Tag Archives: Freddie Mack

400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

28 May 1965 – Johnny Kidd & The Pirates

29 May 1965 – The Diplomats

30 May 1965 – Robin & The Four Hoods

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

6 November 1965 – The Hellions

8 November 1965 – The Blackjacks

12 November 1965 – The Swinging Blue Jeans

Photo may be subject to copyright

13 November 1965 – The Emeralds

15 November 1965 – Gary Kane & The Tornados

19 November 1965 – Rob Storm & The Whispers

Photo may be subject to copyright

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)

Photo may be subject to copyright

24 December 1965 – The Deltas

27 December 1965 – The Riots

31 December 1965 – Dave & The Diamonds

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

1 April 1966 – The Alan Bown Set

2 April 1966 – Steve Brett & The Mavericks

9 April 1966 – The Bystanders

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

13 August 1966 – The Noblemen (Guitarist Martin Barre joined Jethro Tull in late 1968)

15-19 August 1966 – The Noblemen

Photo may be subject to copyright

20 August 1966 – Ray Anton & The Proform

21-22 August 1966 – The Symbols

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

10 September 1966 – Cops ‘n’ Robbers

12-16 September 1966 – Cops ‘n’ Robbers

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

10 December 1966 – Grand Union

16 December 1966 – Guest Group

Photo may be subject to copyright

17 December 1966 – The ‘N Betweens

Photo may be subject to copyright

23 December 1966 – The Onyx Set

24 December 1966 – The Mike Stuart Span

Photo may be subject to copyright

30 December 1966 – Lord Caesar Sutch & The Roman Empire

31 December 1966 – Mr Hip Soul Band

 

7 January 1967 – Trendsetters Limited

Photo may be subject to copyright

14 January 1967 – The Albert Square

20 January 1967 – The Undertakers

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

11 March 1967 – The Palmer James Group

17 March 1967 – The Last-Tik Band

18 March 1967 – The Shannons

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 May 1967 – The Lemon Line

 

2 June 1967 – The Hoboes

Photo may be subject to copyright

3 June 1967 – The Worrying Kynde

9 June 1967 – The Children

10 June 1967 – The Ray King Soul Band

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

1-7 July 1967 – The Mike Stuart Span

8 July 1967 – The Raging Storms

10-12 July 1967 – The Raging Storms

Photo may be subject to copyright

15-21 July 1967 – The ‘N Betweens

22-28 July 1967 – Mr Hip Soul Band

29 July-4 August 1967 – Wellington Kitch Band

Photo may be subject to copyright

5-11 August 1967 – The Heart and Souls

12-18 August 1967 – The Delroy Good Good Band

19-21 August 1967 – The ‘N Betweens

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 September 1967 – The Colour Supplement

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

17 November 1967 – The Scots of St James

18 November 1967 – The Shiralee

Photo may be subject to copyright

24 November 1967 – The Cat Soul Packet

25 November 1967 – The Shame

Photo may be subject to copyright

1 December 1967 – The Shell Shock Show

2 December 1967 – The ‘N Betweens

8 December 1967 – The Foundations

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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)

Photo may be subject to copyright

23 February 1968 – Simon Dupree & The Big Sound

24 February 1968 – Cat Soul Show

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

26 April 1968 – The Shy Limbs (Greg Lake on bass)

27 April 1968 – Delroy Williams & The Sugar Band

 

3 May 1968 – My Dear Watson

Photo may be subject to copyright

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)

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

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

Photo may be subject to copyright

12 October 1968 – Scrugg (formerly Floribunda Rose)

19 October 1968 – Scrugg

26 October 1968 – Finders Keepers

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 November 1968 – Mud

9 November 1968 – Hopscotch

15 November 1968 – Indiana Highway (Friday)

16 November 1968 – The Swamp with Jon & James

23 November 1968 – Breakthru

30 November 1968 – Ebony Blush

 

7 December 1968 – Cardboard Replica

14 December 1968 – Palmyra Stock

Photo may be subject to copyright

19 December 1968 – Bandwagon and The Grand Union

21 December 1968 – Bubblegum

24 December 1968 – The Mike Stuart Span

26 December 1968 – Mud

Photo may be subject to copyright

28 December 1968 – The Epics

31 December 1968 – The Ebonites

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author

Toft’s, Folkestone, Kent

Run by Harold and Doris Toft and located at 35-39 Grace Hill in Folkestone, Kent, Toft’s was a major music venue on the English south coast during the 1960s.

I’ve started to list gigs below and would welcome any additions and memories in the comments section below.

7 May 1966 (Saturday) – Georgie Fame & The Blue Flames (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

14 May 1966 (Saturday) – John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

21 May 1966 (Saturday) – Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

27 May 1966 (Friday) – The Playboys (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

28 May 1966 (Saturday) – Tony Knight’s Chessmen (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

29 May 1966 (Sunday) – Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

30 May 1966 (Monday) – The Playboys (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

4 June 1966 (Saturday) – Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

5 June 1966 (Sunday) – The Gass (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

11 June 1966 (Saturday) – The Alan Price Set (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

12 June 1966 (Sunday) – Herbie Goins & The Night-timers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

18 June 1966 (Saturday) – Chris Farlowe & The Thunderbirds (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

19 June 1966 (Sunday) – Ralph Denyer’s Rockhouse Band (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

25 June 1966 (Saturday) – Sounds Incorporated (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

26 June 1966 (Sunday) – The Amboy Dukes (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

2 July 1966 (Saturday) – The Nashville Teens (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

3 July 1966 (Sunday) – Roy C with The League of Gentlemen (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

9 July 1966 (Saturday) – The Shotgun Express (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

10 July 1966 (Sunday) – Rufus Thomas & Bluesology (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

16 July 1966 (Saturday) – The Mike Cotton Sound with Lucas (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

17 July 1966 (Sunday) – Tony Rivers & The Castaways (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

22 July 1966 (Friday) – The Thornton Group and The End (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) The End may not be the Surrey band that worked with Bill Wyman but a local group instead

23 July 1966 (Saturday) – Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

24 July 1966 (Sunday) – The In Crowd (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

27 July 1966 (Wednesday) – The Thornton Group and The End (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) The End may not be the Surrey band that worked with Bill Wyman but a local group instead

29 July 1966 (Friday) – The Thornton Group and The End (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) The End may not be the Surrey band that worked with Bill Wyman but a local group instead

30 July 1966 (Saturday) – The Shevelles (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

31 July 1966 (Sunday) – Alexis Korner (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

3 August 1966 (Wednesday) – The Thornton Group and The End (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

5 August 1966 (Friday) – The Thornton Group and The End (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) The End may not be the Surrey band that worked with Bill Wyman but a local group instead

6 August 1966 (Saturday) – The Gass (Melody Maker)

7 August 1966 (Sunday) – The Gass (Melody Maker)

10 August 1966 (Wednesday) – The Thornton Group and The End (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) The End may not be the Surrey band that worked with Bill Wyman but a local group instead

13 August 1966 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

14 August 1966 (Sunday) – The Senate (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

20 August 1966 (Saturday) – Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

21 August 1966 (Sunday) – The Gass (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

27 August 1966 (Saturday) – John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

28 August 1966 (Sunday) – The Mike Cotton Sound with Lucas (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

29 August 1966 (Monday) – The Scots of St James (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

3 September 1966 (Saturday) – Jimmy James & The Vagabonds (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

4 September 1966 (Sunday) – The Ying Tongs (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

10 September 1966 (Saturday) – Herbie Goins & The Night-Timers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

11 September 1966 (Sunday) – The Vibrations (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) The Vibrations were most likely backed by The Noblemen

16 September 1966 (Friday) – Georgie Fame & The Blue Flames (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

17 September 1966 (Saturday) – The Peeps (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

18 September 1966 (Sunday) – The Peeps (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

23 September 1966 (Friday) – The Vibrations and The Noblemen (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

24 September 1966 (Saturday) – Rick ‘N’ Beckers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

25 September 1966 (Sunday) – John McCoy’s Crawdaddies (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

30 September 1966 (Friday) – The Summercumlauds (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

 

1 October 1966 (Saturday) – The Ying Tongs (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

2 October 1966 (Sunday) – The Tonicks (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

8 October 1966 (Saturday) – The HT (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

9 October 1966 (Sunday) – Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Fabulous 208)

15 October 1966 (Saturday) – Lee Dorsey (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald) Looks like he was replaced by Guy Darrell Syndicate

16 October 1966 (Sunday) – The Scots of St James (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

21 October 1966 (Friday) – Live group (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

22 October 1966 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

23 October 1966 (Sunday) – The Scots of St James (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

25 October 1966 (Tuesday) – The Scots of St James (Melody Maker) This needs confirmation

28 October 1966 (Friday) – Live group (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

29 October 1966 (Saturday) – The Gass (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

30 October 1966 (Sunday) – The Scots of St James (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

4 November 1966 (Friday) – The Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

5 November 1966 (Saturday) – T D Backus and The Powehouse (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

6 November 1966 (Sunday) – The Scots of St James (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

11 November 1966 (Friday) – The Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

12 November 1966 (Saturday) – Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

13 November 1966 (Sunday) – The Meantimers (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

18 November 1966 (Friday) – The Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

19 November 1966 (Saturday) – The HT (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

20 November 1966 (Sunday) – The Original Dyaks (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

25 November 1966 (Friday) – The Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

26 November 1966 (Saturday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

27 November 1966 (Sunday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

 

2 December 1966 (Friday) – The Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

3 December 1966 (Saturday) – The Nite People (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

4 December 1966 (Sunday) – The Luther Morgan Relationship (Melody Maker) The Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald has The Derek Savage Foundation instead

10 December 1966 (Saturday) – The Meddy Evils (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

11 December 1966 (Sunday) – Guy Darrell & The Gnomes of Zurich (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

16 December 1966 (Friday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

17 December 1966 (Saturday) – Little Richard, The Quotations and The Kingpins (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

18 December 1966 (Sunday) – The Peeps (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

23 December 1966 (Friday) – The Mixed Feelings and The Spectre Quin Team (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

24 December 1966 (Saturday) – The Fleur De Lys and The Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

26 December 1966 (Monday) – The Heart and Souls and The Kingpins (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

31 December 1966 (Saturday) – The Mike Cotton Sound with Lucas and he Mixed Feelings (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

7 January 1967 (Saturday) – The Original Dyaks (Melody Maker)

8 January 1967 (Sunday) – The See-Saw Soul Set (Melody Maker)

14 January 1967 (Saturday) – The Meantimers (Melody Maker)

15 January 1967 (Sunday) – The Fenmen (Melody Maker)

22 January 1967 (Sunday) – The Spencer Davis Group (Melody Maker)

28 January 1967 (Saturday) – The Who (Melody Maker)

4 February 1967 (Saturday) – Manfred Mann (Melody Maker)

11 February 1967 (Saturday) – Maxine Brown (possibly with The Q-Set) (Melody Maker) Melody Maker also has The Gass

18 February 1967 (Saturday) – Cream (Melody Maker)

19 February 1967 (Sunday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

25 February 1967 (Saturday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

 

4 March 1967 (Saturday) – The Power House (Melody Maker)

11 March 1967 (Saturday) – Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band (Melody Maker)

12 March 1967 (Sunday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

18 March 1967 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Melody Maker)

24 March 1967 (Friday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

25 March 1967 (Saturday) – The Gass and The Web with J L Watson (Melody Maker)

26 March 1967 (Sunday) – The Amboy Dukes (Melody Maker)

27 March 1967 (Monday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

31 March 1967 (Friday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

1 April 1967 (Saturday) – Prince Buster & The Bees (Melody Maker) The British Music Archive site lists The Wilde Flowers on this date

2 April 1967 (Sunday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

7 April 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

8 April 1967 (Saturday) – Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band (Melody Maker)

9 April 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

14 April 1967 (Friday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

15 April 1967 (Saturday) – John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers (Melody Maker)

16 April 1967 (Sunday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

21 April 1967 (Friday) – Danny & The Belmonts (Melody Maker)

22 April 1967 (Saturday) – The Mike Cotton Sound (Melody Maker)

23 April 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

28 April 1967 (Friday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

29 April 1967 (Saturday) – The Squaredeals Show (Melody Maker)

30 April 1967 (Sunday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

6 May 1967 (Saturday) – Prince Buster & The Bees (Melody Maker)

12 May 1967 (Friday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

13 May 1967 (Saturday) – Graham Bond Organisation (Melody Maker)

14 May 1967 (Sunday) – The Wilde Flowers (British Music Archive website)

19 May 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

20 May 1967 (Saturday) – Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band (John Culley’s diary/Melody Maker)

26 May 1967 (Friday) – The Wilde Flowers (Melody Maker)

27 May 1967 (Saturday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

28 May 1967 (Sunday) – The Gass (Fabulous 208/Melody Maker)

29 May 1967 (Monday) – Take Five (Melody Maker)

 

2 June 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

3 June 1967 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Melody Maker)

4 June 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

9 June 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

10 June 1967 (Saturday) – The Web with John L Watson (Melody Maker)

11 June 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

17 June 1967 (Saturday) – Chris Farlowe & The Thunderbirds (Fabulous 208/Melody Maker)

23 June 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

24 June 1967 (Saturday) – Ronnie Jones & The Q-Set (Melody Maker)

25 June 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

30 June 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

1 July 1967 (Saturday) – John Lee Hooker with The Savoy Brown Blues Band (Melody Maker)

2 July 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

5 July 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

7 July 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

8 July 1967 (Saturday) – The Web with John L Watson (Melody Maker)

9 July 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

12 July 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

14 July 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

15 July 1967 (Saturday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker) This show was recorded for a live LP

16 July 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

19 July 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

21 July 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

22 July 1967 (Saturday) – The Gass (Melody Maker)

23 July 1967 (Sunday) – Georgie Fame (Melody Maker)

26 July 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

28 July 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

29 July 1967 (Saturday) – The Coloured Raisins with Honey Darling (Melody Maker)

30 July 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

 

2 August 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

4 August 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

5 August 1967 (Saturday) – The Skatalites (Melody Maker)

6 August 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

8 August 1967 (Tuesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

9 August 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

12 August 1967 (Saturday) – John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers (Melody Maker)

13 August 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

15 August 1967 (Tuesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

16 August 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

17 August 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

18 August 1967 (Saturday) – Chicken Shack (Melody Maker)

19 August 1967 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Melody Maker)

20 August 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

22 August 1967 (Tuesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

23 August 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

26 August 1967 (Saturday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

27 August 1967 (Sunday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker) Replaced by The Jeff Beck Group. Please see comment from Mick Morris below

 

1 September 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

2 September 1967 (Saturday) – The Gass (Fabulous 208/Melody Maker)

3 September 1967 (Sunday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

6 September 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

8 September 1967 (Friday) – The Scots of St James (Melody Maker)

9 September 1967 (Saturday) – The Skatalites (Melody Maker)

10 September 1967 (Sunday) – The Scots of St James (Melody Maker)

13 September 1967 (Wednesday) – The Scots of St James (Melody Maker)

15 September 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

16 September 1967 (Saturday) – The Bag O’ Nails (Melody Maker)

17 September 1967 (Sunday) – The Peddlers (Melody Maker)

20 September 1967 (Wednesday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

22 September 1967 (Friday) – Scots of St James (Melody Maker)

23 September 1967 (Saturday) – Ferris Wheel (Fabulous 208/Melody Maker)

24 September 1967 (Sunday) – Scots of St James (Melody Maker)

29 September 1967 (Friday) – Resident band (Melody Maker)

30 September 1967 (Saturday) – Marmalade (Fabulous 208/Melody Maker)

 

1 October 1967 (Sunday) – Dr Marigold’s Prescription (Melody Maker)

7 October 1967 (Saturday) – The Squaredeals (Melody Maker)

8 October 1967 (Sunday) – The Geranium Pond (Melody Maker)

14 October 1967 (Saturday) – Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

21 October 1967 (Saturday) – Savoy Brown Blues Band (Melody Maker)

22 October 1967 (Sunday) – The Amboy Dukes, JR Walker & The All Stars and The Wages of Sin (Melody Maker)

Melody Maker stopped advertising the venue at this point

 

4 May 1968 (Saturday) – Warren Davis Monday Band (Del Paramor’s gig diary)

 

14 September 1968 (Saturday) – Ten Years After (http://www.dover-kent.com/Tofts-Folkestone.html)

 

26 October 1968 (Saturday) – The Mike Stuart Span (Fabulous 208)

 

2 November 1968 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Fabulous 208)

 

9 August 1969 (Saturday) – Ambrose Slade (http://www.dover-kent.com/Tofts-Folkestone.html)

 

15 November 1969 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Keith Guster’s diary)

 

24 December 1969 (Wednesday) – The Amboy Dukes (Keith Guster’s diary)

 

28 March 1970 (Saturday) – The Amboy Dukes (Keith Guster’s diary)

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author.

 

Ralph Denyer & The Uptown Band

Thanks to Roy Stacey for the photo. The Uptown Band plays the Cromwellian around July 1966

Ralph Denyer (lead vocals, guitar) 

Graham Wilson (lead guitar)

Art Regis (keyboards)

Tony Priestland (alto sax)

Roy Stacey (bass)

Jim Toomey (drums)

The Uptown Band linked up with Ralph Denyer after he’d ditched The Rockhouse Band in mid-July 1966.

Stacey recalls that the band was booked by Georgie Fame and Zoot Money’s managers Rik and John Gunnell, who ran the Flamingo Club in Soho’s Wardour Street as well as the Bag O’Nails in nearby Kingley Street and Brixton’s Ram Jam. The Uptown Band played all three venues regularly during the latter half of 1966.

He also remembers that the band played at the Roaring Twenties in Carnaby Street which was run by Jamaican Count Suckle, owner of the Cue Club in Paddington.

Another notable gig took place at the Cromwellian in November 1966 when Mike Love from The Beach Boys sat in on Hammond organ, together with Georgie Fame’s percussionist “Speedy” Acquaye.

Around Christmas the band folded and Jim Toomey formed Jon with former Rockhouse Band and Gass member Stuart Cowell (guitar/vocals) plus Tom Tierney (bass) from Lulu’s backing band; Ron Reynolds (keys); and singer Chris Simmons (who left during 1967).

Jon became Still Life in February 1968 when Con Byrne took over bass and Tom Tierney moved to rhythm guitar. In March, however, Still Life joined forces with Warren Davis (and his two sax players) and worked as a new version The Warren Davis Monday Band from March-September 1968.

In February 1969, Cowell and Toomey joined forces with Bernie Holland (guitar) and Jerome Arnold (bass) to form The Jerome Arnold Band who played together until late May 1969.

Next, Toomey reunited with former Uptown Band sax player Tony Priestland in Titus Groan. Toomey later found fame with The Tourists, featuring Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart.

Ralph Denyer initially worked as a solo singer/songwriter before joining Welsh rock band, Blonde on Blonde. Later he joined Aquila and co-wrote The Guitar Handbook with American guitarist singer/songwriter Isaac Guillory. He died in 2011.

Art Regis meanwhile joined Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound in January/February 1967. He didn’t stay long, however, and in June that year briefly worked with Billie Davis & The Quality followed by a month with singer Engelbert Humperdinck.

In late July, Regis joined Jimmy James & The Vagabonds where he reunited with Nat Fredericks from his early 1960s band, Rupert & The Red Devils. He stayed until September 1968 and then worked with Art Regis & The Brass Cannon.

Tony Priestland briefly joined Jimmy James in July 1968 but it’s not clear how long he stayed before he reunited with Toomey in Titus Groan.

Roy Stacey, who’d filled in for John Treais in The Five Proud Walkers during late 1966, including a show at the Ram Jam in Brixton, also covered for his successor John Ford in January-February 1967 when he was ill. Later that year, Stacey worked with that band’s drummer Richard ‘Hud’ Hudson and backed American guitarist Champion Jack Dupree for several gigs at Eel Pie Island (most likely in August).

After auditioning for the bass player’s spot in The Crazy World of Arthur Brown at the Middle Earth in Covent Garden in September 1967 (he lost out to Nick Greenwood), Stacey briefly reunited with Art Regis in Jimmy James & The Vagabonds in March 1968, playing a handful of dates.

Stacey next worked with an unnamed gypsy rock eight-piece group who recorded two songs at Radio Luxembourg that year.

“It was quirky and ahead of the time,” he says. “We had a girl singer; two cellists, who doubled on bassoon and other wind instruments; singer/songwriter and guitarist Andy Rae; second guitarist Terry O’Leary; Alistair Fielder on various range flutes; me on electric bass; and drummer Iain Clark.

“Albert Hammond produced the acetate. We took the band to Tony Viscounti, who said the line-up wouldn’t work.”

In August 1968 Iain Clark auditioned for Danny Kirwan’s band but when the young guitarist joined Fleetwood Mac, the drummer joined Cressida (and later Uriah Heep) in October. The gypsy rock group carried on but folded around 1971.

However, during late 1968 (or possibly 1969), Stacey reunited with Art Regis again in an early jazz rock group that recorded material with the intention of playing some gigs in Sweden. Featuring jazz singer Bobby Breen and tenor sax legend Dick Morrissey (whose wife was Swedish), the project proved short-lived.

In the early 1970s, Stacey reunited with Paul Brett and worked with him alongside Johnny Joyce from Paul Brett’s Sage, recording some BBC Radio sessions.

Regis who lives in Germany and Stacey continue to pursue music projects. Toomey lives in Australia and also continues to play as well as act.

Notable gigs: 

15 July 1966 – Beachcomber Club, Nottingham with Solomon Burke (backed by Bluesology) (Nottingham Evening Post) Billed as Ralph Denyer’s Uptown Band

16 July 1966 – Britannia Rowing Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post) Billed as Ralph Denyer’s Uptown Band

23 July 1966 – New Spot, Gosport, Hampshire (Portsmouth News)

 

5 August 1966 – Britannia Rowing Club (Nottingham Evening Post)

6 August 1966 – Beachcomber Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post) Says from Rufus Thomas tour

14 August 1966 – Nottingham Boat Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post)

Many thanks to Roy Stacey, Art Regis, Iain Clark and John Treais for helping with the story.

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without prior permission from the author.

Johnny Kidd & The New Pirates

Photo: Nick Simper. Left to right: Johnny Kidd, Mick Stewart, Roger Truth, Nick Simper and Ray Soper at Kingsbury Odeon on 21 May 1966

Johnny Kidd (lead vocals)

Mick Stewart (lead guitar/vocals)

Nick Simper (bass/vocals)

Ray Soper (keyboards)

Roger Truth (drums)

When legendary British singer Johnny Kidd decided to part with the original Pirates after a gig on 19 April 1966, he had some outstanding gigs to honour and hired several, temporary, groups to fulfil the bookings, one of which was west London R&B outfit Jeff Curtis & The Flames.

The band’s drummer, Pete Burt, younger brother of Dave Burt in Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers, was a window cleaner and was cleaning Kidd’s windows one day when they got talking. The group played a couple of gigs with Kidd, including a naval base in Chatham, before keyboard player Ray Soper was fired.

Unknown group back Kidd as The New Pirates. Image may be subject to copyright

Interestingly, Johnny Kidd & The Pirates played at the annual Festival Gardens Gala in Battersea on 7 May but it’s very doubtful that his backing band were The Flames on this occasion as they were performing at the Locarno Ballroom in Swindon on this date.

Soper decided to form a new group to carry on as Kidd’s new version of The Pirates and got hold of his friend, bass player Nick Simper, who he’d previously worked with in Buddy Britten & The Regents and Cryano & The Bergeracs during late 1964-mid-1965. Roger Truth was the drummer in both groups.

In need of a guitarist, they brought in Mick Stewart who’d, previously played with a number of west London bands, notably The Redcaps and The All-Nite Workers (who briefly backed singer Simon Scott).

Anyone interested in reading more about this period, should read Nick Simper’s excellent story. Adie Barrett’s excellent site is also worth exploring.

The new line-up’s debut gig was in Bromley, southeast London.

The gigs below are all from Nick Simper’s diary unless otherwise noted:

Notable gigs:

14 May 1966 – Bromley, south London (most likely Bromley Court Hotel) (debut)

Image may be subject to copyright

20 May 1966 – Royal Albion Hotel, Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex (Essex County Standard)

21 May 1966 – Odeon, Kingsbury, north London

26 May 1966 – Leas Cliff Hall, Folkestone, Kent

27 May 1966 – Abergavenny, Wales (most likely Town Hall)

Image may be subject to copyright

17 June 1966 – Victoria Cross Gallery, Wantage, Oxfordshire (North Berks Herald)

Image may be subject to copyright

19 June 1966 – Plaza Ballroom, Newbury, Berkshire (North Berks Herald)

Image may be subject to copyright

25 June 1966 – Leas Cliff Hall, Folkestone, Kent (Kentish Express)

26 June 1966 – Bure Club, Mudeford, Dorset (Website: https://bournemouthbeatboom.wordpress.com/gigs-1966/)

 

?? July 1966 – Gig in Oxford

Image may be subject to copyright

16 July 1966 – Royal Lido, Prestatyn, Clwyd, Wales with The Atlantic Sounds (Rhyl & Prestayn Gazette)

?? July 1966 – Gig in Seaton, Devon (most likely Seaton Beat Club at Seaton Town Hall)

Ray Soper left at this point and joined The Denims/Headline News

 

?? August 1966 – Winter Gardens, Weston-Super-Mare, Somerset with Eden Kane (with Peter Sarstedt on bass)

?? August 1966 – Gig in Grimsby, Lincolnshire

19 August 1966 – Caird Hall, Dundee, Scotland (first date on Scottish tour) with The Red Hawks, Dunfermline Boys, The Ivy League, The Jay-Birds, The St Louis Union and David and Jonathan (http://www.adiebarrett.co.uk/johnnykidd/timeline/timeline.htm)

Image may be subject to copyright

26 August 1966 – The Leys, Clacton, Essex with Hap & Unit Four and Buzz Inc (Essex County Standard)

Image may be subject to copyright

29 August 1966 – Civic Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire with The Outer Limits (Nantwich Chronicle)

29 August 1966 – Regal Ballroom, Ripley, Derbyshire (Derbyshire Evening Telegraph) Also booked to play 12 November 1966 but cancelled

 

3 September 1966 – Birmingham Flower Show, Handsworth Park, Birmingham with Tony Jackson & The Vibrations (Sports Argus)

3 September 1966 – Gig in Orpington, Kent

19-25 September 1966 – Cabaret dates at Flamingo Club, Darlington with Robb Storme & The Whispers (with former Mojos member Lewis Collins on bass)

 

1 October 1966 – Raven Club, RAF Waddington, Lincolnshire

6 October 1966 – Gig in Oldham (some source say Bolton), Lancashire (cancelled)

7 October 1966 – Tried to get gig at Nelson Imperial, Nelson, Lancashire but not successful

Kidd and Simper were involved in a car crash on the return journey to London in the early hours of 8 October, a few miles south of Bury, Lancashire. Simper was seriously injured. Kidd, however, was pronounced dead on his arrival at Bolton Royal Infirmary.

In the aftermath, Mick Stewart participated in a Jerry Lee Lewis tour. Then, once Simper had recuperated, Simper and Stewart hooked up with Bobby Hebb for a UK tour, debuting on 1 December 1966 while Truth joined Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound.

The New Pirates:

Mick Stewart (lead guitar/vocals)

Nick Simper (bass/vocals)

John Carroll (keyboards/vocals)

Roger Truth (drums)

Sometime in early February, Simper and Stewart decided to reform The New Pirates. Truth, who’d been playing with Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound, agreed to re-join and they brought in keyboard player John Carroll, who’d recently left Tony Knight’s Chessmen.

According to Melody Maker, The New Pirates played at the Upper Cut in Forest Gate, east London on 17 February 1967 with The Afex and The Trekkas.

Image may be subject to copyright

However, the Newham, West Ham & East Ham, Barking and Stratford Express lists The Apex and Jo Jo Gunne as support.

Photo: Nick Simper. Left to right: John Carroll, Roger Truth, Nick Simper and Mick Stewart, February 1967 prior to Cornwall tour

Truth played the London show and then, a few days before a short tour of Cornwall commenced, he returned to Freddie Mack’s band, possibly for that group’s gig at the Village in Cleethorpes on 22 February.

James Smith, who’d worked with Carroll in The London Beats in 1965, auditioned but turned the job down and subsequently joined Hamilton & The Hamilton Movement in March (replacing Phil Wainman).

John Kerrison, who’d previously drummed with a number of bands, notably Frankie Reid & The Casuals and The Rockin’ Eccentrics, took his place.

The revised line-up undertook the Cornwall tour and played a couple of gigs in England before heading to Scotland.

Notable gigs:

23 February 1967 – Royal Naval Air Station, Helston, Cornwall

Image may be subject to copyright

24 February 1967 – Winter Gardens, Penzance, Cornwall with The Hoboes (West Briton & Royal Cornwall Gazette)

Image may be subject to copyright

25 February 1967 – Blue Lagoon, Newquay, Cornwall with The Other Five (West Briton & Royal Cornwall Gazette)

 

3 March 1967 – Gig in Welwyn Garden City, Herts (possibly Woodhall Community Centre)

24-25 March 1967 – Kelvin Hall, Glasgow, Scotland with Unit 4 Plus 2, Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Titch, Screaming Lord Sutch and The Mack Sound

27 March 1967 – Kelvin Hall, Glasgow, Scotland with Unit 4 Plus 2, Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Titch, Screaming Lord Sutch and The Mack Sound

Returning to London, the band found there was little demand for The New Pirates and the members started to look around for other work.

Thanks to his contacts with bass player Peter Carney who he had worked with in The Flexmen and The London Beats (and briefly Tony Knight’s Chessmen), Carroll played with Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band for a few weeks (debuting on 26 April in Croydon) before Dave Greenslade was taken on as a permanent member.

According to Nick Simper’s website, The New Pirates met on 1 May 1967 to discuss their future and decided to go their separate ways.

Later that month, Simper would join Billie Davis & The Quality. However, when work dried up, he became a member of Screaming Lord Sutch & The Savages during July. Next he signed up with The Flowerpot Men (September 1967-February 1968) before forming the original Deep Purple.

After his brief time with Geno Washington, John Carroll worked with Herbie Goins & The Nightimers from August 1967 through to March 1968. He then played with The Flowerpot Men briefly (just after Simper had departed). In early 1969, he was part of the backing band appearing on Stevie Wonder’s UK tour.

In late August, 1967, John Kerrison joined Episode Six who featured future Deep Purple members Ian Gillan and Roger Glover and remained until August 1968.

After working on a few projects (including working with Don Arden’s son David), Mick Stewart joined Hamilton & The Hamilton Movement around October 1967 and stayed until April 1968. He then worked with The James Royal Set before working briefly with The Flowerpot Men in late 1968 (after Carroll had departed). During 1969, he replaced Frank Torpey in The Sweet.

Interestingly, a band called themselves The New Pirates was billed to perform the following dates, but it’s not clear who the musicians were.

2 July 1967 (for two weeks) – Blue Lagoon, Newquay, Cornwall (West Briton & Royal Cornish Gazette)

Roger Truth might have been one of the members as he left Freddie Mack at the end of June 1967.

Big thank you to Adrian Barrett, Nick Simper, Ray Soper, John Carroll, Mick Stewart and John Kerrison.

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author.

 

Cat Soul Packet/Cat Road Show starring US Flattop

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Alan Rowell, Richard Henry, US Flattop

This little known soul act was active from around spring 1967 through to the end of 1969 and had an extremely fluid line-up with tonnes of musicians coming and going.

I’d be grateful for any further personnel in the comments below as well as stories and notable gigs.

Photo: Woking Herald. US Flattop with The Soul System, October 1966. Photo may be subject to copyright

Judging by adverts in the music press, it looks like US Flattop first worked with the band The Soul System in 1966. When he left to form this new group, his former outfit became Ivan St Claire & The Soul System.

Flattop’s new band was billed as both The Cat Soul Packet and The Cat Road Show, but mainly the latter.

An early mention in Melody Maker from April 1967 reveals the group was initially a 14-piece act but on another UK tour in August that year, there were 12 members. A show in September 1969 lists only nine members.

Photo: Mike Fauré. Keith Bleasby and Jacqui, late 1967

As well as starring singer US Flattop, the band also featured several guest singers over the years, as well as dancers, including Lorna and Lesley in late 1967,  Jacqui and Sue in summer 1968 and Leroy and Jacqui in late 1968.

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Carl Griffiths, Dave Coxhill, Mike Fauré and Jon Lee

Thanks to South African tenor sax player Mike Fauré, I’ve been able to piece together the group’s line up for mid-September to early November 1967.

Fauré kept a diary and very generously shared the tour dates and band photos shown here.

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Fred D’Albert, Alan Rowell and Tony Knight

When he joined the band in mid-September 1967, the group comprised the following musicians:

US Flattop – Lead vocals

Richard Henry – Lead vocals

Keith Bleasby  – Spokesperson and percussion

Fred D’Albert – Guitar

Ted Fraser – Keyboards

Alan “James” Rowell – Bass

Dave Coxhill – Baritone sax

Mike Fauré – Tenor sax

Carl Griffiths – Tenor sax

Jon Lee – Trumpet

Tony Knight – Drums/Vocals

Jacqui – Dancer

Photo: Mike Fauré. Terry Knight

Mike Fauré says that he joined the band in time to play his first gig at the OVC Club in Earl’s Court.

Fred D’Albert, Tony Knight, Alan Rowell and Dave Coxhill all joined in September after Tony Knight’s Chessmen split up.

Jamaican Carl Griffiths had previously played with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds and Prince Buster & The Bees.

American Richard Henry, who hailed from Detroit, had first played with The Zig Zag Band when he came to England and then joined Timebox.

During 1967, he also led Tales of the City whose band opened for The Cat Soul Show in late August 1967 at the California Ballroom (see advert and gig listing below).

Photo: Mike Fauré. Richard Henry and Tony Knight

It is possible Keith Bleasby, Ted Fraser and Jon Lee had worked with the band on earlier tours in 1967.

After the 4 November date below, Mike Fauré joined the Paris-based Eddie Lee Mattison Soul Revue. He returned to South Africa in 1968 and briefly worked with The Square Set and Freedom’s Children before moving to the US where he continues to perform.

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Carl Griffiths, Mike Fauré and Ted Fraser

I believe that Carl Griffiths may have rejoined The Bees, which changed name to The Pyramids. However, he may have remained with The Cat Soul Packet longer.

Richard Henry later recorded some solo material.

Fred D’Albert and Tony Knight stuck together in The Magicians. D’Albert later played with Sweetwater Canal.

Alan Rowell joined The Simon Raverne Trio during 1968 while Dave Coxhill joined Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound around February 1968. He later reunited with Carl Griffiths in Manfred Mann Chapter 3.

Photo may be subject to copyright. Image from Melody Maker

I have found the following gigs from Melody Maker (unless otherwise noted) and would welcome any additions:

Photo: Birmingham Evening Mail. Photo may be subject to copyright

20 May 1967 – Iron Curtain Club, Small Heath, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail) Billed as Cats Soul Packet with US Flattop

 

15 June 1967 – Public Hall, Epping, Essex

16 June 1967 – Hemel Hempstead Pavilion, Hemel Hempstead, Herts

Photo: Birmingham Evening Mail. Photo may be subject to copyright

17 June 1967 – Iron Curtain Club, Small Heath, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail) Billed as The Cat with US Flattop

18 June 1967 – Blue Room, Edmonton, north London

Photo: Birmingham Evening Mail. Photo may be subject to copyright

22 July 1967 – Iron Curtain Club, Small Heath, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail) Billed as The Cat with US Flattop

29 July 1967 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Leicester Daily Mercury)

Photo: Melody Maker. Photo may be subject to copyright

4 August 1967 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London Billed as Flat Top and The Cat Band

5 August 1967 – Tin Hat, Kettering, Northamptonshire (Dave Clemo research) Billed as The Cat with USA Flattop

Photo: Lincolnshire Standard/Spalding Guardian. Photo may be subject to copyright

12 August 1967 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Zany Woodruff Operation, Katch 22 and Ray Bones (Lincolnshire Guardian) Billed as The Cat with US singer Flattop

Photo may be subject to copyright

25 August 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Beds with Richard Henry’s Tales of The City

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Tony Knight, Mike Fauré, Fred D’Albert and Dave Coxhill

21 September 1967 – OVC Club, Earl’s Court, west London (Mike Fauré’s diary)

23 September 1967 – College of Further Education, Eastbourne, East Sussex (Mike Fauré’s diary)

26 September 1967 – Town Hall, High Wycombe,  Bucks (Mike Fauré’s diary)

 

5 October 1967 – RAF Base, Helston, Cornwall (Mike Fauré’s diary)

6 October 1967 – Winter Gardens, Penzance, Cornwall (Mike Fauré’s diary)

Photo: Mike Fauré

7-8 October 1967 – Flamingo Ballroom, Redruth, Cornwall (Mike Fauré’s diary)

13 October 1967 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Mike Fauré’s diary)

14 October 1967 – OVC Club, Earl’s Court, west London (Mike Fauré’s diary)

18 October 1967 – Hemel Hempstead Pavilion, Hemel Hempstead, Herts (Mike Fauré’s diary)

20 October 1967 – Venue in Salisbury, Wiltshire (Mike Fauré’s diary) This was probably Alex Disco or City Hall

21 October 1967 – Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey (Mike Fauré’s diary)

22 October 1967 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Chatham, Kent (Chatham, Rochester & Gillingham News/Mike Fauré’s diary)

Photo: Western Gazette. Photo may be subject to copyright

27 October 1967 – Steering Wheel Club, Dorchester, Dorset (Mike Fauré’s diary)

Thanks to Mike Fauré for supplying the clipping

28 October 1967 – Blue Lagoon, Newquay, Cornwall (Mike Fauré’s diary)

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Ted Fraser, US Flattop, Keith Bleasby, Carl Griffiths and Mike Fauré

3 November 1967 – Town Hall, Selkirk, Scotland (Mike Fauré’s diary)

4 November 1967 – Hotel, Galashiels, Scotland (Mike Fauré’s diary)

Photo: Mike Fauré. Left to right: Fred D’Albert, Mike Fauré, Dave Coxhill, Tony Knight, Alan Rowell

14 November 1967 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Eastern Evening News) Billed as Cat Soul Package with US Flat Top

Photo: Eastern Evening News. Photo may be subject to copyright

18 November 1967 – Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Lunar 2 and The Late and Granny’s Intentions (Spalding Guardian) Billed as The New Cat Soul Packet

Photo: Lincolnshire Standard. Photo may be subject to copyright

24 November 1967 – 400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon (Herald Express)

26 November 1967 – Riverside Club, Cricketers Hotel, Chertsey, Surrey (Woking Herald)

 

10 December 1967 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Chatham, Kent (Chatham, Rochester & Gillingham News)

16 December 1967 – Civic Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire with The Vibrations (Nantwich Chronicle)

Photo: Lancashire Evening Post. Photo may be subject to copyright

16 December 1967 – Twisted Wheel, Manchester with The Vibrations (Lancashire Evening Post) Billed as Cat Soul Package

Photo: Eastern Evening News. Photo may be subject to copyright

26 December 1967 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Eastern Evening News) Billed as Cat Soul Package with US Flat Top

Fred D’Albert remembers that trumpet player Pat Higgs worked with the group. Higgs had previously played with Bluesology (with a young Elton John), Hamilton & The Hamilton Movement and Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band

6 January 1968 – Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Tremeloes, Legay and Ray Bones (Lincolnshire Standard) Billed as T.H.E Cat Soul Package with Flattop

7 January 1968 – Co-op Hall, Warrington, Cheshire (Runcorn Guardian)

21 January 1968 – Britannia Rowing Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post) Says US Flattop and Richard Henry

22 January 1968 – Carlton Club, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian) Billed as T.H.E CAT

Photo: Woking Herald. Photo may be subject to copyright

2 February 1968 – Riverside Club, Chertsey, Surrey (Woking Herald) Billed as The Cat Soul Show with US Flatop

10 February 1968 – Big C, Farnborough, Hampshire (Aldershot News) Billed as The Cat Soul Show featuring Ricky, Henry, Flattop

12 February 1968 – Belfry, Wishaw, near Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands with The Monopoly (Birmingham Evening Mail) Billed as US Flat Top & The Cat Soul Packet

Photo: Herald Express. Photo may be subject to copyright

24 February 1968 – 400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon (Herald Express) Billed as Cat Soul Show

25 February 1968 – Britannia Rowing Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post)

26 February 1968 – British Legion Hall, Slough, Berkshire (Windsor & Eton Express)

Photo: Leicester Mercury. Photo may be subject to copyright

1 March 1968 – Il Rondo, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)

15 March 1968 – Rendevous Club, Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent (East Kent Times & Mail)

Photo: Evening Sentinel. Photo may be subject to copyright

2 May 1968 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire with JJ Jackson (Evening Sentinel)

 

15 June 1968 – Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey (Surrey Herald)

22 June 1968 – La Bamba, Tunbridge Wells, Kent

28 June 1968 – Hemel Hempstead Pavilion, Hemel Hempstead, Herts

29 June 1968 – 400 Ballroom, Torquay, Devon (Herald Express)

Photo: Western Gazette. Photo may be subject to copyright

6 July 1968 – Alex Disco Club, Salisbury, Wiltshire (Western Gazette) Billed as The Cat Road Show with US Flattop

 

30 August 1968 – City Hall, St Albans, Herts with The Crazy World of Arthur Brown and Pakka Jax Billed as Cat Road Show

31 August 1968 – Middle Earth, Torquay Town Hall, Torquay, Devon With US Flatop

 

2 September 1968 – Richmond Athletic Ground, Richmond, west London

Thanks to Dave Clemo for the photo

7 September 1968 – Tin Hat, Kettering, Northamptonshire with Taste) (Dave Clemo research) Billed as The Cat Roadshow with US Flattop

Photo: Western Gazette. Photo may be subject to copyright

14 September 1968 – Glastonbury Town Hall, Glastonbury with Stormy (Central Somerset Gazette/Western Gazette) Billed as The Cat Road Show featuring US Flattop

26 September 1968 – Blue Lagoon, Newquay, Devon with The Provokers (Cornish Guardian)

 

12 October 1968 – Union Rowing Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post) Billed as Cat Road Show

26 October 1968 – Alex Disco, Salisbury, Wiltshire (Salisbury Journal/Western Gazette) Billed as The Cat Road Show starring US Flattop

Photo: Warrington Guardian. Photo may be subject to copyright

10 November 1968 – Beat Discotheque Club, Co-Op Hall, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian) Billed as The Cat Show featuring US Flat-Top

15 November 1968 – Newmarket Discotheque, Bridgwater, Somerset (Bridgwater Mercury)

16 November 1968 – Lion Hotel, Warrington, Cheshire with Katch 22 (Warrington Guardian) Billed as The Cat Road Show

Photo: Warrington Guardian. Photo may be subject to copyright

18 November 1968 – Carlton Club, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian) Billed as The Cat Road Show

 

14 December 1968 – Tin Hat, Kettering, Northamptonshire ) (Dave Clemo research) Billed as The Cat Roadshow featuring US Flattop

24 December 1968 – Flamingo, Redruth, Cornwall with The Rick ‘N’ Beckers and Ray Williams & The Grenades (West Briton & Cornwall Advertiser)

Photo: Western Gazette. Photo may be subject to copyright

26 December 1968 – Alex Disco Club, Salisbury, Wiltshire (Western Gazette) Billed as T.H.E Cat Road Show with US Flattop

Photo: Woking Herald. Photo may be subject to copyright

31 December 1968 – Walton Hop, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey (Woking Herald) Billed as The Cat Road Show starring US Flatop

Nick Ronai (trombone) and Brian Spibey (trumpet) played with The Cat Soul Packet after their band The Fulson Stillwell Band broke up. They didn’t stay long and soon formed Swegas.

25 January 1969 – Imperial College, South Kensington, southwest London (Melody Maker) Billed as The Cat Road Show featuring US Flattop

Photo: Melody Maker. Photo may be subject to copyright

14 February 1969 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London

21 February 1969 – Pavilion, St Albans, Herts

Photo: Warrington Guardian. Photo may be subject to copyright

22 February 1969 – Lion Hotel, Warrington, Cheshire with White Rabbit (Warrington Guardian) Billed as the Cat Road Show

Photo: Melody Maker. Photo may be subject to copyright

1 March 1969 – Savoy, Catford, southeast London

Photo: Melody Maker. Photo may be subject to copyright

15 March 1969 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, west London

22 March 1969 – Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Duster Bennett and Elijah & The Goat (Lincolnshire Standard)

Photo: Melody Maker. Photo may be subject to copyright

2 May 1969 – The Crown, Marlow, Bucks (Melody Maker) Billed as US Flattop and The Cat Road Show

10 May 1969 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, west London (Uxbridge Weekly Post)

 

8 June 1969 – Railway, Wealdstone, northwest London

Photo: Bucks Free Press. Photo may be subject to copyright

18 July 1969 – The Crown, Marlow, Bucks (Bucks Free Press) Billed as US Flattop Soul Show

Photo: Birmingham Evening Mail. Photo may be subject to copyright

27 October 1969 – Belfry, Wishaw, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail)

Huge thanks to Mike Fauré for the use of his photos. 

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author

Freddie Mack’s bands March 1969-late 1973

Guitarist Mick Clarke worked with Freddie Mack around mid-late 1970. This photo shows the group at the Marquee in Wardour Street, Soho, London. Thanks to Pete Clarke for the photo.

Unlike the earlier versions, I have found very little information on Freddie Mack’s groups post-February/March 1969 when he split with the previous version. I would love to hear from anyone who can fill in the blanks.

Billed mainly as ‘The Freddie Mac Extravanganza’, an entirely new version debuted on 11 April 1969 at the New Market Hotel in Bristol. A few weeks later, they played at the New Rainbow Suite Co-op in Birmingham on 24 April.

According to the Nantwich Chronicle, the 13-piece band performed at the Civic Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire with Rubber Soul on 26 April.

The Freddie Mac Road Show played at the Royal Hotel, Walsall on 4 May 1969, according to the Walsall Observer and South Staffordshire Chronicle. The Birmingham Evening Mail lists the band playing at Club Cedar with Passion Forest the next day.

Photo: Birmingham Evening Mail

According to Melody Maker, the new line up then toured West Germany in June.

Drummer Maurice McElroy remembers playing in a seven-nine piece band with Freddie Mack called the Freddie Mac Extravaganza II, which featured a female singer, a male singer, a female dancer plus two other dancers. However, it only lasted a few months.

McElroy confirms that his version played from late June (just after the West German tour above) but he himself left around October 1969.

McElroy says that the band’s roadie Roy Truman left soon after joining Freddie Mack to form a band called Swegas (alongside trumpet player Chris Dawe who worked with Mack in 1967-1968) in which he played bass.

Swegas appears to have been formed in mid-1969 and McElroy joined them later that year. Noel Norris appears to have played with Freddie Mack again in 1970 (see later line up below).

The drummer remembers the following musicians in Mack’s band:

Terry Jenkins – lead guitar

Buddy Bounds – trumpet (replaced by Noel Norris)

Nick Judd – keyboards

Maurice McElroy – drums have found the following gigs, which would cover McElroy’s time with the group: 

23 June 1969 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

 

14 July 1969 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with Shady Lane and Wall City Jazzmen

19 July 1969 – Raven Club, RAF Waddington, Lincolnshire with Stonewall Jackson and Dusk Soul featuring Clive Bond (billed as Freddie Mack Show)

21 July 1969 – Thomas A Beckett, Old Kent Road, south London (pictures of the group playing here on this date can be found at Getty) The same photo appeared in the Evening Standard, 22 July 1969, page 30

28 July 1969 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

 

9 August 1969 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with Heatwave

14 August 1969 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with Lee Harmer’s Popcorn (billed as Freddie Mac Extravaganza)

25 August 1969 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho, central London (billed as Freddie Mac Extravaganza)

30 August 1969 – Kent Pop Festival with Deep Purple

 

5 September 1969 – The Factory, Birmingham

20 September 1969 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with First Back from Heaven and Respect (billed as Freddie Mack Extravaganza)

26 October 1969 – Le Metro, Birmingham

According to singer Bob Mundy (see comments section below), his group, The International Road Show from Southend-on-Sea joined Freddie Mack around November 1969.

Bob Mundy – vocals

Erline ? – vocals

Yudell Anderson – vocals

Steve Sallis – guitar

Brian Williams – bass

John Walsh – Hammond organ

Pat Green – drums

Jeff Bridges – tenor sax

Phil Presland – baritone sax

+

Kenny Baxter – saxophone

Digby Fairweather – trumpet

I have found the following gigs for this formation: 

13 December 1969 – Cue Club, Paddington, London (billed as Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound)

24 December 1969 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds and Lloyd Williams Soul Caravan

27 December 1969 – Flamingo, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Earthquakes (billed as Freddie Mack Extravaganza)

 

21-22 March 1970 – Tamla Village, D’Arblay Street, London with Freddie Notes & The Rudies and The Tonics

Photo: Pete Clarke. His brother Mick Clarke playing with Freddie Mack at the Marquee, 1970

Lead guitarist Mick Clarke played with Freddie Mack from around mid-to-late 1970 (and possibly in the April-May 1969 line up too). Clarke was with a band called Hunter when he met Mack and this same band recorded under the name Orang-utan after he left the singer in late 1970.

Clarke says that the band was fluid, in as much as it would have different horn players on each gig. However, the rhythm section was pretty stable. The guitarist adds that the typical line-up would feature Freddie Mack, a go-go-dancer, lead guitar, bass, drums, organ and three to five horn players (but sometimes nine).

Noel Norris, who had played with an earlier line up, left in October 1970 to form the band Marriage. Norris and Geoff Peach both went on to play with Pacific Gas & Electric in the United States.  They then reunited again in a version of The Foundations in the early 1970s.

Clarke also says that singer Carl Douglas sat with the band at times, which would have been after September 1970 when he returned from Spain.

Freddie Mack, 1970, Marquee with Eddie Thornton (trumpet) and Mick Clarke (guitar). Photo: Pete Clarke

Mick Clarke lists the following musicians who played alongside him:

Mick Clarke – lead guitar

Jeffrey Jai Seopardi – drums

Steve Humphries – bass

Eddie Thornton – trumpet

Noel Norris – trumpet

Geoff Peach – saxophone

Photo from Pete Clarke. Playing at the Marquee, 1970

Around 1971/1972, former members of the band Sonority joined forces with Freddie Mack. Bobby Morris got in touch and I’ve included his email details in the comments section below.

I have found the following gigs which may cover different line-ups:

25 April 1970 – Baths Hall, Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire with Cloud Nine, Freddie Notes & The Dynamic Rudies and Maggie & Sharon

The Torbay Express & South Devon Echo lists a group called Tenderness (ex-Freddie Mac Show) performing at the Madison Club in Torquay on 2-3 October 1970, which suggests this band backed Freddie Mac at some point in 1970.

21 November 1970 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Carl Edwards Roadshow

 

25 October 1971 – Wall City, Quaintways, Chester Cheshire with Aquarius (billed as Freddie Mack Sounds)

28 October 1971 – Beau Brummell Club, Royal Hotel, Crewe, Cheshire (billed as Freddie Mack Road Show)

 

6 November 1971 – Aquarius Club, Lincoln, Lincolnshire (billed as Freddie Mack Sounds)

Copyright © Nick Warburton. All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author. To contact the author, email: Warchive@aol.com or nick_warburton@hotmail.com

 

1973 recording

Tuesday’s Children gigs 1966-1969

Welcome to another posting of a series of gig listings for 1960s bands. None of these lists is exhaustive and my idea is to add to them in the comments section below over time. They are here for future researchers to draw on.  I have also added a few interesting bits of information and will add images in time.

I’d like to encourage band members to get in touch to share memories, or for anyone to send corrections/clarifications to my email: Warchive@aol.com 

Equally important, if you attended any of the gigs below or played in the support band, please do leave your memories below in the comments section for future historians to use. If you know of any missing gigs, please add them too, if possible, with the sources.

Tuesday’s Children in Fabulous 208, July 1967, shortly before Phil Cordell left for a solo career.  Image may be subject to copyright

TUESDAY’S CHILDREN

Formed in mid-1966 from the ashes of The Prophets the original line-up comprised:

Phil Cordell (lead vocals, guitar)

Mick Ware (vocals, guitar)

Paul Kendrick (bass)

Derrick Gough (drums)

1966

Photo: Record Mail, September 1966. Image may be subject to copyright

1 October 1966 – New Spot, Gosport, Hampshire (Portsmouth News)

14 October 1966 – Garry Owen Club, Hammersmith, west London (Fabulous 208)

15 October 1966 – Wimbledon Palais, Wimbledon, southwest London (Fabulous 208)

Image may be subject to copyright

12 November 1966 – Walton Hop, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey (Woking Herald)

 

10 December 1966 – Baths, Leyton, London (Fabulous 208)

1967

14 January 1967 – Starlite, Greenford, northwest London (Fabulous 208)

20 January 1967 – Windmill Hall, Upminster, east London (Fabulous 208)

 

4 February 1967 – Wimbledon Palais, Wimbledon, southwest London with The Attack (Fabulous 208)

17 February 1967 – Harvest Moon Club, Guildford, Surrey with The Next Move (Surrey Advertiser)

Image may be subject to copyright

11 March 1967 – Bal Tabarin, Downham, southeast London with the Collection (South East London Mercury)

22 March 1967 – Big L Party Night, Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London with The James Royal Set (Melody Maker)

23 March 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London (Fabulous 208)

24 March 1967 – Miners’ Club, Ripley, North Yorkshire (Fabulous 208)

25 March 1967 – Anchor Hotel, Skegness, Lincolnshire (Fabulous 208)

 

7 April 1967 – Witchdoctor, Catford, southeast London (Fabulous 208)

28 April 1967 – Europa Hotel, Grosvenor Square, central London (Fabulous 208)

 

24 May 1967 – Wellington Manor Country Club, Crowthorne, Berkshire with Grapefruit (Reading Evening Post)

26-27 May 1967 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, London (Fabulous 208)

 

8 June 1967 – Elizabethan Hall, Dagenham, London (Fabulous 208)

9-15 June 1967 – Pier, Ryde, Isle of Wight (Fabulous 208)

 

29 July 1967 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, London (Fabulous 208)

In early August, Phil Cordell left for a solo career. 

Hammond organist Bob Hodges joined. Earlier in the year, he’d played with The Attack. 

The group also added two sax players: Roger Davies, who was Kinks siblings’ Ray and Dave’s cousin, and Liverpudlian Phil Kenzie, who had recently played with Sonny Childe & The TNT

12 August 1967 – Starlite Ballroom, Greenford, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 August 1967 – Lotus Ballroom, Forest Gate, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

During September trumpet player Hilary Roy did four gigs with the band 

2 September 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, London (afternoon) (Bob Hodges’ diary)

2 September 1967 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (evening) (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

3 September 1967 – Working Men’s Club, Kettering, Northamptonshire with Eyes of Blonde (Bob Hodges’ diary/Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)

8 September 1967 – De Valence Ballroom, Tenby, Wales with The Swinging Blue Jeans (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

9 September 1967 – Ritz Ballroom, Skewen, Wales with Love Sculpture (Bob Hodges’ diary/Port Talbot Guardian/South Wales Evening Post)

10 September 1967 – Pavilion Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

15 September 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire with Sons & Lovers (Evening Sentinel/Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 September 1967 – Garden of Eden Club, Bridge Hotel, Wheatley, Oxfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

21 September 1967 – RAF Watton, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 September 1967 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

23 September 1967 – Embassy Rooms, Colchester, Essex with The Collection (Bob Hodges’ diary/Essex County Standard)

24 September 1967 – Pink Flamingo, Wardour Street, Soho, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 September 1967 – Shades, Masonic Hall, Wokingham, Berkshire (Ricky Tick Club Night) (Bracknell News/Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

30 September 1967 – Nags Head, Wollaston, Northamptonshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

7 October 1967 – University of Sussex, Falmer, West Sussex with Pink Floyd, The Moody Blues, Fairport Convention and The Crazy World of Arthur Brown (Bob Hodges’ diary)

13 October 1967 – According to Bob Hodges’ diary, the band attended ABC Film/TV Studios, Teddington

14 October 1967 – Victoria Hotel, Dartford, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

15 October 1967 – Foseco Sports & Social Club, Tamworth, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary/Tamworth Herald)

20 October 1967 – Youth Club, St Ives, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

21 October 1967 – Twisted Wheel, Manchester (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle/Bob Hodges’ diary)

27 October 1967 – St Barnabus Youth Club, Woodford, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 October 1967 – Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Street, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 October 1967 – Middleton Hotel, Southend-on-Sea, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

31 October 1967 – Wood Green Jazz Club, Fishmongers Arms, Wood Green, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

3 November 1967 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Photo: Richard Goddard. This isn’t in Bob Hodges’ gig diary list

4 November 1967 – YMCA, Sebert Street, Gloucester with The Inmates (Gloucester Citizen)

5 November 1967 – Cat Balou, Grantham, Lincolnshire (Bob Hodges’ diary/Grantham Journal)

6 November 1967 – Tabbys Discotheque, Ealing, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 November 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Tages (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live/Bob Hodges’ diary)

10 November 1967 – Windmill Hall, Upminster, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 November 1967 – Penny Farthing Club, Southend-on-Sea, Essex (Southend Standard) This gig is not in Bob Hodges’ diary

Image may be subject to copyright

11 November 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Swindon, Wiltshire with Modes Mode (Bob Hodges’ diary) Gig lists six piece

12 November 1967 – Middleton Hotel, Middleton, Essex (Southend Standard) This gig is not in Bob Hodges’ diary so may not have happened

Around this time sax players Roger Davies and Phil Kenzie departed, the latter to briefly work with PP Arnold and then with Freddie Mack. Davies may be the same musician who subsequently played with The Warren Davis Monday Band.

17 November 1967 – Cooks Ferry Inn, Edmonton, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 November 1967 – Silver End Hotel, Silver End, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 November 1967 – Aurora Hotel, Gillingham, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 November 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29-30 November 1967 – According to Bob Hodges’ diary, the band attended Pinewood Studios to film “The Ugliest Girl In the World” with actor Nicholas Parsons

 

1 December 1967 – Victoria and Bull Hotel, Dartford, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

2 December 1967 – Lord Hill Hotel, Shrewsbury, Shropshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

3 December 1967 – Tiffany’s, Shaftsbury Avenue, W1, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

7 December 1967 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho London (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 December 1967 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

9 December 1967 – Nags Head, Motown Club, Wollaston, Northamptonshire with Big Bob’s Hi-Fi Sound (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary/Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)

10 December 1967 – Dolphin Hotel, Maidenhead, Berkshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 December 1967 – Penny Farthing Club, Southend-on-Sea, Essex (Essex Chronicle/Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

12 December 1967 – Civic Hall, Corby, Northampshire with The Minor Portion Roll Band (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary/Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)

14 December 1967 – Palais Ballroom, Nottingham (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 December 1967 – Bear and Key Hotel, Whitstable, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 December 1967 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

20 December 1967 – West Oxfordshire College of Technology, Whitney, Oxfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 December 1967 – Roadmender Club, Northampton (Bob Hodges’ diary)

23 December 1967 – Manor House Pub, Manor House, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 December 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Swindon, Wiltshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 December 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Amboy Dukes (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live/Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 December 1967 – Rugby Club, Letchworth, Hertfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 December 1967 – Cliffs Pavilion, Westcliff, Southend-on-Sea, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

1968

3 January 1968 – Marconi Sports & Social Club, Chelmsford, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

6 January 1968 – Tabernacle Club, Stockport, Greater Manchester (Bob Hodges’ diary)

7 January 1968 – Parley Sports Club, Wimbourne, Dorset (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 January 1968 – Rhodes Centre, Bishop’s Stortford, Herts with The Mooche (Steve Ingless book: The Day Before Yesterday/Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 January 1968 – Springhead School, Northfleet, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

13 January 1968 – Wellington Club, Dereham, Norfolk with Reformation (Bob Hodges’ diary/Lynn News)

14 January 1968 – Maids Head, King’s Lynn, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

20 January 1968 – Blaises, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

25 January 1968 – Cromwellian, South Kensington, London (Fabulous 208/Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 January 1968 – Steering Wheel, Weymouth, Dorset (Dorset Evening Echo/Bob Hodges’ diary)

27 January 1968 – Ritz Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 January 1968 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

1 February 1968 – Concord Club, Southampton, Hampshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

2 February 1968 – Shepway Youth Club, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

3 February 1968 – Union Rowing Club, Nottingham (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Image may be subject to copyright

6 February 1968 – North Park Club, Kettering, Northamptonshire with The Eagle Blue Beat Band (Bob Hodges’ diary/Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)

8 February 1968 – RAF Henlow, Bedfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

10 February 1968 – Luton Boys Club, Luton, Bedfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 February 1968 – Cromwellian Club, South Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

17 February 1968 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

23 February 1968 – Youth Club, Loughton, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 February 1968 – La Bamba Club, Tunbridge Wells, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

27 February 1968 – North Park Club, Kettering, Northamptonshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

1 March 1968 – Romford Youth Club, Harold Hill, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

2 March 1968 – Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Street, Kensington (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 March 1968 – Robert Beard Youth Club, Hornchurch, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 March 1968 – Brighton College of Education, Farmer, West Sussex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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10 March 1968 – Embassy Suite, Colchester, Essex with The System (Essex County Standard/Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 March 1968 – Wood Green Jazz Club, Fishmonger’s Arms, Wood Green, London (Melody Maker/Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 March 1968 – London University, St John Street, Clerkenwell, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 March 1968 – Memorial Hall, Newmarket, Suffolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

20 March 1968 – Sir James Hawkey Hall, Woodford (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 March 1968 – Woodlands Youth Club, Basildon (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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23 March 1968 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Simon Dupree & The Big Sound and The Wild Angels (Bob Hodges’ diary/Melody Maker)

24 March 1968 – Adelphi, Slough, Berkshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 March 1968 – Gaiety Ballroom, Ramsey, Cambridgeshire with Root and Jenny Jackson with The Hightimers (Cambridge News) This isn’t in Bob Hodges’ diary

30 March 1968 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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4 April 1968 – RAF Swanton, Moreley, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

5 April 1968 – Hastings College of Technology, Hastings, East Sussex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

6 April 1968 – Sybillas, Swallow Street, London (morning) for filming scene for film “29” with Alexis Kanner (Bob Hodges’ diary)

6 April 1968 – Lynton Hall Palais, Wellingborough, Northamptonshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

7 April 1968 – Silver End Hotel, Silver End, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

10 April 1968 – William McGuffie Youth Club, Walthamstow, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

13 April 1968 – High Wycombe Town Hall, High Wycombe, Bucks with The Associates (Bucks Free Press/Bob Hodges’ diary)

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14 April 1968 – Parley Sports & Social Club, Wimbourne, Dorset (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 April 1968 – Roadmender Club, Northampton (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 April 1968 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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20 April 1968 – Wellington Club, Dereham, Norfolk with Sleepy Talk (Bob Hodges’ diary/North Norfolk News)

21 April 1968 – Birdcage, Harlow, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 April 1968 – Speakeasy, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

27 April 1968 – All Saints Youth Club, Hornchurch, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

3 May 1968 – Youth Club, Loughton, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

4 May 1968 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

5 May 1968 – Youth Club, Poplar, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 May 1968 – Mountbatten Club, Chatham, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 May 1968 – Scotch of St James, Masons Yard, Mayfair, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 May 1968 – La Bamba Club, Tunbridge Wells, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

13 May 1968 – Hatchettes Club, Piccadilly, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

17 May 1968 – Ritz Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset (Bob Hodges’ diary)

18 May 1968 – University College, London with Deep Purple (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 May 1968 – Wellington Boot Bar, Wellington Manor Country Club, Crowthorne, Berkshire with Grapefruit (Bracknell News/Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 May 1968 – Egham College Students’ Union, Egham, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

27 May 1968 – Youth Club, Epping, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 May 1968 – Blaises, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

31 May 1968 – William McCuffie Youth Club, Walthamstow, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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1 June 1968 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

3 June 1968 – Birdcage Club, Harlow, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

4 June 1968 – Top Rank Club, Watford (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 June 1968 – TA Drill Hall, Bedford, Bedfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

14 June 1968 – Archer Hall, Billericay, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 June 1968 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 June 1968 – Willows, Romford, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 June 1968 – University of Essex Students’ Union, Colchester, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 June 1968 – Scene Club, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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28 June 1968 – Potters Bar Hotel, Potters Bar (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 June 1968 – Pier Ballroom, Lowestoft, Suffolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

1 July 1968 – Hatchetts, Piccadilly, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

2 July 1968 – Scene Club, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

6 July 1968 – Town Hall, Clacton-on-Sea, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

7 July 1968 – Rasputins, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 July 1968 – Scene Club, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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11 July 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary/Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)

13 July 1968 – T Walls & Co Social Club, Gloucester, Gloucestershire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

14 July 1968 – Silver End Hotel, Silver End, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 July 1968 – Domino Club, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 July 1968 – Scene Club, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

17 July 1968 – Revolution Club, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

18 July 1968 – Speakeasy, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Gig isn’t in Bob Hodges’ diary list. Image may be subject to copyright

23 July 1968 – Scene Club, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Eastern Evening News) Missing from Bob Hodges’ diary so may not have happened

28 July 1968 – Bag O’Nails, Kingley Street, Soho, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

2 August 1968 – Fiesta Hall, Andover, Hampshire (Andover Advertiser/Bob Hodges’ diary)

3 August 1968 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

5 August 1968 – Domino Club, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 August 1968 – Sybillas, Swallow Street, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

10 August 1968 – La Bamba, Tunbridge Wells, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

14 August 1968 – Revolution Club, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 August 1968 – Youth Club, Cuffley, Hertfordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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17 August 1968 – Scene Club, Gari Ballroom, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk with The Something Else (Bob Hodges’ diary/Yarmouth Mercury)

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22 August 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary/Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)

23 August 1968 – Sybillas, Swallow Street, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 August 1968 – Thingamajig, Reading, Berkshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 August 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford (Bob Hodges’ diary)

31 August 1968 – Pier Ballroom, Lowestoft, Suffolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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5 September 1968 – Revolution Club, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

6 September 1968 – Rasputin’s, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

7 September 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

10-11 September 1968 – Hatchetts, Piccadilly, London (Poster at Jonathan Marks’ website: https://imgur.com/a/sWtBd#0)

14 September 1968 – Pier Ballroom, Morecambe, Lancashire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 September 1968 – Tabernacle, Stockport, Greater Manchester (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 September 1968 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

20 September 1968 – Black Sheep Club, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

21 September 1968 – Hatchetts, Piccadilly London (Melody Maker/Mick Capewell’s Marmalade Skies)

27 September 1968 – Loughton College of Education, Loughton, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 September 1968 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 September 1968 – Tiffany’s, Shaftsbury Avenue, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

5 October 1968 – Pier Ballroom, Lowestoft, Suffolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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7 October 1968 – St Edmund Hall, Student Union, Oxford University (Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 October 1968 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 October 1968 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 October 1968 – Sybillas, Swallow Street, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 October 1968 – Youth Club, Cuffley, Herts (Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 October 1968 – Sixth Form College, Lincoln (Bob Hodges’ diary)

27 October 1968 – Bag O’Nails, Kingley Street, Soho, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 October 1968 – Sybillas, Swallow Street, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 October 1968 – Revolution, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

31 October 1968 – El Grotto Club, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

1 November 1968 – Shepway Youth Club, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

2 November 1968 – Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Street, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

3 November 1968 – Embassy Rooms, Colchester, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary/Essex County Standard)

9 November 1968 – Rush Green College, Romford (Bob Hodges’ diary)  Surrey Advertiser has them at Pantiles in Bagshot, Surrey. They must have been replaced for this gig by another band

15 November 1968 – Rasputins, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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17 November 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder) This is missing from Bob’s diary so perhaps they were replaced

22 November 1968 – Civic Hall, Aveley, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

23 November 1968 – Corn Exchange, Bedford (Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 November 1968 – Blaises, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 November 1968 – Sports Centre, Crippe Street, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

12 December 1968 – Greyhound Hotel, Chadwell Heath, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary/Newham, West Ham & East Ham, Barking and Stratford Express/Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)

13 December 1968 – Hornchurch Grammar School, Hornchurch (Bob Hodges’ diary)

14 December 1968 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 December 1968 – Technical High School, Chelmsford, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

20 December 1968 – College of Further Education, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

21 December 1968 – Westcliffe Pavilion, Southend-on-Sea, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 December 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 December 1968 – La Bamba Club, Tunbridge Wells, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 December 1968 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London (private charity event) (Bob Hodges’ diary)

1969

6 January 1969 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with US Flaptop & The Cat Road Show and Headline News (website: www.45worlds.com/live) Not listed in Bob Hodges’ diary

10 January 1969 – Youth Club, Sawston, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 January 1969 – Ritz Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset (Bob Hodges’ diary)

18 January 1969 – Redifon Social Club, Wandsworth, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 January 1969 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 January 1969 – Revolution Club, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 January 1969 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 January 1969 – Guildhall, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

31 January 1969 – Institute Hall, Braintree, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

2 February 1969 – Red Cow, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 February 1969 – Memorial Hall, Great Shelford (Bob Hodges’ diary)

14 February 1969 – Wesley Youth Club, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 February 1969 – Whisky A Go Go, Wardour Street, Soho, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 February 1969 – Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Street, Kensingston, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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1 March 1969 – Bubbles Club, Brentwood, Essex with Pussyfoot Tramp, Still Life, Colours and Fantasy (Bob Hodges’ diary/Melody Maker)

8 March 1969 – Netherhall School, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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14 March 1969 – Corn Exchange, Cambridge with The Who (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 March 1969 – University College, Gower Street, London with The Nice, Deep Purple and three others (Melody Maker) Not in Bob Hodges’ diary

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15 March 1969 – Bubbles Club, Brentwood, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 March 1969 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 March 1969 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

4 April 1969 – Silverwood Working Men’s Club, Rotherham (Bob Hodges’ diary)

5 April 1969 – Athaneum, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 April 1969 – 100 Club, Oxford Street, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 April 1969 – Burnetts Club, Newbury, Berkshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

18 April 1969 – Maidstone Technical College, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 April 1969 – Graduate Centre, Cambridge University (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 April 1969 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

26 April 1969 – Hermitage Club, Hitchin, Herts (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

2 May 1969 – Lafayette Club, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (Bob Hodges’ diary)

10 May 1969 – Neeld Hall, Chippenham, Wiltshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 May 1969 – Meridan Youth Club, Royston, Herts (Bob Hodges’ diary)

22 May 1969 – Sawston Hall, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 May 1969 – Pantiles Club, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary/Windsor, Slough & Eton Express)

26 May 1969 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 May 1969 – Dorchester Hotel, Park Lane, London, W1 (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 May 1969 – Teachers Training College, Saffron Walden, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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8 June 1969 – Cambridge Rock and Pop Festival (afternoon) (Bob Hodges’ diary)

8 June 1969 – Cambridge Footlights Club, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 June 1969 – Clare College, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

9 June 1969 – Selwyn College, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

10 June 1969 – Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 June 1969 – Magdalen College, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 June 1969 – RAF Bassingbourn, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

14 June 1969 – Agricultural College, Askham Bryan, York (Bob Hodges’ diary)

21 June 1969 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

3 July 1969 – Technical College, Worcester, Worcestershire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

5 July 1969 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 July 1969 – RAF Coningsby, Lincolnshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 July 1969 – Tye Green Community Centre, Harlow, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 July 1969 – Union Society, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 July 1969 – Stapleford Recreation Ground, Stapleford, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

24 July 1969 – BRC Sports Club, Stafford, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25-26 July 1969 – Bakers Row Club, Cardiff, Wales (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 July 1969 – Union Society, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

17 August 1969 – Tower Ballroom, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

23 August 1969 – Cruising Club, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 August 1969 – RAF Odiham, Hampshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 August 1969 – RAF Wittering, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

2 September 1969 – Revolution Club, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

12 September 1969 – Lyceum Ballroom, Strand, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

13 September 1969 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 September 1969 – Technical College, Chelmsford, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

20 September 1969 – Rhodes Centre, Bishops Stortford, Herts (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 September 1969 – BRC Club, Stafford, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

1 October 1969 – New Penny Club, Derby (Bob Hodges’ diary)

4 October 1969 – Christchurch College, Canterbury, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

5 October 1969 – Horns Hotel, Braintree, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

11 October 1969 – Ewell Technical College, Ewell, Surrey with The Faces (Bob Hodges’ diary)

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14 October 1969 – Southbank Club, Grimsby with The Graham Bond Initiation (Bob Hodges’ diary)

Photo: Thanks to Julie Kirk for providing

17 October 1969 – Technical College, Rugby, Warwickshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 October 1969 – Industrial Club, Norwich, Norfolk (Bob Hodges’ diary)

25 October 1969 – Youth Club, Cheadle Hulme (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 October 1969 – The Cinema, Saffron Walden, Essex with The Herd (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 October 1969 – Tramway Club, York (Bob Hodges’ diary)

30 October 1969 – Progressive Club, Gateshead (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

7 November 1969 – Youth Club, Wickford, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

15 November 1969 – Royal Lancaster Hotel, Kensington, London (Bob Hodges’ diary)

28 November 1969 – Technical College, Maidstone, Kent (Bob Hodges’ diary)

29 November 1969 – Beetroot Club, Brentwood, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

 

12 December 1969 – St Peter’s School, Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

13 December 1969 – Memorial Hall, Newmarket (Bob Hodges’ diary)

16 December 1969 – Letchworth Grammar School, Letchworth (Bob Hodges’ diary)

18 December 1969 – BRC Sports & Social Club, Stafford, Staffordshire (Bob Hodges’ diary)

19 December 1969 – Rumpston Youth Club, Witham, Essex (Bob Hodges’ diary)

From the start of 1970, they began working as Czar

Jimmy James & The Vagabonds

Image may be subject to copyright. Left to right: Carl Noel, Wallace Wilson, Phil Chen, Jimmy James, Carl Griffiths, Count Prince Miller and Rupert Balgobin. Photo shows line-up in late 1965

Jimmy James – lead vocals

Count Prince Miller – lead vocals

Wallace Wilson – lead guitar

Coleson Chen – bass

Carl Noel – keyboards

Carl Griffiths – tenor sax

Rupert Balgobin – percussion

Winston Martin – drums

Born on 13 September 1940 in the United States, Jimmy James moved to Jamaica in the mid-1940s and joined The Vagabonds in 1964 after recording solo singles. The Vagabonds had been formed in 1961 by Count Prince Miller, Coleson Chen and Wallace Wilson with other musicians, who were gradually replaced with the line-up above.

The musicians relocated to London in May 1964 with Chen’s younger brother Phil guesting on second guitar and initially they played at parties and social functions. This formation recorded The Vagabonds LP.

Soon after, Winston Martin left and Rupert Balgobin took over drums and Phil Chen became a permanent member.

Attracting the attention of manager Pete Meaden, who’d discovered The Who, the group landed a month-long residency at the Scene in March 1965. In mid-1965 Coleson Chen returned to Jamaica and his brother Phil moved on to bass.

Selected gigs

20 November 1964 – Kilburn State Ballroom, Kilburn, London with Ronnie Jones & The Night-Timers and Dixieland Steel Band (billed as The Jamaican Vagabonds)

 

18 March 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London (billed as The Vagabonds)

 

30 April 1965 – Ricky Tick Club, Plaza, Guildford, Surrey with Chris Farlowe & The Thunderbirds

 

9 May 1965 – Blue Moon, Hayes, west London with The Spencer Davis Group

18 May 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Mark Leeman Five

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22 May 1965 – Haymarket Lounge, Basingstoke, Hampshire

28 May 1965 – Ricky Tick Club, Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey

31 May 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

 

7 June 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Who

12 June 1965 – Town Hall, High Wycombe, Bucks

13 June 1965 – Galaxy Club, Woburn Park Hotel, Addlestone, Surrey

14 June 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Solomon Burke

17 June 1965 – Birdcage, Kimbells Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire

Jimmy James & The Vagabonds were featured in an article in the Staines and Egham News (18/6/65, page 10)

19 June 1965 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham (billed as The Vagabonds)

21 June 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Ronnie Jones & The Blue Jays

26 June 1965 – Galaxy Club, Town Hall, Basingstoke, Hampshire

28 June 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

 

1 July 1965 – Birdcage, Kimbells Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire

2 July 1965 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham

5 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Animals

9 July 1965 – Ricky Tick Club, Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey

10 July 1965 – Birdcage, Kimbells Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire

12 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

13 July 1965 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London with The Brian Auger Trinity

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14 July 1965 – Bromley Court Hotel, Bromley, London (billed as The Vagabonds)

19 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Manfred Mann

25 July 1965 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham

26 July 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The VIPs

29 July 1965 – Birdcage, Kimbells Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire

31 July 1965 – Galaxy Club, Town Hall, Basingstoke, Hampshire

Under Pete Meaden’s management, the band’s debut single on Columbia, “Shoo Be Doo (You’re Mine)” c/w “I’ll Never Stop Loving You” was released in August 1965 but was not a chart success. They then moved to Piccadilly for seven singles, starting with “I Feel Alright” c/w “I Wanna Be Your Everything” in February 1966.

Image may be subject to copyright

Despite not cracking the singles’ chart, Jimmy James & The Vagabonds became regulars at the Marquee and built up a huge following on the nationwide club circuit where they were regarded as one of the most dynamic live acts.

Selected gigs

2 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

9 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

12 August 1965 – Birdcage, Kimbells Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire

13 August 1965 – Ricky Tick Club, Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey

16 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Boz and The Boz People

21 August 1965 – Ricky Tick Club, Clewer Mead, Windsor, Berkshire (Billed as The Vagabonds with Jimmy James and Count Prince Miller)

23 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

27 August 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

30 August 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with John Lee’s Groundhogs

 

2 September 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

6 September 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Crowd

9 September 1965 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London

13 September 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

17 September 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

20 September 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Sidewinders

22 September 1965 – Le Disque A Go Go, Bournemouth, Dorset

23 September 1965 – Cooks Ferry Inn, Edmonton, London (billed as Vagabonds)

27 September 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Mark Leeman Five

 

1 October 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

4 October 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Boz & The Boz People

6 October 1965 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London with Dave Antony’s Moods

11 October 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Uglys

13 October 1965 – Farnborough Town Hall, Farnborough, Hampshire

14 October 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

18 October 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

21 October 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire with The Action and Johnny B Great & The Quotations (Dave Allen research)

24 October 1965 – Tavern Club, Sunshine Floor, Dereham, Norfolk with Mike Prior & The Pagans

25 October 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with John Lee’s Groundhogs

29 October 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

 

1 November 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Roscoe Brown Combo

4 November 1965 – Cooks Ferry Inn, Edmonton, London (billed as The Vagabonds)

6 November 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

8 November 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Banshees

9 November 1965 – Bristol Chinese R&B Club, Corn Exchange, Bristol

15 November 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Train (Moon’s Train?)

17 November 1965 – Le Disque A Go Go, Bournemouth, Dorset

18 November 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

22 November 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

27 November 1965 – Milford R&B, Strutt Arms, Milford, Derbyshire

29 November 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

 

4 December 1965 – Ricky Tick Club, Clewer Mead, Windsor, Berkshire with Mike Cotton Sound

6 December 1965 – Adelphi, Slough, Berkshire wit Manfred Mann, The Yardbirds, Goldie (of the Gingerbreads), Shangaans, The Mark Leeman Five and Gary Farr & The T-Bones

10 December 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

12 December 1965 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

13 December 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Roscoe Brown Combo

15 December 1965 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London with The Rick ‘N’ Beckers (billed as The Vagabonds)

19 December 1965 – Tavern Club, Dereham, Norfolk with The Blaizes

20 December 1965 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

Around this time Carl Griffiths returned to Jamaica but later came back to the UK with singer Prince Buster. He also worked with Cat Soul Packet in September-November 1967 before joining The Bees who became The Pyramids. Griffiths later worked with Manfred Mann Chapter 3

 Jimmy James & The Vagabonds now comprises:

 Jimmy James – lead vocals

Count Prince Miller – lead vocals

Wallace Wilson – lead guitar

Phil Chen – bass

Carl Noel – keyboards

Rupert Balgobin – drums

 

Selected gigs

9 January 1966 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

10 January 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Mark Leeman Five

14 January 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

15 January 1966 – Ricky Tick Club, Clewer Mead, Windsor, Berkshire

17 January 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

23 January 1966 – Nottingham Boat Club, Nottingham

24 January 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Mark Leeman Five

25 January 1966 – Bristol Chinese R&B Club, Corn Exchange, Bristol

27 January 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire with The Drifters

31 January 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London

 

5 February 1966 – Carousel Club, 1 Camp Road, Farnborough, Hampshire

6 February 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London (on one occasion they were joined by John Brown’s Bodies, so maybe this date)

8 February 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

12 February 1966 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear

14 February 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Mark Leeman Five

20 February 1966 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham

21 February 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Mark Leeman Five

19 February 1966 – King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire with Herbie Goins & The Night-timers and The Blueberries (with “Count Prince Miller”)

26 February 1966 – King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (with “Count Prince Miller”)

 

3 March 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho,central London with The Summer Set

15 March 1966 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, north London (billed as The Vagabonds)

18 March 1966 – Ricky Tick Club, Town Hall, Staines, Middlesex

20 March 1966 – Dereham Tavern, Dereham, Norfolk with Rocky & The Emperors

21 March 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Boz “And New Group”

Photo may be subject to copyright

26 March 1966 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London with The Goodtime Band (billed as The Vagabonds)

28 March 1966 – Bluesville, Manor House, Ipswich, Suffolk

30 March 1966 – Orford Cellar, Norwich, Norfolk

31 March 1966 – Ricky Tick Club, Harvest Moon, Guildford, Surrey

Around this time former Rupert & The Red Devils’ tenor sax player Fred “Nat” Frederick joins. Frederick may be the same Fred who had recently played with John Lee’s Groundhogs.

3 April 1966 – Agincourt Ballroom, Camberley, Surrey with support

4 April 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

6 April 1966 – Target Paul’s Row, High Wycombe, Bucks

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8 April 1966 – Links R&B Club, Maxwell Park Youth Centre, Borehamwood, Herts with The Fairies (opening night) Melody Maker has The Action as second group

9 April 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

11 April 1966 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with Sonny Childe & The TNT and The Real McCoy

14 April 1966 – The Village, Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire

17 April 1966 – King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire with The Alan Bown Set

19 April 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Vibrations

20 April 1966 – Bromley Court Hotel, Bromley, southeast London

25 April 1966 – Atlanta Ballroom, Woking, Surrey

28 April 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

29 April 1966 – York University, York

30 April 1966 – Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear

The group releases its third 45, “Hi Diddley Dee Dum Dum” c/w “Come To Me Softly”

1 May 1966 – Dereham Tavern, Dereham, Norfolk with The News

2 May 1966 – Rag Queen Dance, East Ham Town Hall, East Ham, east London with The Symbols

4 May 1966 – Highbury Technical College, Cosham

5 May 1966 – Burton Manor, Stafford, Staffordshire

6 May 1966 – Keele University, Keele

7 May 1966 – Manor Lodge, Stockport, Greater Manchester

8 May 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, west London with The Deakin Lewis Band (billed as The Vagabonds)

9 May 1966 – Bluesville, Manor House, Ipswich, Suffolk

11 May 1966 – College of Technology, Brighton, West Sussex

12 May 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Statesides (This is missing from Beat Instrumental unless this was moved to 16th)

13 May 1966 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London

14 May 1966 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, west London

15 May 1966 – Country Club, Kirklevington

16 May 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

19 May 1966 – Starlight, Crawley, West Sussex

20 May 1966 – Bluesville, Manor House, north London

21 May 1966 – St Martin’s School of Art, central London

22 May 1966 – Leofric Hotel, Coventry

23 May 1966 – Majestic Ballroom, Reading, Berkshire and Concord Club, Basset Hotel, Southampton, Hants

24 May 1966 – Concorde Club, Basset Hotel, Southampton, Hampshire

27 May 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, west London (possibly with John Brown’s Bodies) Trend & Boyfriend magazine has Links Ballroom, Borehamwood on this date as well

28 May 1966 – Gig in Islington, north London

29 May 1966 – Country Club, Kirklevington

30 May 1966 – Blues Festival, East Dereham, Norfolk with Zoot Money & The Big Roll Band, Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band, Sullivan James Band and Sounds Reformed. Beat Instrumental says this was the Tavern Club

 

3-5 June 1966 – Gigs in Ostend, Belgium

6 June 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

10 June 1966 – Ram Jam, Brixton,  south London

11 June 1966 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear

12 June 1966 – Beachcomber, Nottingham

13 June 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

14 June 1966 – St John’s College, Cambridge

15 June 1966 – Blue Flame Club, Wolverhampton, West Midlands and Casino Club, Walsall, West Midlands

16 June 1966 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London

17 June 1966 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with Bobby Gibson and Group 004

18 June 1966 – Commonwealth Institute, central London

19 June 1966 – Blue Moon, Hayes, west London

20 June 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

21 June 1966 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, north London (billed as The Vagabonds)

23 June 1966 – Birdcage, Porthsmouth, Hants

24 June 1966 – Gig in Exeter, Devon (probably university)

25 June 1966 – Blue Moon, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

26 June 1966 – Starlite Ballroom, Greenford, west London (not mentioned in Beat Instrumental)

27 June 1966 – Wall City JC, Chester, Cheshire

28 June 1966 – American School, Hilton Hotel, central London

29 June 1966 – Reading University, Reading, Berkshire

30 June 1966 – Birmingham University, Birmingham

 

1 July 1966 – Mr McCoys, Middlesbrough

2 July 1966 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Lincolnshire with Roy C, The League of Gentlemen, The Amboy Dukes and The Ferryboys

4 July 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

5 July 1966 – Concord, Southampton, Hampshire

6 July 1966 – Orford Cellar, Norwich, Norfolk

7 July 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (not mentioned in Beat Instrumental)

8 July 1966 – Masonic Hall, Hornchurch, east London

9 July 1966 – Jigsaw, Manchester

10 July 1966 – King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire

11 July 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Jimmy Brown Sound (not mentioned in Beat Instrumental)

12 July 1966 – Bristol University, Bristol

14 July 1966 – Bircage, Eastney, Hampshire

16 July 1966 – Porchester Hall, Paddington, central London

17 July 1966 –White Lion, Edgware, north London

18 July 1966 – Shoreline Club, Bognor Regis, West Sussex

19 July 1966 – Manor House, north London (not mentioned in Beat Instrumental)

22 July 1966 –Mr McCoys, Middlesbrough

23 July 1966 – Mojo Club, Sheffield, South Yorkshire

24 July 1966 – Country Club, Kirklevington

The band releases its fourth 45 on Piccadilly “This Heart of Mine” c/w “I Don’t Wanna Cry”

Photo may be subject to copyright

29 July 1966 – Iron Curtain Club, St Mary Cray, southeast London

 

2 August 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire with The Move

4 August 1966 – Concorde, Southampton, Hampshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

5 August 1966 – Beat ‘n’ Blues Festival, Torquay Town Hall, Torquay, Devon with The Better Days, The Kynd and The Reaction

6 August 1966 – Cadillac Club, Brighton, West Sussex

Photo may be subject to copyright

7 August 1966 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent

11 August 1966 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London

Photo may be subject to copyright

13 August 1966 – Taggs Island, Hampton Court Casino Ballroom, Hampton Court, Middlesex

14 August 1966 – Ricky Tick Club, Clewer Mead, Windsor, Berkshire

17 August 1966 – Stevenage Mecca, Locarno, Stevenage, Hertfordshire

18 August 1966 – Locarno Ballroom, Bristol with The Fanatics

21 August 1966 – Beachcomber Club, Nottingham

23 August 1966 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, north London

25 August 1966 – Astoria, Finsbury’s Park, north London with Sonny & Cher, Sharon Tandy & The VIPs

27 August 1966 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, west London and Lyceum, central London

28 August 1966 – Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

29 August 1966 – Majestic Ballroom, Reading, Berkshire

30 August 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Clayton Squares

31 August 1966 – Discoblue Club, Ryde, Isle of Wight

Baritone sax player Milton James, who has previously worked with Hogsnort Rupert, The Olympics and The Dynamics joins

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 September 1966 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with Him & Others

3 September 1966 – Toft’s, Folkestone, Kent

5 September 1966 – Wall City Jazz Club, Chester, Cheshire

8 September 1966 – Concorde, Southampton, Hampshire

9 September 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

10 September 1966 – Porchester Hall, Paddington, central London

13 September 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Wynder K Frog

Photo may be subject to copyright

14 September 1966 – Ackys Scene, New Maid’s Head Hotel, King’s Lynn, Norfolk

16 September 1966 – Porchester Hall, Paddington, central London

17 September 1966 – Corn Exchange, Leicester

18 September 1966 – Beachcomber, Nottingham with Chris Farlowe & The Thunderbirds

20 September 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

24 September 1966 – Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Tony Rivers & The Castaways, Lord Sutch & The Savages, The Intruders, The Ferryboys

26 September 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, south London with Bluesology

27 September 1966 – Churchill Hall, Kenton, north London

 

1 October 1966 – St Mary’s College, Twickenham, west London

2 October 1966 – Palais Ballroom, Newbury, Berkshire

3 October 1966 – Bluesville, Ipswich, Suffolk

4 October 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

6 October 1966 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London

9 October 1966 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

11 October 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Episode Six

14 October 1966 – Market Hall, St Albans, Herts

15 October 1966 – International Club, Leeds, West Yorkshire

15 October 1966 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

Melody Maker says the band went to Belgium to play gigs in Brussels and Ostend on 17 October. Is this possible for one day?

18 October 1966 – Town Hall, High Wycombe, Bucks

19 October 1966 – Falcon Hotel, Eltham, southeast London

20 October 1966 – Concorde, Southampton with Simon Dupree & The Big Sound

20 October 1966 – Wykeham Hall, Romford, east London

Photo may be subject to copyright

21 October 1966 – The Marquee Show, Fairfield Hall, Croydon, south London with The Spencer Davis Group, The Move, Wynder K Frog, The Herd and The VIPs

22 October 1966 – Ricky Tick, Windsor, Berkshire

23 October 1966 – George Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire

25 October 1966 – Concord, Southampton, Hampshire

26 October 1966 – Queen Mary’s College, Mile End, east London

27 October 1966 – BRC R&B Club, Burton Manor, Stafford, Staffordshire

28 October 1966 – Mr McCoys, Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire

29 October 1966 – Manchester University, Manchester

29 October 1966 – Jigsaw, Manchester

30 October 1966 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent

The band releases its fifth 45 “Ain’t Love Good, Ain’t Love Proud” c/w “Don’t Know What I’m Gonna Do”

Image may be subject to copyright

9 November 1966 – Locarno Ballroom, Stevenage, Herts

10 November 1966 – Locarno Ballroom, Streatham, southwest London

12 November 1966 – Chelsea College, Chelsea, southwest London

13 November 1966 – Youth Centre, Liverpool

Photo may be subject to copyright

16 November 1966 – Adam & Eve, Southampton, Hampshire

18 November 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Summer Set

19 November 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

24 November 1966 – Rocky Rivers’ Top 20 Club, Conservative Club, Bedford

26 November 1966 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, northwest London

27 November 1966 – Beachcomber Club, Nottingham

28 November 1966 – Top Rank Ballroom, Reading, Berkshire

29 November 1966 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, north London

Around this time, the band releases its LP The New Religion

Photo may be subject to copyright

1 December 1966 – White Bicycle Club, Maple Ballroom, Northampton

2 December 1966 – Il Rondo, Leicester

3-4 December 1966 – Maryland Club, Glasgow, Scotland

6 December 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Syn

9 December 1966 – Durham University, Durham with Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band

10 December 1966 – Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Orlons, The Gates of Eden and The Ebonites

11 December 1966 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

12 December 1966 – White Bicycle Club, Maple Ballroom, Northampton with The Hip 100

13 December 1966 – Concord, Southampton, Hampshire

15 December 1966 – School of Art, Guildford, Surrey with The Alan Bown Set

Photo may be subject to copyright

16 December 1966 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Unchained

17 December 1966 – Disco Club, Ryde, Isle of Wight

20 December 1966 – St Thomas, Brentwood, Essex

22 December 1966 – Southampton Guildhall, Hampshire with Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band

22 December 1966 – Ricky Tick, Corn Exchange, Bedford, Bedfordshire

23 December 1966 – Ricky Tick Club, Hounslow, west London with The Summer Set

24 December 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

26 December 1966 – Baths Hall, Ipswich, Suffolk

27 December 1966 – Corn Exchange, Bristol

31 December 1966 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Neat Change and The Bunch

The band releases its sixth 45 “I Can’t Get Home to My Baby” c/w “Hungry For Love”

 

1 January 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

2 January 1967 – Clouds, Derby, Derbyshire

The Hillingdon Mirror ran an article and photos in its 3 January 1967 issue, page 20

4 January 1967 – Stevenage Mecca, Locarno, Stevenage, Hertfordshire

7 January 1967 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Soul Sisters with The Tonic and Charades

8 January 1967 – Beau Brummel, Nantwich, Cheshire with Phil Ryan & The Scorpians

Around this time Milton James departs. Baritone sax player Pat Gravende (aka Pat Sandy) replaces him. Also, longstanding member Carl Noel departs and Tom Parker, who has previously played with The Groundhogs, The Mark Leeman Five and Eric Burdon’s New Animals takes his place

 

The line-up now comprises: 

Jimmy James – lead vocals

Count Prince Miller – lead vocals

Wallace Wilson – lead guitar

Phil Chen – bass

Tom Parker – keyboards

Fred “Nat” Frederick – tenor sax

Pat Sandy – baritone sax

Rupert Balgobin – drums

 

Selected gigs

27 January 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London

28 January 1967 – Corn Exchange, Chelmsford, Essex

Photo may be subject to copyright

 29 January 1967 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent

31 January 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The Syn

 

3 February 1967 – Clouds, Derby, Derbyshire

4 February 1967 – Leeds University, Leeds, West Yorkshire

5 February 1967 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Delmonts

6 February 1967 – Wall City Club, Chester, Cheshire

7 February 1967 – Manchester University, Manchester with Alan Bown and The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band

9 February 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Coventry, West Midlands

11 February 1967 – Liverpool University, Liverpool

17 February 1967 – Gyro Club, Troutbeck Hotel, Ilkley, West Yorkshire

19 February 1967 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London

20 February 1967 – Bluesville Club, Baths Hall, Ipswich, Suffolk

21 February 1967 – Winter Gardens, Malvern, Worcestershire

24 February 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

25 February 1967 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Triads, The Eyes of Blonde and Ray Bones

25 February 1967 – Night Owl, Leicester

26 February 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

27 February 1967 – Majestic Ballroom, Reading, Berkshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 March 1967 – City Hall, Salisbury, Wiltshire with The Gordon Riots

3 March 1967 – Ricky Tick Club, Thames Hotel, Windsor, Berkshire

4 March 1967 – Chelsea College, Chelsea, London

5 March 1967 – Beachcomber, Nottingham

5 March 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Hubbubs

7 March 1967 – Corn Exchange, Bristol

10 March 1967 – Phillipa Fawcett College, Streatham, London

11 March 1967 – Aquarium, Brighton, West Sussex

12 March 1967 – Beau Brummel, Nantwich, Cheshire with Phil Ryan & The Scorpians

14 March 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Wynder K Frog

15 March 1967 – The Thing, Oldham, Greater Manchester with The Drifters

16 March 1967 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear

17 March 1967 – Aston University, Birmingham

18 March 1967 – Manchester College, Manchester

19 March 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

20 March 1967 – Assembly Hall, Stafford, Staffordshire

21 March 1967 – Savoy Ballroom, Portsmouth, Hampshire

24 March 1967 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, London

25 March 1967 – Trade Union Hall, Watford, London

25 March 1967 – Clouds, Derby, Derbyshire with The Alan Price Set

27 March 1967 – King’s Lynn Corn Exchange with Family, Reformation and Rubber Band

28 March 1967 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset with The Bossmen

30 March 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (Fab 208 says 29 March)

31 March 1967 – South Bank Jazz Club, Grimsby, Humberside

 

1 April 1967 – Floral Hall, Southport, Lancashire

2 April 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

4 April 1967 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London

13 April 1967 – Concord, Southampton, Hampshire

14 April 1967 – Brighton Arts Festival, Metropole Hotel, Brighton, West Sussex with Paul Jones, The Move, Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band, Mike Stuart Span, Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers and others

15 April 1967 – Ricky Tick Club, Thames Hotel, Windsor, Berkshire

17 April 1967 – Bluesville Club, Ipswich, Suffolk

19 April 1967 – Blue Moon, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

20 April 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Coventry, West Midlands

21 April 1967 – Bluesville, Manor House, London

22 April 1967 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, London

24 April 1967 – Beachcomber, Nottingham

26 April 1967 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge

28 April 1967 – Mr McCoys, Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

29 April 1967 – Matlock Bath Pavilion, Matlock Bath, Derbyshire with Sons and Lovers

The band releases its seventh 45 on Piccadilly “No Need to Cry” c/w “You Showed Me The Way”

It’s possible that Carl Noel may have returned at this point to briefly replace his successor Tom Parker

Jimmy James & The Vagabonds, France, May 1967. Photo © Odile Noël (www.odilenoel.com)

5 May 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The American Vibrations and The Hubbubs

6 May 1967 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with The Fleur De Lys

Photo may be subject to copyright

7 May 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

8 May 1967 – Orford Cellar, Norwich, Norfolk

9 May 1967 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset

24 May 1967 – Purple Fez Club, Devonport, Plymouth, Devon

25 May 1967 – Concorde, Basset Hotel, Southampton, Hampshire

25 May 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with Wynder K Frog

27 May 1967 – Gaiety, Ramsey, Cambridgeshire with The Survivors

28 May 1967 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Skyliners

29 May 1967 – Boulevard Gardens, Tadcaster, South Yorkshire with Brian Poole and The Echoes, Ellison’s Hog Line, The Screen, The Shotgun Express, Pete Lala Group and others

29 May 1967 – Crystal Bowl, Castleford, South Yorkshire with Brian Poole and The Echoes

The band in France, May 1967. Photo © Odile Noël (www.odilenoel.com)

1 June 1967 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire

3 June 1967 – St George’s Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire

4 June 1967 – The Place, Oldham, Greater Manchester

5 June 1967 – Bluesville, Ipswich, Suffolk

7 June 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Stevenage, Herts

8 June 1967 – Electric Garden, Covent Garden, London (Disc and Music Echo, 27 May issue, says the venue recently opened)

9 June 1967 – Matrix Ballroom, Coventry, West Midlands (with Mike Cotton Sound and The Big Jump Band?)

10 June 1967 – Beachcomber, Nottingham

Photo may be subject to copyright

11 June 1967 – Ram Jam, Brixton, London

14 June 1967 – Savoy Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

15 June 1967 – City Hall, Salisbury, Wiltshire with Life

17 June 1967 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, northwest London

17 June 1967 – Shoreline, Bognor Regis, West Sussex

According to Melody Maker, Jimmy James & The Vagabonds played at The Shoreline in Bognor Regis and Jimmy James collapsed from exhaustion. The Derby gig was called but he was fit to do the Klooks Kleek gig

18 June 1967 – Clouds, Derby (cancelled)

20 June 1967 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London

22 June 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Coventry, West Midlands

25 June 1967 – Cosmo, Carlisle, Cumbria with The Jude Brown Trust

26 June 1967 – McGoo’s, Edinburgh, Scotland

28 June 1967 – Royal Pier, Mecca Ballroom, Southampton, Hampshire

29 June 1967 – Harper Adams Agricultural College, Newport, Wales with The Fortunes

30 June 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, London with The Condors

 

1 July 1967 – Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Triads, The Steps and Ray Bones

2 July 1967 – Spinning Disc Club, Leeds, West Yorkshire

3 July 1967 – Reading University, Reading, Berkshire (Disc & Music Echo has this on 5 July)

3 July 1967 – Bath Pavilion, Bath

4 July 1967 – Floral Hall, Malvern, Worcestershire

7 July 1967 – McGoo’s, Edinburgh, Scotland

7 July 1967 – Victoria Hall, Dunbar, Scotland

8 July 1967 – Market, Carlisle, Cumbria

9 July 1967 – Top 10 Club, Dundee, Scotland

10 July 1967 – Kinema Ballroom, Dunfermline, Scotland

12 July 1967 – Douglas Hotel, Aberdeen, Scotland

13 July 1967 – Caledonian Hotel, Inverness, Scotland

15 July 1967 – Market Assembly Hall, Carlisle, Cumbria with Stewart Henry & The Livewires

19 July 1967 – Disco Blue, Ryde, Isle of Wight

20 July 1967 – Dorothy Ballroom, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire

21 July 1967 – Bluesville, Manor House, London

22 July 1967 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

22 July 1967 – Supreme Ballroom, Ramsgate, Kent

24 July 1967 – Bluesville, Ipswich, Suffolk

26 July 1967 – Top Rank Suite, Brighton, West Sussex

On 27 July 1967, Arthur (Art) Regis took over from Carl Noel after playing with Billie Davis & The Quality (and more recently Engelbert Humperdinck). Regis had previously worked with Frederick in Rupert & The Red Devils. He’d also played with Arthur Brown during 1965-1966 and then Freddie Mack in early 1967.

 

The line up now comprises:

 Jimmy James – lead vocals

Count Prince Miller – lead vocals

Wallace Wilson – lead guitar

Phil Chen – bass

Art Regis – keyboards

Fred “Nat” Frederick – tenor sax

Pat Sandy – baritone sax

Rupert Balgobin – drums

 

Selected gigs

27 July 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Bristol (presumably Regis’ debut gig)

29 July 1967 – Leas Cliffe Hall, Folkestone, Kent

 

5 August 1967 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

12 August 1967 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with Johnny Carr & The Cadillacs

15 August 1967 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London

18 August 1967 – Britannia Rowing Club, Nottingham

22 August 1967 – Bluesville, Manor House, London

24 August 1967 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire

26 August 1967 – St George’s Hall, Hinckley, Leicestershire with The Catharacts

28 August 1967 – Boulevard, Tadcaster, North Yorkshire with Elmer Gantry

28 August 1967 – Boogaloo, Castleford, West Yorkshire with Cockahoop (Wakefield Express) Missing from Art Regis’ gig list

29 August 1967 – Nottingham Blues Festival, Sherwood Rooms, Nottingham with The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Long John Baldry, Jimmy Cliff & The Shakedown Sound and Wynder K Frog

 

1 September 1967 – Princess Club, Chorlton, Greater Manchester

1 September 1967 – Domino Club, Openshaw, Greater Manchester

2 September 1967 – Matlock Bath Pavilion, Matlock, Derbyshire with Bread & Butter Band

Photo may be subject to copyright

3 September 1967 – Locarno, Wakefield, West Yorkshire

9 September 1967 – Gigs in Ghent and Lens, Belgium

10 September 1967 – Gig in Paris, France (possibly La Tour Club)

11 September 1967 – Gig in Paris, France (possibly La Tour Club)

15 September 1967 – St Michael’s Hall, Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire

16 September 1967 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Friction and Eyes of Blonde

17 September 1967 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Delmonts

19 September 1967 – Gig in Malvern, Worcestershire

Photo may be subject to copyright

20 September 1967 – Pavilion, Royal Pier, Southampton, Hampshire

23 September 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Crew and The Gentle Madness

24 September 1967 – Golden Torch, Tunstall, Staffordshire

25 September 1967 – Bluesville ’67 Clubs, Manor House Ballroom, Ipswich, Suffolk

26 September 1967 – BBC Overseas Service, Aeolian Hall, London

29 September 1967 – Central Pier, Morecambe, Lancashire

30 September 1967 – Spa Royal Hall, Bridlington with the Purple Mist and The Penjants

Photo may be subject to copyright

1 October 1967 – Cosmopolitan, Carlisle, Cumbria

2 October 1967 – Queen’s Ballroom, Wolverhampton, West Midlands

3 October 1967 – BBC Dave Symonds, Saturday Club

5 October 1967 – Broken Wheel, Retford, Nottinghamshire with Le Gay

6 October 1967 – McGoo’s, Edinburgh, Scotland

7 October 1967 – Maryland Glasgow and McGoo’s, Edinburgh, Scotland

8 October 1967 – Maryland Glasgow, Scotland

9 October 1967 – McGoo’s, Edinburgh, Scotland

11 October 1967 – 5th Dimension, Leicester

13 October 1967 – Loughborough University, Loughborough, Leicestershire

14 October 1967 – Northwich Memorial Hall, Northwich, Cheshire

14 October 1967 – Floral Hall, Southport, Lancashire

15 October 1967 – Broken Wheel, Retford, Nottinghamshire

16 October 1967 – Gig in Norwich (cancelled)

17 October 1967 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset

19 October 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

20 October 1967 – Carnatic Hall, Liverpool

21 October 1967 – Leas Cliff Hall, Folkestone, Kent

Photo may be subject to copyright

22 October 1967 – Kyrle Hall, Birmingham

24 October 1967 – Spinning Disc, Leeds, West Yorkshire

25 October 1967 – Majestic Ballroom, Reading, Berkshire

27 October 1967 – University of Surrey, Battersea Park Road, London

28 October 1967 – The Boogaloo, Castleford, West Yorkshire with Cockahoop

28 October 1967 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, northwest London

29 October 1967 – Leofric Hotel, Coventry, West Midlands

Photo may be subject to copyright

30 October 1967 – Bluesville ’67 Clubs, St Matthew’s Baths Hall, Ipswich, Suffolk

 

3 November 1967 – Gig in York, North Yorkshire

4 November 1967 – Floral Hall, Southport, Lancashire

10 November 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Deadly Nightshades and The System

11 November 1967 – Taggs Island, Hampton Court, Middlesex

Photo may be subject to copyright

12 November 1967 – Saville Theatre, London with The Nice and David McWilliams

13 November 1967 – City Hall, Sheffield, South Yorkshire with The Amboy Dukes

14 November 1967 – Sherwood Rooms, Nottingham (with Eddie Gray’s resident house band)

17 November 1967 – Gaiety Ballroom, Grimsby, North East Lincolnshire with Bleu Kats

18 November 1967 – Leicester University, Leicester

18 November 1967 – Night Owl, Leicester

19 November 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

20 November 1967 – Bluesville ’67, St Mathew’s Baths, Ipswich, Suffolk

22 November 1967 – Pavilion Theatre, Southampton, Hampshire

23 November 1967 – Locarno, Streatham, London

24 November 1967 – Bluesville, Manor House, London

Photo may be subject to copyright

25 November 1967 – Wellington Club, Dereham, Norfolk with Nature’s Own

26 November 1967 – Starlite Ballroom, Greenford, London with The Living Daylights

27 November 1967 – Pavilion Theatre, Bath

 

1 December 1967 – Lancaster University, Lancaster

2 December 1967 – Nottingham University, Nottingham

Photo may be subject to copyright

3 December 1967 – New Regis Club, Butlin’s Holiday Camp, Bognor Regis, West Sussex

7 December 1967 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear

8 December 1967 – Students’ Union, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk with Herbie Goins & The Night-Timers and Precious Few (Eastern Evening News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 December 1967 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Jo Jo Gunn, Reformation and Ray Bones

10 December 1967 – Starlight Ballroom, Crawley, West Sussex

12 December 1967 – King’s Hall, Aberystwyth, Wales (cancelled)

12 December 1967 – Aston University, Birmingham

14 December 1967 – Student’s Union, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk with Herbie Goins & The Night Timers and Precious Few

15 December 1967 – “Big C”, Farnborough, Hampshire

16 December 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with support

18 December 1967 – Bluesville, Ipswich, Suffolk

21 December 1967 – Pavilion, Worthing, West Sussex

22 December 1967 – Manor House (could be London or Ipswich)

23 December 1967 – Twisted Wheel, Manchester

24 December 1967 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Bluecaps

27 December 1967 – Queen’s Ballroom, Wolverhampton, West Midlands

30 December 1967 – Pavilion Theatre, Matlock Bath, Matlock, Derbyshire with Peppers Machine

30 December 1967 – Night Owl, Leicester

31 December 1967 – Brave New World, Southsea, Hampshire

 

4 January 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

13 January 1968 – Civic Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire with Funny Farm

18 January 1968 – Locarno Ballroom, Derby, Derbyshire

19 January 1968 – Students Union, Nottingham Regional College of Technology, Nottingham with Jimmy Cliff & The Shakedown Sound and The Litter

21 January 1968 – New Regis Club, Bognor Regis, West Sussex

 

8 February 1968 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

Around this time, Count Prince Miller, Wallace Wilson, Phil Chen and Rupert Balgobin gave notice that they were splitting from the group. Miller and Chen started to form The Counts with former member Carl Noel. The final gig with the old line-up appears to have been 2 March.

Jimmy James kept Art Regis, Fred “Nat” Frederick and Pat Sandy (aka Pat Gravesende) and started to recruit new musicians, billed as The New Vagabonds. 

These included former Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band members John Roberts (bass) and Herb Prestidge (drums). Another new recruit was trumpet player Barry Sutton and guitarist Dave Tedstone, who gave notice with his current employer Freddie Mack.

Initially, Art Regis’ old band mate from The Arthur Brown Union, Roy Stacey played bass before John Roberts took over.

17 February 1968 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, London (billed as Jimmy James Show)

18 February 1968 – Starlight Ballroom, Crawley, West Sussex

23 February 1968 – Tottenham Royal, Tottenham, London

24 February 1968 – Winter Gardens, Weston Super Mare, Somerset

25 February 1968 – Corn Exchange, Maidstone, Kent with The Coconut Mushroom

26 February 1968 – Queen’s Ballroom, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (billed as Jimmy James Show)

29 February 1968 – Streatham Locarno, Streatham, London

 

1 March 1968 – Top Rank, Doncaster, South Yorkshire

2 March 1968 – Twisted Wheel, Manchester

The new line up comprises:

Jimmy James – lead vocals

Dave Tedstone – lead guitar

Art Regis – organ

Roy Stacey – bass (replaced by John Roberts)

Fred “Nat” Frederick – tenor saxophone

Pat Gravesende – tenor and baritone saxophone

Barry Sutton – trumpet

Herb Prestidge – drums

 

Selected gigs

5 March 1968 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London (debut of new line up according to Regis’ diaryRoy Stacey on bass

6 March 1968 – South Parade Pier, Portsmouth, Hampshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 March 1968 – Leas Cliff Hall, Folkestone, Kent with The Supernatural

Photo may be subject to copyright

10 March 1968 – Butlins “Regis Club” Bognor Regis, West Sussex

Roy Stacey left to work in a short-lived group with Iain Clark who went on to Cressida in late 1968 and John Roberts joined on bass

13 March 1968 – Mecca Ballroom, Leeds, West Yorkshire

16 March 1968 – Cheshire College of Education, Crewe, Cheshire

17 March 1968 – Lyddon Sports Club, Bournemouth, Dorset

20 March 1968 – Top Rank, Bristol

22 March 1968 – Gig in Addington, London

23 March 1968 – Brave New World, Portsmouth, Hampshire

27 March 1968 – Tangerine Club, East Ham, London

28 March 1968 – Marimba, Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire

29 March 1968 – Salford University, Salford, Greater Manchester

30 March 1968 – Gig in Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire (most likely Bridlington Spa)

In early April 1968, the press announces that Count Miller and other former Vagabonds had formed The Counts

Photo may be subject to copyright

5 April 1968 – Die Hallen, Kortrijk, Belgium with Johnny Halliday and The Lemons

6 April 1968 – Eden Ranch, Lens, Belgium

7 April 1968 – L’Omnibus and Le Trident, Paris, France

11 April 1968 – Barn Barbecue Dance, Thurmaston, Leicester with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Fleetwood Mac, Alan Bown, Soft Machine, Fairport Convention, Legay, Sons & Lovers, The Equals, Pesky Gee, Pitiful Souls and Six Across (Regis says this clashes with the following gig)

11 April 1968 – Skyline Ballroom, Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire

12 April 1968 – Maryland, Glasgow, Scotland

13 April 1968 – Maryland, Glasgow, Scotland

14 April 1968 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Dominoes

Photo may be subject to copyright

15 April 1968 – The Barn Barbecue, Leicester with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Soft Machine, Fleetwood Mac, The Equals, Alan Bown, Fairport Convention, Legay, Pitiful Souls, Sons & Lovers, Six Across, Pesky Gee

19 April 1968 – Central Pier, Morecambe, Lancashire

Photo may be subject to copyright

20 April 1968 – Civic Hall, Nantwich, Cheshire with Kaspers Engine (billed as The Jimmy James Show)

21 April 1968 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

22 April 1968 – Bluesville ’68 Clubs, Manor House Ballroom, Ipswich, Suffolk

24 April 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

25 April 1968 – The Pier, Worthing, West Yorkshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

26 April 1968 – Pavilion Ballroom, Weymouth, Dorset with Delroy Williams and The Sugar Band, The New Trend and Continuity Big D Show

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 April 1968 – George Ballroom, Hinkley, Leicestershire (Regis has Hackney but this is more likely)

30 April 1968 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London

 

4 May 1968 – Earlham Park, Norwich, Norfolk with Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Titch, Ten Years After and The Precious Few

Photo may be subject to copyright

8 May 1968 – Spa Lounge & Ballroom, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

10 May 1968 – Trentham Gardens, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire

11 May 1968 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, London

12 May 1968 – Union Club, Nottingham

21 May 1968 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

24 May 1968 – Manor House (London or Ipswich)

25 May 1968 – Cliffs Pavilion, Southend, Essex with support

26 May 1968 – Top Hat, Littlehampton, West Sussex

31 May 1968 – White Lion, Edgeware, London

 

1 June 1968 – George Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire with Peppermint Creams

3 June 1968 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

7 June 1968 – Clockwork Orange, Chester, Cheshire with Green Ginger (billed as The Jimmy James Show)

8 June 1968 – Winter Gardens, Western Super Mare, Somerset

14 June 1968 – Anson Suite, New Union Building, Bristol

15 June 1968 – Leas Cliff Hall, Folkestone, Kent

19 June 1968 – Locarno, Stevenage, Herts

20 June 1968 – Locarno Ballroom, Streatham, London

21 June 1968 – College of Education, Leicester

22 June 1968 – Gig in Bridlington, East Riding of Yorkshire (most likely Bridlington Spa)

23 June 1968 – Top Hat, Littlehampton, West Sussex

28 June 1968 – Leeds University, Leeds, West Yorkshire

29 June 1968 – Newark Rugby Club, Newark, Nottinghamshire

30 June 1968 – Redcar Jazz Club, Coatham Hotel, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The West Coast Promotion

The new formation releases its debut 45, issued on Pye, “Red Red Wine” c/w “Who Could be Loving You?”

Tony Priestland, who has played with Art Regis in Arthur Brown’s band in 1965 briefly joins around about now plus a trumpet player called Don.

4 July 1968 – Cornwall Technical College (possibly St Austell) with PP Arnold and Spirit of John Morgan

6 July 1968 – Dreamland, Margate, Kent

7 July 1968 – Douglas House, U.S. Military Social Club, London

12 July 1968 – Central Pier, Morecambe, Lancashire

13 July 1968 – Gig in Yardley, Birmingham

14 July 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

16 July 1968 – Concorde, Southampton, Hampshire

18 July 1968 – Locarno Ballroom, Bristol

19 July 1968 – Tottenham Royal, London

21 July 1968 – Union Club, Nottingham

23 July 1968 – The Spa Lounge, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

25 July 1968 – Locarno Ballroom, Portsmouth, Hampshire

26 July 1968 – Mistrale Club, Beckenham, London

27 July 1968 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with support

28 July 1968 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire

At some point (most likely during July), the band recorded four tracks which were later picked up by Acid Jazz for its Lookin’ Good EP: “She’s Looking Good”, “Aunt Dora’s Love Soul Shack”, “Soul Sister, Brown Sugar” and “Why (Must I Be Treated So Bad)”

 

Regis’ diary has Scottish tour for 29 July-6 August 1968

Dave Tedstone leaves immediately after this tour to work with Geno Washington. His temporary replacement is guitarist John Bedder who has played with The Savages and also Winston G

 

The line-up now comprises: 

Jimmy James – lead vocals

John Bedder – lead guitar

Art Regis – organ

John Roberts – bass

Fred “Nat” Frederick – tenor saxophone

Pat Gravesende – baritone saxophone

Tony Priestland – alto saxophone

Barry Sutton – trumpet

Don ? – trumpet?

Herb Prestidge – drums

10 August 1968 – Botley, Oxfordshire

13 August 1968 – BBC Stuart Henry Show (if this is the date the show aired, this might be the tracks described above, later released by Acid Jazz)

15 August 1968 – Royal Pier, Southampton, Hampshire

16 August 1968 – Plaza, Teignmouth, Devon

Photo may be subject to copyright

16 August 1968 – Plaza, Tynemouth, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear (very unlikely but advertised)

17 August 1968 – R.A.F. Raven Club, Waddington, Devon

18 August 1968 – Linden Sports Club, Bournemouth, Dorset

24 August 1968 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, northwest London

29 August 1968 – Concorde, Southampton, Hampshire (Southern Echo says 27 August)

Photo may be subject to copyright

30 August 1968 – Candlelight Club, Scarborough, North Yorkshire

Dave Tedstone returns around about now

31 August 1968 – Gig in Western Super Mare, Somerset (may be Tedstone’s first gig back)

 

1 September – Mercers Arms, Coventry, West Midlands

8 September – Beau Brummel, Nantwich, Cheshire

9 September – Gig in Bath

12 September – Gig in Worthing, West Sussex

13 September 1968 – Kew Boathouse, Kew, west London

Around this time Art Regis departs and Bill Coleman takes over on organ. Tony Priestland also moves on to join Titus Groan. Another former Ram Jam member, Lionel Kingham comes in on sax

This same month, Pye issues the band’s LP Open Up Your Soul

25 September 1968 – City Hall, Sheffield, South Yorkshire

28 September 1968 – Leascliffe Hall, Folkestone, Kent

 

1 October 1968 – Spa Lounge, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

4 October 1968 – George Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire

5 October 1968 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with support

9 October 1968 – Hemel Hempstead Pavilion, Hemel Hempstead, Herts with Renaissance Fair

15 October 1968 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London

18 October 1968 – Central Pier, Morecambe, Lancashire

19 October 1968 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Privy Seal

20 October 1968 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Chelfont Line

Photo may be subject to copyright

29 October 1968 – Concorde, Southampton, Hampshire

Photo may be subject to copyright

1 November 1968 – Shrubbery Hotel, Ilminster, Somerset with The Package Deal and Dave the Rave

3 November 1968 – Byron, Greenford, northwest London

8 November 1968 – University of Sussex, Brighton, West Sussex

9 November 1968 – Pavilion, Weston Super Mare, Somerset

10 November 1968 – Britannia Rowing Club, Nottingham

12 November 1968 – Kirkcaldy Ice Rink, Kirkcaldy, Scotland with Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich, The Love Affair, The Herd and Procession

Photo may be subject to copyright

13 November 1968 – Market Hall, Carlisle, Cumbria with Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich, The Herd, The Procession and The Emeralds

15 November 1968 – Falkirk Town Hall, Falkirk, Scotland with Brian Marshall Foundation, Haze and Procession

15 November 1968 – Dundee Ice Rink, Dundee, Scotland with The Love Affair, The Herd and Procession

28 November 1968 – Skyline Ballroom, Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire

29 November 1968 – Elms Court Hotel, Botley, Oxford with Paper Lemon

30 November 1968 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent

Photo may be subject to copyright

3 December 1968 – Spa Lounge, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire

6 December 1968 – Pier Ballroom, Morecambe, Lancashire

7 December 1968 – Brighton University, Brighton, West Sussex

8 December 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

12 December 1968 – Walthamstow Assembly Hall, Waltham Forest Tech College and School of Art, northeast London with The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band and The Pretty Things

13 December 1968 – John Dalton College, Manchester

14 December 1968 – Walsall Town Hall, Walsall, West Midlands

14 December 1968 – Cliff Pavilion, Folkestone, Kent (unlikely)

15 December 1968 – Byron, Greenford, northwest London

16 December 1968 – Guildhall, Portsmouth, Hampshire

21 December 1968 – St George Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire with The Spring and Tom-E-Tee

In late December Jimmy James dissolves the current formation and puts together a new line up the following month. Phil Chen returns from The Counts and the group also features former Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band member, guitarist Pete Gage

Jimmy James – lead vocals

Pete Gage – lead guitar

Bill Coleman – keyboards

Phil Chen – bass

Clive Stephens – saxophone

Barry Sutton – trumpet

+ others

Pete Gage describes the situation as a “pick up band vibe” with various musicians coming and going alongside those listed above. He was also getting tired of the soul scene and started to get into more early jazz fusion so later that year he and Stephens left to form Dada. Chen also departs and Coleman helps Jimmy James revamped the group again

Selected gigs

1 January 1969 – Gaiety Ballroom, Ramsey, Cambridgeshire

6 January 1969 – Orchid Ballroom, Purley, Surrey

10-11 January 1969 – Scene Two, Scarborough, North Yorkshire

24 January 1969 – Shrewsbury Hotel, Bridgewater, Somerset

25 January 1969 – Witchdoctor, Catford, southeast London with Justin Tyme

26 January 1969 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Skyliners

Melody Maker notes that Jimmy James split from their recording manager John Schroeder and will use independent producers from now on. Next is Pete Gage and 45 “Close The Door on My World”.

1 February 1969 – Winter Gardens, Weston Super Mare, Somerset

4 February 1969 – Concord, Southampton, Hampshire

6 February 1969 – Locarno, Portsmouth, Hampshire

8 February 1969 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, northwest London

13 February 1969 – Locarno Ballroom, Coventry, West Midlands

15 February 1969 – New Astoria Ballroom, Rawtenstall, West Midlands

16 February 1969 – Belle Vue, Manchester

17 February 1969 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with Lemon Cartoon and Cleo’s Mood

22 February 1969 – Town Hall, Glastonbury, Somerset

The band releases the 45 “Open the Door” c/w “Why” on Pye

6 April 1969 – Sherwood rooms, Nottingham with Marv Johnson & The Bandwagon

12 April 1969 – Burton’s, Uxbridge, northwest London

15 April 1969 – Revolution, central London

27 April 1969 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with White Rabbit

 

3 May 1969 – Kennington College, south London

26 May 1969 – Skegness Seaside Soul Festival, Skegness, Lincolnshire with Amen Corner, Inez and Charlie Foxx, The Fantastics and Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band

 

2 June 1969 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with Rubber Soul Band and Wall City Jazzmen

7 June 1969 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with Rainbow Folly and The Connection

Photo may be subject to copyright

14 July 1969 – Orchid Ballroom, Purley, Surrey

18 July 1969 – Devizes Corn Exchange, Devizes, Wiltshire with Tom Browne and Green Ice

20 July 1969 – Broken Wheel, Retford, Nottinghamshire with Clyde McPhatter

Pip Williams joins on lead guitar around late July from The Fantastics’ backing band The House of Orange. From his recollections, it looks like some of the musicians who had played with Jimmy James in 1968 returned

 

Jimmy James – lead vocals

Pip Williams – lead guitar

Bill Coleman – keyboards

John Roberts – bass

Barry Sutton – trumpet

Lionel Kingham – tenor sax

Herb Prestidge – drums

Williams doesn’t remember many gigs but does recall playing at the Club Saint Hilaire de La Mer in St Maxime in the south of France during the summer, which lasted about a week. He also remembers that former member Count Prince Miller stepped in as MC a few times. The group later split from Jimmy James to back Jimmy Ruffin.

Selected gigs

6 August 1969 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset

 

6 September 1969 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Attic Express and Paper Lemon

Photo may be subject to copyright

14 September 1969 – Le Metro, Birmingham

Photo may be subject to copyright

21 September 1969 – Caribbean Music Festival, Empire Pool, Wembley, London with Johnny Nash, Desmond Dekker, Maxi Romeo, Jackie Edwards, Count Prince Miller, Joyce Bond, Root and Jenny Jackson, Black Velvet, Derek Morgan, The Mohawks, Pat Kelly and The Skatalites

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 October 1969 – Rebecca’s, Birmingham with Ray King Soul Band

Photo may be subject to copyright

25 October 1969 – Dreamland Ballroom, Margate, Kent with The Ritual

27 October 1969 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with Petrus, Golliwog and Wall City Jazzmen

Photo may be subject to copyright

31 October 1969 – Flamingo Entertainment Centre, Hereford

 

8 November 1969 – Royal Links Pavilion, Cromer, Norfolk with The Village Green Road Show

9 November 1969 – Le Metro, Birmingham

23 November 1969 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire

 

24 December 1969 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Freddie Mac Show and Lloyd Williams Soul Caravan

Photo may be subject to copyright

3 January 1970 – Belfry, Wishaw, West Midlands with Dandelion Replaced Spooky Tooth

In early 1970, James completely revised the group line-up as the following:

Jimmy James – lead vocals

Chris Garefield – lead guitar

Alan Kirk – keyboards

Alan Wood – bass

Russell Courtney – drums

 

Selected gigs

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 March 1970 – Belfry, Wishaw, West Midlands

 

14 May 1970 – Byron, Greenford, northwest London

23 May 1970 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with support

31 May 1970 – Pavilion Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset

 

4 July 1970 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London

28 July 1970 – Top Rank Suite, Birmingham with Major Lance, J J Jackson & Dilemma, The Fantastic Honey and Darling & The Purple Bloom

 

9 August 1970 – Pavilion Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset

 

10 October 1970 – Madison Club, Torquay, Devon

 

24 December 1970 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Fantastics and Carl Edwards Roadshow

Art Regis helped greatly by sharing his diary dates. Thanks also to Pete Gage, Pip Williams, Dave Tedstone, Phil Chen and Roy Stacey. Big thanks to David Else for his help with chronology of the early years and fact checking

Sources include:

Aldershot News, Beat Instrumental, Maidstone Gazette, East Kent Times & Mail, Nuneaton Evening Tribune, Fabulous 208 Magazine, Derby Evening Telegraph, Evening Argus (Brighton), Bournemouth Evening Echo, Gloucestershire Echo, Melody Maker, Leicester Mercury, Southern Evening Echo, Northwich Chronicle, Nottingham Evening Post, Newham, West & East Ham, Barking and Stratford Express, Yorkshire Evening Post, Eastern Evening News, Evening Star (Ipswich), Bucks Free Press (High Wycombe), Dundee Evening Telegraph, Folkestone & Hythe Gazette, Essex Chronicle, Coventry Evening Telegraph, Portsmouth News, Retford Times, The Star, the Dorset Evening Echo, the Express & Star, Torbay Express and South Devon Echo. Western Gazette, Derbyshire Times, Wakefield Express, Dave Allen provided Birdcage gigs for Southsea and Eastney.

 

Herbie Goins & The Night-Timers’ gigs 1965-1969

Welcome to another posting of a series of gig listings for 1960s bands. None of these lists is exhaustive and my idea is to add to them in the comments section below over time. They are here for future researchers to draw on.  I have also added a few interesting bits of information and will add images in time.

I’d like to encourage band members to get in touch to share memories, or for anyone to send corrections/clarifications to my email: Warchive@aol.com 

Equally important, if you attended any of the gigs below or played in the support band, please do leave your memories below in the comments section for future historians to use. If you know of any missing gigs, please add them too, if possible, with the sources.

HERBIE GOINS & THE NIGHT-TIMERS:

 Herbie Goins – lead vocals

John McLaughlin – lead guitar

Mick Eve – tenor saxophone

Harry Beckett – trumpet

Nigel Stanger – Hammond organ/saxophone

Dave Price – bass

Bill Stevens – drums

1965

23 March 1965 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, north London (Geoff Williams’ research: Decca Studios and Klooks Kleek book) This might have been before the link-up with The Night-Timers who were working with Ronnie Jones

 

21 April 1965 – Orford Cellar, Norwich, Norfolk (Eastern Evening News)

25 April 1965 – Flamingo, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Geno Washington & The Ram Jam Band (Melody Maker)

 

8 May 1965 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham (website: https://dungeonmods.wordpress.com/) Says straight from the Flamingo, Wardour Street, Soho, London

16 May 1965 – The Dolphin, Marine Court, St Leonards, East Sussex (Roger Bistow’s research at Dizzy Tiger Music website)

29 May 1965 – Corn Exchange, Chelmsford, Essex (Essex Chronicle)

 

2 June 1965 – Le Disque A Go Go, Bournemouth, Dorset (website: https://bournemouthbeatboom.wordpress.com/)

7 June 1965 – Cooks Ferry Inn, Edmonton, north London (Leyton, Leytonstone and Waltham Forest Guardian) Billed as The Night-timers

11 June 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with support (NME) Billed as The Night-timers with Herbie Goins

13 June 1965 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with Kim & The Kinetics (Dennis Weller, Chris Scott Wilson and Graham Lowe’s book)

20 June 1965 – Agincourt Ballroom, Camberley, Surrey (Aldershot News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 June 1965 – Galaxy Club, Woburn Park Hotel, Addlestone, Surrey (Woking Herald)

 

1 July 1965 – Bowes Lyon Youth Centre, Stevenage, Herts with The Bumps In The Night (Hertfordshire Express)

4 July 1965 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham (website: https://dungeonmods.wordpress.com/)

10 July 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with Gary L Thompson & The Sidewinders (NME)

23 July 1965 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham (website: https://dungeonmods.wordpress.com/)

 

6 August 1965 – Birdcage, Kimbells Ballroom, Southsea, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

7 August 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London with Group Survival (NME) Billed as The Night-timers with Herbie Goins

Photo may be subject to copyright

8 August 1965 – Galaxy Club, Woburn Park Hotel, Addlestone, Surrey (Woking Herald)

28 August 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London (NME) Billed as The Night-timers with Herbie Goins

Sometime in late August/early September 1965, Nigel Stanger returned to Newcastle upon Tyne and worked with Alan Price. Former member Dave Morse returned on Hammond organ

Photo may be subject to copyright

4 September 1965 – Zambesi Club, Hounslow, west London (Middlesex Chronicle)

12 September 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

Photo may be subject to copyright

16 September 1965 – Ritz Club, Skewen, Wales with The Kingpins and The Iveys (Port Talbot Guardian)

17 September 1965 – Archer Hall, Billericay, Essex (Southend Standard & Essex Weekly Advertiser)

18 September 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Putney, southwest London (Melody Maker)

24 September 1965 – Orford Cellar, Norwich, Norfolk (Eastern Evening News)

 

8 October 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

13 October 1965 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, west London with The Rick ‘N’ Beckers (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

16 October 1965 – Corn Exchange, Chelmsford, Essex with Loomers Ltd (Essex Chronicle)

24 October 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

 

3 November 1965 – Farnbrough Town Hall, Farnborough, Hampshire (Aldershot News)

12 November 1965 – Beachcomber, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post)

13 November 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

14 November 1965 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, west London with The Worrying Kind (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

21 November 1965 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

28 November 1965 – Ricky Ticky, Plaza, Guildford, Surrey (David Else’s research)

 

5 December 1965 – Agincourt Ballroom, Camberley, Surrey (Aldershot News)

9 December 1965 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

11 December 1965 – Beachcomber, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post)

15 December 1965 – Le Disque A Go Go, Bournemouth, Dorset (website: https://bournemouthbeatboom.wordpress.com/)

24 December 1965 – King Mojo Club, Sheffield, South Yorkshire with Tony Knight’s Chessmen (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

26 December 1965 – Pontiac, Zeeta House, Pontiac, southwest London (Melody Maker)

1966

1 January 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

5 January 1966 – Farnborough Town Hall, Farnborough, Hampshire (Aldershot News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

8 January 1966 – House of Aden, Witham Hall, Essex with Elkie Brooks, The Marionettes and Ray Ford and The Statesiders (Essex County Standard)

20 January 1966 – Carousel Club, 1 Camp Road, Farnborough, Hampshire (Aldershot News/Camberley News)

22 January 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, London (Melody Maker)

30 January 1966 – King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (The Star)

 

4 February 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, London (Melody Maker)

5 February 1966 – Winter Gardens, Banbury, Oxfordshire with Elkie Brooks, The Marionettes and Phase II (Brackley Advertiser) Is this possible with the gig below?

5 February 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

13 February 1966 – Ricky Ticky, Plaza, Guildford, Surrey (David Else’s research)

18 February 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, London with Dakota Station (Melody Maker)

19 February 1966 – King Mojo, Sheffield, South Yorkshire with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds and The Blueberries (The Star)

26 February 1966 – New All-Star Club, 9a Artillery Passage, E1, London (Melody Maker)

Dave Morse departed on the eve of a Swiss tour and former member Nigel Stanger recommended his friend Mike Carr

March 1966 – Hazyland Club, Hazy Osterveld, Zurich, Switzerland (one month) (Mike Carr recollections)

19 March 1966 – Mod Place, Victoria Rooms, Clifton, Bristol with Elkie Brooks, The Marionettes and The Reasons (Western Scene) Is this possible with Swiss dates above

Photo may be subject to copyright

1 April 1966 – New All-Star Club, 9a Artillery Passage, E1, London with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins (Melody Maker)

4 April 1966 – Penthouse, Birmingham, West Midlands with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins (Birmingham Evening Mail)

9 April 1966 – Jigsaw, Manchester with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and Graham Bond Organisation (Manchester Evening News & Chronicle)

10 April 1966 – Plaza Ballroom, Handsworth West Midlands with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins (Birmingham Evening Mail)

15 April 1966 – Dungeon Club, Nottingham with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins (website: https://dungeonmods.wordpress.com/)

Photo may be subject to copyright

16 April 1966 – Carousel Club, 1 Camp Road, Farnbrough, Hampshire with Screaming J Hawkins (Aldershot News/Camberley News)

18 April 1966 – Atlanta Ballroom, Woking, Surrey with support (Aldershot News/Camberley News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

23 April 1966 – Starlight Ballroom, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, The Plain & Fancy and The Tykes (Lincolnshire Standard)

30 April 1966 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear with The Score (website: http://www.readysteadygone.co.uk/club-agogo-newcastle-2/)

 

2 May 1966 – Esquire, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (The Star)

3 May 1966 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

4 May 1966 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear with The Score (website: http://www.readysteadygone.co.uk/club-agogo-newcastle-2/)

8 May 1966 – Blue Moon, Hayes, Middlesex (Melody Maker)

15 May 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London with The Seventh Sun (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 May 1966 – Carousel Club, 1 Camp Road, Farnbrough, Hampshire (Aldershot News/Camberley News) David Else also has the band playing at the Camberley Ricky Tick at the Cambridge Hotel on this date with The Blues Syndicate

Photo: John Treais

28 May 1966 – New All-Star Club, 9a Artillery Passage, E1, London (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

Around late May/early June John McLaughlin left and first Mick Barker and then John Smith came in on guitar (Ed: would welcome any insights from readers)

Photo may be subject to copyright

4 June 1966 – Zambesi, Hounslow, west London (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

10 June 1966 – Carousel Club, 1 Camp Road, Farnborough, Hampshire (Aldershot News/Camberley News)

12 June 1966 – Toft’s, Folkestone, Kent (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald)

15 June 1966 – Orford Cellar, Norwich (Eastern Evening News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

17 June 1966 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with Mood Indigo (Melody Maker)

19 June 1966 – Nottingham Boat Club, Nottingham (Down at the Boat book)

24 June 1966 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with support (website: www.california-ballroom.info/gigs/)

29 June 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London with Nocturnal (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 July 1966 – Bowes Lyon House, Stevenage, Hertfordshire (Welwyn Times)

11 July 1966 – Majestic, Reading, Berkshire (Bracknell News)

July/August 1966 – Papagayos, St-Tropez, France with Steampacket (Mike Carr recollections)

 

7 September 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, London with The Charge (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

9 September 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, London (Melody Maker)

10 September 1966 – Toft’s, Folkestone, Kent (Folkestone, Hythe & District Herald/Melody Maker)

11 September 1966 – Beachcomber, Nottingham with The Jimmy Brown Sound (Nottingham Evening Post)

Photo may be subject to copyright

12 September 1966 – Queens Ballroom, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail/Express & Star)

Photo may be subject to copyright

14 September 1966 – Scene Club, Cardiff, Wales (Western Daily Press)

19 September 1966 – Locarno Ballroom, Bristol (Evening Post)

19 September 1966 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

25 September 1966 – Black Prince Hotel, Bexley, southeast London (South East London Mercury)

25 September 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Melody Maker)

29 September 1966 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, west London (London Life) This may be 30 September

Photo may be subject to copyright

30 September 1966 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Washington DCs (website: www.california-ballroom.info/gigs/)

Sometime in early October, Speedy Acquaye joined on congas from Georgie Fame’s Blue Flames, having appeared on the sessions for “Number One in Your Heart” earlier in the year

1 October 1966 – Beachcomber, Nottingham with Broodly-Hoo (Nottingham Evening Post)

2 October 1966 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent (Chatham, Rochester & Gillingham News)

8 October 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

15 October 1966 – The New All-Star Club, 9a Artillery Passage, E1, London (Melody Maker)

16 October 1966 – Dereham Tavern Club, Dereham, Norfolk with The Sullivan James (North Norfolk News)

22 October 1966 – The Location, Woolwich, southeast London with The Images (Melody Maker)

23 October 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

26 October 1966 – Elbow Room, Aston, West Midlands (Birmingham Evening Mail)

27 October 1966 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

28 October 1966 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)

29 October 1966 – Plebians, Halifax, West Yorkshire (Halifax Evening Courier & Guardian)

31 October 1966 – The Village, Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire (Grimsby Evening Telegraph)

 

2 November 1966 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, west London with The Coloured Raisins (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

5 November 1966 – The Union, Manchester University with Cock-A-Hoops and All Soul Band (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle)

9 November 1966 – Harpenden Town Hall, Harpenden, Hertfordshire (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

11 November 1966 – Top Spot, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire with The Blues Generation (Gloucester Citizen)

13 November 1966 – Beachcomber Club, Nottingham with Sonny Childe & The TNT (Nottingham Evening Post)

14 November 1966 – Stafford College of Art, Stafford, Staffordshire with Powerhouse (Express & Star)

17 November 1966 – Blaises, Queen’s Gate, Kensington (Tatler)

18 November 1966 – South Bank Jazz Club, Grimsby, Humberside (Grimsby Evening Telegraph)

24 November 1966 – Concorde, Southampton, Hampshire (Southern Evening Echo)

27 November 1966 – Dereham Tavern Club, Dereham, Norfolk with The Marvin Lois Enterprise (North Norfolk News)

 

2 December 1966 – Dancing Slipper Ballroom, West Bridgeford, Nottingham with The Tribe (Nottingham Evening Post)

3 December 1966 – Burlesque, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)

3 December 1966 – St George’s Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire (Nuneaton Evening Tribune)

4 December 1966 – Douglas House, Lancaster Gate, west London with Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

4 December 1966 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 December 1966 – Carousel Club, Farnborough, Hampshire (Camberley News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

10 December 1966 – Wimbledon Palais, Wimbledon, southwest London with The Merseybeats (Balham & Tooting News and Mercury)

Photo may be subject to copyright

11 December 1966 – Beau Brummel Club, Alvaston Hall Hotel, Nantwich, Cheshire with Phil Ryan & The Scorpions (Chester Chronicle)

14 December 1966 – Stourbridge Town Hall, Stourbridge, West Midlands with The Satin Dolls (Poster)

15 December 1966 – London College of Fashion, John Princess Street, London (Melody Maker)

16 December 1966 – Wimbledon Palais, southwest Wimbledon, London (Mitcham News & Mercury)

18 December 1966 – Starlite, Greenford, northwest London (Melody Maker)

23 December 1966 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London with The Satin Dolls and The Situation (Melody Maker)

29 December 1966 – Speakeasy, central London (Disc & Music Echo)

30 December 1966 – Chislehurst Caves, Chislehurst, southeast London (Melody Maker)

31 December 1966 – Sibyllas, Swallow Street, central London (Disc & Music Echo)

1967

1 January 1967 – Beachcomber Club, Nottingham with The Satin Dolls (Nottingham Evening Post)

3 January 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

5 January 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Coventry, West Midlands with The Silverstone Set (Coventry Evening Telegraph)

6 January 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Wynder K Frog (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)

Photo may be subject to copyright

7 January 1967 – Roundhouse, Chalk Farm, London with Cliff Bennett & The Rebel Rousers, The Creation, The Artwoods and St Louis Union (Melody Maker)

11 January 1967 – Eel Pie Island, Twickenham, west London with John Bryan Fraternity (website: http://eelpieislandmusic.com/eel-pie-island-roll-call)

13 January 1967 – California Ballroom, Dunstable, Bedfordshire with The Satin Dolls and The All Night Workers (website: www.california-ballroom.info/gigs/)

15 January 1967 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent with Satin Dolls (Chatham, Rochester & Gillingham News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

20 January 1967 – Mod Ball, Pavilion Ballroom, Weymouth, Dorset with Teak and Smokey and The Nite People (Western Gazette)

Photo may be subject to copyright

21 January 1967 – Starlight Room, Boston Gliderdrome, Boston, Lincolnshire with The Satin Dolls, Timebox with Richard Henry, Triads and Ray Bones (Spalding Standard)

26 January 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with Jimmy Cliff & The Shakedown Sound (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 January 1967 – Top Spot Ballroom, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire with The Knak (Gloucester Citizen)

Photo may be subject to copyright

28 January 1967 – Clouds, Derby (Derby Evening Telegraph)

28 January 1967 – Nite Owl, Leicester (Leicester Mercury)

 

1 February 1967 – Elbow Room, Aston, West Midlands (Fabulous 208)

2 February 1967 – Bowes-Lyon-House, Stevenage, West Midlands (Fabulous 208)

4 February 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London with The Avalons and The Mack Sound (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

5 February 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)

6 February 1967 – Queen’s Ballroom, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (Express & Star)

7-8 February 1967 – Sibyllas, Swallow Street, central London (Fabulous 208)

9 February 1967 – Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, central London with The Satin Dolls and The In Crowd (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)

10 February 1967 – Hereford College (presumably Hereford but could be Oxford college) (Fabulous 208) They may have played the Stage Club on this date too (Cherwell)

11 February 1967 – Durham University, Durham, County Durham (Fabulous 208)

14 February 1967 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, west London (Fabulous 208)

14 February 1967 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, north London (Geoff Williams’ research: Decca Studios and Klooks Kleek book)

16 February 1967 – Cadenas Club, Stoke Hotel, Guildford with The Jeremiah Thing (David Else’s research)

17 February 1967 – Ricky Tick, Hounslow, West London (David Else’s research)

18 February 1967 – Ricky Tick, Thames Hotel, Windsor, Berkshire (David Else’s research)

19 February 1967 – Saville Theatre, Shaftsbury Avenue, London with Chuck Berry and The Canadians (Fabulous 208)

21 February 1967 – Pavilion, Bournemouth Colleges Student’s Union, Landsdowne, Dorset with The Palmer James Group (Bournemouth Evening Echo)

23 February 1967– Marquee, Wardour Street, Soho, London with The In Crowd (Tony Bacon’s book: London Live)

24 February 1967 – Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, Wales with The Yardbirds (Fabulous 208)

Photo may be subject to copyright

25 February 1967 – Matlock Bath Pavilion, Matlock, Derbyshire with John L Watson and The Web (Derby Evening Telegraph)

According to the Guardian Journal’s 18 March issue, page 5, Mike Carr departed in early March. His replacement was Jamaican musician Junior Kerr.

Kerr came in via backing singers and dancers Cassie and Candy (aka The Satin Dolls) who were part of the Ready Steady Go dancing troupe. They joined around in late 1966 (Ed: would welcome any reader insights)

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4 March 1967 – Royal Lido, Prestatyn, Clwyd, Wales with The Raynes (Rhyl & Prestayn Gazette)

16 March 1967 – Locarno, Derby (Fabulous 208)

17 March 1967 – Queen’s Rink, West Hartlepool, County Durham (Fabulous 208)

18 March 1967 – Sheffield University, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (Fabulous 208)

Photo may be subject to copyright

19 March 1967 – Cosmo Ballroom, Carlisle, Cumbria with 22nd Street People (Cumberland News/Fabulous 208)

22 March 1967 – College of Tech, Nottingham with Unit 4 Plus 2 (Fabulous 208)

23 March 1967 – Palace Hotel, Southport, Lancashire (Fabulous 208)

24 March 1967 – Top Ten, Manchester with Candy Choir (Manchester Evening News & Chronicle)

24 March 1967 – Bluesville, Manor House, London (Melody Maker)

25 March 1967 – Gaiety Ballroom, Ramsey, Cambridgeshire with The Legay (Cambridgeshire Times)

26 March 1967 – Belle Vue, Greater Manchester (Fabulous 208)

9 April 1967 – Ram Jam, Brixton, south London (Melody Maker)

14 April 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London (Melody Maker)

16 April 1967 – Kirklevington Country Club, Kirklevington, North Yorkshire (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)

18 April 1967 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset with The Bossmen (Bournemouth Evening Echo)

23 April 1967 – Nottingham Boat Club, Nottingham (Down at the Boat book)

26 April 1967 – Bromel Club, Bromley Court Hotel, Bromley, Kent (Melody Maker)

28 April 1967 – Steering Wheel Club, Dorchester, Dorset with Adge Cutler & The Wurzels and The Gordon Riots (Western Gazette)

29 April 1967 – Nite Owl, Leicester with The Executive (Melody Maker)

30 April 1967 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent with Satin Dolls (Chatham, Rochester & Gillingham News)

Sometime around this period, Linda Lewis also sang with the group briefly having worked with The Q-Set in late 1966. She didn’t stay long and cut a solo single for Polydor that summer. She would reunite though with Kerr soon after in White Rabbit

Photo may be subject to copyright

6 May 1967 ­– Shoreline Club, Bognor Regis, West Sussex with The In Crowd (Dave Allen research)

9 May 1967 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, London with The Satin Dolls (Melody Maker)

12 May 1967 – Drokiweeny, Manchester with The Satin Dolls (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle)

12 May 1967 – Tabernacle, Stockport, Greater Manchester with The Satin Dolls (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle)

12 May 1967 – Mr Smith’s, Manchester with The Satin Dolls (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle)

16 May 1967 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, London with The Web (Melody Maker)

23 May 1967 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, London (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 May 1967 – St George’s Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire (Nuneaton Evening Tribune)

27 May 1967 – Klooks Kleek, West Hampstead, London (Geoff Williams’ research: Decca Studios and Klooks Kleek book)

29 May 1967 – Beachcomber, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post) Is this possible with the gig below?

29 May 1967 – Supreme Eastern Esplanade, Ramsgate, Kent with The Satin Dolls and Len Marshall Sound (Melody Maker/East Kent Times & Mail)

30 May 1967 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, London (Melody Maker/Record Mirror)

 

2 June 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London with The Satin Dolls (Melody Maker)

This large gap in June suggests they may have been overseas

Photo may be subject to copyright

30 June 1967 – Koo Koo Byrd, Cardiff, Wales (Glamorgan County Times)

 

1 July 1967 – Supreme Eastern Esplanade, Ramsgate, Kent (East Kent Times & Mail)

8 July 1967 – Birdcage, Eastney, Hampshire (Dave Allen research)

10 July 1967 – Queen’s Ballroom, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (Express & Star)

29 July 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, London with The Fraternity and The Army (Melody Maker)

I would welcome any further insights from readers but I believe that in late July/early August, the group headed to Italy for a short tour. John Smith and Bill Stevens left on the eve of the tour and former Pack/Flowers of Wisdom members Andy Rickell and Terry Stannard joined. Stannard had recently worked with Freddie Mack.

The tour was a disaster and all of the equipment was stolen. Most of the group returned home and Junior Kerr, Andy Rickell and Terry Stannard formed White Rabbit with former member Linda Lewis

A new formation was formed on Goins’ return:

Herbie Goins – lead vocals

Alan Roskams – guitar (ex-Gass)

Mick Eve – tenor saxophone

Harry Beckett – trumpet

Speedy Acquaye – congas

John Carroll – Hammond organ

Dave Price – bass

Ian Hague – drums (ex-Chris Farlowe & The Thunderbirds/The Nice)

+ Satin Dolls backing singers/dancers Cassie and Candy 

Photo may be subject to copyright

19 August 1967 – Wellington Club, Dereham, Norfolk with The Midnight Times (North Norfolk News)

20 August 1967 – Beachcomber, Nottingham with Satin Dolls (Nottingham Evening Post)

Photo may be subject to copyright

25 August 1967 – Steering Wheel, Dorchester, Dorset with The Cellar Rats (Dorset Evening Echo)

26 August 1967 – Floral Hall, Southport, Lancashire with The Maraccas (Manchester Evening News and Chronicle/Formby Times)

27 August 1967 – Redcar Jazz Club, Redcar, North Yorkshire with The Bluecaps (Dennis Weller, Chris Scott Wilson and Graham Lowe’s book)

30 August 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, London (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 September 1967 – St George’s Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire with Mike Stuart’s Span (Nuneaton Evening Tribune)

3 September 1967 – Starlite, Greenford, northwest London (Melody Maker)

6 September 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London (Melody Maker)

8 September 1967 – 5D, Leicester with The Worrying Kynde (Leicester Mercury)

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 September 1967 – Pink Flamingo, Soho, central London with The Paper Blitz Tissue and Geranium Pond (Melody Maker)

10 September 1967 – Central R&B Club, Central Hotel, Gillingham, Kent (Chatham, Rochester & Gillingham News)

11 September 1967 – Ritz, Bournemouth, Dorset (Bournemouth Evening Echo)

12 September 1967 – Blaises, Imperial Hotel, Queen’s Gate, west London (Melody Maker)

13 September 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London (Melody Maker)

20 September 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London (Melody Maker)

22 September 1967 – 5D, Leicester with The Wild Flowers (Leicester Mercury)

27 September 1967 – Tiles, Oxford Street, central London (Melody Maker)

30 September 1967 – Glastonbury Town Hall, Glastonbury, Somerset with The Safety Catch (Somerset County Gazette)

 

3 October 1967 – Bournemouth Pavilion, Bournemouth, Dorset with Granny’s Intentions and The Palmer James Group (Bournemouth Evening Echo)

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 October 1967 – Top Rank, Cardiff, Wales with The Searchers, Lucas with The Mike Cotton Sound and The Zombies (South Wales Echo)

Photo may be subject to copyright

15 October 1967 – Cosmopolitan, Carlisle, Cumbria with Tamla Express (Cumberland News)

20 October 1967 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Melody Maker)

21 October 1967 – Northwich Memorial Hall, Northwich, Cheshire (Crewe Chronicle)

Photo may be subject to copyright

22 October 1967 – Carlton Club, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian)

29 October 1967 – South Bank Jazz Club, Grimsby, Humberside (Grimsby Evening Telegraph)

This large gap in November suggests they may have been overseas

2 December 1967 – Pearce Hall, Maidenhead, Berkshire with Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Titch and The Echoes (Bucks Free Press)

3 December 1967 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

8 December 1967 – Students’ Union, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds and Precious Few (Eastern Evening News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

9 December 1967 – Upper Cut, Forest Gate, east London with Ferris Wheel and Carl Douglas & The Big Stampede (Melody Maker)

12 December 1967 – New Century Hall, Manchester with Kibbus (Manchester Evening News & Chronicle)

14 December 1967 – Student’s Union, University of East Anglia, Norwich with Jimmy James & The Vagabonds and The Reasons (Eastern Evening News)

25 December 1967 – Cue Club, Paddington, central London (Melody Maker) Guest with The Tonicks, Ronnie Jones, Owen Grey and The Youth

26 December 1967 – Locarno Ballroom, Portsmouth, Hampshire (Portsmouth News)

1968

This large gap in January suggests they may have been overseas

4 February 1968 – Wooden Bridge Hotel, Guildford, Surrey with The Strange Brew (Surrey Advertiser)

18 February 1968 – New Regis Club, Bognor Regis, West Sussex (Brighton Evening Argus)

23 February 1968 – Shades, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (Sheffield Star)

 

1 March 1968 – Hotel Leofric, Coventry, West Midlands with Scarlet Religion (Coventry Evening Telegraph)

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 March 1968 – Sheffield University Student’s Union, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (Sheffield Star)

8 March 1968 – Club A Go Go, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear (website: http://www.readysteadygone.co.uk/club-agogo-newcastle-2/)

10 March 1968 – The Place, Hanley, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

18 March 1968 – Park Hall Hotel, Goldthorn Park, Wolverhampton, West Midlands with Time and Mr Showbiz (Express & Star)

25 March 1968 – Cosmopolitan, Carlisle, Cumbria (Cumberland News)

29 March 1968 – Poole College Rag, Poole College Main Hall, Poole, Dorset with The Nite People (Bournemouth Evening Echo)

Photo may be subject to copyright

30 March 1968 – Ewell College, Ewell, Surrey with Robert Plant & The Band of Joy (Melody Maker)

 

1 April 1968 – Staffordshire Yeoman, Staffordshire (Evening Sentinel)

John Carroll left about this time to join The Flowerpot Men’s backing band. Former member Junior Kerr may have briefly returned as footage from French TV show Bouton Rouge dated 4 April reveals; however, this may have been a recording from the previous year. In the first week of April 1968, Kerr played with his new band Junior’s Conquests

Eddie Thornton, who’d worked with Georgie Fame (and more recently The Amboy Dukes) also joined in time for the French tour on trumpet, taking over from Harry Beckett

Photo may be subject to copyright

10 April 1968 – Cellar Discotheque, Hartlepool (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)

13 April 1968 – St George’s Ballroom, Hinckley, Leicestershire (Nuneaton Evening Tribune)

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15 April 1968 – The Shrubbery Hotel, Ilminister, Somerset (Somerset County Gazette)

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19 April 1968 – Scene, Cambridge YMCA, Cambridge (Cambridge News)

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20 April 1968 – Tin Hat, Kettering, Northamptonshire with Howling Robin (Northamptonshire Evening Telegraph)

21 April 1968 – Le Metro, Birmingham (Birmingham Evening Mail)

26 April 1968 – Cue Club, Paddington (Melody Maker)

Photo may be subject to copyright

27 April 1968 – Ettington Park Hotel, Alderminster, near Stratford, Warwickshire (Birmingham Evening Mail) Could this have been the date below or did they play again a few weeks later?

29 April 1968 – Carlton Club, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian)

 

4 May 1968 – Wolverhampton College of Technology, Wolverhampton, West Midlands with Soul Seekers (Express & Star)

11 May 1968 – Ettington Park Hotel, Alderminster, Warwickshire (Stratford upon Avon Herald)

12 May 1968 – Excel Blue Angel, Middlesbrough (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)

19 May 1968 – Black Prince Hotel, Bexley, London (Poster)

23 May 1968 – Liberal Hall, Yeovil, Somerset with The Klick (Western Gazette)

31 May 1968 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Melody Maker)

 

6 June 1968 – James Finegan Hall, Eston, Middlesbrough with Rivers Invitation and The Tramline (Middlesbrough Evening Gazette)

8 June 1968 – Mistrale Club, Beckenham Junction, London with The Shiralee (Coulson & Purley Advertiser)

16 June 1968 – Black Prince Hotel, Bexley, London with The Satin Dolls (Poster)

23 June 1968 – Cosmopolitan, Carlisle, Cumbria with Junco Partners (Cumberland News)

 

31 August 1968 – Civic Hall, Guildford, Surrey with The Strange Brew (Surrey Advertiser)

Photo may be subject to copyright

2 September 1968 – Top Spot, Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire with Lot 39 with Mel Taylor (Gloucester Citizen)

Around September 1968, Dave Price and Alan Roskams left.

Would welcome insights from readers but I think a new formation featured the following:

Herbie Goins – lead vocals

Kelvin Bullen – lead guitar (ex-Joe E Young & The Tonicks)

Hugh Bullen – bass (ex-Joe E Young & The Tonicks)

Mick Eve – tenor saxophone

Eddie Thornton – trumpet

Speedy Acquaye – congas

Ian Hague – drums

+ Satin Dolls backing singers/dancers Cassie and Candy

Photo from Paul Kane

5 September 1968 – Speakeasy at Blaises, London (Poster from Paul Kane)

6 September 1968 – Pavilion Ballroom, Bournemouth, Dorset (Bournemouth Evening Echo)

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7 September 1968 – Alex Disco, Salisbury, Wiltshire (Salisbury Journal/Western Gazette)

20 September 1968 – CLCE Scraptoft, Leicester with The Shevelles and The Decoys (Leicester Mercury)

Photo may be subject to copyright

21 September 1968 – Stage Club, Oxford (Oxford Mail)

 

7 October 1968 – Quaintways, Chester, Cheshire with Perfumed Garden, The Hands and Wall City Jazzmen (website: www.45worlds.com/live)

13 October 1968 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)

19 October 1968 – Students Union UEA, Norwich, Norfolk with Bumbly Hum (Eastern Evening News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

3 November 1968 – Carlton Club, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian)

Photo may be subject to copyright

7 December 1968 – Stage Club, Oxford (Oxford Mail)

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10 December 1968 – King’s College, Strand, London with The Nice and The Circus (Melody Maker)

14 December 1968 – Mid-Herts College, Welwyn Garden City, Herts with The Herbal Remedy (Welwyn and Hatfield Advertiser)

Photo may be subject to copyright

18 December 1968 – Candlelight, Scarborough, North Yorkshire with The Satin Dolls and Free (Scarborough Evening News)

Photo may be subject to copyright

21 December 1968 – The Catacombs, Wolverhampton, West Midlands (Express & Star)

1969

Sometime in early 1969, Ian Hague left to join J J Jackson’s backing band

21 February 1969 – Cue Club, Paddington, London (Melody Maker)

23 February 1969 – Pantiles, Bagshot, Surrey (Melody Maker)

 

1 March 1969 – Cue Club, Paddington, London (Melody Maker)

30 March 1969 – Carlton Club, Warrington, Cheshire (Warrington Guardian)

 

13 April 1969 – Blaises, London (Hounslow Post)

27 April 1969 – Le Metro, Birmingham (Birmingham Evening Mail)

 

2 May 1969 – Lyceum Ballroom, Strand, London with Alan Bown, Spooky Tooth, Jon Hiseman’s Colosseum and Portrait (Melody Maker)

3 May 1969 – New Union Rowing Club, Nottingham (Nottingham Evening Post)

24 May 1969 – Farnborough Technical College Students’ Union, Farnborough, Hampshire (Aldershot News)

 

14 June 1969 – El Grotto, Ilford, east London (Redbridge & Ilford Recorder)

 

28 July 1969 – Soul Club, Plaza Ballroom, Newsbury, Berkshire with Simon K & The Meantimers (Reading Evening Post)

Photo may be subject to copyright

28 September 1969 – Rebecca’s, Birmingham (Birmingham Evening Mail)

Soon after the above gig, the band landed a part-time residency in Rome, Italy

I would welcome any insights from readers on what happened next with the band’s formation

I’d like to thank David Else for generously sharing his own history on the band and helping to cross check timelines and facts. Also, thanks to Mick Eve for his insights.

Copyright © Nick Warburton.  All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author.

One

One 1969. Left to right: Alan Marshall, Bobby Sass, Kevin Fogerty, Conrad Isidore, Brent Forbes and Norman Leppard

Alan Marshall – lead vocals/guitar

Bobby Sass – keyboards

Kevin Fogerty – lead guitar

Brent Forbes – bass

Norman Leppard – horns

Conrad Isadore – drums

In late 1969/early 1970, a motley crew of London-based musicians entered Trident Studios in the heart of Soho to record a lone, rare album for Fontana Records. Helmed by Indian-born musicians and childhood friends, singer Alan Marshall and keyboard player Bobby Sass, One had initially formed in early 1969 after a series of jam sessions at Marshall’s studio flat, located at 6 Denmark Street which he shared with manager Roger Burrow, a friend of Graham Nash’s.

Born in Lahore, Alan Marshall had quite the musical pedigree. Starting out with Bexley Heath, Kent R&B outfit The Loose Ends in the early 1960s, Marshall had cut two excellent singles on Decca before the original formation splintered in October 1966. Forming a new version with members of Croydon band The Subjects and another Bexley Heath area aggregation, Bob ‘N’ All, the new-look Loose Ends landed a short residency at the Bang Bang Club in Milan during January-February 1967.

When the musicians returned to London that March, they were spotted by Otis Redding at the Scotch of St James (or Speakeasy depending on who you speak to) and, ‘blown away’ by Marshall and co-vocalist Bob Saker’s duets, the soul legend took both singers back to the States to record two tracks at Fame Studios in Muscle Shoals – “Johnny B Goode” and “Keep Pushing”. The plan was to couple the two recordings for a single on Atlantic but internal politics led to the tracks being shelved. Tragically, Redding died later that year.

Back in the UK, Alan Marshall reunited with guitarist Peter Kirtley who’d been playing with Alan Price’s band after leaving The Loose Ends the previous October. The pair decided to form a new group, Happy Magazine, and Marshall recommended his childhood friend Bobby Sass (not Bobby Tench under an alias which has often been misreported) to play keyboards. Unfortunately, after some tentative rehearsals, it was decided that Sass didn’t fit the band concept and he was dropped.

“He was a tremendous piano player and he loved Errol Garner. He and I grew up together in Karachi,” says Marshall. “Bobby didn’t make it in Happy Magazine. They didn’t like his style; he was too jazzy.”

Happy Magazine, 1968. Alan Marshall (back left). Peter Kirtley (second right). Thanks to Peter for the image

Signed to Polydor, Happy Magazine cut three singles with Alan Price in the producer’s chair before splitting in early 1969. By this point, Marshall had moved into a studio flat on Denmark Street (aka as Tin Pan Alley) with his friend and manager Roger Burrow; Bobby Sass was a regular visitor. As the singer recalls, the doors were always open and musicians used to wander in.

This is the most likely explanation for how Dominica-born drummer and percussionist Conrad Isidore entered the picture that spring. An incredibly gifted musician, Isidore had first come to prominence working with noted R&B outfit Joe E Young & The Tonics during 1967 after playing with The Links and The Grendades. It was with The Toniks that Isidore worked with bass player Calvin ‘Fuzzy’ Samuels, a former member of The Blue-Act-Unit, who also featured future Bob Marley sideman, Junior Kerr (aka Junior Marvin).

Conrad Isidore (bottom right) with Joe E Young & The Toniks, 1968

Isidore and Samuels soon moved on to form The Sundae Times with singer/guitarist Wendell Richardson. Produced by The Equals’ Eddy Grant, the trio recorded three singles and an LP, Us Coloured Kids, during 1968-1969 before the musicians went their separate ways. Somehow Isidore’s path crossed with Marshall and Sass and the drummer threw in his lot with the two Indian musicians.

Not long after, bass player Brent Forbes also joined the loose-knit set up. Originally from Salford, Greater Manchester, Forbes had previously played with The Rogues, who cut a lone single for Decca in December 1967. After changing their name to Sunshine in February 1968, the musicians turned pro and landed a residency in Turkey of all places. This was followed by a six-month stint playing clubs in Crete before the musicians returned to the drizzle of Greater Manchester.

At this point, Forbes joined a short-lived group called Zac, who moved down to London and cut an album’s worth of material at IBC Studios near Marble Arch. When this project failed to materialise, Forbes’s former band mate from Sunshine, guitarist Rod Alexander, who was managing Sound City on Shaftsbury Avenue, directed him to Marshall’s nearby studio flat.

The next musician to join was guitarist Kevin Fogerty, who had first come to prominence with Southport R&B group, Timebox. Fogerty appeared on the band’s early recordings but around October 1967, he jumped ship and signed up with The Dave Davani Four, which is where he later met tenor saxophonist and flutist Norman Leppard.

Originally from Handscross in West Sussex, Leppard was 23 years old when he turned professional. “I was mainly a freelance musician, working with different bands, touring all over the place,” he says. “I was always busy. I did a fortnight tour with The Temptations”.

Sometime in 1968, Leppard auditioned for The Dave Davani Four and landed the gig, despite being up against about 20 sax players. “Kevin was with them before I joined them,” he adds. “I ended up sharing a flat with Kevin and his then girlfriend Jenny in Kennington.”

According to Forbes, the loose-knit group of musicians spent ages rehearsing material before album sessions commenced at Trident Studios in St Anne’s Court, Soho, encompassing the latest in 16-track technology.

“We spent weeks, months, it felt like forever, in this studio [in Denmark Street] and the band would go in and play,” recalls the bass player. “We’d do an arrangement one day and go in the next day and it would be totally different as music should be. Depending on the mood of everybody it would be totally different.”

Production was split between the band’s manager Roger Burrow and Alan Marshall and Bobby Sass, working with sound engineers Robin Cable and Roy Baker. Production supervision meanwhile was handled by Lee Hallyday, who’d recently recorded his brother Johnny’s self-titled LP in France. According to several band members, the sessions at Trident’s studios also featured Alan Marshall’s former band mate from The Loose Ends and Happy Magazine, Peter Kirtley, who provided lead guitar on several cuts.

“Kevin was on some of the tracks,” explains Leppard. “He was mainly on rhythm guitar I think. I am not sure he’s on all the tracks, but he’s definitely on most of them.”

Brent Forbes is quick to credit Isidore and Marshall as the key inspirations during the recording process.

“Whether he’s playing guitar, percussion, drums or singing, [Marshall’s] just a warm spirit,” he says. “Conrad was [also] a fantastic influence for me. Great feel. He sat down one day and said: ‘Brent the notes are all right but the feel’. He made me think about that and I managed to maintain it and got a reputation for it over the years.”

Judging by the track listing, Richie Havens was a huge influence on the singer, but Marshall is not entirely happy with how some tracks turned out. “There are a couple that I am not too keen on,” says Marshall. “It was marijuana fuelled and they went on and on like ‘Run, Shaker Run’ but we didn’t know any better. We were young guys.”

That may well be, but One’s storming cover of Havens’ “Don’t Listen To Me”, which opens the LP and third track, “Stop Pulling and Pushing Me” are inspired, extended workouts full of inventive playing and powerful instrumental passages. The musicians also do justice to “Cautiously”, an atmospheric reading of the ballad written by Maurey Hayden, singer, stand-up comedian and wife of Lenny Bruce. Alan Marshall and Bobby Sass’s “Near The Bone”, the band’s lone contribution to the song-writing stakes is also noteworthy.

According to Forbes, there were no left-overs from the album sessions, which is perhaps surprising considering how long the musicians spent rehearsing material.

With the sessions complete, Norman Leppard was invited to become a fully-fledged member of One. “After the album was done, they asked me to join the band, which I then did for quite a long time,” remembers the session player.

Fontana duly released the LP in the UK in late 1969, followed by continental releases in France, Germany and Spain. The label also issued several singles but like the LP, none of the releases charted, which is perhaps not surprising considering that One undertook very little live work to promote the records. One notable gig took place on 7 October 1969 when the musicians made a rare appearance on stage at Hatchettes Playground in Piccadilly.

During March-April 1970, the musicians got to meet Stephen Stills, who was in London to record sessions for his first solo LP. It’s not clear who in the band made the initial contact. Marshall says that he used to leave the flat door open and musicians used to wander in. One strong possibility is Roger Burrow, who of course was a friend of Graham Nash’s. Alan Marshall, however, is pretty certain that it was Bobby Sass who ran into Stills.

“I don’t know how he met Stephen [but] we used to go over to the house [in Elstead],” says Marshall. “[Stills] had Peter Sellers’ old house and we used to go out there and hang out.”

Impressed by Conrad Isidore and his friend Calvin Samuels, Stills recruited both for his solo LP sessions. In May 1970, no doubt concerned about the shortage of live work, the drummer jumped ship to join Manfred Mann Chapter 3.

“We didn’t do as many gigs as we should have,” admits Forbes. “We did a hop or two to [West] Germany and we probably did the Marquee. We never did enough work really. How on earth we existed [I don’t know] – I think Roger [Burrow] the manager helped support everybody.”

The German club in question was the Happy Cat in Eschollbrucken near Darmstadt, which is close to Frankfurt. However, the shortage of live work soon led to cracks in the group and by the summer of 1970 both Kevin Fogerty and Norman Leppard had also moved on.

Interestingly, while One’s revolving door of personnel changes continued at pace, Fontana issued a French-only ‘45, ‘How Much Do You Know” (adapted from Adagio Royal by F de Boivallee), which was credited solely to Alan Marshall backed by One’s ‘Don’t Listen To Me”.

By the time the single appeared, Alan Marshall, Bobby Sass and Brent Forbes had pieced together a new formation which included guitarist Jack Lancaster and drummer Terry Stannard.

“There was a guitar player called Jack Lancaster, [who had] the same name as the famous one in Blodwyn Pig and he came from Swindon. He came in and took [Kevin Fogerty’s place],” says Forbes.

“God knows what we did after that. I can’t remember doing many gigs. It was a time when Fat Mattress got £200,000 advance and just sat rehearsing. It was a time when groups could afford to do that.”

Stannard, meanwhile, also originated from Wiltshire where he’d worked with Calne group, The Pack during late 1966. In the summer of 1967, the drummer moved up to London where he briefly landed a gig with Freddie Mack & The Mack Sound (and may have spent a short stint with Herbie Goins). He then moved on to join Junior Kerr (aka Junior Marvin) and Linda Lewis in the short-lived White Rabbit. By mid-1968, however, Stannard had moved on. While it’s not clear who he played with in the interim, one of the bands was Mirrors featuring Boz Burrell and Nick Judd.

Forbes remembers the new formation cutting an LP for Johnny Hallyday at a studio near Marble Arch, which could well have been IBC, towards the end of the year. “I remember getting session money for it because I went home to my uncle’s and had a very nice Christmas,” says the bass player.

Not long after, in early 1971, One underwent yet another reshuffle. On this occasion, Alan Marshall and Bobby Sass put together a short-lived version featuring former Them/Trader Horne guitarist/singer Jackie McAuley, future Traffic bass player Roscoe Gee and drummer Glenn LeFleur, who like his predecessor Terry Stannard, went on to play with Kokomo.

“I don’t know how I met Roscoe and Jackie,” says Marshall. “I used to meet so many musicians because I used to leave the door open in summer and musicians would drift in. We had a PA and Hammond organ and drums all set up.”

The new formation played at the Speakeasy and also Strawberry Fields where according to Marshall, “Paul McCartney and those guys used to love hearing us.”

During 1972/1973, Marshall’s old friend Ron Bryer, the original guitarist with The Loose Ends, joined after returning from Switzerland and playing with Brainticket.

Unfortunately, the group wound down in 1973/1974 after with the musicians scattering to work in a diverse range of projects.

Marshall ended up joining Strabismus, which subsequently changed its name to Riff Raff when the singer’s former band mate from The Loose Ends/Happy Magazine, Peter Kirtley joined and also featured bass player Roger Sutton and keyboard player Tommy Eyre. However, Marshall quit before Riff Raff’s debut album was recorded and pursued a solo career before recording with Zzebra. He then joined Gonzalez in the late Seventies in time for their 1979 release, Move It To The Music. Based in Thames Mead, he has become a pastor but continues to busk in Stratford, East London.

His school friend Bobby Sass later moved to Australia but died in the 2000s. Kevin Fogerty also passed away, in December 2010. During the early 1970s, he worked for a while in The Tommy Hunt Band.

As for Norman Leppard, he joined Eric Delaney’s band after leaving One and also appeared on Jack McDuff’s Blue Note LP, issued in late 1970. He continues to work as a session player.

Conrad Isidore meanwhile became a noted session player, working with the likes of Joe Cocker, Linda Lewis, Terry Reid, Vinegar Joe and Eddy Grant to name a few. He also later played with Junior Marvin in his band Hanson and with Hummingbird. Isidore later moved to Porvoo near Helsinki in Finland but died in 2019.

Brent Forbes also landed on his feet and, immediately on leaving One, joined the West End show, Catch My Soul. Like Isidore, he later moved into session work, playing with Doris Troy, Jimmy Helms, Lulu, Locus, Jim Capaldi and Hudson Ford among others. From 1975-1980, he also landed regular work on West End shows like Rocky Horror Picture Show and Les Miserables. During this period, he also briefly performed with Herbie Goins and Zzebra. Later, he moved into TV session work, providing music for Young Ones, the Lenny Henry Show, Victoria Wood among others.

As for One, the group remains something of an obscurity. While the LP has been issued on CD by two different labels, neither appear to be official releases. Given the collectability of the record and the fact that a mint copy will probably fetch you close to £100, perhaps it’s time that the band was given a proper re-issue treatment, complete with detailed liner notes.

Many thanks to the following for their help with the story: Alan Marshall, Brent Forbes, Norman Leppard and Jackie McAuley.

Copyright © Nick Warburton.  All Rights Reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any from or by any means, without prior permission from the author.