British Invasion

Greatly Appreciated

BRITISH INVASION
 
 
The British Invasion  was a phenomenon that occurred in the mid-1960s when rock and pop music acts from the United Kingdom, as well as other aspects of British culture, became popular in the United States, and significant to the rising “counterculture” on both sides of the Atlantic.  Pop and rock groups such as the Beatles, the Dave Clark Five, the Kinks, the Rolling Stones, Herman’s Hermits, the Animals, and the Who were at the forefront of the invasion.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
Back in 1958, Tom King, at the tender age of 15, started things off with a rhythm and blues band that he formed called the Starfires.  Their repertoire was mostly instrumentals, with occasional vocals by Tom King; they were local favorites, playing up to six shows per week, and had a minor local hit based on the popular TV commercial, “Stronger than Dirt” for Ajax laundry detergent.  (Ajax had basically invented advertising jingles years earlier).  When Tom King began to lose his voice, he brought in Sonny Geraci and his brother Mike Geraci; and the band quickly began to transition to the more modern sounds being ushered in by Motown and the nascent British Invasion.  Their legacy as a hard-working R&B band helped them successfully compete against the Brits.
 
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Meanwhile, back in the mid-1960’s, the Cleveland music scene was spurred on by the success of these local heroes.  Bandleader Dann Klawon of the Choir knew a girl who had been to England in 1963 and picked up some of the early Beatles singles and one of their albums.  Like most of the American garage bands, they were influenced by the British Invasion; but for them, it hadn’t even arrived here yet.  Klawon wrote an unabashedly Beatlesque power-pop classic for the band called “It’s Cold Outside” that made the local charts and is among the most beloved garage-rock songs from the era.  Stiv Bators, frontman for the seminal 1970’s Cleveland punk band the Dead Boys was among its admirers; but his band couldn’t figure out how to play the song!  (Later, as a solo artist, Bators came up with a nice version). 
 
(February 2010)
 
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By 1971, the term “punk rock” had already been applied retrospectively by Greg Shaw as well as Greil Marcus to American bands such as Question Mark and the Mysteriansthe Standellsthe Seedsthe Shadows of Knightand the Kingsmen who managed to score some hit songs during the height of the British Invasion.  In 1972Lenny Kaye popularized the term in the first definitive compilation album that he helped assemble for this music, called Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968; his liner notes are almost as legendary as the double-album itself.  (This music is now referred to as garage rock and psychedelic rock). 
 
(April 2010)
 
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Though I have had fun trying to pick up which Beatles song is echoing through the tracks on the album, the Poppees are not Beatles imitators or a cover band.  Mostly they play their own material; in fact, the closest they ever came to covering a Beatles song is when they recorded Love of the Loved, an obscure Lennon/McCartney song that the Beatles never recorded.  (Actually, it turns out that this song was included among the 15 songs on their famed Decca Records audition tape; Pete Best was still drumming then, so it wasn’t really the Beatles that we all know at that point).  Instead, they passed it along to Cilla Black, a protegé of their manager Brian Epstein who had been a coat-check girl at the legendary Cavern Club, where the Beatles were honing their skills in 1961.  Though virtually unknown on these shores, Cilla Black was the only important female artist to emerge from the British Invasion – and the second-biggest-selling recording artist out of Liverpool (after you know who– and has been a beloved entertainer in England for decades.  While “Love of the Loved” wasn’t a big hit, her version of “Anyone Who Had a Heart”, which came out in January 1964, eclipsed the original by Dionne Warwick and became the biggest selling record in Britain by any female artist in history:  Cilla Black sold 800,000 copies of the single in England and another 1,000,000 worldwide. 
 
(December 2010)
 
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Thirty-some years ago, I picked up a two-record set with a neo-psychedelic cover called Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968.  Lenny Kaye, who would later be the guitarist for Patti Smith Group, helped put the album together and wrote the liner notes that are almost as well known as the album itself.  In an introductory noteLenny Kaye expressed something that I felt as well while I was reading it:  that there was this wonderful music floating around among the British Invasion bands and the girl groups and the Motown sound, and it was gone before we even knew what we were hearing, and wouldn’t it be great to hear all of these songs again in one place.  Kaye called the music “punk rock” – the first high-profile use of that term – but these days, it is called garage rock and psychedelic rock.  It is no exaggeration to say that this album told my soul what kind of music I really love. 

 

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Only last year did I discover that the Premiers were a Chicano band; there was a show on PBS that explained how this band and so many other Latin bands had been chased off the charts by the British Invasion.  

 

(January 2011)

 

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Back in junior high, I was really enamored with Jan & Dean (not so much with the Beach Boys, but I liked them also), and the various other one-hit wonder surf rock bands of that time period.  Jan & Dean were the hosts as I recall of one of the first big rock concert films, The T.A.M.I. Show (it stands for Teen Age Music International).  I was starting to tire of the duo though, particularly when they resorted to covering British Invasion songs and started releasing tripe like Jan & Dean Meet Batman

 

(July 2011)

 

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A side man can be a wonderful thing for a musician.  For rock bands without keyboard players (and that was true of many in the 1960’s), Nicky Hopkins was the go-to guy if you wanted a pianist:  He played with everybody from Jefferson Airplane to Jeff Beck Group to Steve Miller Band, and with simply every big British Invasion group:  the Beatles, the Kinks, the Who, and especially the Rolling Stones.  His name appears on dozens of albums from the late 1960’s into the 1980’sHopkins released a couple of solo albums that I have never gotten around to buying, but I sure remember one of the first songs that I heard on college radio at North Carolina State University.  It was “Edward the Mad Shirt Grinder”; Nicky Hopkins was officially a member of Quicksilver Messenger Service at that time, and the song was the final track on their albumShady Grove (1969).  Hopkins wrote it, and it was all his piano work along with a backing band.
 
(August 2011)
 
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Before you stick up your noses at mono, the early British Invasion albums were typically recorded in monaural; thus, when you got a “stereo” album, it was electronically reprocessed in some way and, these days, sounds pretty cheesy.  Even the early stereo efforts aren’t the greatest in the world:  Many Beatles records run the instruments through one channel and the vocals through the other, and then call that stereo. The first album that I can recall which was released only in stereo was the soundtrack album for the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey
 
(April 2012)
 
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The American songwriter/producer trio of Bob FeldmanJerry Goldstein and Richard Gottehrer has been a veritable cauldron of one-hit wonders over the years.  They first teamed up in 1963 for the girl-group classic “My Boyfriend’s Back” by the Angels.  The following year, in the wake of the British Invasion, they decided to reinvent themselves as a band called the Strangeloves and to pretend that they were three brothers who grew up on a sheep farm in Australia.  
 
(May 2012)
 
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Lou Christie had hit after hit beginning in the early 1960’s and continuing through the early years of the British Invasion; I just loved his muscular falsetto.  Actually his real name is Lugee Sacco
 
(July 2012)
 
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That's what it says:  The Magnificent Moodies.  This record was released in 1965 and was the first album by the Moody Blues.  Like many of the British Invasion bands, they started out as a crackerjack rhythm and blues band, and the U. S. release of the album has a different cover and some variation in the songs.  You can certainly be forgiven if you don’t think of them as a British Invasion band. 
 
While I would have to put the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and the Yardbirds as the Top Three British Invasion bands to my way of thinking, the Animals would be right behind them, even ahead of the Kinks I think.  
 
(September 2012) 
 
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You might think me a little crazy for saying so, but I have been thinking more and more these days that the Garage Rock Revival of the early 2000’s – if I may be so bold as to capitalize the term – is the British Invasion of the 21st Century.  Sure, it was not nearly so world-enveloping as the wave of mostly British bands that invaded our shores (after conquering their own continent) nearly a half-century ago, but its effects have been just as far-reaching.  One key difference is that the British Invasion happened relatively quickly, once Europeans absorbed the raw R&B and blues records from the good old USA and applied the tactics to their own sensibilities. 
 
One fascinating view of the whole story is the history of the British Invasion as told from a musician/fan’s perspective – Cyril Jordan, a founding member of the Flamin’ Groovies (whose roots go all the way back to 1965) – which is the cover story of the current issue of Ugly Things magazine that also includes my own article on Milan the Leather Boy
 
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The British Invasion caught American recording artists flat-footed; they were not used to any overseas competition to speak of.  Creedence Clearwater Revival and a revitalized Beach Boys are two of the responses by American recording artists to the British Invasion
 
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American teenagers (mostly white suburban kids) were also invigorated by the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and all the rest; and they responded by launching a counter-assault, when seemingly every kid in America wanted to be in a band.  This era is now known as the garage rock era (that was the most available practice space for most of these would-be rock stars, hence the name); this time period also saw the beginnings of the psychedelic rock movement on both sides of the Atlantic.  I didn’t know exactly what I was hearing at the time, but the music by bands like the SeedsBlues Magoosthe Electric Prunes, Question Mark and the Mysteriansthe StandellsCount Five, and Strawberry Alarm Clock (among many other bands) was grabbing me almost immediately.  I don’t know that I even realized immediately how bizarre many of these American band names were, as compared to those of British Invasion bands like the AnimalsFreddie and the Dreamers, and the Dave Clark Five
 
Thankfully, in 1972 (though if I’m not mistaken, the album was actually not released in the US until 1976), Lenny Kaye – later the guitarist for the seminal Patti Smith Group – helped assemble hit songs by all of these diverse bands plus plenty more into what is now regarded as one of the greatest compilation albums of all times:  Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era, 1965-1968.  It remains one of my favorite records, and I have spoken of it several times before in these posts. 
 
(January 2013) 
 
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You can talk about your pioneers of rock and roll – Chuck BerryLittle RichardElvis PresleyJames Brown, just to name a few – and you can even bring up your British Invasion greats – the Beatlesthe Rolling Stonesthe Animalsthe Yardbirds, the Kinks, just to name another few.  All of them are already in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and deservedly so.  However, you can play a lot of more modern rock records all day long and not really discern more than a hint of their direct influence; no question it’s in the DNA, but actual Elvis Presley-style vocals or Chuck Berry guitar licks or James Brown wails are elusive. 

 

That is not so with Link Wray:  His influence is front and center on a good 50% of the records that I play, because he is credited with introducing the “power chord” on electric guitar to rock and roll, a technique whose effect is often enhanced by distortion

 

Writing for AllmusicCub Koda calls the power chord “the major modus operandi of modern rock guitarists”.  I will spare you the technical details – not least because I don't really understand them myself – but Ray Davies of the Kinks (in their classic “You Really Got Me”) and Pete Townshend of the Who (in “My Generation”) helped popularize the power chord in the early years of the British Invasion.  When Townshend is performing his famous windmill guitar technique, he is typically playing power chords

 

The very earliest power chords are credited to 1950’s bluesmen.  Music historian Robert Palmer (not the same man as the 1980’s singer named Robert Palmer by the way) cites Willie Johnson (on Howlin’ Wolfs “How Many More Years” that was recorded in 1951) and Pat Hare (on James Cotton’s “Cotton Crop Blues” that was recorded in 1954).  Anyway, the Brits liked what they heard and launched the British Invasion, and the rest is history. 

 

Not even Communist countries seemed to have problems with instrumental songs:  I have two CD’s of quite good rock instrumentals that were recorded and officially released in nations behind the Iron Curtain during the 1960’s; no doubt that there was plenty of censorship in Communist countries, but there was some rock and roll that was made available even there.  When the British Invasion hit, even the Russkies had to let in some of the real stuff; this music was recorded before that. 

 

(February 2013)

 

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At the time of the British Invasion that began in late 1963, it wasn’t so hip to be American.  However, with a few exceptions – such as Peter Noone, the lead vocalist of Herman’s Hermits – even singers that had heavy British accents in their speaking voices didn’t sound particularly British when they sang.  Thus, many bands and recording artists in that period feigned Englishness in hopes of improving their changes of making the charts. 

 

One of the most successful faux-English bands of that period was the Sir Douglas Quintet; although they had a proper British name, the band was actually from San Antonio, Texas, and two of the bandmembers were Hispanic.  When their debut album came out in 1966 under the misleading name, The Best of the Sir Douglas Quintet, the band was photographed in silhouette so as to keep the ruse going.  

 

(April 2013)

 

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The extravagant glasses that Elton John has worn throughout his decades-long career all started when young Reg Dwight began wearing glasses in his teens “not because he needed them, but in homage to Buddy Holly”, as Philip Norman wrote in his biography of the English legend.  Lead singer Freddie Garrity of Freddie and the Dreamers is another British star who wore Buddy Holly glasses on stage; in the 1970’s, pub-music star Elvis Costello was doing the same.  Allmusic describes Freddie and the Dreamers as “the clowns of the British Invasion” due to their outlandish hits like “Do the Freddie”, but there is a lot more to them than that (though I will have to get into that another time). 

 

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More than a few British rock groups adopted band names in tribute to Buddy Holly.  The Beatles in part took their insect-oriented name from that of his band the Crickets.  One Manchester band of the British Invasion period simply called themselves the Hollies.  Yet another British Invasion band, the Searchers took their name from the John Wayne movie of that name, The Searchers, where the Duke often said, “That’ll be the day”; the catch phrase had been adopted by Buddy Holly as the name of one of his first hits, That’ll Be the Day

 

(June 2013/1)

 

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When the British Invasion came along and seemed to sweep away the surf music sceneBrian Wilson masterminded a response album in 1966 by the Beach Boys that matched the Brits in every way:  Pet Sounds.  The hit songs from the album – “Wouldn’t it be Nice”, God Only Knows and “Sloop John B” – don’t begin to convey how well Pet Sounds works as an album.  The record was hugely influential and (in a nice twist) was an even bigger hit in England than it was in the USA

 

(June 2013/2)

 

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Part of the reason has to do with the Liverpool music scene in the 1960’s:  Other than you-know-who, most of the big British Invasion bands came from somewhere else.  The Beatles’ early competitors on the American charts were the Dave Clark Five; their first big hit song “Glad All Over” hit the Top Ten in February 1964, though the Five wouldn’t make #1 until “Over and Over” came out in November 1965.  The Dave Clark Five were from North London and were being promoted as the progenitors of the “Tottenham Sound”. 

 

The Rolling Stones were from London, as were the Kinksthe Who and the Yardbirds.  The Animals came from Newcastle, an industrial backwater like Liverpool, though on the opposite coast.  The Hollies were formed in Manchester, though the bandmembers came from East Lancashire.  The Moody Blues were from the Birmingham area; Birmingham, Alabama (one of the first major industrialized cities in the American South) is named for the British city. 

 

Though only one of the big acts came from there, other 1960’s bands were based in Liverpool.  Gerry and the Pacemakers is likely the best known; like the Fab Four, this band was managed by Brian Epstein, and their records were produced by George Martin.  Their American hits include “Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying” and “Ferry Across the Mersey”, a reference to the Mersey River that runs by the city – in case you are wondering why there has always been so much “Mersey” talk surrounding the Beatles

 

The Searchers is another Liverpool band that had numerous hits in the U.K., though they were less successful in the U.S.; their biggest hit songs here were remakes of “Love Potion No. 9” and “Needles and Pins”.  The Swinging Blue Jeans barely missed the U.S. Top 20 with their cover of “Hippy Hippy Shake”, which was also recorded by the Beatles.  Others include the Cryin’ Shames (not to be confused with the Cryan’ Shames, an American band from the same time period), the Merseybeatsthe Hideawaysthe Koobas (also known as the Kubas), and one of the first all-female rock bands, the Liverbirds. 

 

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Much to my surprise, in the Rip Chords, I finally found a rock band that did not have a listing in Wikipedia with a genuine hit song; their single “Hey Little Cobra was one of the biggest hit songs in surf music, making it to #4 in early 1964, even though the surf scene was already in significant decline following the recent arrival of the British Invasion.  

 

(July 2013)

 

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After a few albums of (more or less) pure country, Linda Ronstadt perfected her sound when she connected with one of the top producers of the 1970’sPeter Asher; he was also Ronstadt’s manager for several years.  Peter Asher and Gordon Waller performed as Peter and Gordon, a British duo who enjoyed several years of success, particularly with their #1 hit in 1964, “A World Without Love”.  The song was written by Paul McCartney but credited as Lennon/McCartney as was all of his music and that of John Lennon in the British Invasion period. 

 

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The Goldie and the Gingerbreads 1964 recording of “Can’t You Hear My Heartbeat” made it to #25 in the UK.  Here in this country, Herman’s Hermits released Can’t You Hear My Heartbeat two weeks earlier; the heavy promotion of that song cut them out of the U. S. charts.  After meeting Eric Burdon and the AnimalsGoldie and the Gingerbreads was signed for a European tour, where they performed with the Who’s Who of the British Invasion the Beatles, the Rolling Stonesthe Animals, the Yardbirds, the Holliesthe Kinks, and others. 

 

(October 2013)

 

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The Mamas and the Papas are another band featuring both men and women that had enduring popularity throughout the British Invasion years. 

 

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Here is a poster from a time when the Sons of the Piltdown Men – a later band similar to the Piltdown Men – shared a bill with the Beatles and other British Invasion groups: 
 
 
 
(November 2013)
 

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Patti Smith began performing rock music in 1974 – another year that popular music changed irrevocably, much like 1963 with the Beatles and the rest of the British Invasion – with music archivist and guitarist Lenny Kaye.  While not actually inventing the term “punk rock”, he had popularized it in his liner notes for the first compilation album of garage rock and psychedelic rock music, Nuggets, so this was most appropriate. 

 

(February 2014)

 

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Many of the songs in the English Freakbeat Series were by musicians that became famous in later bands or in other contexts.  The real attraction for the English Freakbeat, Volume 3 CD reissue though are three songs by a band called the Ravens; their bandleader Dave Davies and his younger brother Ray Davies were later in the Kinks, with Ray being the frontman and main songwriter for that stellar British Invasion group.  Ray Davies was supposedly not involved in the Ravens at all according to the band’s official history; however, the CD liner notes as well as the review by Allmusic notes that some of these songs bear Ray Davies’ stamp and might have been sung (if not written) by him. 

 

(March 2014/2)

 

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David Crosby met Graham Nash of the British Invasion band the Hollies when the Byrds toured England in 1966; when the Hollies came to L.A. in 1968, they reunited their acquaintance.  At a party given by Nash’s then-girlfriend Joni Mitchell in July 1968Stephen Stills and David Crosby performed a new Stills song called “You Don’t Have to Cry” with harmony vocals added by Graham Nash.  The three realized that they had a unique chemistry, and Crosby, Stills & Nash was born. 

 

(April 2014)

 

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Returning to the topic of making new rock bands out of old ones, the English band Cream was a juggernaut that, first, burned out too fast; also, was the first and probably the greatest power trio in rock music; third, marked a new contingent of British hitmakers beyond the original British Invasion; and lastly, spawned numerous other bands and artists. 

 

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The Yardbirds was one of my very favorite British Invasion bands.  Casual rock music fans might know the band as successively including within its ranks three of the greatest rock guitarists of all time:  Eric ClaptonJeff Beck,, and Jimmy Page.  That is, after Eric Clapton left the Yardbirds, he suggested Jimmy Page as his replacement; but Page was highly successful as a session guitarist in this period and instead recommended Jeff Beck, who played his first gig with the band just two days after Clapton left.  Jimmy Page later joined the Yardbirds after Jeff Beck moved on. 

 

As with many of the British Invasion bands, the Yardbirds initially played American R&B and blues songs rather than their own compositions.  As reported in Wikipedia, during their days at the Crawdaddy Club:  “They drew their repertoire from the Chicago blues of Howlin’ WolfMuddy WatersBo DiddleySonny Boy Williamson II, and Elmore James, including ‘Smokestack Lightning’, ‘Good Morning Little School Girl’, ‘Boom Boom’, ‘I Wish You Would’, ‘Rollin’ and Tumblin’’, and ‘I’m a Man’.”  In fact, Eric Clapton left the Yardbirds in March 1965 as a protest when the band finally got a hit single with a song that did not come from this milieu, “For Your Love” (written by Graham Gouldman, later a member of 10cc). 

 

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As was often true throughout the British Invasion, the British and American releases of Fresh Cream were different.  I Feel Free is not on the U.K. version even though it was the band’s first single in Britain, while Spoonful is omitted from the original American release – happily it is included on my copy, since it is one of my favorite Cream tracks.  Spoonful is also a standout, extended live track on Wheels of Fire.  

 

(May 2014)

 

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Manfred Mann was one of the original British Invasion bands, but they deserve more State-side success than they had, so allow me to quote Bruce Eder’s article in Allmusic to give an overview of the band’s history:  “An R&B band that only played pop to get on the charts, Manfred Mann ranked among the most adept British Invasion acts in both styles.” 

 

Manfred Mann always had a chameleon quality and, unlike the top-flight British Invasion bands like the Beatles, the Who and the Rolling Stones, had frequent changes in their line-up.  As I noted last month, Jack Bruce, later of Cream was a member in the mid-1960’s.  

 

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Another important British Invasion band, Fleetwood Mac had a major change or two in direction over their career.  Like Manfred Mann, they started off as an important blues-rock English band; after several line-up changes – including the addition of two women, Christine McVie and Stevie Nicks – Fleetwood Mac evolved into a best-selling pop-rock band.  

 

(June 2014)

 

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The Rolling Stones were the “bad boys” of the British Invasion.  They played around with Satanic themes and imagery, most famously with their hit Sympathy for the Devil, and also their under-rated psychedelic album that had the unfortunate title of Their Satanic Majesties’ Request.  (From Wikipedia:  “The album’s title is a play on the ‘Her Britannic Majesty requests and requires ...’ text that appears inside a British passport.”)     

 

But even the Stones came up with a religious themed song a while back, or at least Mick Jagger did:  “God Gave Me Everything” was co-written by Mick and Christian rocker Lenny Kravitz (who also performed on the recording) and was included on his 2001 album, Very Best of Mick Jagger.  I remember seeing the video many years ago back when you’d see those on MTV from time to time.  

 

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Rod Argent was the keyboard player for the Zombies; they were an English rock band but somehow stood apart from most of the other British Invasion bands.  After the Zombies broke up, he formed the band Argent in 1969.  They are best known for their million-selling song “Hold Your Head Up”, which was included on their third album All Together Now (1972). 

 

(November 2014)

 

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"Popsicles and Icicles" by the Murmaids reached #3 on both the Billboard and Cash Box record charts in January 1964.  Additionally, the song was ranked #1 on the Record World charts for the week of January 18, 1964; since the next Number One song on the Record World charts was “I Want to Hold Your Hand” by the BeatlesPopsicles and Icicles is often cited as the last Number One song of the pre-British Invasion era.  

 

(January 2015/1)

 

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The first album by the CrawdaddysCrawdaddy Express – recorded in monaural; talk about looking back! – came out in 1979 as the initial LP on Voxx Records.  Allmusic gives the album 4½ stars and states in the review by Matt Carlson:  “The Crawdaddys started their recording career properly, releasing a record with nothing but ’60s R&BBritish Invasion, and blues standards (in addition to two original compositions).”  

 

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By September 1963the Rolling Stones had outgrown the local club scene and had begun to tour; their replacement at the Crawdaddy Club was another of the major British Invasion bands, the Yardbirds, whose line-up at that time included Eric Clapton.  Other major bands and artists who performed at this club include Led ZeppelinLong John Baldry, Elton John, and Rod Stewart

 

(January 2015/2)

 

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Like many of the British Invasion bands, the Rolling Stones primarily played and recorded R&B classics and were slow to begin writing their own songs.  By contrast, the Beatles were recording mostly new material, and this seemed to be more popular at least with American audiences – the Fab Four scored one #1 single after another over here, beginning with I Want to Hold Your Hand in February 1964.   

 

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Unlike several other recent posts of mine where Allmusic really had almost nothing to contribute on the band that I was writing about, there is a long article about the Primitives by Bruce Eder – maybe the longest that I have seen on Allmusic for any of the UARB’s and UARA’s over the years.  The opening remarks make it clear how great Eder thinks the band was: 

 

The Primitives were never, ever exactly a household name, even in Oxford, where they had a serious following as a club band – and that’s a reminder that some things in life and history, and even music, are just so unfair as to be unsettling.  The Primitives [were] signed to Pye Records in 1964 [and] never found even a small national audience in England. . . .  Castle Communications issued their catalog on CD in 2003.  That CD was a delight and a vexation; it proved in the listening that these guys deserved a lot better than cult or footnote status, but it also brought home the unfairness inherent in their status.  Even in their second, slightly more pop-oriented incarnation, when they were allowed to cut loose and be who and what they really were – a loud band without a lot of subtlety but power to spare and the sincerity to put over their music – they rated a place near the top of Pye Records’ roster and in the upper reaches of the British Invasion pantheon.  Listening to the CD, this reviewer found himself pained, to the point of shedding a tear, over the fact that this band only got to leave 24 songs behind from its prime years. . . . 

 

“[T]heir sound was very similar to the Pretty Things, rooted heavily in American R&B, and [lead singer Jay] Roberts was a serious, powerful shouter who could sound seriously, achingly raspy, rough, and growly, while the others played with virtually none of the niceties or delicacy that usually marred British attempts at the music.” 

 

(May 2015)

 

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The Yardbirds included “Train Kept A-Rollin’ on their second American album, Having a Rave up with the Yardbirds that is absolutely chock full of classic songs; in addition to their major hits “I’m a Man and Heart Full of SoulHaving a Rave Up includes “Evil Hearted You” and “Still I’m Sad”, plus a full side of the Yardbirds in concert featuring Eric Clapton on lead (taken from their British debut album, Five Live Yardbirds) that includes “I’m a Man again plus their devastating cover of Howlin’ Wolf’s “Smokestack Lightning that I first heard on their 1967 collection The Yardbirds’ Greatest Hits.  Anyone who thinks that the British Invasion began and ended with the Beatles and the Rolling Stones needs to hear this music post haste. 
 
(June 2015)
 
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For some reason, over the years the 1970’s have gotten a reputation as a poor decade for music. (So do the 1950’s, for that matter, even though that is where rock and roll came from). It certainly cannot be because everything sounded the same. Most of the British Invasion bands were still active, from the Rolling Stones, to the Whoto the Kinks, to the Moody Blues, to the Hollies – to this day, even Herman’s Hermits has never broken up. Among the big English bands, only the Beatles and the Animals were gone by the end of the 1960’s.  The top American acts were still going strong as well, and many major stars arrived in the 1970’s. Anyone who says they are a music fan has to be able to find someone, and probably several someones on that list that they like a lot.
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The line-up in the Sonics stabilized in late 1963 with the addition of three members from another local band called the Searchers (not to be confused with the British Invasion band, the Searchers); their frontman was future Moby Grape guitarist Jerry Miller. Larry Parypa remained on lead guitar, while Andy Parypa switched to bass guitar. The new bandmembers were Bob Bennett on drums, Rob Lind on sax, and Gerry Roslie on keyboards and, later, lead vocals.
 
(December 2016)

Last edited: March 22, 2021