Singer Tommy Bishop, who hailed from Brentwood in Essex, had first come to prominence with Tommy Bishop’s Richochets.
It’s not clear what Bishop did after the group split up in 1966/1967 but it’s possible he put together a new group with guitarists Chris Howlett and Pete Hole, who were behind the recording of the Decca single “Midnight Train”, which was credited the Rock ‘n’ Roll Revival Show.
According to tenor sax player Jeff Lake, who had started his career with west London R&B group Jeff Curtis & The Flames in 1964-1965, another tenor sax player/pianist called Jack, who came from Tottenham, was part of the group and both most likely appeared on the single.
“I first met Tommy when I auditioned for him when he was forming a band to go to Germany,” remembers Lake, who’d recently worked as road manager for Manchester’s Playboys (his friend and another ex-Flames member Malcolm Randall was their sax player).
“That group never got off the ground. A couple of months later I received a telegram from him to join this new band which became The Rock and Roll Revival Show.”
Lake also remembers three musicians from northeast England who were part of the group. These were guitarist Mick Pearson, bass player Noel “Bo” Skelton and drummer Terry “Tetley” Parkin.
However, Parkin says that none of them appeared on the single, which was recorded and released before their arrival.
Parkin, who hailed from north Lincolnshire, joined his first band The Echoes in 1959. The group later worked as The Northern Echoes and sometimes The Sound of The Echoes, including a two-month residency at the Top Ten Club in Hamburg (Ed: The Beatles were playing around the corner at the Star Club at the time).
Later, Parkin played with The Chads, another north Lincolnshire group, which is where he met guitarist Mick Pearson.
In early 1966, Parkin joined Brian Poole’s post-Tremeloes group, The Unity, appearing on the single “The Other Side of the Sky”.
When the group split in early 1968, he answered an advert in Melody Maker and joined Tommy Bishop’s new group who included another guitarist and bass player, both of whom quit after the first gig.
“That was when I suggested that Noel and Mick were available and they joined the band,” he says. “I can’t remember how long the band were together but the highlight was when we toured and supported Bill Haley and the Comets on their UK tour.”
Parkin remembers the group recorded a demo track, possibly for Decca, a Tommy Bishop composition called “Sugar Man”, which wasn’t released.
When the group split up, Parkin later played with The Gordon Jones Soul Band while Skelton returned to The Rumble Band, which later recorded as Rumble.
“Jack, the sax player from Tottenham, later went out as a guitar/vocals solo artist under the name Jack Bodine,” says Parkin. “Sometime after Bill Haley died, Jack sang with the original Comets on UK TV.”
We’d love to hear from anyone who can add any more information.
Huge thanks to Terry “Tetley” Parkin and Jeff Lake for providing further information about the group
Selected gigs:
15 March 1968 – Pink Flamingo, Wardour Street, Soho, London
30 March 1968 – Cottingham Civic Hall, Cottingham, East Riding of Yorkshire with The Big Change
5 April 1968 – Benn Memorial Hall, Rugby, Warwickshire with Pete Kelly’s Solution and Tuxedo Junction Blues Band
9 April 1968 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London
12 April 1968 – Locarno, Stevenage, Herts
13 April 1968 – Borough Assembly Hall, Aylesbury, Bucks with Candy Bus
14 April 1968 – Bournemouth Pavilion, Bournemouth, Dorset with The Balloons
15 April 1968 – Impsella Club, Chateau Impney, Droitwich, Worcestershire
16 April 1968 – Gala Ballroom, Norwich, Norfolk
18 April 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire
19 April 1968 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset
21 April 1968 – Riverside Club, Cricketers Hotel, Chertsey, Surrey
27 April 1968 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Fanny Flicker’s Show and The Cortinas
29 April 1968 – Sheridan Rooms, Nottingham with Bill Haley & The Comets
4 May 1968 – Belfry, Wishaw, near Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands with The Skin Deep (Birmingham Evening Mail)
11 May 1968 – Polytechnic, Little Titchfield Street, London with Karl ‘G’ Big Band
13 May 1968 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with The Hitmakers
18 May 1968 – Gaiety Ballroom, Ramsey, Cambridgeshire with Out of Sight
19 May 1968 – Excel Blue Angel, Middlesbrough
25 May 1968 – Campus, Welwyn Garden City with The Frugal Sound
27 May 1968 – Penny Farthing Club, Leicester
1 June 1968 – Mistrale Club, Beckenham, London with Mr Mo’s Messengers
2 June 1968 – Bournemouth Pavilion, Bournemouth, Dorset with The Palmer James
4 June 1968 – Dudley Zoo, Dudley, West Midlands with Bill Haley & The Comets and Pete Kelly’s Solution
8 June 1968 – Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey with Pattersons Generation
15 June 1968 – Alex’s Disco, Salisbury, Wiltshire
16 June 1968 – Crown & Cushion, Perry Barr, West Midlands with Jasper Stubbs, Fanny Flickers Rock & Roll Show and Al Copone & Steve Rio
23 June 1968 – Kinema Ballroom, Dunfermline, Scotland with The Falcons and The Shadettes
28 June 1968 – Regal Ballroom, Bonnyrigg, Scotland with Slater’s Street Few and Spider’s Web
29 June 1968 – Cheltenham Spa Lounge and Ballroom, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire with Loopy & Cindy (This may be another band)
12 July 1968 – Swinging Slipper, West Bridgeford, Nottinghamshire
26 July 1968 – Top Spot, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire with Sound City (This may be another band)
The Lost and Found originated in San Clemente, California as the Nuts & Bolts. Relocating to Phoenix Arizona, they became the Lost and Found and cut this single on the one-off Pins label. They were about 16 or 17 years old at the time of the session.
The band members were:
Jim Jeffers – lead guitar Mike Ingram – rhythm guitar and vocals Al Manfredi – bass and vocals Mike Ryer – drums and vocals
Mike Ingram wrote the fast-paced “Don’t Move Girl”, while Al Mandredi wrote the introspective “To Catch the Sun”, both songs published by Debra, BMI.
The Library of Congress shows the songs registered on November 14, 1966, listing their full names, with their mothers’ names as publishers: John Michael Ingram and Ruby P. Ingram; and Albert T. Manfredi and Wanda Manfredi.
The single is a Wakefield Pressing with the code SJW-8937. It was recorded at Loy Clingman’s Viv Studio.
The group had a tragic streak, as Mike Ingram died soon after the group returned to California in early 1967. After a year’s hiatus, Al Manfredi reformed the group with drummer Mike Ryer, only to have tragedy strike again, as Ryer died of cancer. Certainly this was a talented group that deserved a better fate.
Al Manfredi gave music lessons while continuing to write and record demos of songs. In 1973 he brought a band into a studio to cut some of his original songs, and had a small number of copies pressed by Band ‘n Vocal Mobile Recording Service. Al passed away in 1995, but Now-Again Records has issued his album and other recordings as Blue Gold.
Having enjoyed success in their native Victoria, British Columbia as Bobby Faulds & The Strangers, the group makes plans to relocate to England in late 1966 after drummer Barry Casson, who has spent time in London, recommends moving there.
The band arrives in England in early October 1966, having travelled overland across Canada from Vancouver to Gander, Newfoundland where they pick up their flight.
On arrival, the group stay with Faulds’ relatives in Kettering, Northamptonshire. Renamed The Canadians, they start by playing some local gigs.
5 November 1966 – Corby Civic Centre, Corby, Northamptonshire (Northamptonshire Advertiser)
12 December 1966 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge with Bob Kidman & His Band, the Prowlers, The Few Four and The Breed (Cambridge News) Billed as The Canadian Strangers
15 December 1966 – Tiles, Oxford Street, London with Him & The Others (Melody Maker)
17 December 1966 – Refectory, Golders Green, London (Melody Maker)
17 December 1966 – Cue Club, Praed Street, Paddington, London (Melody Maker)
18 December 1966 – The Cavern, Liverpool with The Prowlers, The Mead, The Defenders and Times Five (Phil Thompson’s Story of the Cavern book)
Just before Christmas, the horn section returns home to Canada. Around the same time, the band signs to the Roy Tempest Agency and gains work backing visiting US acts.
23 December 1966 – Clouds, Derby with John Evan Soul Band (Derby Evening Telegraph)
24 December 1966 – Flamenco, Folkestone, Kent (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)
25 December 1966 – Dungeon, Nottingham with The In Crowd (The Canadians were backing The Drifters) (Nottingham Evening Post)
31 December 1966 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Equals, The Triads, Ray Bones at the Organ and Frank and Keith (The Canadians were backing The Spellbinders) (Lincolnshire Standard) The Canadians may have been back at this venue on 7 January backing The Soul Sisters
31 December 1966 – The Cavern, Liverpool (All-nighter) with The Prowlers, The Beechwoods, The Tatters, The States, The Klubs, The Kids, The Sign and The Times, The Hideways and The Shades (The Canadians were probably backing The Soul Sisters) (Phil Thompson’s Story of the Cavern book)
8 January 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire (The Canadians were backing The Soul Sisters) (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)
10 January 1967 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho, London (Melody Maker) The Canadians probably also played on 11 January backing The Soul Sisters
14 January 1967 – Dungeon, Nottingham (The Canadians were backing The Spellbinders) (Nottingham Evening Post)
14 January 1967 – Rawmarsh Baths Hall, Rawmarsh, South Yorkshire with the Rumours (The Canadians were backing The Spellbinders)
23 January 1967 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire with Traction (The Canadians were backing Inez & Charlie Foxx) (Evening Sentinel)
30 January 1967 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire with The Amboy Dukes (The Canadians were backing Inez & Charlie Foxx)(Evening Sentinel)
30 January 1967 – Clouds, Derby with Peppers Machine (The Canadians were backing Inez & Charlie Foxx)(Derby Evening Telegraph)
11 February 1967 – Dungeon, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post)
Tour with Chuck Berry (Record Mirror and Disc & Music Echo):
17 February 1967 – Princess Theatre, Chorlton, Greater Manchester and Domino Club, Openshaw, Greater Manchester
18 February 1967 – New Century Hall, Manchester
18 February 1967 – Manchester Tech College, Manchester
19 February 1967 – Saville Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue, London with Hamilton & The Hamilton Movement and Del Shannon (riot at this show or the one on 26 February)
20 February 1967 – Queen’s Hall, Wolverhampton (unlikely given Cardiff which is confirmed below but not impossible)
20 February 1967 – Cardiff Top Rank, Cardiff, Wales
21 February 1967 – Olympia, Paris, France
22 February 1967 – Stevenage Locarno, Stevenage, Herts
22 February 1967 – Cedar Club, Birmingham (or is this the Rum Runner?)
23 February 1967 – Streatham Locarno, Streatham, London
23 February 1967 – Blaises, Queen’s Gate, London
24 February 1967 – Durham University, Durham
24 February 1967 – Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear
25 February 1967 – Sussex University, Brighton, West Sussex
25 February 1967 – Agincourt Ballroom, Camberley, Surrey
26 February 1967 – Saville Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue, London with Hamilton & The Hamilton Movement and Herbie Goins & The Night-Timers (riot at this show or the one on 19 February)
27 February 1967 – The Cavern, Liverpool with The Multivation, The Klubs and The Tremas (Phil Thompson’s Story of the Cavern book)
18 March 1967 – Civic Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire with The Original Drifters, The Sound Society and The Solents (Evening Sentinel)
Tour with Bo Diddley:
14 April 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire
15 April 1967 – Imperial Ballroom, Nelson, Lancashire
16 April 1967 – Saville Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue, London
17 April 1967 – Cardiff Top Rank, Cardiff, Wales
18 April 1967 – Cromwellian, South Kensington, London
19 April 1967 – Blaises, Queens Gate, London
19 April 1967 – Sybilla’s, Swallow Street, London
During late April/early May, English guitarist Mick Patel from The Loose Ends joins The Canadians who travel to Cologne in May to play gigs.
27 April 1967 – Golden Torch Tunstall, Staffordshire with The Soul Sisters and The Toggery (Evening Sentinel) Possibly with Mick Patel on guitar by now
On their return to the UK, Bobby Faulds signs a solo deal and records as Bobby Hanna.
David Foster and Mick Patel will subsequently join The Warren Davis Monday Band. Casson meanwhile joins Ruskin T Emery Revue with Australian guitarist Ray Danaher
Before the Buckinghams, there were the Centuries, who released one fine single on the Spectra-Sound label in 1965, “I Love You No More” b/w “Yeh: It’s Alright”.
The Centuries’ members were:
Carl Giammarese – lead guitar Nick Fortuna – rhythm guitar Curt Bachman – bass guitar and lead vocals on “I Love You No More” Gerald Elarde – drums and lead vocals on “Yeh; It’s Alright”
Listen to “I Love You No More” below. “Yeh; It’s Alright” is also good, especially Carl’s frantic guitar solo.
It’s Alright and I Love You No More were recorded by The Centuries in, I think, late 1964, at Lawrence and Western and I think it was the old St. Louis Insurance Building. My cousin Jerry Elarde was our drummer and lead singer (fab voice) … he sang It’s Alright. Our bass player, Curt Bachman, sang I Love You No More. I was the Lead Guitar player and Nick Fortuna was the rhythm guitar player. Both songs were written by Jeff Boyen (from Saturday’s Children). Jeff was part of a duo called Ron and Jeff, kind of folky, but they did early Beatles fabulously. These songs had nothing to do with The Buckinghams other than Nick and I became The Pulsations and then The Buckinghams.
Jeff Boyan was part of the Blackstones which included Curt Bachman for a time. The Blackstones would release four singles on the Invictus label, including a slightly different arrangement of “I Love You No More” (as Dalek/Engam: the Blackstones) in July, 1965. Boyan would go on to join Saturday’s Children with singles on Dunwich. Deb Music BMI published both songs, which were credited to “Geoff – Boyan”.
Carl Giammarese, Nick Fortuna and Curt Bachman would continue with a name change to the Pulsations, adding Dennis Tufano, Jon Poulos, and Dennis Miccoli and eventually becoming the Buckinghams. The Buckinghams first single would also come out on Spectra-Sound Records, “Sweets for My Sweet” / “Beginner’s Love”, before they were signed to U.S.A. Records.
Dan Belloc owned Spectra-Sound Records. The Centuries single has master numbers 4759-1 and 4760-1 while the Buckinghams has S-4617, which may indicate the Buckinghams was released first, but I am not sure of that.
For more info on Jeff Boyan and context on these bands, I definitely recommend Jeff Jarema’s interview with Jerry McGeorge of the Blackstones, the Shadows of Knight, and H.P. Lovecraft in Here ‘Tis #6, which can be found on the Internet Archive.
A west London band formed in mid-1966 and not to be confused with David O’List’s short-lived group of the same name who morphed into The Attack, The Soul System were originally called Four Point Five.
Formed by friends at Mellow Lane School in Hayes, the original formation comprised:
Geoff ? – lead vocals
Keith Kendall – lead guitar
John Bartovski – bass/harmony vocals
Rik Jones – organ/harmony vocals (after Bartovski departed)
Dave Horn – tenor sax
Duncan Wilkes – trumpet
Keith Jellows – drums
Kendall had started out with another Mellow Lane School group, Brian & The Fantoms but had left in 1964 to join The First Impressions (aka The Legends). In late 1965/early 1966, he departed to join Four Point Five.
Four Point Five (and later The Soul System) gigged extensively but never released any recordings.
As Four Point Five:
9 August 1967 – Drayton Hall, West Drayton, west London (Uxbridge and West Drayton Chronicle)
The Hillingdon Mirror ran an article and photo in its 15 August 1967 issue, page 2 (see above)
30 August 1967 – Hayes Town Hall, Hayes, west London (Uxbridge and West Drayton Chronicle)
The Hillingdon Mirror ran a photo of the band playing at the Town Hall Park in its 5 September 1967, page 7 (see above)
14 October 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with Georgie Fame and The Army (website: www.california-ballroom.info/gigs/)
Changing name to The Soul System around late 1967/early 1968, former All Night Workers’ baritone sax player Johnny Baker joined the formation in January/February 1969.
The following month John Bartovski left and future Strawbs’ bass player Chas Cronk briefly covered the bass slot until the summer.
Rick Eagles, who’d worked with Keith Kendall in the First Impressions and The Legends during 1964-1965, and had subsequently worked with Tony Knight’s Chessmen and The Good Earth, assumed the bass position until the end of the year.
Just before Eagles’ arrival, however, Dave Horn departed to focus on his ‘A’ Levels. The group line-up remained steady until late 1969 when Baker re-joined The All Night Workers. He subsequently suggested Keith Kendall on lead guitar (who had briefly returned to Brian & The Fantoms in the interim).
Keith Jellows later played with The New Mud and also The Sweet.
Gigs at The Soul System (see comments section for more)
25 January 1969 – Club LaBamba, Tunbridge Wells, Kent (Kent & Sussex Courier)
28 January 1969 – Town Hall, High Wycombe, Bucks with Rod Welling and guest group (Bucks Free Press)
Thanks to Keith Kendall, Dave Horn, Keith Jellows and Rick Eagles for information about the band. We’d love to hear from anyone who can add more information.
A very obscure British band who cut a rare, lone 45 “The Maze of Yesterday” c/w “Freewheel Uphill” in 1969/1970. The recordings were issued only in West Germany (Ariola), Spain (Vergara) and Sweden (Polydor). The picture sleeves depict a five-piece in the German release and a four-piece in the Spanish release, suggesting they started life as a quintet.
Judging by the song-writing credits, the group featured Gordon Neville, Michael Halpin and George J Watt.
Singer Gordon Neville subsequently sang with Alan Bown among others and was also in Scottish group Beggars Opera who recorded the song “Now You’re Gone” composed by Neville with Sellar and Watt, who I presume is the same George Watt associated with The Projection.
George Watt has confirmed that he is not the same musician who played Hammond organ briefly in The Attack in mid-1967.
We would welcome any more information on this rare band.
Jeannie Purretta released one single in the early ’60s on the Camsul label owned by Dick Campbell, who also wrote and produced both sides, and Artie Sullivan, who co-produced.
“If You See My Baby” is a catchy, fast number with an interesting guitar-led passage after the first verse. The recording quality is somewhat crude but helps to give the single a wall-of-sound quality, and deserves a reissue as it is currently an obscure recording.
Jeannie sings “He’s My Boy Friend” with almost a country twang.
Jeannie Purretta came from Worcester, Massachusetts, graduating from Commerce High School in 1952. The Beachcomber of August 12, 1959, published in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, has a photo and lists Jean Purretta as 1st place winner in a talent parade.
On April 27, 1960, Jean Purretta sang on three songs recorded in New York with a large group featuring Charlie Mariano, Vinnie Dean, Frank Soccolow, John Hafer, Pepper Adams, Curtis Fuller, Jerry Tyree, Burt Collins, Rick Kiefer, Chet Ferretti, Eddie Bert, Frank Rehak, Bill Elton, Mike Zwerin, Bill Barber, Tommy Flanagan, Paul Chambers, Charlie Persip, Sal Salvador.
Some of the session appeared on Tony Zano’s Balmore LP The Gathering Place but the vocals with Jean have never been issued to my knowledge. Tony Zano was a stage name for Anthony Ferrazzano.
Dick Campbell and Artie Sullivan started Camsul Records in Worcester in 1962. In 1965 they relocated to the midwest and started CineVista Records and Andrea Dawn Music, recording in Janesville WI (Leaf Records), Sauk City WI (Cuca Records) and Chicago, IL (Universal Studios).
I asked Artie about Jeannie’s single and he wrote to me:
Jeannie Purretta was singing in local clubs at the time and we heard her sing. She was our fourth release on Camsul Records while we were living in Shrewsbury MA. We recorded her in Worcester MA at North East Recording Studio (owner Fred Holovnia). Fred later moved to Shrewsbury MA. Last I checked she was living in Shrewsbury MA. We used the band the Scarlets to back her up and Dick & I sang background.
The Scarlets was a local college band from Worcester MA that Dick & Artie hooked up with and used to back up their recordings while living in Massachusetts. Dick joined the band about a year and half after they formed. The Scarlets consisted of Peter Damanis on drums, born in Queens NY attending Clark University Worcester MA, Gordon Schultz on lead guitar from Worcester MA also at Clark University Worcester MA and John Benson on bass from Worcester Ma attending Worcester Tech.
Thank you to Artie Sullivan for the information about Jeannie and the Scarlets.
Welcome to another posting of a series of gig listings for 1960s bands. None of these lists is exhaustive and my idea is to add to them in the comments section below over time. They are here for future researchers to draw on. I have also added a few interesting bits of information and will add images in time.
I’d like to encourage band members to get in touch to share memories, or for anyone to send corrections/clarifications to my email: Warchive@aol.com
Equally important, if you attended any of the gigs below or played in the support band, please do leave your memories below in the comments section for future historians to use. If you know of any missing gigs, please add them too, if possible, with the sources.
NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
Formed in Leeds, West Yorkshire as The Cherokees, the original formation comprised:
John Kirby Woollard – lead vocals
Tez Stokes – lead guitar
David Bower – rhythm guitar
Mick Sweeney – bass
Jim Green – drums
In early 1966, the group changed name to The New York Public Library and worked at the Star Club in Hamburg, West Germany
25 June 1966 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with The End and The Carl Douglas Set (Melody Maker)
30 July 1966 – Cleveland Arms, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (Express & Star)
20 August 1966 – ABC Promotions, Public Hall, Heacham, Norfolk with The Ultimate (Lynn News)
27 August 1966 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with The Mynah Birds and The Broodly-Hoo (Melody Maker)
18 September 1966 – Agincourt Ballroom, Camberley, Surrey with support (Aldershot News/Camberley News)
Around this time drummer Mick Ibbotson took over from Jim Green and appears on the band’s debut 45 “I Ain’t Gonna Eat Out My Heart Anymore”
2 October 1966 – George Inn, Wilby, Northamptonshire (Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)
28 October 1966 – 7 Club, Shrewsbury, Shropshire with The Van-Dels (Express & Star)
29 October 1966 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with The Soul Method and The Heavenly Bodies (Melody Maker)
12 November 1966 – Midnight City, Digbeth, West Midlands with Zoot Money and His Big Roll Band (Birmingham Evening Mail)
18 November 1966 – Boulevard, Tadcaster, North Yorkshire (Yorkshire Evening Post) Says formerly The Cherokees
17 December 1966 – House of Aden, Witham Public Hall, Witham, Essex with The Hush (Essex County Standard)
31 December 1966 – Eastbourne Town Hall, Eastbourne, East Sussex with Lee Hawkins (Eastbourne Herald Chronicle)
1967
In early 1967, both Mick Sweeney and newcomer Mick Ibbotson departed
Now based in London, former Knack drummer Topper Clay replaced Ibbotson and bass player Paul Servis joins. Servis had previously worked with Johnny Milton & The Condors before attending university
7 April 1967 – Cofton Country Club, Rednal, West Midlands (Redditch Indicator)
16 April 1967 – Kitchners, Black Horse, Kidderminster, Worcestershire (Kidderminster Times and Stourport News)
8 July 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with The Rick ‘N’ Beckers and Jimmy Powell & The Dimensions (Melody Maker)
15 July 1967 – Town Hall, Clacton, Essex with The Gass and Status One (Essex County Standard)
2 September 1967 – Khyber Club, Taunton County Cricket Ground, Taunton, Somerset with Combustic Show (Somerset County Gazette)
22 September 1967 – Clay Pigeon, Eastcote, northwest London with James & Bobby Purify (Harrow Weekly Post)
29 September 1967 – Starlite Ballroom, Greenford, west London (Melody Maker)
7 October 1967 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with Georgie Fame (East Kent Times & Mail)
8 October 1967 – Rendevous Club, Margate, Kent (East Kent Times & Mail)
30 October 1967 – Dollar & Discotheque, Wexham, Berkshire (Windsor, Slough & Eton Express)
21 October 1967 – Penthouse, Birmingham, West Midlands with Breakthru (Birmingham Evening Mail)
4 November 1967 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)
5 November 1967 – Kyrle, Birmingham (Birmingham Evening Mail)
19 November 1967 – Kettering Working Men’s Club, Kettering, Northamptonshire with J J Bender SOS (Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)
7 December 1967 – Hatchetts Playground, Piccadilly, central London (Evening Standard)
8 December 1967 – Hatchetts Playground, Piccadilly, central London (Evening Standard)
9 December 1967 – Hatchetts Playground, Piccadilly, central London (Evening Standard)
10 December 1967 – Castaways, Birmingham with Kathy Kirby (Birmingham Evening Mail)
22 December 1967 – Andromeda, Colchester, Essex (Essex County Standard)
23 December 1967 – Clockwork Orange, Chester, Cheshire with Mandy’s Movement (Crewe Chronicle)
31 December 1967 – Rendevous Club, Margate, Kent with P P Arnold (East Kent Times & Mail)
1968
4 February 1968 – Beau Brummel Club, Alvaston Hall Hotel, Nantwich, Cheshire with James & Bobby Purify and The Jaytree Organisation (Crewe Chronicle)
8 February 1968 – Club Cedar, Birmingham with James and Bobby Purify (Birmingham Evening Mail)
1 March 1968 – 400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon (Herald Express)
20 March 1968 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)
6 April 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Stafforshire (Evening Sentinel)
13 April 1968 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with The Alan Price Set (East Kent Times)
28 April 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)
4 May 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)
Around May/June Paul Servis left and joined The Parking Lot briefly
Singer John Kirby Woollard also left. David Bower moved over to bass and Clay’s former Knack band mate, Brian Morris came in on lead vocals and rhythm guitar
15 June 1968 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)
29 June 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)
The new formation records two 45s “Got To Get Away” and “Love Me Two Times” and also unreleased material
20 July 1968 – The Cobweb, St Leonards, East Sussex with Herb of Grace (Roger Bistow’s research at Dizzy Tiger Music website)
4 August 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)
30 August 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)
Melody Maker says that the group went to Belgium and Holland on 16 September. It also says they will take in a promotional trip to Norway. The article adds that they will undertake their first US tour on 16 February 1969 with six weeks of dates.
14 September 1968 – Nottingham University, Nottingham (Melody Maker)
2 October 1968 – Manchester University, Manchester (Melody Maker)
5 October 1968 – Bristol University, Bristol (Melody Maker)
10 October 1968 – 100 Club, Oxford Street, central London (Melody Maker)
12 October 1968 – Loughborough University, Loughborough, Leicestershire (Melody Maker)
19 October 1968 – Hull University, Hull (Melody Maker)
2 November 1968 – Gala Ballroom, Norwich, Norfolk with The Peter Croft Blues Band (Eastern Evening News)
30 November 1968 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)
3 December 1968 – High Wycombe Town Hall, High Wycombe, Bucks (Bucks Free Press)
13 December 1968 – Brockley County School, Brockley, southeast London with The Mojos (South East London Mercury)
1969
12 January 1969 – Downbeat Club, the Swan, Maldon, Essex (Essex Chronicle)
1 February 1969 – Lion Hotel, Warrington, Cheshire with Finders Keepers (Warrington Guardian)
18 March 1969 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, west London (Hounslow Post)
10 July 1969 – The Revolution, central London (possibly with Kenny Rogers & The New Edition) (Melody Maker)
In August 1969, singer Peter Morrison took over from Brian Morris
30 August 1969 – Town Hall, High Wycombe, Bucks with The Crescents (Bucks Free Press)
Thanks to John Kirby Woollard, Tez Stokes, Topper Clay, David Bower and Peter Morrison for photos
I don’t have much info on the Coming Generation who released one single in 1969 on the King Town label. Jim Du Bois wrote “Tell Me Now”, and Ed Barnhart wrote “This Troubled Life”.
The band seems to have been a quintet or sextet, with organ and smooth harmony vocals. They were indeed from Kingston, New York, as noted on several ads for shows in the Kingston Daily Freeman beginning in 1967 and ending in 1970. A sample of their shows include:
1967 – Sportsmen’s Park, Rosendale and the Viking Lounge on Glasco Turnpike, High Woods
1968 – The Tropical Inn, Port Ewen
1969 – 1970 – the Pleasure Yacht, Eddyville
December 31, 1969 – the Creamery at Wiltwyck Village, Esopus with Jay and the Techniques
1970 – Thunderbird Inn, Route 9W, Saugerties
March, 1970 – Thunderbird Inn with Fire and Ice (could this be Auggie Bucci’s group, with singles on Capitol and Crazy Horse?)
Runout vinyl has no markings other than 0024-A/B, but this numbering and the label design indicates it was recorded at Kennett Sound Studio in Kinderhook, NY.
Despite the labels saying copyright ’69, I haven’t found any registration for these songs.
Welcome to another posting of a series of gig listings for 1960s bands. None of these lists is exhaustive and my idea is to add to them in the comments section below over time. They are here for future researchers to draw on. I have also added a few interesting bits of information and will add images in time.
I’d like to encourage band members to get in touch to share memories, or for anyone to send corrections/clarifications to my email: Warchive@aol.com
Equally important, if you attended any of the gigs below or played in the support band, please do leave your memories below in the comments section for future historians to use. If you know of any missing gigs, please add them too, if possible, with the sources.
TUESDAY’S CHILDREN
Formed in mid-1966 from the ashes of The Prophets the original line-up comprised:
Phil Cordell (lead vocals, guitar)
Mick Ware (vocals, guitar)
Paul Kendrick (bass)
Derrick Gough (drums)
1966
1 October 1966 – New Spot, Gosport, Hampshire (Portsmouth News)
14 October 1966 – Garry Owen Club, Hammersmith, west London (Fabulous 208)
15 October 1966 – Wimbledon Palais, Wimbledon, southwest London (Fabulous 208)
12 November 1966 – Walton Hop, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey (Woking Herald)
10 December 1966 – Baths, Leyton, London (Fabulous 208)
1967
14 January 1967 – Starlite, Greenford, northwest London (Fabulous 208)
20 January 1967 – Windmill Hall, Upminster, east London (Fabulous 208)
4 February 1967 – Wimbledon Palais, Wimbledon, southwest London with The Attack (Fabulous 208)
17 February 1967 – Harvest Moon Club, Guildford, Surrey with The Next Move (Surrey Advertiser)
11 March 1967 – Bal Tabarin, Downham, southeast London with the Collection (South East London Mercury)
22 March 1967 – Big L Party Night, Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London with The James Royal Set (Melody Maker)
23 March 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London (Fabulous 208)
24 March 1967 – Miners’ Club, Ripley, North Yorkshire (Fabulous 208)
25 March 1967 – Anchor Hotel, Skegness, Lincolnshire (Fabulous 208)
7 April 1967 – Witchdoctor, Catford, southeast London (Fabulous 208)
28 April 1967 – Europa Hotel, Grosvenor Square, central London (Fabulous 208)
24 May 1967 – Wellington Manor Country Club, Crowthorne, Berkshire with Grapefruit (Reading Evening Post)
26-27 May 1967 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, London (Fabulous 208)
8 June 1967 – Elizabethan Hall, Dagenham, London (Fabulous 208)
9-15 June 1967 – Pier, Ryde, Isle of Wight (Fabulous 208)
29 July 1967 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, London (Fabulous 208)
In early August, Phil Cordell left for a solo career.
Hammond organist Bob Hodges joined. Earlier in the year, he’d played with The Attack.
The group also added two sax players: Roger Davies, who was Kinks siblings’ Ray and Dave’s cousin, and Liverpudlian Phil Kenzie, who had recently played with Sonny Childe & The TNT
12 August 1967 – Starlite Ballroom, Greenford, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
26 August 1967 – Lotus Ballroom, Forest Gate, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
During September trumpet player Hilary Roy did four gigs with the band
2 September 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, London (afternoon) (Bob Hodges’ diary)
7 October 1967 – University of Sussex, Falmer, West Sussex with Pink Floyd, The Moody Blues, Fairport Convention and The Crazy World of Arthur Brown (Bob Hodges’ diary)
13 October 1967 – According to Bob Hodges’ diary, the band attended ABC Film/TV Studios, Teddington
14 October 1967 – Victoria Hotel, Dartford, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
15 October 1967 – Foseco Sports & Social Club, Tamworth, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary/Tamworth Herald)
20 October 1967 – Youth Club, St Ives, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)
21 October 1967 – Twisted Wheel, Manchester (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle/Bob Hodges’ diary)
27 October 1967 – St Barnabus Youth Club, Woodford, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)
28 October 1967 – Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Street, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
6 November 1967 – Tabbys Discotheque, Ealing, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
9 November 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Tages (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live/Bob Hodges’ diary)
10 November 1967 – Windmill Hall, Upminster, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
11 November 1967 – Penny Farthing Club, Southend-on-Sea, Essex (Southend Standard) This gig is not in Bob Hodges’ diary
11 November 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Swindon, Wiltshire with Modes Mode (Bob Hodges’ diary) Gig lists six piece
12 November 1967 – Middleton Hotel, Middleton, Essex (Southend Standard) This gig is not in Bob Hodges’ diary so may not have happened
Around this time sax players Roger Davies and Phil Kenzie departed, the latter to briefly work with PP Arnold and then with Freddie Mack. Davies may be the same musician who subsequently played with The Warren Davis Monday Band.
17 November 1967 – Cooks Ferry Inn, Edmonton, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
19 November 1967 – Silver End Hotel, Silver End, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)
24 November 1967 – Aurora Hotel, Gillingham, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
26 November 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
29-30 November 1967 – According to Bob Hodges’ diary, the band attended Pinewood Studios to film “The Ugliest Girl In the World” with actor Nicholas Parsons
1 December 1967 – Victoria and Bull Hotel, Dartford, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
2 December 1967 – Lord Hill Hotel, Shrewsbury, Shropshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)
3 December 1967 – Tiffany’s, Shaftsbury Avenue, W1, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
7 December 1967 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho London (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary)
12 December 1967 – Civic Hall, Corby, Northampshire with The Minor Portion Roll Band (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary/Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)
14 December 1967 – Palais Ballroom, Nottingham (Bob Hodges’ diary)
15 December 1967 – Bear and Key Hotel, Whitstable, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
23 March 1968 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Simon Dupree & The Big Sound and The Wild Angels (Bob Hodges’ diary/Melody Maker)
24 March 1968 – Adelphi, Slough, Berkshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)
30 March 1968 – Gaiety Ballroom, Ramsey, Cambridgeshire with Root and Jenny Jackson with The Hightimers (Cambridge News) This isn’t in Bob Hodges’ diary
29 October 1968 – Revolution, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
31 October 1968 – El Grotto Club, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
1 November 1968 – Shepway Youth Club, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
2 November 1968 – Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Street, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
3 November 1968 – Embassy Rooms, Colchester, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary/Essex County Standard)
9 November 1968 – Rush Green College, Romford (Bob Hodges’ diary) Surrey Advertiser has them at Pantiles in Bagshot, Surrey. They must have been replaced for this gig by another band
15 November 1968 – Rasputins, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)
17 November 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder) This is missing from Bob’s diary so perhaps they were replaced
23 November 1968 – Corn Exchange, Bedford (Bob Hodges’ diary)
26 November 1968 – Blaises, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
30 November 1968 – Sports Centre, Crippe Street, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
12 December 1968 – Greyhound Hotel, Chadwell Heath, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary/Newham, West Ham & East Ham, Barking and Stratford Express/Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)
22 December 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary)
28 December 1968 – La Bamba Club, Tunbridge Wells, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)
30 December 1968 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London (private charity event) (Bob Hodges’ diary)
1969
6 January 1969 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with US Flaptop & The Cat Road Show and Headline News (website: www.45worlds.com/live) Not listed in Bob Hodges’ diary
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