Sooner ... The initial line-up of Rare Bird was as set out below - TopicsExpress



          

Sooner ... The initial line-up of Rare Bird was as set out below (sorry - land title language!) (I feel like I am typimg a title commitment!) although there would be changes by the time they came to work on their third album. The first two members listed were a constant throughout the lifetime of the band. Steve Gould (born Stephen Burt Gould, 25 March 1950, Battersea, South London) - lead vocals and bass, rhythm guitar David Kaffinetti (born David Franklyn Ewer, 17 April 1946, Folkestone, Kent) - pianos and assorted keyboards Graham Field (born Graham Stansfield, 3 May 1940, Beaminster, West Dorset) - organ and assorted keyboards Mark Ashton (born Mark Ashton Vey, 23 June 1949, Bridge, Kent) - drums and backing vocals The history of Rare Bird began when Graham Field placed an advertisement for a pianist in a musical periodical. He got thirty replies and formed a group called Lunch. He met Dave Kaffinetti in November 1968, and together they formulated the basic ideas for Rare Bird. In August 1969, they finally found the ideal rhythm section in Steve Gould, Chris Randall and Mark Ashton. Field and Kaffinetti had originally envisaged that the band would be a four piece and were looking for a singer/bass player. Steve and Chris, who had both previously been members of the Pop-Psych band Fruit Machine, applied to the ad as vocals/guitar and bass respectively and were taken on. Lunch played a few gigs, one notable one was at the Tilbury Working Mens Club for the princely sum of five pounds. The band had no van and they managed to get amps, drums, guitars and Hammond organ into their cars. The gig was marred by Chris receiving a bad electric shock whilst on stage. It later turned out that the founders of the band were more interested in Steve and convinced him to play bass. Chris was now high and dry and was kicked out of the band. Two weeks later, they had signed management and agency contracts, and three weeks later, were in the studio recording their debut album. Before joining Lunch, Randall and Gould had previously written a song called To the Memory of Two Brave Dogs. Rare Bird included this song in their debut album renaming it Iceberg but Randall received no credit on the L.P. Along with Van der Graaf Generator and The Nice, they were one of the very first bands that signed to Charisma Records, the record label that Tony Stratton-Smith had founded.[2] Their late 1969 release Sympathy reached No. 2 in Italy, sold 500,000 copies in France and over one million globally.[1] It became their only UK hit single, reaching No. 27 and staying on the chart for 8 weeks. A 1970 cover version of the track by The Family Dogg, reached number two in the Netherlands. The song returned to the UK chart in 1992 when a version by Marillion reached No. 17.[3] In 2001, the track was sampled by Faithless in their song Not Enuff Love, named after a chorus line in Sympathy. The first album released in 1969 was called Rare Bird. Later members included Fred Kelly (Nic Potter), Ced Curtis, Paul Holland, and Paul Karas on the Epic Forest album with Andy Curtis and Fred Kelly appearing on the album Somebodys Watching. The band finally split up in the mid 1970s. Dave Kaffinetti (credited as David Kaff) played the part of Viv Savage in This Is Spinal Tap (1984). Chris Randall went on to play with Martin Murray and The Honeycombs, the groundbreaking group of the mid sixties with their worldwide hits, Have I the Right, Love In Tokyo and Thats the Way!. Paul Holland had previously been a recording engineer at Southern Musics studio in Denmark Street, London during the time that Fruit Machine recorded songs for release on the Spark Label under the direction of Barry Kingston. Paul passed away in 2010 after losing the fight against cancer. The song Beautiful Scarlet from their first album was sampled in the 2004 song Summers Gonna Hurt You by electronic music producer/DJ Diplo. I took alot of this from Wikipedia to see if my computer really was or is back up and running. And then compared the information to the notes I made of my Rare Bird albums while I away in Hell over the summer. I finally found this album at a Spartans department store in Central City in Ferguson in 1973 Here is a song that doesnt get much airplay, but the weather in the North East coast reminded me of this. https://youtube/watch?v=3IZWX1zsH5g
Posted on: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 14:26:39 +0000

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