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9 July 2023

The Sundowners - Where Am I/ Gotta Make Their Future Bright


Shel Talmy produces and Peter Lee Stirling writes this Kent group's final 45

Label: Parlophone
Year of Release: 1965

Oh, this is so confusing. For reasons presumably known only to bad admin and poor communication across the British gig scene, there were three groups called The Sundowners active in the sixties - one was from Scotland, the other were London based, the third were from Folkestone in Kent. In the past, I've managed to land my foot straight into a large clump of research cowpat by confusing the Scottish group with the London one. This, I am 99% sure, is the Kent bunch, although if you want to nip into Ladbrokes and bet against that, be my guest.

This lot were a busy bunch locally right through until the mid-nineties, and on a national level are perhaps best known - among those who really care about this stuff - as the first British group to cover "House of The Rising Sun" on the flipside of their debut single "Baby, Baby". While that version has none of the abrasiveness of The Animals smash rendition, it marked the group out as a tasteful and knowing bunch in a manner the beaty pop of the A-side probably didn't.

The group followed it up with a second single on Piccadilly in January 1964 ("Come On In"), then backed Linda Doll for a final Piccadilly 45 in February 1964 ("He Don't Want Your Love Anymore") before jumping to Parlophone in 1965 for this final outing.

"Where Am I" is notable for having been produced by Shel Talmy, although unlike his work with The Kinks, The Creation and The Who during the same period, this is gentle, subtle stuff, an eerie ballad backed with echoing female vocals, pattering drumming and atmospheric, tingling guitar work. Heard without knowing the producer responsible, you might even incorrectly guess that Joe Meek was responsible for this; it has the same faintly paranoid and boxed-in claustrophobic feel and has perhaps been rather unfairly overlooked. Talmy might not have been creating his usual noise and mayhem here, but it's still the sound of a man who knew exactly how to manipulate the studio.

The group consisted of Matt Jones on lead guitar, Bozz Henson on rhythm guitar, Neville Parkes on bass guitar and Roger Ames on drums. Following the failure of this, they returned to Folkestone to entertain the locals for another few decades in the pubs and clubs along the Kentish coast.

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