Barnsley's The Whales, for example, were Opportunity Knocks winners in 1968 and were given a fantastic opportunity to break through afterwards; a contract with CBS was duly inked, and the group were paired with the brilliant Mark Wirtz to produce a debut single. "Come Down Little Bird" was the outcome, and while it has since been compiled on "Piccadilly Sunshine", making it well known amongst the popsike cognoscenti, it was perhaps a bit too lacking in pizazz for the mass market. Wirtz clearly offered them a solid enough tune, but not one which sounded like a hit - the chorus is gently lilting rather than forceful, while the verses are too childlike and gentle to compensate. It's not bad, it's just clearly no "Teenage Opera".
The flipside "Beachcomber", on the other hand, has remained uncompiled but perhaps might have shown a little bit more promise if released during a sympathetic summer month. Swooping Macca styled bass lines meet perfectly blended vocal harmonies, gentle back beats and the lonesome sound of a British beach holiday gone loveless. There was a reason this lot won "Opportunity Knocks", obviously - they could convincingly and intricately deliver a very strong contemporary pop melody.
After this false start, the band tried again in 1969 with a cover of The Four Seasons "Tell It To The Rain", then finally moved to Pye in 1970 for the uncharacteristically reggae tinged "Papa's Gonna Kiss It Better". Neither of these records sold either, and the group disappeared from recording studios thereafter, spending the next 16 years as a live act in clubs before finally packing their gear away for good.
The website "Roll Back The Years" has a fantastic array of information on the group and is worth wading through.
If the preview below isn't working properly, please go right to the source.
2 comments:
Amazing read! The lead singer Ken was my granddad, so I love finding out little articles like this online, especially one so recent! I'd love to find a copy of the single to have. My mum told me all the stories of sitting in the studio while they attempted to compose these tracks! From what I remember, they didn't want to sing 'Come Down Little Bird' as their debut single, but had their hand forced! Thank you again for such a heartfelt write-up, and all the best!
Sam :))
No problem Sam and thanks for dropping by. Doesn't surprise me to hear about the group being reluctant to release "Come Down Little Bird" as an A-side, but that often tended to be the way at the time - a lot of these bands were given the B-sides to express themselves and did whatever they were told on the other side (and it wouldn't really pay off).
Post a Comment