guy’s fiancé’s house. At first we slept in the attic but it was so hot that we moved to a nearby hotel. This became too expensive and we had to finish in Livorno and drive home.
“While in Livorno we went to the Viareggio Piper Club and saw Dave Antony’s Moods, a band I had seen before with The Moonrakers at the Bure Club near Bournemouth.”
Chris Rodger, who wrote letters to his future wife while he was away in Rome, notes that the band arrived back in England on 19 May and took a week’s holiday to recover.
Motivation were billed to play at the New Yorker Discotheque on Saturday, 15 April and the advertisement also notes that they recently played at the Cromwellian in west Kensington. However, neither gig was honoured as the band was still in Italy.
The same is true of other gigs advertised during April and May. These include the Methodist Hall in Studley, Warwickshire on Saturday, 22 April and a show the following day at the Tavern Club in Dereham, Norfolk.
Rodger does remember his final gig with the band, which took place at the Playboy Club on Park Lane, central London on 27 May, after which he announced his departure.
Soon afterwards, the musicians went in search of a new lead singer to take over from Jimmy Marsh.
Singer Denny Thomas Alexander (b. 10 March 1946, Liverpool, Lancashire, d. 6 December 2018) remembers Stevens picking him up from his home in Liverpool and then collecting Martin Barre in Solihull on route to Bognor Regis where the new version would rehearse extensively at the Shoreline Club.
Stevens and Ketley had remembered The Clayton Squares’s singer whose band had shared the stage with Beau Brummell & The Noblemen at the Storyville Club in Frankfurt in West Germany back in March 1966.
“When we decided we wanted a change after Jimmy Marsh, I contacted Denny who agreed to join up with us,” remembers Stevens.
“I went up to Liverpool and brought him down to Bognor where he stayed at the Shoreline Hotel (the only teenage hotel run by teenagers for teenagers in Bognor) while we got a new act together before going out on the road again.”
Alexander, like his erstwhile colleagues, had been active since the early ’60s, playing with Liverpool bands Tony & The Chequers, The Aarons, The Secrets and The Kinsleys.
His greatest success, however, came with The Clayton Squares, who he joined in February 1965 and with whom he recorded two singles for Decca in late 1965 and early 1966. The band, which was managed by Don Arden, had played extensively at the Cavern but had arrived on the scene too late to capitalise on the success of the first wave of Merseyside bands.
Alexander, who had been working in West Germany with the London-based group, The Thoughts (and recorded unreleased material with them for Shel Talmy’s Planet Records) after leaving the Clayton Squares, brought both a strong voice and some powerful original material to the new Motivation line up.
It’s quite possible that most of June 1967 was spent rehearsing new exciting original material that Alexander was starting to pen and performing it at the Shoreline (dates for this venue are impossible to find).
During this period back on the south coast, Motivation was booked to appear at the Royal Ballrooms in Boscombe on Tuesday, 28 June, returning soon after to perform on Monday, 3 July.
More significantly, on Saturday, 1 July, Motivation opened for Cream at the Upper Cut in Forest Gate, east London.
Ketley remembers finishing their set and walking outside for fresh air and heard a strange noise coming from an open back truck parked next to their own gig wagon.
“I couldn’t believe my eyes as there laid down in the back of the truck was Ginger Baker opening up packets of drum sticks and rolling them across the floor of the truck so he could choose the best ones for the set. I also remember the drum roll Ginger did on the double bass drums while getting ready to open – the curtains were closed and even then the audience erupted – they opened with ‘Sunshine of Your Love’. Amazing!”
On Friday, 4 August, Motivation also appeared at Caesar’s Place at the Mulberry Tree in Stratford-upon-Avon in Warwickshire with The Agency.
Then, the following day, they travelled to Birmingham to appear at the Carlton Ballroom in Erdington, followed by a second show that evening at the Elbow Room in Aston. The weekend was completed with a show in Coventry on the Sunday at the Casablanca Club in the Sportsman’s Arms, Allesley.
During August, the band (sometimes billed as The Motivations) appeared at the Beeches Barn Theatre in Cirencester, Gloucestershire (Friday, 11 August) before returning to the Royal Ballrooms in Boscombe for a show on Saturday, 19 August and then travelling to Worcestershire to appear at the Chateau Impney in Droitwich on Friday, 25 August. It was at this point that another name change was deemed necessary.
With the Cheshire version of The Motivation increasingly active (they opened for The Jeff Beck Group at Nantwich Civic Hall on 24 June 1967) and yet another group billed as The Motivation signing and later recording with Direction Records, the musicians decided to become The Penny Peep Show.
To be continued…
Thanks to Bryan Stevens, Mike Ketley, Martin Barre, Jimmy Marsh, Denny Alexander, Chris Rodger, Malcolm Tomlinson, Mike Paxman, Vernon Joynson and Hugh MacLean. Thank you to Bryan Stevens and Mike Ketley for the band photos.
Formed in Dagenham, Essex, and originally called The Buddy’s, the group changed its name to The Trend in mid-1965 after manager Jack Palmer saw Pete Cole playing with the East Ham based group The Prospectors and brought him in to replace the original bass player Jeff.
Soon afterwards, Ken, the group’s singer, and Brian, the rhythm guitar player, both departed. Norman Cummins took over on lead vocals (alongside lead guitar) and John Connolly joined on rhythm guitar.
The Buddy’s had started out without Norman Cummins who joined after answering an advert in a tobacconist’s window. The Buddy’s used to rehearse in a pub’s cellar in Whalebone Lane in Chadwell Heath. The group then started performing in local pubs, community halls and youth clubs in and around the Dagenham area.
According to an old friend, Norman Cummins used to carry his guitar everywhere and would get up on stage in pubs and play Bob Dylan and Donovan songs.
Norman Cummins started playing music at the age of seven, his first instrument being a piano accordion which was a gift one Christmas. However, he couldn’t quite get on with all the push buttons, so he just played the piano keys on his lap and worked the bellows with his feet.
His brother, however, had a guitar but he wasn’t allowed to touch it. When his brother was out of the house Norman picked up the guitar and learnt to play.
Not long afterwards, he sold the piano accordion and bought a cheap Spanish guitar. He later became adept at playing in a Chet Atkins style and purchased a secondhand Hofner Congress acoustic guitar to which he added a neck pickup. He used this guitar throughout his entire time with The Trend.
The aspiring guitarist also had a Gretsch Tennessee that had belonged to Gerry Marsden from Gerry and The Pacemakers. The guitar still had Gerry’s name and address in its case, but he couldn’t get on with it, so he just left it propped up on stage to show that he also had a “better” guitar.
Originally from East Ham, Pete Cole grew up in the next street to British guitar legend Bert Weedon. Lonnie Donegan was also a neighbour in East Ham and became famous for his skiffle group and the hit song “Rock Island Line”.
Pete was introduced to music when he lived with his grandmother (up until he was seven years old) in East Ham. After breakfast every morning he would sit in front of his granny’s old valve radio and listen to Django Reinhardt, Yehudi Menuhin, Count Basie and Stéphane Grappelli.
Later, his friend Geoff showed him the three chords from “Riders in the Sky”, a popular instrumental hit at the time, on an old acoustic guitar. His parents wouldn’t buy him one, so Pete made his own guitar and started The Prospectors who played once a week in Saint Paul’s Church in East Ham.
When he reformed the band, Pete Cole bought a Hofner 173 solid bodied guitar but after having to teach the bass player how to play, he decided to find a better lead guitarist than himself (Mick Baggeridge) as well as a rhythm guitarist (Tom Robinson), and switched to bass using an EKO Florentine bass. He later bought a Slab Body Fender Precision Bass from the J60 music Bar in Manor Park when he joined The Trend.
Pete also befriended future Small Faces front man Steve Marriott during this time. He remembers meeting up with Steve when they rode their track bikes around a cinder track in Little Ilford Park, Church Road, Manor Park.
“There were a lot of stinging nettles in the park which eventually inspired Steve and Ronnie Lane to write their hit song ‘Itchycoo Park’,” he says.
Steve Marriott used to work on Saturdays in a music shop in High Street North Manor Park called the J60 Music Bar. The shop had a small recording room in the basement where musicians could record directly onto a 45-rpm disc.
The Prospectors recorded “Just You” there for a prospective single. During their time together, Pete’s band supported some well-known acts, including Georgie Fame and The Blue Flames at East Ham Town Hall, John Lee Hooker at the Granada Cinema on the Barking Road and Sounds Incorporated at Leyton Baths.
Shortly after the name change to The Trend, Norman Cummins remembers the group playing at the foot of Nelson’s column in Trafalgar Square and winning £15 in the “Best Band in East London” competition with an extra £5 for the best original song.
On 22 July 1966, The Trend joined Chords Five, City Blues and The Eights for the Top Group Final, held at Stratford Town Hall.
Through Jack Palmer and local promoter Kenny Johnson, The Trend landed an audition with a German club owner, Paul Neuman, who offered the musicians work for a month at the PN Hit House in Schwabing, Munich in September 1966.
The Trend took over from The Giants, who featured Gibson Kemp on drums from the group Paddy, Klaus and Gibson.
Norman and John had decided to hitch hike to Munich because The Trend’s van was overloaded and did not have enough room for more than one passenger. However, after the ferry crossing the plan was to meet Pete and Frankie in the van the next day in Belgium and somehow make enough room to travel together.
However, Norman and John never saw the van the next morning. The guitarist recalls that, after sleeping by the side of the road near the ferry the pair managed to hitch a lift from a German driving a BMW, who took them to a remote town called Blaubeuren. As they knew the guy had kidnapped them and drove like a maniac on the motorway, John kept calling him a c***. When the guy asked the rhythm guitarist what it meant, John replied “good driver” after which the guy kept saying “Me c***!
Norman Cummins says the two musicians tried for days to convince the driver to take them to Munich. Eventually, they managed to leave, got to a train station and travelled on to Munich.
Pete Cole remembers the pair turning up at night, unshaven, and 30 minutes before they were about to go on stage (but two days after they were due to begin their residency).
After two nights on stage Norman got laryngitis and lost his voice during the concert. Pete tried his best to get The Trend to the end of their set and they lost another two nights with Norman returning to the stage singing like a bird after having cortisone injections given to him by a local doctor.
While in Munich, the band cut two tracks for a 45, issued on the PN Schwabing’s “Life Records” label (see image below).
It wasn’t the last time the group would play in West Germany. Pete remembers many tours there and never having any problems with permits (something that would dog a subsequent line-up). He also recalls one day not having a valid passport when a last-minute German gig was booked.
“I went to my local post office and for £1 I got a year’s visitor’s passport over the counter,” he says. “However, after a few trips to Germany that year, the passport office got wise and asked me to return it”.
Pete and Norman recall that when they played at the PN Hit House the Americans had an army base nearby and the soldiers used to come and listen to The Trend playing.
“It was pretty sad to watch these guys in the audience knowing full well that they were going to be shipped out to fight in the war in Vietnam and so many of them would never come back alive,” says Norman.
“Some of the guys were like us and had played in bands at home before they were called up for duty. We got friendly with some of them and they would come back to our apartment in Schwabing across from the club, where we would talk shit all night. Many of them would be A.W.O.L. (absent without leave) and the Military Police in their white helmets, knowing where they were, would come knocking on the door in the early hours of the morning to collect them and take them back to the army base.”
Back in the UK, The Trend landed a notable gig at the exclusive Scotch of St James in Mayfair, performing on 13-14 October 1966.
However, in November, Pete Cole and John Connolly both left and returned to West Germany. John didn’t stay long, returning to the UK soon afterwards. He appears to have disappeared from the music scene.
Pete meanwhile joined a band called The Beathovens who had a single in the charts.
The bass player toured West Germany with the band and remained there for about nine months before returning home.
Back in east London, he subsequently re-joined The Trend in September 1967 (more of which later).
Jack Palmer meanwhile brought into two new musicians so The Trend could continue.
Introduced to the public in the 20 January 1967 edition of the Newham and Stratford Express, rhythm guitarist Mo Eccles and bass player Phil Duke were both East Ham lads.
In the same article, it said the group had been offered work in Spain and Germany, but that Jack Palmer had turned it down because he wanted The Trend to play more East End clubs.
However, this formation proved to be very short-lived. In the 24 March 1967 edition of the Newham and Stratford Express, the article noted that The Trend had signed up two new members.
Although it’s not clear if this was a fifth member, there was at least one new musician – guitarist and organist/singer Michael Claxton who took over from Mo Eccles (Ed. the same newspaper’s 10 February 1967 edition said Eccles had left and Claxton had joined).
Hailing from Barking, Michael Claxton remembers that he was standing in for a musician in his brother’s band who was ill. On the night in question, the band opened for The Trend, the headlining act, at St Philip and St James Church Hall in Plaistow.
Michael recalls: “Their manager, Jack Palmer, came up to me as I was watching, and despite hearing me sing ‘Stone Free’ and ‘Mustang Sally’, asked me to join.”
The new recruit also remembers that The Trend played at the Upper Cut in Forest Gate (most likely 4 March when the musicians battled with local groups The Jokers, The New Jump Band and The Survivors in the ‘Discoveries of Tomorrow’ show) and Stratford Town Hall during his time with the band.
He also remembers playing at Soho clubs, the Bag O’ Nails and Whisky A Go Go.
The 28 April 1967 edition of the Newham and Stratford Express noted that The Trend had been chosen to back visiting US singing duo, The Soul Sisters on a two-week countrywide tour, which was arranged through the Roy Tempest Agency.
The article also mentioned that, the previous week, the group had played central London clubs, Tiles in Oxford Street (21 April), the Speakeasy (22 April) and Sibyllas (26 April). Hampshire historian David Allen, confirms that The Soul Sisters backed by The Trend played at the Birdcage in Southsea earlier in the day on 22 April with The Bizarre also on the bill.
Judging by a concert billing in the Reading Evening Post promoting The Soul Sisters’ show at the Harvest Moon in Guildford, Surrey on 14 April, it seems likely that the tour had actually started mid-month (although The Trend may not have been there at the outset and had taken over from the original backing band).
Melody Makerconfirmed the Tiles gig on 21 April (which also had The Love Affair on the bill). It also listed two further gigs attributed to Soul Sisters – the California Ballroom in Dunstable on 28 April and the New All-Star Club near Liverpool Street station the following day.
Stoke-on-Trent newspaper, The Evening Sentinel, listed a Soul Sisters’ gig at the Golden Torch in Tunstall on 27 April with The Canadians (featuring a very young David Foster) and The Toggery.
Another Soul Sisters’ gig (advertised in the Crewe Chronicle) suggests the singing duo played at Warmingham Grange Country Club in Cheshire on 30 April, but The Trend are not named in the advert.
According to the Newham and Stratford Express, Jack Palmer added drummer/turned lead singer Wade Maddison from Goodmayes in early May and the expanded five-piece headed to West Berlin for a four-week West German tour a week or so later.
Maddison had previously played drums with a few bands, including with Ilford group The Inner Sect. He then drummed with a group from Peyton called The Unknown who opened The Small Faces and The Who. They also backed The Truth, who recorded The Beatles song “Girl” in 1966.
Although Michael Claxton insists that the new front man did not join The Trend until after the German dates and that he also provided lead vocals during the tour, Maddison remembers the tour well (see comments).
The idea was to relieve singer Norman Cummins, so he could focus on playing lead guitar when The Trend played for long hours during the German shows. In many German clubs, visiting British bands had to play four or five one-hour sets a night and often work into the early hours of the morning.
Norman remembers that The Trend were backing The Soul Sisters in Stoke-on-Trent on the final night of the tour when they received the telephone call from the Roy Tempest Agency’s secretary telling them that they had to get to West Berlin as soon as possible.
After driving back to London to collect their passports and a change of clothes, the band drove non-stop through Belgium, West Germany and into East Germany before arriving at their destination exhausted.
“We drove straight to West Berlin to play four US air force bases the same evening and after driving all day from London,” recalls Michael Claxton.
Norman remembers the Russians giving the musicians hell at the check points, making them unload the band’s equipment as they entered East Germany and re-entered West Germany at the East Berlin/West Berlin border. Soldiers looked in the guitar cases and in the back of the amplifiers, looking for drugs; all the musicians had long hair and looked a bit scruffy after their long trip.
After backing one of the singers from The Fabulous Drifters for three nights, the musicians received another phone call from Roy Tempest’s secretary telling them that the agency had sent the wrong band and that The Trend were supposed to be playing a month’s residency at the Atlantic Bar in Hanau near Frankfurt.
On arrival, Norman Cummins recalls getting friendly with another English band who were playing at the K52 Club in Frankfurt and they decided to swap gigs (they never knew what the club owners must have thought!).
The Trend played the K52 for a few nights, but the hours were horrendous, so they swapped back with the other group, the guitarist recalls.
Norman adds: “During one of The Trend’s nights at The K52 Club, Jimi Hendrix, Mitch Mitchell and Noel Redding walked in. Everybody wanted Jimi to play but there wasn’t a left-handed guitar, so he played my Fender Telecaster upside down and still played it better than me, son of a b****!”
The club in Hanau was where the American GIs hung out of at night. On one occasion, one of the soldiers, threw a rock and smashed the windscreen of the band’s van because one of the members (probably Norman) had stolen his girlfriend. They had a hard job getting a replacement windscreen. Finally, one night the club got raided by the police and The Trend, not having work permits, got thrown out of West Germany.
An article, which appeared in a mid-June edition of the Newham and Stratford Express, noted that The Trend had just returned from three weeks in West Germany and on 13 June had played their first gig back in the UK at the Ilford Palais, which later became a legendary venue.
The Trend were then given another booking through the Roy Tempest Agency, opening for The Original Drifters on a countrywide tour, playing their own half hour slot before the US soul act came on stage.
Melody Maker listed some of these shows: the Upper Cut in Forest Gate, east London on 10 June; the Whisky A Go Go in Wardour Street, Soho on 15 June; and the Starlite in Greenford, northwest London on 18 June.
According to the Nantwich Chronicle, The Original Drifters also played at Warmingham Grange Country Club on 2 July.
However, The Trend weren’t advertised for any of these shows so it’s not possible to determine with any certainty whether they were the backing band at every show.
What is clear from the Lincolnshire Standard is that The Trend did back The Original Drifters on 8 July at the Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Six-Across, The Charades and Ray Bones.
In the 28 July 1967 edition of the Newham and Stratford Express, the article mentioned that the group had secured a recording contract with Polydor Records, which had been signed the previous week when the tour with The Original Drifters had drawn to a close.
Jack Palmer had kept the deal secret until a surprise party for the group on the Saturday after a gig at the Whisky A Go Go (most likely the one on 11 July).
However, the same newspaper ran another story on 25 August which said that Michael Claxton had left the group when they signed the contract with Polydor.
According to singer Wade Maddison, Michael’s parents didn’t want him to be in a professional band and didn’t want him to sign the recording contract.
The keyboard player has different recollections and reasons for his departure, which sounds like it was around mid-August: “When we came back [from West Germany], there were few jobs for us as I recall, and I had to ‘sign on’ for three weeks to survive.”
Michael Claxton’s departure was noted by another local band, The Parking Lot, who’d picked up on the news after reading the story in the paper and subsequently asked him to join.
When Claxton accepted the offer, The Parking Lot included guitarist/singer Steve Taylor; drummer/singer Brian Hudson; Cliff ? on bass; and lead singer Joe Wheal.
A revamped version of The Parking Lot (who will be profiled at a later date) recorded a lone 45 with Paul Samwell-Smith producing. Claxton subsequently moved to Sweden and played with funk band Inside Looking Out. He currently lives in Tokyo, Japan.
Claxton’s replacement in The Trend was something of a surprise. Paul Likeman was the first and last member who didn’t come from the East End, hailing from Streatham in southwest London.
One of his first appearances with The Trend took place at the Whisky A Go Go in Soho on 20 August.
The following week (26 August), The Trend performed at the Boston Gliderdrome in Boston, Linconlshire alongside New Zealand group The Human Instinct, The Ebony Keys and Ray Bones .
Interestingly, in the same edition (25 August) of the Stratford and Newham Express, there was a short piece on former member Pete Cole who had just returned from Munich. The article mentioned that Jack Palmer was going to help Cole to piece a new band together.
In the article, Jacky said: “I don’t know what it will be called but it will be a great group. I wanted another group besides The Trend and having one with Pete as the bass guitarist will be marvelous.”
As events transpired, the new group never happened and in mid-September 1967, Pete Cole returned to The Trend after a major shake-up in the band.
Not long after a gig at the New Yorker Discotheque in Swindon, Wiltshire on 2 September, Phil Duke moved on to join Sam Gopal while lead singer Wade Maddison also jumped ship.
Paul Likeman was likewise gone, replaced by Lowrey organist Cliff Reuter from The Shakedowns and Maton’s Magic Mixture, who only played in the band for a short period.
Norman and Pete both recall: “Cliff Reuter was a very good organist and always looked the part. We didn’t fully understand why he never stayed with us for any length of time. We think maybe it was because we were workaholics. If we weren’t playing, which wasn’t that often because by then we were playing seven days a week, we used to rehearse, so it was very rare to have a day off and even if we did we nearly always stayed together, met up for a drink and a meal.”
Pete Cole had literally retaken his position on bass when The Original Drifters were back in the UK for another tour. Norman Cummins kept a track of the tour dates which are as follows:
14 September 1967 – Skyline Ballroom, Hull
15 September 1967 – Clouds, Derby and Co-op, Doncaster
16 September 1967 – Plaza Ballroom, Old Hill, West Midlands; Plaza Ballroom, Handsworth, West Midlands and Penthouse, Birmingham
17 September 1967 – Starlite, Greenford, northwest London and Club West Indies, northwest London
18 September 1967 – King’s Hall, Berkhamsted, Herts
19 September 1967 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, central London
21 September 1967 – Locarno, Streatham, southwest London
22 September 1967 – Princess Theatre, Chorlton, Greater Manchester and Domino Club, Openshaw, Greater Manchester
23 September 1967 – New Century Hall, Manchester, Paradise Club, Scholes, Wigan, Lancashire and King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire
24 September 1967 – The Place, Wakefield, West Yorkshire and the Hub, Barnsley, South Yorkshire
26 September 1967 – Playhouse, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey
27 September 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire
29 September 1967 – Tin Hat, Kettering, Northamptonshire
30 September 1967 – Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Cats Pyjamas, Magic Roundabout and Ray Bones and Nite Owl, Leicester
1 October 1967 – Dungeon, Nottingham (with Garnet Mimms & The Senate)
2 October 1967 – Parr Hall, Warrington, Cheshire
Both Pete Cole and Norman Cummins concur on the intensity of the touring itinerary: “The tours dates would sometimes list three concerts in three different towns on the same night but somehow we managed to arrive at the venues on time”.
The Trend backed no less than three different formations of The Drifters on tours of the UK and in between these engagements the musicians continued to play clubs like the Whisky A Go Go, the Scotch of St James, Blaises, the Speakeasy and the Bag O’Nails.
Pete Cole remembers the Speakeasy had a very small stage. “I can’t for the life of me see how we managed to get the band and all the equipment on the stage, it was so small, no more than 3 or 4 m wide. It was a great venue though. I remember years later, with my American girlfriend at the time, having dinner there with Johnny Winter and his brother Edgar who my girlfriend knew from when she lived in the US.”
Around this time, the band briefly added sax player Bob Mather from Scottish soul band, The Senate, who was given separate billing with The Trend when they backed the next round of US soul acts, again as part of the Roy Tempest packages.
The Senate, incidentally, were also booked as a backing group on some of the Roy Tempest Agency tours (backing Edwin Starr and Garnet Mimms among others). A few of its members went on to become part of The Average White Band who had a mega hit with “Pick up The Pieces”.
Interestingly, The Trend were later the opening act for The Brian Auger Trinity featuring Julie Driscoll on vocals at one venue and Robbie McIntosh from The Senate was on drums.
During October the band returned to provide support for The Soul Sisters on another tour, appearing at the Whisky A Go Go in Soho on 12 October.
Immediately afterwards The Original Drifters returned to the UK for another tour. According to Melody Maker, the US soul act’s tour included two shows on the 24 October: one at the Whisky A Go Go in Soho and another at Klooks Kleek in West Hampstead, north London.
During late October/early November, The Trend started backing Nepenthe, which included an appearance at the Dungeon Club in Nottingham on 12 November. They also joined Nepenthe for two shows at the Whisky A Go Go in Wardour Street on 16 and 23 November.
On 15 November, The Trend backed Nepenthe at the Savoy Ballroom in Southsea, Hampshire that also featured The Fantastics, backed by The Clockwork Orange.
The Roy Tempest tours kept the musicians busy on the road. In December, they backed The Fabulous Marvelettes, who were previously known as The Gypsies, and consisted of the sisters Earnestine, Shirley and Betty Pearce and Viola Billups. One show, on 24 December, took place at the Dungeon in Nottingham.
The tour straddled December with Bob Mather driving the girls in his ‘S’ type Jag and standing in on sax. On Christmas night they played at Sloopy’s Club in Manchester.
Then, on 30 December, The Trend returned to the Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire for a show with Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band, Ebony Keys and Ray Bones.
On their return in 1968 for another tour with The Trend, The Fabulous Marvelettes took up residence in Britain and changed name to The Flirtations. That same year they recorded a song on Deram in 1968 called “Nothing but a Heartache”.
After the tour, The Trend saw in the New Year with a show at the Lotus Club in Forest Gate.
In January 1968, The Trend backed The Fabulous Platters and again later that year on a second highly successful tour (during May-June).
Norman Cummins remembers The Platters had a very professional stage show and one performance took place at the Hub in Barnsley, West Yorkshire on 7 January. Another took place at Nottingham’s Dungeon on 12 January.
“They were always immaculately dressed and had a nonchalant side step when approaching their microphones, all part and parcel of their stage routine,” the guitarist recalls.
The Eastern Evening News advertised a gig with The Platters at the Night Prowler in Great Yarmouth on 18 January 1968 while the Ipswich Evening Star lists a show at the Bluesville ’68 Club at St Matthew’s Baths in Ipswich on 22 January.
On one of the Roy Tempest tours The Trend also played at The Cavern in Liverpool. Pete Cole remembers how cramped it was, consisting of two arched alcoves, one having a stage.
“It was very hot and sweaty, because of the low ceilings that were painted white,” he says. “The paint was falling off in flakes that stuck in your hair and on lay on your shoulders. The club was lite with blue ultra violet lights that made the spots of paint look like snowflakes.”
In mid-February The Trend returned to the Lotus Club in Forest Gate to play a show (see pic below).
According to the Sheffield Star, The Trend opened for The Marvelettes at Rawmarsh Baths in Rotherham, South Yorkshire on 11 March 1968 on a bill that also featured The Original Drifters backed by The London All-Stars. The same artists appeared at Sheffield City Hall on 20 March 1968.
Not long after both Bob Mather and Cliff Reuter moved on and The Trend continued as a trio, although the 28 June issue of the Newham, Barking & Stratford Express reported that the group was looking for an experienced organist.
Later that year, The Trend toured with Clyde McPhatter, one of The Original Drifters, who wrote “It’s a Lovers Question” in 1958. Norman Cummins remembers him as being a real character who was either pissed or stoned and was never happy if he didn’t pull a bird after every gig. Clyde moved back to the US in 1970 and, after an amazing career, died at the age of 39.
One of the most memorable Roy Tempest bookings was the “Tour de France” as Pete Cole and Norman Cummins call it. On the face of it, it seemed a romantic and exotic assignment. However, it all went terribly wrong.
“We arrived at about 2.30 in the morning at Calais and being as the road signs are orientated in a different manner to those in England and it was also a bit foggy, it got confusing as to how to get on the road to Bordeaux where we were due to play our first gig,” says the guitarist.
“At a roundabout Pete saw a policeman and stopped to ask him the way. The policeman kept pointing at a headlight on the van. We couldn’t understand a word he was saying but he insisted and eventually we could see that the headlight was working but one of the side lights wasn’t.”
Norman Cummins continues: “He signaled us to follow him. We thought ‘Great, he’s going to put us on the right road to Bordeaux’. However, instead he took us to the local Gendarmerie where they locked us up for the night.”
Pete Cole remembers the police at the station played cards most of the night and that one of them used to come into the cell balancing a wooden baton in front of his nose.
“We stayed locked up until about 8.30 in the morning when they escorted us to a local garage to purchase a five-watt side light bulb,” adds the guitarist. “We managed to drive down to Bordeaux and to the club in time.”
Pete Cole remembers the club being located near Bordeaux in the countryside. “There was a welcoming smell of a burning wood fire and we had a small but cozy changing room,” he says.
“There was a cardboard box with Fox cubs in it. Apparently, there had been a fox hunt that week and their mother had been killed. The club owner’s wife had managed to find and retrieve the cubs and was rearing them at the club.”
The bass player remembers the French tour took in Bordeaux, Bergerac, Toulouse, Tours and Neufchatel near Le Mans. One of the clubs in Toulouse is still there. During the 1960s (and 1970s), the city was known as France’s “rock ‘n’ roll town”, with every bar and hall (salle de fête) having live music during the week days and at weekends.
Back in the UK, Pete Cole remembers The Trend opened for The Jeff Beck Group at the Dome in Brighton (Ed. it’s not been possible to find this gig). The guitarist and bass player remember watching Jeff Beck from a balcony seat. Rod Stewart, who was Jeff Beck’s singer at the time, was singing from behind the tall Marshall guitar amplifiers.
“We both thought at first that it was because Jeff Beck didn’t want to get upstaged by the singer,” says Norman Cummins. However, it later transpired that Rod Stewart admitted he did that because he was shy.
During 1968, the pair also remember The Trend supported Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band, Jethro Tull, Amen Corner and The Herd featuring Peter Frampton.
Newham, Barking and Stratford Express‘ 7 June issue notes that The Trend had just finished a three-week tour with The Platters. It added that the musicians were taking a week off and then were backing The Isley Brothers on a two-three week tour.
It’s not clear if The Isley Brothers tour transpired. However, The Trend did back Nepenthe on another tour, including a show at the Beau Brummel Club at the Alvaston Hall Hotel in Nantwich, Cheshire on 30 June.
In early 1969, towards the end of their time together, The Trend toured England as support act for The Crickets.
Norman Cummins recalls: “Jerry Allison was great and mesmerising when he played the snare on ‘Peggy Sue’. I don’t remember much about them though as they were then ageing hippies. However, I didn’t take too well to Sonny because he remarked that my hero, Buddy Holly, wasn’t a particularly good guitarist.”
In mid-1969, The Trend finally called it day. However, the two musicians soon reunited in The House of Orange who backed The Fantastics. The US soul act had originally been brought over by The Roy Tempest Agency to tour England as The Fabulous Temptations in August 1967.
Pete Cole had started off as the personal driver for The Fantastics but later became their rhythm guitarist and finally replaced the bass guitarist, Ron Thomas, who years later joined The Heavy Metal Kids with Gary Holton on vocals. Holton played the part of Wayne Winston Norris in the popular TV comedy drama Auf Wiedersehen Pet.
When guitarist Pip Williams dropped out in July 1969 while the group were in Frankfurt, Pete Cole called Norman Cummins to come to the rescue. The Fantastics’ work visas for England had expired and they had to stay out of the country for six months before being able to renew them.
Based in Frankfurt, The Fantastics (backed by The House of Orange) played the American air bases. During that summer, however, they also played at the Black Out Club in Zurich, a week’s residency at the American air base in Naples, a residency at a night club in Cannes, France, and a month at Sloopy’s Club in Palma on the island of Majorca.
When the pair split, Pete Cole continued in the music business, driving and playing bass guitar. He replaced Phil Chen on bass in The Joyce Bond Review and toured the West Indies with them after Joyce Bond recorded “Do the Teasy” and a cover of the Beatles “Ob La Di Ob La Da” for Richard Branson’s Island Records, which topped the Jamaican charts in 1970.
The bass player later returned to England and worked for Reg King, Charisma Records and A&M Records. He also reunited with Gibson Kemp from The Giants (see earlier) in Hamburg. Gibson was working for Phonogram Records and Pete Cole was looking for a contract to release an LP he had produced with his group, The Spamm Band, which had been issued on CBS Records in France. The project fell through, however, because CBS insisted on having the rights for West Germany.
Named after Pete Cole’s nickname “Spam”, the group’s members consisted of Terry Scott on vocals; Bob McGuiness on lead guitar; John Edwards on bass; Jeff Peach on saxophone and flute; Graham Broad on drums; and Brian Johnston on piano. Although the LP didn’t sell, some of the members went to successful careers – Terry Scott (Heaven), John ‘Rhino’ Edwards (Status Quo), Graham Broad (Pink Floyd and Bill Wyman’s Rhythm Kings) and Brian Johnston (Whitesnake).
Pete Cole also worked in France and played briefly with singer Nino Ferrer who had a mega hit called “Le Süd” (“The South”) and spent several years in the Caribbean as a painter/artist. During his time there, he played bass with the founder of The Fabiano Orchestra and Tao Ravao.
After leaving The Fantastics’ backing band, The House of Orange, Norman Cummins worked for the Post Office in England and continued to work for them after moving to South Africa. He has played with several different bands over the years, including Platinum, Kenny Small and The Big Boys to name a few. Norman Cummins runs a successful sound installation business but continues to play folk, classical and rock guitar and sings as a solo artist.
I would like to give a massive thank you to Pete Cole who spent a huge amount of time collating material on the band with Norman Cummins and provided many of the photos. Thanks also to Michael Claxton for this recollections.
The Sidewinders pre-existed sometime before mid-1965 but Malcolm Penn says the line-up above dates from May that year when the remaining members of the original formation joined forces with players from Dickie Pride & The Original Topics.
Dickie Pride, Len Neldrett and Malcolm Penn had all previously been members of The Original Topics, formed in the Tolworth, Surbiton and Chessington area of Surrey.
Prior to joining the Sidewinders, Tex Makins and Johnnie Marshall (real name: John Renforth) had both played with Georgie Fame & The Blue Flames.
Nigerian conga player Jimmy Scott is best known as the musician who inspired Paul McCartney to write “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da”, a phrase he originally used. He had also done some work with Georgie Fame & The Blue Flames before joining.
Marshall, Scott and Matthew Hutchinson had all been in the original band, which was led by Jamaican singer Gery L Thompson who only stayed until about early September 1965.
The original formation also included Jamaican trumpet player Roy Edwards, future Led Zeppelin bass player John Baldwin (aka John Paul Jones) and a drummer called Min.
Some of the gigs during June-August were billed as Gery L Thompson & The Sidewinders.
In early November 1965, Boz Burrell, who years later found fame with King Crimson and Bad Company, joined as a second lead vocalist after his group, The Boz People, had folded. The group’s keyboard player Ian McLagan had joined The Small Faces in the first week of November just before the group splintered.
Burrell had initially deputised for Pride when he was unavailable. It was so successful that the group decided to carry on with two singers when Pride returned. While with The Sidewinders, Burrell released two singles on Columbia.
When The Sidewinders folded in June 1966, Malcolm Penn (and Len Neldrett) joined south London band, Moon’s Train, managed by Rolling Stones’ bass player Bill Wyman who oversaw the group’s recordings, including their debut single “Deed I Do”.
Len Neldrett who was studying graphic design subsequently did sessions for The End, featuring his old friend Nicky Graham. He later moved to Spain and worked with former Los Bravos singer Mike Kennedy.
Mark Charig briefly worked with Sonny Childe & The TNT before joining Bluesology, just before Reg Dwight (aka Elton John) left. David Else notes that he subsequently worked with The Keith Tippett Band and The Brotherhood of Breath.
Jimmy Scott later did session work at Maximum Sound and also recorded material there, which was released by Revolution Records. Years later he worked with Bad Manners.
David Else says that Johnnie Marshall rejoined Georgie Fame before later working with J J Jackson. Marshall died on 15 May 2017.
Boz Burrell released two singles on Columbia in quick succession – “Pinochio” on 10 June 1966 and “The Baby Song” on 29 July 1966.
He then reformed The Boz People for a tour with Dusty Springfield (27 September-8 October 1966), which featured Groundhogs’ guitarist Tony McPhee and former Mark Leeman Five keyboard player Tom Parker in his group.
Burrell returned to Norwich where he joined local band Feel for Soul in June 1967 and stayed until October.
He then reunited with Makins in the short-lived Panorama in December 1967 alongside guitarist Colin Pincott, drummer Roy Mills and Australian Hammond organist Peter Beagley (later musician Peter Head). David Else notes that the original keyboard player was Mike O’Neill (not Nero of The Gladiators) and the drummer was originally Pete Williams.
In 1968, Burrell recorded two further singles for Columbia Records. Beagley confirms he was on the cover of Bob Dylan’s “I Shall Be Released”.
Makins meanwhile joined The Flowerpot Men in February 1968. The English pop group, which was created in 1967 as a result of the single, “Let’s Go to San Francisco”, was a studio recording construct created by John Carter and Ken Lewis, originally the main songwriters for The Ivy League. Makins toured with David Garrick later that year alongside drummer Carlo Little.
Len Neldrett notes that The Sidewinders (minus Makins who was replaced by Boots Slade) reunited for a one-off gig as Jimmy Scott’s Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da Band on 2 December 1968.
The group comprising Jimmy Scott, Dickie Pride, Len Neldrett, Malcolm Penn, Johnnie Marshall, Mark Charig, Matthew Hutchinson and Boots Slade played at the Orchid Ballroom in Purley, Surrey.
Dickie Pride died of a heroin overdose on 26 March 1969.
In June 1969, Makins reunited with Jimmy Scott to form the short-lived Jungle Soup which subsequently morphed into The Last Supper.
Selected Sidewinders’ gigs:
28 June 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live) Billed as Gery L Thompson & The Sidewinders
1 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Alex Harvey Soul Band (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
4 July 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London (NME) Billed as Gery L Thompson & The Sidewinders
8 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Graham Bond Organisation (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
10 July 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with Herbie Goins & The Night Timers (NME/Record Mirror) Billed as Gery L Thompson & The Sidewinders
15 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Alex Harvey Soul Band (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
17 July 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with Ronnie Jones & The Blue Jays (NME/Record Mirror) Billed as Gery L Thompson & The Sidewinders
23 July 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with Five Proud Walkers (NME/Record Mirror) Billed as Gery L Thompson & The Sidewinders
29 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Graham Bond Organisation (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
30 July 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with The RBQ (NME)
5 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Mike Cotton Sound (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
12 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Graham Bond Organisation (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
19 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Steampacket (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
20 September 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)
24 September 1965 – Harvest Moon Club, Guildford, Surrey (Surrey Advertiser) Billed as Garry & The Sidewinders
15 October 1965 – Harvest Moon Club, Guildford, Surrey with Keith Powell & The Rivals (Surrey Advertiser)
5 November 1965 – Harvest Moon Club, Guildford, Surrey with The Overriders (Surrey Advertiser) Billed as Sidewinders with Boz
2 December 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Graham Bond Organisation (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live) Billed as Boz & The Sidewinders
4 December 1965 – The Catacombe, Eastbourne, East Sussex with support (Eastbourne Herald Chronicle) Billed as Boz & The Sidewinders
19 December 1965 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)
31 December 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London followed by a private party in Highgate Village (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
1966
9 January 1966 – Agincourt Ballroom, Camberley, Surrey with The Emeralds (Aldershot News/Camberley News) Advert mistakenly says ‘Original Georgie Fame Group featuring Phil Seaman on drums’
14 January 1966 – Co-op Hall, Grays, Essex (Melody Maker)
19 January 1966 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, west London with Lee Dorsey & The Krew (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
20 January 1966 – Briefing for start of the Stevie Wonder Tour (no rehearsal!) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
21 January 1966 – Flamingo Club, Wardour Street, central London (start of Stevie Wonder tour) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
21 January 1966 – The In Place, central London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
21 January 1966 – Flamingo Club, Wardour Street, central London with Little Stevie Wonder (Allnighter) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
22 January 1966 – Rhodes Centre, Bishop’s Stortford, Herts with Little Stevie Wonder (Steve Ingless book: The Day Before Yesterday)
22 January 1966 – All Star Club, Bishopsgate, east London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
23 January 1966 – Oasis Club, Manchester with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
23 January 1966 – Cavern Club, Liverpool with Little Stevie Wonder and other acts (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
26 January 1966 – Orchid Ballroom, Purley, Surrey with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
26 January 1966 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, west London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
27 January 1966 – Ricky Tick Club, Windsor, Berkshire with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
28 January 1966 – Mr McCoys Club, Middlesborough with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
29 January 1966 – Birmingham (first venue, no record of the club venue name) with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
29 January 1966 – Birmingham (second venue, no record of the club venue name) with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
30 January 1966 – Flamingo Club, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
30 January 1966 – Macador Club, central London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
1 February 1966 – Klooks Kleek, Hampstead, north London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
1 February 1966 – Scotch of St James, Mayfair, central London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
2 February 1966 – TWW TV Studios, Bristol with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
3 February 1966 – Club Cedar, Birmingham with Little Stevie Wonder (Birmingham Evening Mail)
4 February 1966 – Manchester (first venue, no record of the club venue name) with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
4 February 1966 – Manchester (second venue, no record of the club venue name) with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
5 February 1966 – Starlight Ballroom, Greenford, west London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
5 February 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
6 February 1966 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham with Little Stevie Wonder (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary) David Else says Charlie Foxx was on the bill as well
7 February 1966 – St Joseph’s Hall, Basingstoke, Hampshire with Little Stevie Wonder & The Alan Bown Set (Hampshire & Berkshire Gazette)
7 February 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Little Stevie Wonder (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live) This was the end of the Stevie Wonder tour
9 February 1966 – Playhouse Theatre, Charing Cross, central London (BBC Jazz Beat Recording) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
Boz Burrell’s debut single on Columbia “Isn’t That So” was released on 11 February.
11 February 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
12 February 1966 – Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
4 March 1966 – El Partido, Lewisham, southeast London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
5 March 1966 – Zambezi Club, Hounslow, west London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary) David Else has the band backing Sonny Childe at the King Mojo on this date
12 March 1966 – University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
12 March 1966 – All Star Club, Bishopsgate, east London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
18 March 1966 – Railway Hotel, Wealdstone, northwest London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
20 March 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
21 March 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live) This is billed as Boz and new group but most likely The Sidewinders
25 March 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
26 March 1966 – Holbeach, Lincolnshire (no record of the club venue name) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
27 March 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London with The Soul Pushers (Melody Maker)
31 March 1966 – The Village, Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire (Grimsby Evening Telegraph)
1 April 1966 – Farnborough, Hampshire (no record of the club venue name but possibly Carousel Club) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
1 April 1966 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
2 April 1966 – Jigsaw Club, Manchester (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
2 April 1966 – Flamingo, Wardour Street, Soho, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
3 April 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
Boz Burrell’s second Columbia single “Meeting Time” was released on 7 April
13 April 1966 – Britannia Boat Club, Nottingham (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
14 April 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
15 April 1996 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
16 April 1966 – Oasis Club, Manchester (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
17 April 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
23 April 1966 – Patrick (Tara) Browne’s 21 Birthday party, Luggala, Co Wicklow, Eire (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
1 May 1966 – Downes Hotel, Hassocks, West Sussex with Beryl Marsden and also Four and Seven Eights (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary/Mid Sussex Times) Billed as Boz, The Sidewinders, Dicky Pride and Beryl Marsden
5 May 1966 – Klooks Kleek, Hampstead, north London (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
7 May 1966 – Carousel Club, 1 Camp Road, Farnborough, Hampshire with Jackie Edwards (Aldershot News/Camberley News)
14 May 1966 – Stamford R&B Club, Stamford Hotel, Stamford, Lincolnshire (Grantham Journal) With Sonny Childe
15 May 1966 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)
29 May 1966 – Tower Ballroom, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Eastern Evening News)
25 June 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, north London (final Sidewinders gig) (Malcolm Penn’s gig diary)
I’d especially like to thank Malcolm Penn for providing the photos on the band and for also providing some background information on the group. Thank you too for correcting and adding to the gig list above.
Massive thank you also to David Else for helping out with research, correcting some facts and adding material.
British band The Mode arrived in Spain during 1966 and cut a lone (rare) 45 for Sonoplay: “What You Been Doing” c/w “Love is to Blame, Not You”, composed by Henderson and Taylor.
Although Colin Giffin of The End, who the musicians befriended while in Spain, is sometimes credited for appearing on the recording, the single’s picture sleeve shows a five-man group (and not including Giffin), so it looks like there was a bass player whose name is missing from the list above.
It’s not clear when the band split up but Taylor did sessions for The End in late 1967 and joined the group back in London in March 1968 as a permanent member. Jim Henderson also joined The End (but in spring 1970) just before the band changed name to Tucky Buzzard.
He is also rumoured to have recorded some solo material before joining The End but it’s not clear if it was as The Jimmy Henderson Set.
Both Bircumshaw and Thackway stayed in Spain. Bircumshaw went on to join Canarios and appeared on their LP Libérate!
Thackway also stayed in Spain and went on to play with La Mosca among others as well as Miguel Rios. He was last heard of teaching English.
We would love to hear from anyone who can add more information about the band and its origins.
After The Trekkers split up in early 1965, Terry Gore, Terry Toothill and John Warwick stuck together and formed The Cast.
According to the Harrow Weekly Post, the group played at Acre Hall in Northwood, Middlesex on 9 April 1965.
The Evening Tribune lists the band playing at the Co-op Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire on 1 October 1965.
The band signed with the Bob Druce Agency and played in the circuit of clubs that the agency ran, most notably the Glenlyn Ballroom in Forest Hill and the Goldhawk Social Club in Shepherd’s Bush where on one occasion, the band opened for The Who on 3 December 1965. The Cast also played here on 31 December 1965.
During 1967, the band changed name to Tangerine Peel.
Many thanks to Terry Gore for providing the information. If you can add to this, please leave a comment below
This site is a work in progress on 1960s garage rock bands. All entries can be updated, corrected and expanded. If you have information on a band featured here, please let me know and I will update the site and credit you accordingly.
I am dedicated to making this site a center for research about '60s music scenes. Please consider donating archival materials such as photos, records, news clippings, scrapbooks or other material from the '60s. Please contact me at rchrisbishop@gmail.com if you can loan or donate original materials