Cesar’s Club in Bedford was a significant rock venue in the 1960s that hosted a number of notable bands, including early Pink Floyd, Family and Ten Years After.
This is the start of an entry on listed artists, advertised in the Ampthill News & Flintwick Record and/or Bedfordshire Times. There are lots of gaps and we would welcome any additions.
9 June 1967 (Friday) – Freddie Mac & The Mac Sound
10 June 1967 (Saturday) – The Merseys
16 June 1967 (Friday) – Marmalade and The Alex Read Sound
17 June 1967 (Saturday) – The Family and The Clew
23 June 1967 (Friday) – Billy J Kramer & The Dakotas with The Minor Portions Roll Band
24 June 1967 (Saturday) – Pink Floyd (they either replaced The Skatterlights and The Contax or were replaced by them)
30 June 1967 (Friday) – The Chevells and The Peapots
1 July 1967 (Saturday) – The Dellroy Good Good Band and The Jamboree Band
7 July 1967 (Friday) – Elkie Brooks & The Scotch & Soda
8 July 1967 (Saturday) – Amen Corner
14 July 1967 (Friday) – Bag-o-Nails (ex-The Blue Flames)
15 July 1967 (Saturday) – The Move
21 July 1967 (Friday) – Wynder K Frog
22 July 1967 (Saturday) – Sonny Childe & The TNT
28 July 1967 (Friday) – Gass with The Niteshades or Nite Train
29 July 1967 (Saturday) – The Original Dyaks with Reaction
4 August 1967 (Friday) – TD Bachus & The Powerhouse and The Teapots
5 August 1967 (Saturday) – John Evans Smash and Minor Portion Roll Band
6 August 1967 (Sunday) – Minor Portion Roll Band
There is a gap in gigs advertised
25 August 1967 (Friday) – Freddie Mac & The Mac Sound
26 August 1967 (Saturday) – Tiles Big Band
27 August 1967 (Sunday) – The Kontax
There is a gap in gigs advertised
8 September 1967 (Friday) – Family and Flower Children
9 September 1967 (Saturday) – Floribunda Rose and Nite Train
10 September 1967 (Sunday) – Stuart James Inspiration
15 September 1967 (Friday) – The Kool and The 100w Carnation
16 September 1967 (Saturday) – The Lloyd Alexander Blues Band and The Courtelles
17 September 1967 (Sunday) – The Jambourie Band
22 September 1967 (Friday) – Amorous Prawns and The Paper Blitz Tissue
23 September 1967 (Saturday) – Hamilton & The Movement and Scotch of St James
24 September 1967 (Sunday) – The Maze
29 September 1967 (Friday) – The Soul Caravan and The Power
30 September 1967 (Saturday) – Geranium Pond and Roscoe Brown Combo
1 October 1967 (Sunday) – Craig King & The Night Train
6 October 1967 (Friday) – The Warren Davis Monday Band and The Locomotion
7 October 1967 (Saturday) – The Trax and The Jamboree Band
8 October 1967 (Sunday) – Tony Rivers & The Castaways and Plastic Dream Boat
13 October 1967 (Friday) – James Royal and The New Breed
14 October 1967 (Saturday) – Pink Floyd and The Tecknique
15 October 1967 (Sunday) – The Human Instinct and Modes Mode
20 October 1967 (Friday) – Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers and The Triads
21 October 1967 (Saturday) – The Lemon Line and The Garden
22 October 1967 (Sunday) – Ten Years After and The Mead
27 October 1967 (Friday) – The Orlons and The Paper Blitz Tissue
28 October 1967 (Saturday) – The Gods and The New Jump Band
29 October 1967 (Sunday) – The Derek Savage Foundation and The Pink Champagne
3 November 1967 (Friday) – The Alan Price Set and The Taylor Upton Big Band
4 November 1967 (Saturday) – The Survivors (or The Healers with Spectre Powerhouse)
5 November 1967 (Sunday) – Pesky Gee
Friday (and most Sunday) gigs appear to be missing from now on
10 November 1967 (Saturday) – The New Breed (According to Graham Sclater’s diary, The Manchester Playboys played on this date)
11 November 1967 (Sunday) – Cats Pyjamas and Geranium Pond
17 November 1967 (Saturday) – The Skatelites with The Minor Portion Roll Band
25 November 1967 (Saturday) – Marmalade and The Vivas
2 December 1967 (Saturday) – Milton James and the Harlem Knock Out
9 December 1967 (Saturday) – Catch 22 (aka Katch 22)
16 December 1967 (Saturday) – The Skatelites
23 December 1967 (Saturday) – The Human Instinct
30 December 1967 (Saturday) – The Lloyd Alexander Blues Band
13 January 1968 (Saturday) – Copper Pot
20 January 1968 (Saturday) – Workshop
27 January 1968 (Saturday) – Simon K & The Meantimers
The Bedfordshire Times stopped advertising gigs in 1968 after the above date
This is the start of an entry on a popular music venue located in Torquay’s harbour that hosted many important visiting bands during the 1960s.
The gigs below and images are all from the Herald Express newspaper
For most of the year, gigs are only on Fridays and Saturdays with occasional gigs on other days in the week, such as Mondays and Wednesdays
2 October 1964 – The Secrets
3 October 1964 – The Master Sounds
5 October 1964 – The Dictators
9 October 1964 – The Telstars
10 October 1964 – The Mon-Keys
12 October 1964 – The Hunters
16 October 1964 – The Cyclones featuring Johnny Carne
17 October 1964 – Kevin & The Kinsmen
19 October 1964 – The Townsmen
23 October 1964 – The Fortunes
24 October 1964 – Mike Allard & The Tremors
26 October 1964 – The Buccaneers
30 October 1964 – The Tycoons
31 October 1964 – The 007
1 November 1964 – The Southbeats
2 November 1964 – The Harlequins
6 November 1964 – The Telstars
7 November 1964 – The Avengers
9 November 1964 – The Cossacks
13 November 1964 – The Vikings
14 November 1964 – The Soul Agents
16 November 1964 – The Starfires
20 November 1964 – Steve Bradley & The Sounds Unlimited
21 November 1964 – The Impact
23 November 1964 – Tony Just & The Orbits
27 November 1964 – The Bossmen
28 November 1964 – The Chevrons
30 November 1964 – Bobby & The Blue Diamonds
3 December 1964 – The Buccaneers
4 December 1964 – The Master Sounds
7 December 1964 – The Harlequins
11 December 1964 – The Buccaneers
12 December 1964 – The Initials
14 December 1964 – The Starfires
18 December 1964 – Steve Bradley & Sounds Unlimited
19 December 1964 – The Companions
21 December 1964 – The Harlequins
24 December 1964 – The Jellys
26 December 1964 – The Southbeats
28 December 1964 – The Ebonies
31 December 1964 – Dek Dooley & The Dominators and The Buccaneers
1 January 1965 – The Plymouth Sounds
2 January 1965 – Dek Dooley & The Dynamic Dominators
8 January 1965 – The Merry Knights
9 January 1965 – Four Hits & a Miss
15 January 1965 – The Better Days
16 January 1965 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks (future Slade guitarist/singer Noddy Holder was a member until late 1965)
22 January 1965 – The Starfires
23 January 1965 – The Master Sounds (replaced by The Impacts)
29 January 1965 – The Better Days
30 January 1965 – The Strollers
5 February 1965 – The Tycoons
6 February 1965 – The Blues Syndicate (Bass player Geoff Penn says that the group opened for The Yardbirds this evening).
12 February 1965 – The Telstars
13 February 1965 – Les Fleur De Lys
17 February 1965 – The Montanas
19 February 1965 – The Royals
20 February 1965 – The Southbeats
26 February 1965 – The Better Days (replaced by Gary Kane & The Tornados)
27 February 1965 – Ricky Vernon & The Pathfinders
1 March 1965 – The Montanas
5 March 1965 – Four Steps Beyond
6 March 1965 – The Tallmen (replaced by The Dynacords)
8 March 1965 – The Secrets
12 March 1965 – The ‘N Betweens (this band evolved into Slade)
13 March 1965 – The Nite People
15 March 1965 – The Better Days
19 March 1965 – The Better Days
20 March 1965 – The Soul Agents (Rod Stewart was singer at this point)
22 March 1965 – The Better Days
26 March 1965 – The Better Days
27 March 1965 – The 007s
29 March 1965 – The Buccaneers
2 April 1965 – Tony Just & The Orbits
3 April 1965 – The Freebooters (replaced by The Palmer James Group)
5 April 1965 – The Tacits
9 April 1965 – The Emeralds with Daniel Boone
10 April 1965 – The Emeralds with Daniel Boone
12 April 1965 – Clive Richie & The Couriers
17 April 1965 – Zuider Lee (could be Zuyder Zee, a popular Dutch band)
19 April 1965 – The Southbeats
23 April 1965 – The Better Days
24 April 1965 – The Hoboes
26 April 1965 – The Guild
28 April 1965 – The Emeralds
30 April 1965 – The Condors
1 May 1965 – The Big T Show
3 May 1965 – The Better Days
5 May 1965 – The Guild
7 May 1965 – The Tac Tics
8 May 1965 – The Riots
10 May 1965 – The Better Days
12 May 1965 – The Telstars
14 May 1965 – The Undertakers
15 May 1965 – The Primitives
17 May 1965 – The Tic Tacs
19 May 1965 – Peter & The Wolves
21 May 1965 – The Applejacks
22 May 1965 – The Cougars
24 May 1965 – The Hunters
28 May 1965 – Johnny Kidd & The Pirates
29 May 1965 – The Diplomats
30 May 1965 – Robin & The Four Hoods
4 June 1965 – The Loose Ends and The Buccaneers
This is roughly the start of the summer season each year (the same applies for subsequent years) when certain artists play the entire the week from Saturday through to Friday. However, it’s not always clear whether they also played the Sunday
5 June 1965 – George Washington & His Congress Men
7-11 June 1965 – George Washington & His Congress Men
12 June 1965 – The ‘N Betweens
14-18 June 1965 – The ‘N Betweens
19 June 1965 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
21-22 June 1965 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
23-25 June 1965 – The Dynamos
26 June 1965 – The Emeralds
28 June-2 July 1965 – The Emeralds
3-9 July 1965 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
10-16 July 1965 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
17 July 1965 – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich
19-23 July 1965 – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich
23 July 1965 – The Dowlands and The Sound Tracks
25-30 July 1965 – The Dowlands and The Sound Tracks
31 July 1965 – The Marauders
1-3 August 1965 – The Marauders
4-6 August 1965 – The King Pins with Roy Grant
7 August 1965 – The Spectres (this may be the same group that evolves into Status Quo)
9-13 August 1965 – Plain & Fancy
14-20 August 1965 – The Emeralds
21-27 August 1965 – The Quiet Five
28-31 August 1965 – The Big T Show
1-3 September 1965 – The Big T Show
4-10 September 1965 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks (Noddy Holder is still a member at this point)
11-12 September 1965 – Bern Elliott & His Clan
13-14 September 1965 – The Emeralds
15-16 September 1965 – The Rock-A-Fellows
18 September 1965 – The Emeralds
20-24 September 1965 – The Emeralds
25 September 1965 – The ‘N Betweens
27-30 September 1965 – The ‘N Betweens
1 October 1965 – The ‘N Betweens
2 October 1965 – Peter Fenton & The Tasty Mob
4-6 October 1965 – The Hi-Jackers
8 October 1965 – Tommy Quickly & The Remo Four
9 October 1965 – The Alleycats
11 October 1965 – The Better Days
15 October 1965 – Sounds Incorporated
16 October 1965 – The In-Sect
18 October 1965 – The Cherokees
22 October 1965 – Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers
23 October 1965 – The Condors
25 October 1965 – The Prophets
29 October 1965 – The Checkmates
30 October 1965 – The Kingpins
1 November 1965 – The Telstars
5 November 1965 – The Applejacks
6 November 1965 – The Hellions
8 November 1965 – The Blackjacks
12 November 1965 – The Swinging Blue Jeans
13 November 1965 – The Emeralds
15 November 1965 – Gary Kane & The Tornados
19 November 1965 – Rob Storm & The Whispers
20 November 1965 – The Wheels
22 November 1965 – The Cordettes
26 November 1965 – Eden Kane with supporting group
27 November 1965 – Pete de Witt & The Magic Strangers (Dutch band)
29 November 1965 – The Spartans
3 December 1965 – The Dedicated Men’s Jug Band and support
4 December 1965 – The Montanas
6 December 1965 – The Telstars
10 December 1965 – The Mojos
11 December 1965 – The Montanas (replaced by Trendsetters Limited)
13 December 1965 – The Royals
17 December 1965 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs with support
18 December 1965 – Finders Keepers (replaced by The Candles)
24 December 1965 – The Deltas
27 December 1965 – The Riots
31 December 1965 – Dave & The Diamonds
1 January 1966 – The Mike Stuart Span
7 January 1966 – The Power House Six
8 January 1966 – Zuyder Zee (a popular Dutch band)
14 January 1966 – The Emeralds
15 January 1966 – The Symbols
21 January 1966 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
22 January 1966 – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
28 January 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks (Noddy Holder had recently left)
29 January 1966 – The Cougars
4 February 1966 – The Nite People
5 February 1966 – The Manchester Playboys
11 February 1966 – The Quiet Five
12 February 1966 – The Trendsetters Limited
18 February 1966 – The Meddyevils
19 February 1966 – The Condors
23 February 1966 – The Maurice Price Seven
25 February 1966 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
26 February 1966 – The Vibros
2 March 1966 – The Trendsetters Limited
4 March 1966 – The Symbols
5 March 1966 – The Mike Stuart Span
9 March 1966 – The Trendsetters Limited
11 March 1966 – The Hot Springs (formerly The Riots)
12 March 1966 – The Majority
16 March 1966 – Carnaby 1 Plus 4
18 March 1966 – The Tennessee Teams
19 March 1966 – Ray Anton & The Profoma
23 March 1966 – The Couriers
25 March 1966 – Cops ‘N’ Robbers
26 March 1966 – The Vogue
1 April 1966 – The Alan Bown Set
2 April 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
9 April 1966 – The Bystanders
11 April 1966 – The Emeralds
15 April 1966 – Kris Ryan & The Questions
16 April 1966 – The Big Sound with Karol Keyes
22 April 1966 – The Statesmen
23 April 1966 – The Kingpins
29 April 1966 – The Couriers
30 April 1966 – The ‘N Betweens
6 May 1966 – The First Lites
7 May 1966 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
13 May 1966 – Carnaby 1 Plus 4
14 May 1966 – The Deltas
20 May 1966 – Peter Fenton with Him & The Others
21 May 1966 – George Bean & The Runners
27 May 1966 – The Silhouttes
28 May 1966 – Davey Sands & The Essex
30 May 1966 – The Gaylords (this band became Marmalade)
3 June 1966 – The Anzaks
4 June 1966 – The ‘N Betweens (Noddy Holder may have joined by now)
6-10 June 1966 – The ‘N Betweens
11 June 1966 – The Vogue
13-17 June 1966 – The Vogue
18-24 June 1966 – The Bystanders
25-30 June 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
1 July 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
2 July 1966 – John Bull Breed (Bass player John Lodge joined The Moody Blues in October 1966)
4-8 July 1966 – John Bull Breed
9 July 1966 – The Powerhouse Six
11-15 July 1966 – The Powerhouse Six
16 July 1966 – The Nite People
18-22 July 1966 – The Nite People
23 July 1966 – Ray Grant & The Kingpins
25-29 July 1966 – Ray Grant & The Kingpins
30 July 1966 – The Powerhouse Six
1-5 August 1966 – The Powerhouse Six
6 August 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
8-12 August 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
13 August 1966 – The Noblemen (Guitarist Martin Barre joined Jethro Tull in late 1968)
15-19 August 1966 – The Noblemen
20 August 1966 – Ray Anton & The Proform
21-22 August 1966 – The Symbols
23-24 August 1966 – The Quiet Five
25-26 August 1966 – Trendsetters Limited
27 August 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
29 August-2 September 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
3 September 1966 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
4 September 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks
5-9 September 1966 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
10 September 1966 – Cops ‘n’ Robbers
12-16 September 1966 – Cops ‘n’ Robbers
17 September 1966 – The ‘N Betweens (this Wolverhampton band later became Slade)
19-23 September 1966 – The ‘N Betweens
24 September 1966 – The Beau Oddlot
26-27 September 1966 – The Mike Stuart Span
28 September 1966 – The ‘N Betweens
29-30 September 1966 – The Mike Stuart Span
1 October 1966 – Giorgio & Mario’s Men
7 October 1966 – Listen (possibly Robert Plant’s band)
8 October 1966 – Blaises
14 October 1966 – The Voids
15 October 1966 – The Combine
21 October 1966 – The Anzaks
22 October 1966 – Mr Hip Soul Band
28 October 1966 – The Onyx Set
29 October 1966 – The Palmer James Group
4 November 1966 – The Rage
5 November 1966 – The Kingpins with Ray Grant
12 November 1966 – The Lonely Ones
19 November 1966 – The Raging Storms
26 November 1966 – The Talismen
2 December 1966 – The Reason Why
3 December 1966 – The Palmer James Group
10 December 1966 – Grand Union
16 December 1966 – Guest Group
17 December 1966 – The ‘N Betweens
23 December 1966 – The Onyx Set
24 December 1966 – The Mike Stuart Span
30 December 1966 – Lord Caesar Sutch & The Roman Empire
31 December 1966 – Mr Hip Soul Band
7 January 1967 – Trendsetters Limited
14 January 1967 – The Albert Square
20 January 1967 – The Undertakers
21 January 1967 – The Bystanders
27 January 1967 – The Onyx Set
28 January 1967 – The Upliners
4 February 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
10 February 1967 – The Jaguars
11 February 1967 – The Ziggy Turner Combo
18 February 1967 – The Lonely Ones
25 February 1967 – The Raging Storms
4 March 1967 – Mr Hip Soul Band
11 March 1967 – The Palmer James Group
17 March 1967 – The Last-Tik Band
18 March 1967 – The Shannons
25 March 1967 – Paul Young’s Toggery
27 March 1967 – The Anzaks
31 March 1967 – Johnston McPhilby Five
1 April 1967 – The Measles
7 April 1967 – The Last-Tik Band
8 April 1967 – Heart & Souls
14 April 1967 –The Jaguars
15 April 1967 – The Vogues
21 April 1967 – The Jigsaw
22 April 1967 – The Delroy Good Good Band
28 April 1967 – The Last-Tik Band
29 April 1967 – The Sunspots
5 May 1967 – The Hoboes
6 May 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
12 May 1967 – The Onyx Set
13 May 1967 – The Outer Limits
19 May 1967 – The Last-Tik Band
20 May 1967 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
26 May 1967 – The Jaguars
27 May 1967 – The Lemon Line
2 June 1967 – The Hoboes
3 June 1967 – The Worrying Kynde
9 June 1967 – The Children
10 June 1967 – The Ray King Soul Band
16 June 1967 – The Parchment People
17 June 1967 – The Five Proud Walkers
23 June 1967 – Omega Plus
24 June 1967 – Dual Purpose
30 June 1967 – Pentworth’s People
1-7 July 1967 – The Mike Stuart Span
8 July 1967 – The Raging Storms
10-12 July 1967 – The Raging Storms
15-21 July 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
22-28 July 1967 – Mr Hip Soul Band
29 July-4 August 1967 – Wellington Kitch Band
5-11 August 1967 – The Heart and Souls
12-18 August 1967 – The Delroy Good Good Band
19-21 August 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
22 August 1967 – The Tremeloes and The ‘N Betweens
23-25 August 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
26 August-1 September 1967 – The Ziggy Turner Combo
2-8 September 1967 – The Real McCoy
9 September 1967 – The Colour Supplement
14 September 1967 – Wynder K Frog
15 September 1967 – The Jaguars
16 September 1967 – The Strange Fruit
23 September 1967 – The Shame (Greg Lake was the band’s bass player)
30 September 1967 – The Workshop
7 October 1967 – Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs
13 October 1967 – Scots of St James (rebooked for 17 November)
14 October 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
21 October 1967 – The Dreaded Spectres
28 October 1967 – The Omega Plus
3 November 1967 – The Last-Tik Band
4 November 1967 – Mr Hip Soul Band
11 November 1967 – The Vogues
17 November 1967 – The Scots of St James
18 November 1967 – The Shiralee
24 November 1967 – The Cat Soul Packet
25 November 1967 – The Shame
1 December 1967 – The Shell Shock Show
2 December 1967 – The ‘N Betweens
8 December 1967 – The Foundations
9 December 1967 – Robert Plant & The Band of Joy
15 December 1967 – The Lamb Bros & Co
16 December 1967 – Dual Purpose
22 December 1967 – Sounds Incorporated
23-24 December 1967 – The Mike Stuart Span
26 December 1967 – Pinkerton’s Colours
29 December 1967 – Simon Dupree & The Big Sound
30-31 December 1967 – Mr Hip Soul Band
5 January 1968 – The Calgary Stampede
6 January 1968 – The Maze (singer Rod Evans and drummer Ian Paice co-founded Deep Purple)
12 January 1968 – The Clockwork Orange
13 January 1968 – The Go Show
19 January 1968 – The Tremeloes
20 January 1968 – John Drevar’s Experience
26 January 1968 – The Gods
27 January 1968 – The Purple Dream
2 February 1968 – Purple Art
3 February 1968 – Heart & Souls
9 February 1968 – The Vigilantes
10 February 1968 – Blossom
16 February 1968 – The Albie
17 February 1968 – The ‘N Betweens (the band became Slade)
23 February 1968 – Simon Dupree & The Big Sound
24 February 1968 – Cat Soul Show
1 March 1968 – The New York Public Library
2 March 1968 – The Firestones
8 March 1968 – The Bunch
9 March 1968 – The Maze
15 March 1968 – Freddie Mack Show
16 March 1968 – Lamb Bros & Co
22 March 1968 – Status Quo
23 March 1968 – The Shell Shock Show
29 March 1968 – The Big T Sound
30 March 1968 – The Vogues
5 April 1968 – The Onyx
6 April 1968 – Wishful Thinking (formerly The Emeralds)
13 April 1968 – The Ebonites (no Friday artist)
15 April 1968 – Locomotive
19 April 1968 – New World
20 April 1968 – John Drevar’s Experience
26 April 1968 – The Shy Limbs (Greg Lake on bass)
27 April 1968 – Delroy Williams & The Sugar Band
3 May 1968 – My Dear Watson
4 May 1968 – The Mike Stuart Span
10 May 1968 – The Late
11 May 1968 – Fanny Flickers Rock ‘N’ Roll Band
17 May 1968 – The Firm
18 May 1968 – The Extreme Sound
20 May 1968 – The Mike Westbrook Band
25 May 1968 – Gerry Temple & The Storm (no Friday artist)
31 May 1968 – The Penny Peep Show (Martin Barre joined Jethro Tull)
1 June 1968 – The Epics
3 June 1968 – The Ebonites
8 June 1968 – George Bean & The Runners (no Friday artist) (says they are Lulu’s backing band)
10 June 1968 – Breakthru
14 June 1968 – The Merseys
15 June 1968 – Floribunda Rose (John Kongos was singer)
17 June 1968 – Locomotive
21 June 1968 – Mud
22 June 1968 – Traction
24 June 1968 – Youngblood
25 June 1968 – Marmalade
28 June 1968 – Pepper
29 June 1968 – Cat Road Show starring US Flattop
There may be missing gigs during July as it wasn’t clear if artists played for the entire week
1 July 1968 – The Ebonites
3 July 1968 – The Ebonites
5 July 1968 – The Ebonites
6 July 1968 – The Jasper Stubbs Gloryland Band
8-10 July 1968 – The Mike Stuart Span
12 July 1968 – The Mike Stuart Span
13 July 1968 – Finders Keepers
15 July 1968 – Finders Keepers
17 July 1968 – Finders Keepers
19 July 1968 – Finders Keepers
20 July 1968 – The Shiralee
22-24 July 1968 – Lamb Bros & Co
26 July 1968 – Lamb Bros & Co
27 July 1968 – Spectrum
29 July 1968 – Spectrum
30 July 1968 – Reperata & The Delrons, Clouds and Spectrum
31 July 1968 – Spectrum
3 August 1968 – The Californians
5-9 August 1968 – The Californians
10 August 1968 – The Light Fantastic (formerly The Vogues)
12-16 August 1968 – The Light Fantastic
17 August 1968 – Wishful Thinking
19 August 1968 – The Onyx
20-23 August 1968 – Wishful Thinking
24 August 1968 – Bubblegum
26-27 August 1968 – Bubblegum
30 August 1968 – Bubblegum
31 August 1968 – The Gods
2 September 1968 – The Gods (they may play all week but it is not clear)
6 September 1968 – The Gods
From this point onwards, it looks like gigs only took place on Saturdays
7 September 1968 – Traction
14 September 1968 – The ‘N Betweens
21 September 1968 – Jason Cord and First Chapter
28 September 1968 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
5 October 1968 – The Luddy Sammes Soul Packet
12 October 1968 – Scrugg (formerly Floribunda Rose)
Apart from the Star Club, the Top Ten Club on the Reeperbahn in St. Pauli was arguably the most important rock music venue in Hamburg during the 1960s.
Opened in 1960 by Peter Eckhorn and operated by Iain Hines, the Top Ten Club was where The Beatles played and also backed singer Tony Sheridan in the group’s first recording sessions during early-mid 1961.
Throughout the 1960s, the Top Ten Club played host to a huge number of British bands, some of which featured future stars such as Elton John, Ritchie Blackmore (later in Deep Purple) and Ray Thomas and Mike Pinder (later in The Moody Blues).
Initially, there was only one band each month but from the mid-1960s onwards, there would be several groups sharing the bill each month. Singer Isabella Bond was a regular fixture and saxophone player Ricky Barnes helped run the club during the mid-late 1960s.
I have started to compile a list of bands that played at the Top Ten Club during this period but would welcome any additions and corrections in the comments below.
October 1960:
The Beatles: John Lennon (rhythm guitar/lead vocals), Paul McCartney (rhythm guitar/lead vocals); George Harrison (lead guitar/lead vocals), Stuart Sutcliffe (bass/lead vocals) and Pete Best (drums).
1961?:
The Jets: Iain Hines (keyboards), Colin Meander (lead guitar), Tony Sheridan (rhythm guitar), Rick Hardy (guitar), Peter Wharton (bass) and others.
27 March-2 July 1961:
The Beatles: John Lennon (rhythm guitar/lead vocals), Paul McCartney (rhythm guitar/lead vocals); George Harrison (lead guitar/lead vocals), Stuart Sutcliffe (bass/lead vocals) and Pete Best (drums).
1 November 1961-January 1962:
Wayne Gibson & The Dynamic Sounds: Wayne Gibson (lead vocals), Mick Todman (lead guitar), Ray Rogers (bass), Pete Gillies (rhythm guitar) and Larry Cole (drums).
March 1963:
The Blackjacks: Pat Harris (lead vocals), Don Callard (lead guitar), Robbie Williams (rhythm guitar/vocals), Bob Wilkinson (bass) and Pete James (drums).
August 1964:
The Mastersounds: Mal Jefferson (lead vocals/bass), Adrian Lord (lead vocals), Tony Cockayne (lead guitar), Gerry Stewart (tenor sax), Mike Price (drums) and others.
February 1965:
The Krew, Paddy, Klaus & Gibson, London Beats (plus Isabelle Bond and Beryl Marsden)
The Krew: Robert Fielden-Nicholls (lead guitar), Howie Casey (tenor saxophone), John Bradley (bass) and Eddie Sparrow (drums).
Paddy, Klaus and Gibson: Paddy Chambers (lead guitar), Klaus Voorman (bass) and Gibson Kemp (drums).
The London Beats: Frank Bennett (rhythm guitar/lead vocals), Mick Tucker (lead guitar/lead vocals), Sam Coaffee (bass) and Jim Smith (drums)
??? 1965:
Next of Kin: Frankie Allan (lead vocals), Dai Johns (lead guitar), Mike Ashman (rhythm guitar), Robert Evans (bass) and Alan Snell (drums).
March 1966:
Frank Sheen Sound: Frank Sheen (lead vocals), T J Huggett (keyboards), John Cushen (bass), John Herridge (drums) and Jeff Condon (trumpet) plus others.
March 1966:
Bluesology and Linda Laine & The Sinners
Bluesology: Stewart Brown (lead guitar/lead vocals), Reg Dwight (aka Elton John) (keyboards/lead vocals), Rex Bishop (bass) and Mick Inkpen (drums).
Linda Laine & The Sinners: Linda Laine aka Veronica Lake (lead vocals), Del Hidden (lead guitar), Peter Bellotte (rhythm guitar), Russ Maxwell (bass) and Len Crawley (drums).
April 1967:
The Copycats: John Stewart (lead guitar), Iain Lyon (rhythm guitar/vocals), Billy Cameron (bass/vocals) and Rob Lawson (drums/vocals).
July/August 1967 (THIS IS MORE LIKELY TO BE MARCH 1968):
Bluesology and The Manchester Playboys
Bluesology: Alan Walker (lead vocals), Stewart Brown (lead guitar/vocals), Reg Dwight (aka Elton John) (keyboards/lead vocals), Caleb Quaye (guitar), Marc Charig (cornet), Fred Gandy (bass) and Pete Gavin (drums) (not sure this is the correct formation)
Manchester’s Playboys: Kerry Burke (lead vocals), Stuart Fahey (lead guitar/Trumpet), Graham Sclater (keyboards), Alan Watkinson (bass), Malcolm Tagg-Randall (saxophone) and Peter Simensky (drums).
Circa September 1967:
The Berkley Squares: Barry Wade (lead vocals), Ray Martinez (lead guitar/vocals), Dave Eldredge (keyboards/vocals), Leigh Catterall (bass/vocals) and Terry Abbs (drums).
December 1967:
Floribunda Rose: John Kongos (rhythm guitar/lead vocals), Chris Demetriou (keyboards/vocals), Pete Clifford (lead guitar/vocals), Jack Russell (bass/vocals) and Nick Dokter (drums).
March 1968:
Scrugg (possibly billed as Floribunda Rose)
Scrugg (two weeks from 1 March): John Kongos (lead guitar/lead vocals), Chris Demetriou (keyboards/vocals), Jack Russell (bass/vocals) and Henry Spinetti (drums).
The Manchester Playboys: Kerry Burke (lead vocals), Stuart Fahey (lead guitar/Trumpet), Graham Sclater (keyboards), Alan Watkinson (bass), Malcolm Tagg-Randall (saxophone) and Peter Simensky (drums).
Thanks to the following for contributing to the timeline: Mick Tucker, Jim Smith, Frank Bennett, Graham Sclater, Jack Russell, Nick Dokter, Len Crawley
The Walton Hop at the Playhouse in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey was a teen disco started by Deniz Corday in 1958.
The music venue is reputed to have been the first disco in the UK. During 1964-1965, it was billed as the Hi-Fi Hop. The venue was billed as the Walton Hop in 1967. This is an incomplete list and I would welcome any additions
1 August 1961 – Mike Dee & The Jaywalkers
24 October 1961 – Mike Dee & The Jaywalkers
7 November 1961 – Mike Dee & The Jaywalkers
19 January 1962 – The Nibs Band
Gigs were on Saturdays and Wednesday but not every week
20 January 1962 – The Sunsets with Linda Shane, Grant Tracy and Ron Diamond
24 January 1962 – Denny & The Crescendos
10 February 1962 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
14 February 1962 – The Impalas
17 February 1962 – Eddy & The Chequers
24 February 1962 – Mike Cordell & The Mysteries
3 March 1962 – Steve Frances & The Counterbeats
10 March 1962 – Johnny Carr & The Bristol Cadillacs
14 March 1962 – The Guildford Rythmics
17 March 1962 – Tony West, Terry Preston & The Nite Hawks
21 March 1962 – Kris Kelly & The Cadillacs
24 March 1962 – Steve Laine & The Cannons
28 March 1962 – The Hamilton Teens
31 March 1962 – Anna Janet Carol and Tony Claidon & The Impalas
4 April 1962 – The Black Arrows
Gap until the next entry
18 April 1962 – Denny & The Crescendos
21 April 1962 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
23 April 1962 – Steve Laine and Terry & The Cannons
26 April 1962 – The Hamilton Teens
28 April 1962 – Duffy Power & The Syndicates
2 May 1962 – Steve Frances & The Counterbeats
5 May 1962 – Neil Christian & The Crusaders (he was ill so postponed and was replaced by Gary Brooker & The Paramounts)
Gap in gigs until next entry
19 May 1962 – Baby Bubbly & His Bubbles
23 May 1962 – Neil Christian & The Crusaders
26 May 1962 – Gary Brooker & The Paramounts
2 June 1962 – Ray Davis & The RDQ Quartette (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
6 June 1962 – Jackie Lynton with Bob Zavier & The Jury
9 June 1962 – Bod Fields, Beverley Swain & The Diablos
11 June 1962 – Jed Stone & The Raiders
14 June 1962 – The Black Arrows
16 June 1962 – Neil Christian & The Crusaders (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
23 June 1962 – Steve Laine and Teddy & The Cannons (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
27 June 1962 – Pat McQueen & His Rock Combo
30 June 1962 – The Checkpoints with Colin Lloyd
3 July 1962 – Ricky Temple & The Lonely Ones (Tuesday)
7 July 1962 – Tony Claidon, Ann Wright and The Impalas (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
11 July 1962 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
14 July 1962 – Brian Howard & The Silhouettes
18 July 1962 – Pete West & The East Combo
21 July 1962 – Karl Anthony & The Nomads
25 July 1962 – The Black Arrows
28 July 1962 – Steve Laine and Terry & The Cannons
1 August 1962 – Pat McQueen & His Rock Combo
4 August 1962 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets (cancelled, not clear who replaced them)
6 August 1962 – Tony Claidon & The Impalas
11 August 1962 – Neil Christian & The Crusaders (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
18 August 1962 – Colin Lyodd & The Checkpoints (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
No gigs for a while
1 September 1962 – The Fleereckers
4 September 1962 – Norman Jago & The Jaguars
8 September 1962 – Brian Howard & The Silhouettes
12 September 1962 – Jackie Lynton & The Jury
15 September 1962 – The Statesmen of Sin
19 September 1962 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
22 September 1962 – Terry Franks & The Avalons
26 September 1962 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
29 September 1962 – Bobby Angelo & The Tuxedos with Susan Terry
3 October 1962 – Jackie Lynton with Bob Zavier & The Jury
6 October 1962 – Bobby Brown & The Barons
10 October 1962 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
13 October 1962 – Brian Howard & The Silhouettes
Gap until next entry
20 October 1962 – Bobby Angelo & The Tuxedos (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
24 October 1962 – Jackie Lynton and Bobby Zavier & The Jury
27 October 1962 – Rod Price & The College Boys
31 October 1962 – Terry Franks & The Avalons
3 November 1962 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
9 November 1962 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
16 November 1962 – Bobby Angelo, Susan Terry & The Tuxedos (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
24 November 1962 – Coral Lee and Ray Fields & The Syndicates (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
27 November 1962 – Brian Howard & The Silhouettes
1 December 1962 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
Gap until next entry
12 December 1962 – Jackie Lynton & The New Teenbeats
15 December 1962 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
19 December 1962 – Rod Price & His College Men
22 December 1962 – Brian Howard & The Silhouettes
24 December 1962 – Bobby Angelo & The Tuxedos with Susan Terry
26 December 1962 – Jackie Lynton & The New Teenbeats
29 December 1962 – John Mazzi & The Clearways (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
31 December 1962 – Terry Franks & The Avalons
Gigs were on Saturdays and Wednesday but not every week. There is gap until next entry
9 January 1963 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
12 January 1963 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
16 January 1963 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
19 January 1963 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
23 January 1963 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
26 January 1963 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
30 January 1963 – The Nashville Teens
2 February 1963 – Rod Price & His College Men (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
6 February 1963 – Shane Fenton & The Fentons and Tony Rivers & The Castaways
9 February 1963 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
14 February 1963 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s (Thursday)
16 February 1963 – Terry Franks & The Avalons
23 February 1963 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
There is a gap until the next entry
2 March 1963 – Rod Price & His College Men
6 March 1963 – Gene Vincent & The British Blue Caps and The Hi-Fi Nits and Jackie & Fiona
9 March 1963 – Pauline Martin and Paul Dean & The Searchers
16 March 1963 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
20 March 1963 – Frank Kelly & The Hunters
23 March 1963 – Pete West and Susan Wayne & The Embers
30 March 1963 – Coral Lee and Ray Fields & The Syndicates (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
6 April 1963 – Tony & The Packabeats
11 April 1963 – Pat McQueen & His Rock Combo (Thursday)
13 April 1963 – John Mazzi & The Clearways and The Hi-Fi Nits
15 April 1963 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets (Monday)
20 April 1963 – Pauline Martin and Pete Dean & The Searchers
27 April 1963 – Lee Faber & The RTJ Combo (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
4 May 1963 – The Strollers Plus Two and The Hi-Fi Nits
10 May 1963 – Rod Price & His College Men (Friday) (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available) Replaced by Jeff Curtis & The Flames
18 May 1963 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s and Fiona and Jackie
25 May 1963 – Terry Franks & The Avalons (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
1 June 1963 – Tony Holland & The Packabeats
3 June 1963 – Vern Rogers & Hi-Fi’s (Monday)
8 June 1963 – Johnny Dee & The Limelighters
15 June 1963 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
22 June 1963 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
29 June 1963 – John Mazzi & Clearways
6 July 1963 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
13 July 1963 – Rod Price & His College Men
20 July 1963 – Jeff Curtis & The Flames
27 July 1963 – Dave Anthony & The Druids
3 August 1963 – The Strollers
5 August 1963 – The Limelights
10 August 1963 – Coral Lee and Ray Fields & The Syndicates
17 August 1963 – Terry Franks & The Avalons (replaced by Eddy & The Chequers)
24 August 1963 – Lee Allan & The Scepters
31 August 1963 – Dave Anthony & The Druids
6 September 1963 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways (Friday) (replaced by Tony Holland & The Packabeats)
14 September 1963 – The Hi-Fi’s
21 September 1963 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
25 September 1963 – Shane Fenton & The Fentons (Wednesday)
28 September 1963 – Dave Dee & The Moquettes
5 October 1963 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
12 October 1963 – Lee Allan & The Scepters
19 October 1963 – Tony Holland & The Packabeats
26 October 1963 – The Wanderers
2 November 1963 – The Druids
9 November 1963 – Jackie Lynton & The Teenbeats
16 November 1963 – The Mustangs (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
23 November 1963 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
30 November 1963 – Jeff Curtis & The Flames
Got gaps until next gig
21 December 1963 – Neil Christian & The Crusaders
24 December 1963 – John Mazzi & The Clearways
26 December 1963 – Tony Holland & The Packabeats
27 December 1963 – Vern Rogers & The Hi-Fi’s
28 December 1963 – Brian Diamond & The Cutters
31 December 1963 – The Druids
Just appears to be gigs on Saturdays in 1964
3 January 1964 – Lee Allan & The Scepters
11 January 1964 – The Moquettes (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
18 January 1964 – The Flintstones
25 January 1964 – The Roof Raisers
1 February 1964 – Pete Nelson & The Travellers
8 February 1964 – The Hi-Fi’s
No gig on 15 February 1964
22 February 1964 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways and The Hop Mimers
29 February 1964 – Guitars Incorporated
7 March 1964 – The Roof Raisers
14 March 1964 – The Druids
21 March 1964 – Lee Allan & The Scepters
26 March 1964 – The Moquettes
28 March 1964 – The Outlaws and The Hop Mimers
30 March 1964 – Wainwright’s Gentlemen
4 April 1964 – The Druids
11 April 1964 – Tony Holland & The Packabeats (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
18 April 1964 – The Limelights
No gig on 25 April
28 April 1964 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
2 May 1964 – Peter’s Faces
9 May 1964 – The Hi-Fi’s (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
16 May 1964 – The Trends
18 May 1964 – The Moquettes (Monday)
23 May 1964 – Wainwright’s Gentlemen
30 May 1964 – Dana Laine and Lee Tracy & The Tributes (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
2 June 1964 – Peter’s Faces (Tuesday)
6 June 1964 – The Druids
9 June 1964 – Wainwright’s Gentlemen (Tuesday)
13 June 1964 – The Prestons (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
16 June 1964 – The Soul Representatives (Tuesday)
20 June 1964 – Mike Shannons & The Strangers
27 June 1964 – Wainwright’s Gentlemen
4 July 1964 – The Chances (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
11 July 1964 – The Nashville Teens
18 July 1964 – Peter’s Faces
25 July 1964 – The Southern Sounds
1 August 1964 – The Birds (Ron Wood on guitar)
3 August 1964 – Peter’s Faces
8 August 1964 – The Grebbles
15 August 1964 – The T-Bones
22 August 1964 – The Southern Sounds
29 August 1964 – Peter’s Faces and Jackie Lynton
5 September 1964 – The Birds
12 September 1964 – The Druids
19 September 1964 – The Tridents (Jeff Beck’s band)
26 September 1964 – The T-Bones
3 October 1964 – The Druids
10 October 1964 – The Herd (replaced by The Paramounts)
17 October 1964 – The Rebounds
24 October 1964 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
31 October 1964 – Peter’s Faces
7 November 1964 – The Tridents
14 November 1964 – The Druids
17 November 1964 – Rhubarb Freshers (Tuesday)
21 November 1964 – Tony Rivers & The Castaways
24 November 1964 – The Aztecs (Tuesday)
28 November 1964 – The Bootleggers
1 December 1964 – The Hustlers (Tuesday) (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
4 December 1964 – The Herd (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
8 December 1964 – The Empty Vessels (Tuesday) (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
12 December 1964 – Peter’s Faces (held at Weybridge Hall as Walton Playhouse not available)
15 December 1964 – Devil’s Disciples (Tuesday)
19 December 1964 – The Pagans
24 December 1964 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
26 December 1964 – The Tridents
31 December 1964 – The Druids
There were gaps during 1965 due to the venue not being used for music
2 January 1965 – The Birds
12 January 1965 – The Moonrakers
16 January 1965 – Peter’s Faces
23 January 1965 – The Herd
26 January 1965 – The Legends
30 January 1965 – Wainwright’s Gentlemen (Ian Gillan was lead singer by now)
2 February 1965 – The Strays
6 February 1965 – The Tridents
9 February 1965 – The Cosmic Sounds
13 February 1965 – Grant Tracy & The Sunsets
23 February 1965 – The Missing Links
27 February 1965 – Dave & The Strollers
2 March 1965 – The Ones
6 March 1965 – The Tridents (this was the band’s first gig after Jeff Beck left to join The Yardbirds and was performed as a trio)
9 March 1965 – The Road Agents
13 March 1965 – The Birds
16 March 1965 – Finders Keepers
20 March 1965 – The Five Dimensions
23 March 1965 – Them
27 March 1965 – The Herd
30 March 1965 – The Bad Boys
3 April 1965 – The Cosmic Sounds
15 April 1965 – The Hero (This could be a missprint and might be The Herd)
Walton Playhouse closed at some point in late April/early May 1965 due to a fire that caused extensive damage. Walton Playhouse re-opened for music on 29 October 1966
29 October 1966 – Flatop and The Soul System
1 November 1966 – The Impalas
5 November 1966 – The Courtelles
8 November 1966 – The Iveys (evolved into Badfinger)
12 November 1966 – Tuesday’s Children
15 November 1966 – The Loving Kind
19 November 1966 –The Dominos
No gigs on 22 and 26 November
29 November 1966 – The Coloured Raisins
3 December 1966 – The Iveys
No gigs on 6 and 10 December
13 December 1966 – The New Downliners Sect
17 December 1966 – The Embers
20 December 1966 – Syd’s Crowd
24 December 1966 – Rob Chance & The Chances R
26 December 1966 – The Coloured Raisins
27 December 1966 – The Summer Set
31 December 1966 – Niti Rossi and Mike Stuart Span
10 January 1967 – The New Mojo Band (The New Mojos)
13 January 1967 – Winston’s Fumbs
17 January 1967 – Norman & The Tek-Neeks (ex-Tornados)
24 January 1967 – Derek Savage Foundation
28 January 1967 – The Nashville Teens
31 January 1967 – The Embers
4 February 1967 – The Condors
7 February 1967 – Winston’s Thumbs
11 February 1967 – Jackie Lynton, Norman Hale & The Package
14 February 1967 – The Iveys
18 February 1967 – Derek Savage Foundation
21 February 1967 – The Mojos
25 February 1967 – Denise Scott & The Soundsmen
28 February 1967 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
4 March 1967 – The Coloured Raisins
7 March 1967 – The Embers
14 March 1967 – The Embers
18 March 1967 – The Bunch
21 March 1967 – Derek Savage Foundation
23 March 1967 – The Coloured Raisins
25 March 1967 – The Medievals
27 March 1967 – Mike Stuart Span
1 April 1967 – The Army (Steve Priest, pre-Sweet on bass)
11 April 1967 – The Iveys
15 April 1967 – The Mojos
18 April 1967 – Sean Buckely Big Set
21 April 1967 – The Seychells (held at Hersham)
No gigs at the Walton Hop on 22, 25 and 29 April. The hall is not available
29 April 1967 – The Flies (held at Hersham)
2 May 1967 – The Farm
6 May 1967 – The Jaybirds
13 May 1967 – The Ministry of Sound
16 May 1967 – The Drag Set
20 May 1967 – The Bunch
23 May 1967 – The Flies
27 May 1967 – The Shinn
29 May 1967 – Mike Stuart Span (Bank holiday Monday)
3 June 1967 – The Courtells
6 June 1967 – The Jaybirds
10 June 1967 – The Happy Story
13 June 1967 – The Shell Shock Show
17 June 1967 – The Iveys
20 June 1967 – The Klooks
There is a gap after this
8 July 1967 – Soul Tonas
14 July 1967 – The Shell Shock Show
22 July 1967 – The Gods
29 July 1967 – The Human Instinct
5 August 1967 – Mike Stuart Span
12 August 1967 – The Tiles Big Band
19 August 1967 – The Flies
26 August 1967 – The Drag Set
28 August 1967 – The Flies (Bank holiday Monday)
2 September 1967 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
9 September 1967 – Modes Mode
16 September 1967 – Mike Stuart Span
23 September 1967 – The Embers
26 September 1967 – The Drifters, The Flies and The Mover
7 October 1967 – The All Nite Workers
14 October 1967 – No band this week
21 October 1967 – Gentle Madness
28 October 1967 – Dr Marigold’s Prescription
4 November 1967 – Coletrain Union
11 November 1967 – The Inspiration
14 November 1967 – The Human Instinct
18 November 1967 – Floribunda Rose (John Kongos’s band)
25 November 1967 – No band this week
28 November 1967 – Force Four
2 December 1967 – Lemon Line
9 December 1967 – No band this week
12 December 1967 – The All Nite Workers
16 December 1967 – Jo Jo Gunne
19 December 1967 – The Doves
26 December 1967 – The Flies (and possibly The Doves but needs confirmation)
30 December 1967 – Mike Stuart Span
9 January 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
13 January 1968 – The Army
16 January 1968 – Force Four
20 January 1968 – The Human Instinct
24 January 1968 – Missing entry
27 January 1968 – The All Nite Workers
30 January 1968 – Dr Marigold’s Prescription
3 February 1968 – Alexander Bell & The Flies (Just back from Denmarkand replaced Cymbaline)
6 February 1968 – The Doves
10 February 1968 – The Human Instinct and The Mover
13 February 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
17 February 1968 – Jon
20 February 1968 – The All Nite Workers
24 February 1968 – Kristen Young & The Reflections
27 February 1968 – Cymbaline
2 March 1968 – Dr Marigold’s Prescription
No gigs on 5 and 9 March
12 March 1968 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
No Saturday gigs until 30 March so no gig on 16 March
19 March 1968 – The All Nite Workers
No gig on 23 March
26 March 1968 – Cymbaline
30 March 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
6 April 1968 – Extreme Sound
11 April 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
13 April 1968 – Cymbaline
15 April 1968 – The All Night Workers
20 April 1968 – The Doves
Looks like gigs on 23, 27 and 30 April
4 May 1968 – The Embers
Looks like no gigs on 7, 11 and 14 May
18 May 1968 – The Penny Peeps (Martin Barre, pre-Jethro Tull on guitar)
Looks like no gigs on 21, 25 and 28 May
1 June 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
4 June 1968 – The Embers
8 June 1968 – The Onyx
No gig on 11 June
15 June 1968 – Extreme Sound
No gig on 18 June
22 June 1968 – Mike Stuart Span
No gigs on 25 and 29 June
No gig on 2 July
6 July 1968 – The Greatest Show on Earth
13 July 1968 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
No gig on 16 July
20 July 1968 – Cymbaline
No gig on 23 July
27 July 1968 – The Groop (from Australia) and Honey
No gig on 30 July
3 August 1968 – Clive Barrow Group (future All Night Workers lead singer)
No gig on 6 August
10 August 1968 – Mike Raynor & The Condors
No gig on 13 August
17 August 1968 – The Embers and Honey
No gig on 20 August
24 August 1968 – Alexander Bell & The Flies
No gig on 27 August
31 August 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
2 September 1968 – The All Nite Workers
7 September 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
No gigs on 10, 14 and 17 September
21 September 1968 – The Late
No gig on 24 September
28 September 1968 – Combustion
No gig on 1 October
5 October 1968 – The Nerve
No gig on 8 October
12 October 1968 – Bobby Johnson & The Atoms
Looks like no gigs on 15, 19 and 22 October
26 October 1968 – The All Nite Workers
No gig on 29 October
2 November 1968 – Bobby Johnson & The Atoms
No gig on 5 November
9 November 1968 – Combustion
No gig on 12 November
16 November 1968 – Nerve
No gig on 19, 23 and 26 November
30 November 1968 – The Coloured Raisins
No gigs on 3, 7 and 10 December
14 December 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
No gig on 17 December
21 December 1968 – The Explosion with Winston T (most likely Watson T Brown & The Explosive)
24 December 1968 – Jo Jo Gunne
26 December 1968 – Rick ‘N’ Beckers
28 December 1968 – The Sky (formerly Mike Raynor & The Condors)
31 December 1968 – The Cat Road Show starring US Flatop
No gig on Saturday, 4 January 1969. Also Tuesday shows given up for DJ
11 January 1969 – The Youngblood
18 January 1969 – The Explosive
25 January 1969 – Canterbury Tales
1 February 1969 – Kingsize Keen Show
8 February 1969 – The Flares
No gig on Saturday, 15 February
23 February 1969 – The Nite People
1 March 1969 – The Youngblood
8 March 1969 – Demon Fuzz
No gig on Saturday, 15 March
22 March 1969 – Watson T Brown & The Explosive
29 March 1969 – Spectrum
3 April 1969 – Canterbury’s Tales
5 April 1969 – Simon K & The Meantimers
7 April 1969 – The All Nite Workers (Clyde Barrow now on lead vocals)
No gigs now until the next date
3 May 1969 – The Youngblood
No gigs now until the next date
31 May 1969 – The Red Squares
7 June 1969 – The Pavement
14 June 1969 – The Onyx
21 June 1969 – The Sky
28 June 1969 – Spectrum
5 July 1969 – The Sweet
12 July 1969 – The Swamp
19 July 1969 – The Embers
26 July 1969 – Simon K & The Meantimers
2 August 1969 – The She Trinity
9 August 1969 – The Sugar
16 August 1969 – The Chimera
23 August 1969 – Pinkerton’s Assorted Colours
30 August 1969 – Canterbury Tales
6 September 1969 – Simon K & The Meantimers
13 September 1969 – Cool Combination
20 September 1969 – Sonority
27 September 1969 – The Cats
4 October 1969 – The Pylots
11 October 1969 – Archimedes Principle
18 October 1969 – Timebox
No gig on Saturday, 25 October
1 November 1969 – Black Velvet
No gig on Saturday, 8 November
15 November 1969 – Orange Rainbow
No gig on Saturday, 22 November
29 November 1969 – Simon K & The Meantimers
No gigs until the next one
13 December 1969 – Information
20 December 1969 – Lucas (from Mike Cotton Sound) and The Soul Sisters
24 December 1969 – Mike Raynor & The Sky
26 December 1969 – John James & The Swamp
27 December 1969 – Chimera
31 December 1969 – Simon K & The Meantimers
There don’t appear to be any gigs for the first half of 1970
All gigs were sourced from the Woking Herald except Mike Dee & The Jaywalkers (Brian Mansell) and Floribunda Rose (Jack Russell)
Buried in the welter of superlative singles issued in September 1967 was an intriguing release by an Anglo-South African group with a suitably ‘flower power’ name, Floribunda Rose. A forgotten gem, ‘One Way Street’ c/w ‘Linda Loves Linda’, should have been a resounding hit but despite being plugged incessantly by several notable radio stations, it barely made a ripple. Floribunda Rose may have been lost to a bygone age but its lead singer and principal songwriter remains one of South Africa’s most successful exports and would years later become synonymous with one of Brit Pop’s most enduring anthems, The Happy Monday’s ‘He’s Gonna Step On You Again’.
Johnny Kongos
Born in Jo’burg on 6 August 1945 to Greek parents, aspiring singer/songwriter and guitarist Johnny Kongos had formed his first group, The Dukes, when he was 15 years old and began carving out a local following playing at his mother’s club, the Fireplace in Boksburg.
Joined by former Mickie Most & The Playboys guitarist Hank Squires in 1962, the group morphed into Johnny Kongos & The G-Men and over the next three years released nearly twenty singles and half a dozen albums for the Teal and RCA labels.
In late 1963, Kongos made his first exploratory visit to the UK but despite auditioning for a couple of major labels, and running into Hank Squires’s former band leader, Mickie Most, now a fledgling producer, Kongos failed to make an impact.
Empty handed, he returned to Jo’burg and reformed The G-Men. Plans to consolidate his earlier successes, however, were soon thrown in the air when the singer was called up for national defence training in late 1964.
Returning to civilian life six months later, Kongos picked up where he’d left off and recorded a final single with The G-Men, ‘Until It’s Time For You To Go’, which secured a release on Teal, the South African distributor for the Pye label.
Thanks to these connections, Kongos elected to return to the UK in April 1966, where he befriended Pye’s manager/producer John Schroeder. Sufficiently impressed by Kongos’s audition tape, Schroeder secured a solo deal with Pye’s subsidiary label, Piccadilly.
The fruits of the ensuing sessions turned up on the singer’s debut UK single – the folky, self penned ‘I Love Mary’, backed with the poppy Kongos/Leroy number, ‘Good Time Party Companion’, released that September. Credited to John T Kongos, the single was well received but did nothing chart-wise.
004
Soon after the single’s release, Kongos was back in South Africa beginning work on a fresh clutch of songs with the intention of recording an album. One night in April 1967, he dropped into the 505 club in Jo’burg’s trendy Hillbrow district and caught British group, The 004 entertaining the crowds (see The 004 page for a closer inspection of this fascinating group). Suitably impressed, he approached the band members after they’d finished their set and asked them to help him cut the planned album as paid musicians.
A hugely popular live act, The 004 had arrived in South Africa by boat in July 1965 on the back of a contract offered to the group’s lead guitarist, Pete Clifford (b. 10 May 1943, Whetstone, London). A former member of Dusty Springfield’s backing group, The Echoes, Clifford had first visited South Africa during 1964 and participated in the singer’s infamous tour where she was deported for refusing to play to segregated audiences.
While the tour had been a PR disaster, Clifford had been promised some lucrative work by Trevor Boswell, husband of South African 1950s star, Eve Boswell, and co-owner of the Keleti Artist Agency, if he could return from London with a new group.
Clifford sought around for suitable musicians and quickly recruited Welsh rhythm guitarist and singer Brian Gibson from The Laurie Jay Combo, who in turn recommended fellow countryman, bass player and singer Jack Russell (b. 29 April 1944, Caerleon, Wales).
Gibson and Russell had known each other for years, having first worked together in The Victors, resident band at the Latin Quarter, one of London’s top theatre restaurants.
“I had a call on the Monday from Brian,” remembers Russell, who was working as a manager for Vox in Dartford at the time. “He asked me if I fancied joining him in a band that was going to South Africa. I said, ‘Yes’ and asked, ‘When do we go?’ He said, ‘Thursday!’”
With Londoner Peter Stember (today a successful US-based photographer) completing the line up on drums, The 004 sailed for Durban and soon shot to local fame as one of the top groups working the clubs, so much so that they landed jobs supporting Gene Vincent and The Ivy League.
During 1966, the band released a handful of singles for CBS, including ‘The In Crowd’ and a decent album, It’s Alright, before Stember returned to the UK in August.
In his place, The 004s recruited Dutch-born, South African raised drummer Nick ‘Doc’ Dokter (b. 24 July 1945, Kampen, Overijsel, The Netherlands), who possessed an impressive musical CV, including a stint with The Leemen Limited alongside South African guitar legend, the late Ken E Henson.
Originally a bass player, Dokter moved to drums early his career after the sticksman in the garage band he was playing in gave up music for a regular job. Working with future A-Cads singer Sammy Evans in a factory making boilers, the pair struck up a friendship and in an interesting turn of events both ended up joining Johnny Kongos’ group The G-Men after the singer was called up for military service.
“We all went and played at John’s place, the Fireplace,” recalls Dokter. “From there I met Kenny Henson, who needed a drummer, so I moved to Durban to join Leemen Limited.”
After two rare singles on the Continental label, including a great version of ‘In The Midnight Hour’ backed by John Mayall’s ‘Heartaches’, it was time to move on again.
“I was just hanging around and Pete Clifford approached me. Peter Stember was leaving The 004 and he just said, ‘Why don’t you just come out and play with us?’ I was really a young kid and I had no experience of playing big clubs. They kinda took me under their wing.”
With Dokter filling the vacant drum stool, The 004 spent the remainder of 1966 consolidating their live reputation. When Gibson handed in his notice in early 1967 (later joining progressive rock band, Abstract Truth, alongside Henson), The 004 briefly recruited guitarist Barry Mitchell from rival band, The In Crowd, but the line up never gelled and when Kongos dropped into the 505, the group had been stripped to a trio.
“John originally offered a job to Jack and Pete,” says Dokter. “I wasn’t included in this. Eve Boswell’s son was originally going to be the drummer. He did some demos with Pete and Jack but it didn’t work out. I happened to be in one of the sessions and just took over.”
As Kongos recalls, he always intended to employ a Farfisa organ sound on his album so when Clifford, Dokter and Russell took up the offer to record with him, they were joined in the studio by a fifth member, Chris Demetriou (more commonly known as Chris Dee).
Chris Demetriou
Former keyboard player with Johannesburg’s finest R&B group, John E Sharpe & The Squires (see the Chris Demetriou interview page for more information on this band), Cyprus-born Demetriou had appeared on all of The Squires’ classic singles, including covers of The Kinks’ ‘Stop Your Sobbing’ and Paul Simon’s ‘I Am A Rock’, as well as the highly sought after Maybelline album.
“John located me through the Jo’burg Greek club,” remembers Demetriou. “I was invited to his house and the next thing I knew we were planning to leave the country and seek fame and fortune in London.”
As Kongos relates, his plan had always been to return to the UK with a band as soon as possible and use the recordings to secure further work. Looking back on the sessions, he dismisses most of the material as forgettable.
“I had written a bunch of songs and I basically wanted to do demos. I went into the studio with all of the guys and wound up taking that ‘album’ of demos to the UK.”
As events panned out, the band got half way through the recording when Kongos made a proposition: rather than pay the musicians for the sessions, he would cover everyone’s fares to UK.
Floribunda Rose
According to Russell, it made sense to return home and crack the British market, especially when Kongos had connections in the music industry. “He would have been a fool not to do that,” he says. “He had a contract in his back pocket with Pye and a contract with Maurice King who ran the Walker Brothers among others; it was a stable worth getting into.”
Before setting off by boat in May 1967, the newly formed group posed for some publicity photos in Kongos’s Jo’burg house. Then, a few days’ later, set sail for England, writing and rehearsing material, including the Kongos-Russell collaboration, ‘Linda Loves Linda’, in preparing for the assault on the British market.
Throughout the long journey the group struggled to come up with a suitable name. “I wanted to call it Kongos’s Magic Dragon but [John] wouldn’t have it,” says Russell.
In fact, as the bass player explains, the musicians only agreed on Floribunda Rose on the way to their first gig! Having arrived at Maurice King’s office during their first week in London, the manager calmly informed the musicians that they had a gig the next day and studio time booked a few weeks later.
A second hand camper van was hastily purchased in Earl’s Court and the band set off for its debut gig – a small club in Castleford, West Yorkshire on 14 July, stopping off in central London on route to pick the elusive name.
“John and I walked across the street in Baker Street to a book shop, desperate to find a name for the band,” recalls Russell. “Flower power was at its zenith, so we plumped for Floribunda Rose. A bloody daft name but that was where people were at.”
After a handful of gigs in the north and the midlands, including shows in Tadcaster, Burnley and Tamworth, Floribunda Rose made their London debut at Tiles on Oxford Street on 19 August.
Around this time, the group also cut its debut single under Schroeder’s watchful eye – the poppy ‘Linda Loves Linda’ – supposedly a tale of female narcissism, backed by Kongos’s infectious, and rather Beatlesque, ‘One Way Street’. The plug side, with its ‘Everyone is Loving Everywhere’ lyric, ‘fairground’ organ and free-form ending, chimes perfectly with the ‘peace, love vibe’.
Released in September 1967 on Pye’s Piccadilly subsidiary and the same week that Radio 1 aired, ‘Linda Loves Linda’ benefited from its publicity and was heavily plugged by Tony Blackburn and Pete Murray.
“We were very lucky,” says Russell. “Maurice King was an operator. He knew his stuff and employed a plugger who would go round the BBC with new releases.”
“In those days you had to get on the BBC play-list. We were on the first week of Radio 1. Only three singles a week out of the 80 releases used to get on that, which was fantastic.”
To coincide with the station’s launch, the group recorded a BBC Radio 1 session with Brian Matthews on 25 September for a show that was replacing Saturday Club, cutting new versions of ‘Linda Loves Linda’ and ‘One Way Street’, along with covers of Paul Simon’s ‘Bright Green Pleasure Machine’ and ‘59th Bridge Street Song’. None of the tracks have been released and remain buried somewhere in the BBC archive.
Yet despite getting on to the new play list, recording a live session and having a Juke Box Jury appearance as ‘mystery band’ (on 8 September) and being voted a hit, the single stiffed.
The group returned to the daily grind of touring, often travelling hundreds of miles to play small clubs and sharing the bill with the likes of The Zombies, Dave Berry and Lonnie Donegan to name a few.
“Most of our gigs were up and down the M1 at less prestigious venues,” recalls Demetriou. “We did play some university events and supported more well known acts.”
“There are lots of little funny things that happened with Floribunda Rose,” adds Kongos. “It was really corny actually – attempting to jump on the ‘Flower Power’ bandwagon. We did dumb things like throw out flowers to the crowd at the end of a the gig [which] went down really well in Workingmen’s clubs (not!)
“I think the best thing about the band was that we did really intricate medleys of known songs – a little like Vanilla Fudge, in the sense that the versions were very different.”
Book-ending the year, Floribunda Rose spent a month playing at the Top Ten in Hamburg, grafting for six hours a night to a largely unappreciative crowd. While there, Dokter remembers rubbing shoulders with the musicians that would later go on to form the nucleus of heavy rock band, Deep Purple.
Exhausted, the group drove home non-stop, heading straight for the Scottish Highlands in the first week of January where the first cracks in the band’s precarious line up surfaced.
“We did one [10-day] tour of Scotland [and] that was the last thing I did with them,” remembers Clifford, who left after the final gig on 14 January. “I then flew out from the freezing cold to the humid heat of Durban and nearly died. I had a pair of leather jack boots and a Scottish hiking jacket!”
Pete Clifford returns to South Africa and joins the Bats
Back in South Africa, the guitarist joined The Bats, appearing on the highly sought after Image album (which includes the superb ‘Money Ain’t Worth a Dang’) and also playing numerous sessions, most notably providing bouzouki on Freedom Children’s debut album, Battle Hymn of The Broken Hearted Horde. During the late 1960s and 1970s, he became one of South Africa’s most respected guitarists and continues to tour with The Bats.
“[Pete] and John just butted like rams,” explains Russell on the guitarist’s dramatic exit. “Pete was very experienced. He had worked with some major people. He knew his stuff and was a good guitar player but basically John didn’t want a lead guitarist.”
“Pete Clifford was an incredible guitar player and so was John,” adds Dokter. “They were both very talented. It was good for Pete to actually go on his own and work with The Bats and John had the freedom to do what he wanted to do.”
Kongos has the last word: “Pete was not satisfied with the lack of progress in the band – it wasn’t easy travelling hundreds of miles to little gigs and winding up almost out of pocket at the end of the day. Musically too, it was not satisfying for us because we had different ideas. We got on each others’ nerves and could have been the model for Spinal Tap if we’d made it.”
Nick Dokter departs
With Clifford gone and Kongos assuming lead guitar duties, it wasn’t long before Dokter also bailed. “Nick was married and his wife was getting bored with the difficulties of not making money,” explains Kongos on the drummer’s departure in late February after a 10-day stand at the Nova club in Kensington, West London.
A qualified boilermaker, Dokter briefly returned to South Africa where he worked a day job while playing with various local groups. In the late 1960s, he moved to his country of birth, Holland, and returned to school to study engineering. Turning down an offer to join The Golden Earring, he subsequently emigrated to Canada in 1969.
During the early 1970s, he got back into playing and recorded an unreleased album with 5 Man Cargo, which later morphed in Cross Town Bus. Through this group he met promoter Bruce Allan and ended up working for his agency for nearly two decades, although Dokter did make occasion trips back to South Africa where he played with his old buddy Kenny Henson in his duo, Finch & Henson among other projects.
“Needless to say, being on the road for 20 years, six-to-nine months at a time, took its toll and I became a studio/session drummer,” says Dokter, who retired from playing full-time in 1989 and currently lives in Vancouver. In the summer of 2009, he plans to visit the UK and catch up with Jack Russell, who he hasn’t seen since early 1968.
Scrugg
With Dokter out of the picture, the remaining members returned to London where Russell and Demetriou found themselves caught up in a police raid at their shared flat. “Unbeknown to us, while we were away in Germany and Scotland our road manager had been renting our rooms out,” says Russell, recalling the tragic event.
“People had been using our place as a doss house and these guys had been dealing. We hadn’t a clue the police had been watching the place and we arrived back the morning they hit the place. We were fitted up and forced to plead guilty. We were fined £50 and got front page of The Sun.”
Putting the loss of Dokter behind them, Russell returned to the Welsh valleys and brought back 16-year-old wonder kid, Henry Spinetti (b. 31 March 1951, Cwm, Wales), younger brother of Victor Spinetti and today Katie Melua’s drummer.
With two weeks’ work lined up at the Top Ten in Hamburg, kicking off on 1 March, the group headed for the continent bearing a new name – Scrugg. “I chose the name because we wanted a more earthy image and I was a fan of Earl Scruggs the banjo player,” admits Russell.
“That was a suggestion that we all made,” chips in Clifford, who believes the name was discussed while he was still a member. “We were all trying to think of a new image and I think I left on the verge of Scrugg because I’ve got a picture of Floribunda Rose and then in brackets it says ‘Scrugg’.”
Under its new guise, Scrugg returned to the studios with John Schroeder to work on the first of three classic singles, which, as David Wells rightly points out in the liners for the John Kongos’s compilation album, Lavender Popcorn, “remain exquisite examples of the psychedelic pop sound.”
Scrugg’s debut outing, released on Pye in April 1968, coupled two John Kongos numbers – ‘Everyone Can See’ backed with ‘I Wish I Was Five’. The latter is undoubtedly the stronger of the two and is notable for Lew Warburton’s stirring string arrangement (based directly on Russell’s bass line) and Demetriou’s moody organ playing, which heightens the tension, building to a dramatic climax. A yearning for the innocence and honesty of youth, ‘I Wish I Was Five’ should have been the side to plug and perhaps not surprisingly the single went nowhere.
Two months later, Pye rushed out a follow up, a cover of Scott English’s poppy ‘Lavender Popcorn’, backed by the Kongos penned ‘Sandwich Board Man’, which the singer says was inspired by said character who he used to see regularly on Oxford Street.
A noted songwriter, English, had serious pop credentials and had scored hits with covers of ‘Hi Ho Silver Lining’ and ‘Bend Me Shape Me’, but the group was uncomfortable recording such a blatant teeny-bopper, bubblegum track. The band’s producer, however, overruled any objections and even contributed to the recording by playing piano with a plectrum! “John Schroeder said, ‘You’re doing it’,” remembers Russell. “‘You’ve had two of your own and you’re doing one of mine now, so shut up!’”
Tailor-made for the pop market, ‘Lavender Popcorn’ should have been Scrugg’s commercial breakthrough but like its predecessors faded into obscurity.
Forced to make a living on the road, Scrugg resumed their busy touring schedule travelling the length and breadth of the country and taking in towns as far as field as Newcastle, Birmingham and Penzance. Debuting on 3 August 1968, the band also became regulars at London’s renowned nightclub, Scotch of St James, returning again for shows on 7 and 14 September and culminating with a two-night stand on 27-28 September. During this hectic period of touring, Scrugg participated in a historic moment in rock history, opening for a “mystery” band of superstars at a show at Sheffield University on 23 November.
“We opened for them and then watched their show,” says Kongos. “We all agreed that these guys would probably not make it because ‘who needed another Cream?’ so we gave them the thumbs down. They were called Led Zeppelin!”
With Zeppelin’s star in the ascent and Scrugg’s future looking bleak, the end was in sight.
In early January, Scrugg’s final single was released and coupled the Kongos’s rave up, ‘Will The Real Geraldine Please Stand Up and Be Counted’ (a song originally recorded for the album session in Jo’burg in 1967), with the singer’s ‘Only George’, a kitchen sink tale about break-up and divorce, introduced by Russell’s freakily distorted vocal.DJ John Peel remained a huge fan and opened his show numerous times during its first week of release but despite the publicity, it failed to chart. Dispirited, the musicians decided to call it a day, bowing out with a two-night stand in Margate, Kent on 18-19 January.
In the aftermath of Scrugg’s split, Kongos went on to establish a successful solo career in the early Seventies, scoring hits with ‘He’s Gonna Step On You Again’ (co-written with Demetriou) and ‘Tokoloshe Man’. He currently resides in Arizona and is preparing material for a new album.
The others meanwhile maintained a less visible, albeit rewarding careers. Spinetti became a top session drummer, working with the likes of Roger Chapman, Bill Wyman and Eric Clapton while Demetriou co-wrote several songs for Kongos’s debut album, Confusions of a Goldfish, and later oversaw recordings for Mike D’Abo and Cat Stevens among others. He currently lives in Esher, Surrey and is a pastor in a local church.
Russell, who gave up playing music in 1969, later ran a successful specialist advertising agency before retiring in 2005. Aside from a brief reunion with Pete Clifford and Brian Gibson where they played at a theatre in Hampton Hill, Middlesex to celebrate Russell’s 6oth birthday, he currently plays solo sets at the Rising Sun pub in Twickenham.
Aficionados can expect to pay hefty prices for Floribunda Rose and Scrugg singles. Mercifully, Castle compiled an excellent CD in 2001 called Lavender Popcorn, pulling together all of the recordings, including the previously unreleased Scrugg track, ‘Patriotic’, although regrettably the BBC radio sessions were omitted.
Despite that small oversight, the CD is recommended to anyone who feels the urge to savour some of the most exquisitely recorded British psychedelic pop.
A huge thanks goes to Jack Russell for his generous assistance in pulling the story together and for offering the use of his private photo collection and live gig list. Thanks also to John Kongos for his insights into the group, Chris Demetriou, Nick Dokter, Pete Clifford and David Wells.
Floribunda Rose: Linda Loves Linda / One Way Street, Picadilly 7N.35408
Scrugg: Everyone Can See / I Wish I Was Five, Pye 7N.17492 Lavender Popcorn / Sandwichboard Man, Pye 7N.17551 Will the Real Geraldine Please Stand Up and Be Counted / Only George, Pye 7N.17656
Floribunda Rose gigs (thanks to Jack Russell for diary dates):
14 July 1967 – Crystal Ballroom, Castleford , West Yorkshire
15 July 1967 – Boulevard, Tadcaster, North Yorkshire
18 July 1967 – Burnley, Lancashire (no venue listed)
22 July 1967 – Brierfield, Lancashire (no venue listed)
4 August 1967 – Crow’s Nest, Tamworth, Staffordshire
19 August 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, London
26 August 1967 – The Boogaloo, Crystal Ballroom, Castleford, West Yorkshire (according to the Sheffield Star and Wakefield Express this was with The Magic Lanterns)
29 August 1967 – Luton, Bedfordshire (no venue listed)
2 September 1967 – The Rover, Solihull, Warwickshire
3 September 1967 – Cromer, Norfolk (most likely Olympia Ballroom)
8 September 1967 – Clouds, Derby, Derbyshire
9 September 1967 – Cesar’s Club, Bedford, Bedfordshire (according to the Bedfordshire Times)
15 September 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with Simon Dupree & The Big Sound
22 September 1967 – Crystal Ballroom, Castleford, West Yorkshire
23 September 1967 – Wellington (near Hull, Humberside, no venue listed)
24 September 1967 – Cosmo, Carlisle, Cumbria with Root and Jenny Jackson and The Hightimers
25 September 1967 – Radio 1 recording
29 September 1967 – Wigston, Cumbria (no venue listed)
30 September 1967 – Boulevard, Tadcaster, North Yorkshire (according to the Yorkshire Evening Post, this was with The Flowerpot Men)
1 October 1967 – Clayton Lodge Hotel, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire with The Pink Variety
7 October 1967 – Cleveland Arms, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (according to Express & Star)
12 October 1967 – Penny Farthing, Hanley, Staffordshire
12 October 1967 – Crystal Ballroom, Newcastle Under Lyme, Staffordshire
13 October 1967 – St Helens, Lancashire (possibly The Co-Op)
14 October 1967 – Leicester University, Leicester, Leicestershire
20 October 1967 – Kendall Town Hall, Kendall, Cumbria
21 October 1967 – Royal Ballroom, Ripley, North Yorkshire
22 October 1967 – Cofton Country Club, Birmingham (listed in Fabulous 208 but not in Jack’s gig list)
28 October 1967 – Barrow, Cumbria (most likely Barrow Public Hall)
29 October 1967 – New Tredegar, Wales (no venue listed)
2 November 1967 – Nottingham (no venue listed)
5 November 1967 – Sutton in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire (possibly The Revolution)
7-13 November 1967 – Birmingham, West Midlands area gigs (booked through the Astra Agency) (see below)
9 November 1967 – Kingfisher Country Club, Wall Health, West Midlands with The Californians and The Barmy Barry Show (according to Express & Star)
10 November 1967 – Waggon and Horses, Wall Health, West Midlands (according to Express & Star)
15 November 1967 – Hucknall, Nottinghamshire (no venue listed)
18 November 1967 – Walton Playhouse, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey
December 1967 – Month in Hamburg, West Germany (Top Ten Club on Reeperbahn)
5-14 January 1968 – Ten-day trip to Scotland (see below)
12 January 1968 – Ballerina Ballroom, Nairn, Scotland with The Rebel Sounds
13 January 1968 – Victoria Hotel, Forres, Scotland (Forres Elgin & Nairn Gazette) This is missing from Jack Russell’s gigs
Peter Clifford left Floribunda Rose in Scotland after the final gig and flew to Durban, South Africa to join The Bats
20 January 1968 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with The Amboy Dukes
3 February 1968 – Barrow Public Hall, Barrow, Cumbria with 4th Coming
16-25 February 1968 – Nova Club, Kensington, London
Nick Dokter left immediately afterwards and the musicians brought in Henry Spinetti. At some point the group changed name to Scrugg but did also continue to be billed as Floribunda Rose for some shows.
1-15 March 1968 – Top Ten, Hamburg, Germany
31 March 1968 – Sunderland, Tyne & Wear (no venue listed)
1-6 April 1968 – Sunderland, Tyne & Wear (possibly gigs at various clubs in the area)
7-13 April 1968 – Wolverhampton, West Midlands area gigs (see below)
The following are confirmed from the Express & Star newspaper (and billed as Floribunda Rose):
7 April 1968 – Albrighton WMC, Albrighton, West Midlands
8 April 1968 – Civic Hall, Wolverhampton, West Midlands with The News
11 April 1968 – Essington WMC, Essington, West Midlands
12 April 1968 – Oasis Club, Wolverhampton, West Midlands with The Dunes
13 April 1968 – 3 Men in a Boat, Walsall, West Midlands
20 April 1968 – Mr Smith’s Club, Winsford, Cheshire with T Bunkum Band and The Hideaways (billed as Floribunda Rose)
21 April 1968 – Coventry (no venue listed)
Around about now, they change name to Scrugg
3 May 1968 – ‘Tik Tok’ Discotheque, Grimsby (billed as Floribunda Rose) (according to Grimsby Evening Telegraph)
4 May 1968 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge with Bob Kidman & His Band, The Break Thro’, Jubilee & The Sacremento “B”, Mildenberg Jazz Band (billed as Floribunda Rose)
10-19 May 1968 –Elgin area gigs in Scotland (see below)
25 May 1968 – Miners Wallace Institute, Kirkonnell, Scotland
31 May 1968 – Ringway, Birmingham, West Midlands
1 June 1968 – Sheffield, South Yorkshire (no venue listed)
2 June 1968 – Club Cedar, Birmingham, West Midlands
14 June 1968 – Milnthorpe, Cumbria (no venue listed)
15 June 1968 – 400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon (Herald Express)
16 June 1968 – Jack’s diary says Birmingham 6 Ways but confirmed as Queen’s Head Beat Club, Six Ways, Erdington, West Midlands (billed as Floribunda Rose; see below too)
21 June 1968 – Eastbourne, East Sussex (no venue listed)
25 June 1968 – Oxford (no venue listed)
29 June 1968 – Queen’s Head Beat Club, Six Ways, Erdington, West Midlands (billed as Floribunda Rose)
3 July 1968 – Olympia, Scarborough, North Yorkshire with The Minority Soul Sound and The Urge
26 July 1968 – Sunderland, Tyne & Wear (not sure this happened as I have found Scrugg billed to play Steering Wheel, Weymouth on this day)
27 July 1968 – Newcastle (no venue listed)
1 August 1968 – Bolton, Lancashire (no venue listed)
2 August 1968 – Reading, Berkshire (no venue listed)
3 August 1968 – Scotch of St James, Mayfair, London
5 August 1968 – Birmingham (possibly Queens Beat Club, Erdington, West Midlands)
10 August 1968 – Sibyllas, Swallow Street, London
11 August 1968 – Abercarn, Wales (no venue listed)
16 August 1968 – Lon Crom (most likely Cromwellian, South Kensington, London)
17 August 1968 – 6 Ways (most likely Queen’s Beat Club, Erdington, West Midlands)
18 August 1968 – Sutton in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire (no venue listed)
24 August 1968 – Crom Lon (most likely Cromwellian, South Kensington, London)
7 September 1968 – Scotch of St James, Mayfair, London
8 September 1968 – Ilford, London (possibly The Angel)
14 September 1968 – Scotch of St James, Mayfair, London
15 September 1968 – Playboy, Hyde Park Corner, London
16-18 September 1968 – Wales gigs TBA
21 September 1968 – King’s Hall, Aberystwyth, Wales with The Shakedown Sounds (this is missing from Jack’s gigs and comes from the Cambrian Times but may not be the same band)
26 September 1968 – Crom Bolton, Lancashire (most likely Cromwellian)
27-28 September 1968 – Scotch of St James, Mayfair, London
29-30 September 1968 – Wales gigs
1-4 October 1968 – Wales gigs
5 October 1968 – Sutton in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire (no venue listed)
10 October 1968 – Commall Hebton (not sure this is correct)
11 October 1968 – Penzance, Cornwall (possibly Winter Gardens)
12 October 1968 – 400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon (Herald Express) It is missing from Jack’s diary but they also play here on 19 October
21 October 1968 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with The Pearlettes, The Elastic Band and Wall City Jazz Men
2 November 1968 – Ilford, London (possibly The Angel)
4 November 1968 – Sibs London (most likely Sibyllas, Swallow Street)
15-17 November 1968 – Scotland dates
23 November 1968 – Sheffield University, Sheffield, South Yorkshire with Led Zeppelin
7 December 1968 – Ilford, London (possibly The Angel)
14 December 1968 – Rotherham (no venue listed)
28 December 1968 – Stage Club, Oxford
18-19 January 1969 – Margate, Kent (most likely the Dreamland Ballroom)
The gig list cuts off here so not sure if there are any others
The 004 were a mid-1960s R&B group put together at the suggestion of Trevor Boswell, a partner in the Hugo Keleti agency, after Dusty Springfield’s disastrous expulsion from South Africa in late 1964. (Hugo Keleti was the father of Eve Boswell, the South African 1950s star, and Trevor was her husband.) The band comprised of expatriate Britons, who recorded a string of singles and a lone album for the CBS label.Lead guitarist Pete Clifford (b. 10 May 1943, Whetstone, London) had first played with The Jesters and then briefly worked with Georgie Fame in London before visiting South Africa for the first time in 1964 with Dusty Springfield as a member of her backing group, The Echoes. Following the fateful trip, Clifford played with Tom Jones on a UK tour and then formed The 004 to return to South Africa, sailing on the Capetown Castle on 10 June 1965 where the band got its set list together.
Bass player/singer Jack Russell (b. 29 April 1944, Caerleon, South Wales) and rhythm guitarist/singer Brian Gibson (b. 17 March 1942, Newport, South Wales) had first met in Wales as members of The Victors, who had a residency at the Latin Quarter in London’s West End. When the band broke up in June 1964, Russell toured the Costa Del Sol and Morocco with French pop singer Teddy Raye while Brian Gibson joined The Laurie Jay combo where he met and socialised with Pete Clifford. In March 1965, after the failed continental tour, Russell got a job as production manager with Vox in Dartford. When Clifford had the call from Boswell and was asked to form a band to return to South Africa that summer, he recruited Gibson, who in turn recommended Russell. The band added Londoner Peter Stember on drums to complete the line up.
After arriving in Durban by boat on 30 June 1965, the group began playing at the Al Fresco Night Club in a hotel on 1 July. The band signed to CBS and recorded a string of singles for CBS, kicking off with “The In Crowd” in November 1965. The following month, the band backed Gene Vincent in Durban for three months.Prior to the release of the group’s debut single, The 004 had briefly relocated to Johannesburg and worked the 505 Club in Kotze Street, Hillbrow. Back in Durban in early 1966, The 004 opened Tiles club, playing with The Ivy League in May. The following month, the band’s lone album It’s Alright was released and contained Gibson’s promising originals, “She’s Going Back Home Today”, “I’ve Found Her” and “Beverley” alongside covers of Curtis Mayfield’s title track and Mann, Weil and Stoller’s “On Broadway”. The album had been recorded in CBS studios in Johannesburg in late 1965 on an old two-track machine with overdubbing rather than the four-track Studer equipment widely available in Europe. During this time, Clifford and Russell did lots of studio work as session musicians recording with Eve Boswell, The Dream Merchants, The Sandpipers (the South African version), Johnny Collini and many others.
In August 1966, Nick ‘Doc’ Dokter (b. 24 July 1945, Kampen, Overijsel, Holland) was recruited from The Leemen Limited to replace Stember, who returned to the UK and later became an internationally renowned photographer, based in California.
Two months later, The 004 returned to Durban to play at Tiles and on 24 December joined a number of acts, including The Gonks, The Difference and The Dream Merchants to play a Christmas Eve show at Durban City Hall.
In March 1967 Gibson also left and Barry Mitchell from The In Crowd briefly took his place. Gibson later played with progressive rock band, Abstract Truth and lives in South Africa. Two months later, the band met John Kongos who invited the musicians, by then down to trio without Mitchell, to the UK to record that summer.
Clifford, Dokter and Russell recorded with John Kongos as a group called Floribunda Rose in London during mid-late 1967 before Clifford left to return to South Africa to join The Bats. Dokter also moved back to South Africa, albeit briefly, working as a boilermaker. He soon moved to Holland before emigrating to Canada where he played with Five Man Cargo, a UK band who later morphed in Cross Town Bus. In later years, he did session work for the Bruce Allan Agency and currently lives in Vancouver.
Russell meanwhile stuck with John Kongos until 1969 and recorded a string of singles in London as Scrugg before moving in to an advertising agency. He currently lives near Hampton Court.
Article by Nick Warburton
List of releases: 45: The In Crowd/Without You (CBS SSC 599) 1965 LP: It’s Alright (CBS ALD 8911) 1966 45: Goin’ Out Of My Head/Little Miss Trouble (CBS SSC 677) 1966 45: Happening Humpty/Lah To The Power of 6 (Continental PD 9198) 1966
Many thanks to Jack Russell, Nick Dokter, Pete Clifford, Vernon Joynson and Tertius Louw
Ed: The oddball single “Happening Humpty” was recorded in order to get Matt Mann to release The 004 from the CBS contract. The band felt suppressed by Mann who offered them no material. Mann refused to release the idiosyncratic and oddball trumpet work by one of South Africa’s top trumpeters. The idiotic inclusion of “out of time” bum notes was deliberate. Mann released the band. Graham Beggs then released the single under the Continental label. It has since become a collector’s item.
Chris Demetriou is best known for co-writing the UK top 5 hit “He’s Gonna Step On You Again” with fellow South African John Kongos and for producing Cat Stevens and former Manfred Mann singer Mike D’Abo. He talks to Nick Warburton about his South African years, working with UK-based groups Floribunda Rose and Scrugg and becoming a pastor.
Q) Hi Chris, I gather from your surname that your heritage is Greek? I know that you grew up in South Africa so what is the connection?I was born in Cyprus but my parents immigrated to South Africa and I stayed there until John Kongos and I moved to the UK in 1967.
Q) You started out as a keyboard player. Was John E Sharpe & The Squires your first group and how did you come to join them?
In fact I started playing guitar, moved on to bass guitar, and ended up playing a Farfisa organ out of necessity. I’m not sure, but I think Les Goode brought me into The Squires.
Q) Besides John E Sharpe and yourself, the other original members were bass player Les Goode, guitarist Barry Saks and drummer Mervyn Harris. The group has a reputation for being one of the best groups on the Johannesburg live scene in the mid-1960s. What do you remember about recording with the band?
We played as more of an R&B band when doing gigs but somehow changed styles in the recording studio. Hence, the cover version of “I am a rock” (by Paul Simon). The band was South Africa’s answer to The Rolling Stones.
Q) You co-wrote a few songs for the band with John E Sharpe. What prompted you to start composing material?
Although I had been writing lyrics since I was twelve and experimenting with different musical styles, it was very natural for me to write with someone else. I chose songwriting partners because that’s what worked for me.
Q) John E Sharpe & The Squires were managed by Clive Calder, who later went on to become one of the richest men in the music industry. What was he like to work with?
I found Clive to be very focused and extremely astute as a musician. You could see that he had a future beyond South Africa.
Q) The band’s lone album “Maybelline” is now almost impossible to find but is regarded as one of the best South African records from that period. What do you remember of the album’s sessions?
Hey I’d love to hear it again! We recorded it at Gallo Studios on a four-track machine. Not many overdubs or clever tweaking. A nearly “live” recording in a true R&B style.
Q) In mid-1967, you left the group to join fellow countryman, John Kongos in London for his new group Floribunda Rose alongside Dutch-born Nick Doktor, Welshman Jack Russell and English guitarist Pete Clifford. How did you make the connection with John and how did you know the other players?John located me through the Jo’burg Greek club. I was invited to his house and the next thing I knew we were planning to leave the country and seek fame and fortune in London. The other players were already in place.
Q) What were you first impressions of London and where did you all end up living? Also, do you have any memories of playing live on the local scene? I found one date for the band playing at Tiles in London in September 1967 with Simon Dupree & The Big Sound.
Wow! You have sourced some interesting information. The Tiles Club! I remember playing the Tiles Club more than once. However, most of our gigs were up and down the M1 at less prestigious venues. We did play some university events and supported more well known acts, but it’s so long ago, I wouldn’t be able to confirm if we were just in the crowd or on the actual bill. I remember seeing Joe Cocker and Jethro Tull.
Q) The group signed to Piccadilly Records and worked with John Schroeder on the single “One Way Street” c/w “Linda Loves Linda”, both sides of which are great tracks. What do you remember about recording this single? Were there are any other songs recorded that were subsequently scrapped?
John Schroeder was very organised when it came to booking studio time. We were in and out as quickly as was necessary to lay down the backing tracks. No real freedom to create on our own.
Q) What was the decision to change the band’s name from Floribunda Rose to Scrugg? Was it the same line up of musicians? I read that Henry Spinetti played some drums?
The “flower power” thing was on its way out and we thought a name change would help us re-focus and take a slightly different direction. Also, Henry had just joined the band.
Q) Scrugg issued three hopelessly rare singles for Pye, none of which seem to have sold that well. What do you remember about these tracks and why do you think the group never got the success it deserved?
We were managed by The Walker Brothers’ manager and had reasonable exposure on radio and some TV, so I do not really know why we didn’t make more of an impact. I suppose that this is just the way the music business runs.
Q) When Scrugg folded in early 1969, you elected to stay in England and continue to work with John Kongos on his solo material. What happened to the other members? I believe that Pete Clifford returned to South Africa to join The Bats?
John and I had burnt our bridges after leaving South Africa. Going back was not an option. John and I were very close – like brothers. Therefore, continuing to work together was natural.
Q) How did you come to move into production work? Did you still continue to perform?
Before “He’s Gonna Step On You Again” became a hit (and after the group had disbanded), I answered an ad in Melody Maker for a production assistant. It was GEM Productions, which was set up by Laurence Meyers and Tony Defries. Tony took me under his wing and I got to help their artists and producers in the studio and out. Sometimes mixing singles, other times helping with promotion. David Bowie, Gary Glitter, Johnny Johnson and the bandwagon, and Mike d’Abo were all part of the team. Right after the successes with John Kongos’ recordings on the Fly label, I seized the opportunity to get into production. I was introduced to Barry Krost (Cat Stevens’ manager) and he took me on board and immediately introduced me to A&M Records. I then established a strong connection with the label and recorded four albums with different artists (including “Down at Rachel’s Place” with Mike d’Abo).
Q) Tell me about your work with Cat Stevens. How did that come about?
As I was being managed by Barry Krost (BKM) it was only a matter of time before Stevens and I would work together. I first helped out on some live recording and then worked with him on the “Budda and the Chocolate Box” album. But it was not a good combination. Two Greek boys in the studio! I eventually had to back out in order to preserve the relationship. We are still friends.
Q) You also worked with Mike D’ Abo on his album “Down At Rachel’s Place”. What were those sessions like?
This is my finest recording. Even now I listen to it and enjoy every moment. We had the best of everything – musicians, arranger and engineer. Ken Scott was my engineer (he went on to produce David Bowie, Supertramp and Chris de Burgh).
Q) You are probably best known for co-writing “He’s Gonna Step On You Again” with John Kongos which became a huge hit in the UK, South Africa and the States and became a hit for The Happy Mondays years later. Tell me about the inspiration for that song and how you and John came up with it?
I had written the first part of the lyric in South Africa in protest of the political situation and the mistreatment of the black population. I had seen similarities between this and the abuse of the Red Indians. John liked the theme and we started writing a song with the guitar riff as a strong lead. John and I could write five songs a day if necessary but when we started writing this song it was different – we knew something truly unique was taking place.
Q) When did you give up a career in music to become a pastor? What prompted that change in career?
I had already moved away from the music business and into the media industry. The career change never took place, rather, I evolved. However, there was a distinct heart change. My career in the media is still very active, even though I am a pastor. Business is what I do – a pastor is who I am. The difference between “calling” and career. I trust you understand.
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