Harvey and the Wallbangers

Last updated

Harvey and the Wallbangers
Origin Cambridge, England
Genres
Years active1980–1987
MembersJeremy Taylor
Jonny Griffiths
Harvey Brough
Neil "Reg" McArthur
Christopher Purves
Richard Allen
Past membersAndrew Huggett

Harvey and the Wallbangers were a 1980s jazz vocal harmony group, playing major festivals and the main concert halls in Europe and the UK, such as the Royal Albert Hall, Sadler's Wells, The Forum, Ronnie Scotts and the Berlin Tempodrom. The group also appeared on the Royal Variety Show and scores of other television programmes including Wogan , Russell Harty and Carrott's Lib.

Contents

Harvey and the Wallbangers recorded four albums on their own label (Hubbadots) and also The Jazz Album with Simon Rattle (EMI). [1]

Band members

Early band members

Stage shows

Each year the Wallbangers would put together a new stage show, normally premiered at the Edinburgh Festival [2] [3] [4] (the only time they missed performing in Edinburgh was 1985). The shows were produced by a selection of inspiring Directors.

Performance YearShow NameDirector
1983Hep Cats Go ApeJude Kelly (Royal National Theatre)
1984Allez BananesRod Natkiel
1985Like men Possessed James Runcie (TV series Grantchester)
1986Park the TigerDavid Gilmore (Daisy Pulls It Off)

Radio Series

On 26 June 1985, the Wallbangers appeared on BBC Radio 2 (at 22.15) for the first of a series of six 15-minute Wednesday night shows of "music & mirth". The series was produced by Paul Mayhew-Archer and featured additional material by comedy writer James Hendrie. [5] The short series was repeated again in April the following year.

This was followed in 1987, when the Wallbangers had their own half-hour Tuesday night radio show on BBC Radio 2. [6] Produced again by Paul Mayhew-Archer and written by James Hendrie, the series ran for 6 episodes, hosting a number of special guest celebrities.

Episode No.Original Air DateGuests
Episode 120 January 1987 Jeremy Hardy, Roger McGough, Pete McCarthy.
Episode 227 January 1987 Paul Merton, John Irwin.
Episode 33 February 1987 John Dowie, Nick Revell.
Episode 410 February 1987 Jeremy Hardy, Roger McGough, Pete McCarthy.
Episode 517 February 1987 Norman Lovett, John Dowie.
Episode 624 February 1987 Paul Merton, John Irwin.

In 1986 the band also provided music for an adaptation of Dario Fo's Archangels broadcast on BBC Radio 3. [7] [8]

Dissolution

After Griffiths left the band, the band decided to break up after a final tour. [9] The band performed with Simon Rattle and the London Sinfonietta, later released on Rattle's Jazz Album. [10]

The final show, on Sunday 3 May 1987, was originally booked at the Duke of York's Theatre in the West End, but having sold out in just a morning, it was finally moved to the Sadler's Wells Theatre in Clerkenwell, London, where the Wallbangers performed for the last time.

Stephen Grater (the band's manager for the past four years) had contracted a brain tumor, and died a few days before the final concert. According to Purves, this partly inspired the band members to stop. [11]

Discography

Album CoverAlbum TitleAlbum DetailsTracks
Allez Bananes [12]
  • Released: 1984
  • Recorded: Gateway Studios, Battersea
  • Engineer: Pascal Gabriel
  • Produced: Rex Brough & Harvey Brough

(1) Five Guy's Named Moe, (2) Who Do You Know in Heaven, (3) My Baby's Gone, (4) Jailhouse Rock, (5) Shine, (6) Your Feet's Too Big, (7) I'll Be Forever Loving You, (8) Boogie Nights, (9) Sweet Talkin' Guy, (10) Sixteen Tons, (11) Traffic Jam, (12) Nutrocker, (13) Right Next Door to An Angel, (14) Sh Boom, (15) Blue Skies.

Wallbangers A – GoGo [13]
  • Released: 1985
  • Recorded: Gateway Studios, Battersea
  • Engineer: Pascal Gabriel
  • Produced: Rex Brough & Harvey Brough

(1) Make Your Mind Up, (2) Lets Make It Today, (3) Sea Cruise, (4) Ain't Nobody Here But Us Chickens, (5) Breakaway, (6) The Falling Rain, (7) Someday Soon Somehow, (8) Needle in a Haystack, (9) Anything (You Want Me To Do), (10) 523 423, (11) Sometimes Ali, (12) Got The Woo-Woos, (13) Cool Dog, (14) Every Second Every Minute Every Hour of Every Day (I Need Your Love).

Park The Tiger (EP) [14]
  • Released: 1986
  • Recorded: Hollywood Studios, London
  • Engineer: – Olly Hitch
  • Produced: Harvey Brough & Olly Hitch

(1) I Ain't Got You, (2) Tons & Tons of Sunshine, (3) Dancing in the Ballroom, (4) Devil Went Down To Georgia, (5) Like I Should.

Someday Soon Somehow [15]

(1) Here Comes Leroy, (2) We're Heading for the Poorhouse, (3) False Alarm, (4) Traffic Jam, (5) Baby Don't Drink, (6) Out of the Shadows, (7) The Concept, (8) Inflation Blues, (9) I Think You're Something Else, (10) Sometimes I Feel like A Motherless Child, (11) Marie, (12) Occapella, (13) Cool Jerk, (14) Let Me Down, (15) Life Is Easy, (16) Since I Don't Have You, (17) Lipstick Traces on a Cigarette, (18) High School Confidential, (19) Who's Fooling Who? (20) Someday Soon Somehow, (21) Breaths.

Simon Rattle Jazz Album [16]
  • Released: 1987
  • Recorded: CTS Studios, Wembley
  • Conductor: Simon Rattle & London Sinfonietta
  • Produced: EMI Records Ltd

(3) After You've Gone, (8) Sweet Sue, (10) Makin' Whoopee!, (11) My Blue Heaven.

Final Concert
Early Days [17]
  • Remastering of 'Allez Bananas' with some added out-takes
  • Released: 2004
  • Recorded: Gateway Studios, Battersea
  • Engineer: Pascal Gabriel
  • Produced: Rex Brough & Harvey Brough

(1) Five Guy's Named Moe, (2) Who Do You Know in Heaven, (3) My Baby's Gone, (4) Jailhouse Rock, (5) Shine, (6) Your Feet's Too Big, (7) I'll Be Forever Loving You, (8) Boogie Nights, (9) Sweet Talkin' Guy, (10) Sixteen Tons, (11) Traffic Jam, (12) Nutrocker, (13) Right Next Door to An Angel, (14) Sh Boom, (15) Blue Skies, (16) Glad To Be Here, (17) Paper Moon, (18) Deacon Jones, (19) Atom & Evil, (20) Mr Paganini, (21) Old Man River, (22) Don't You Worry 'bout A Thing, (23) Sunny Side of the Street.

Post-Wallbangers careers

Christopher Purves, who left the band due to the pressures of touring, trained as an operatic baritone and his first major role was in Inés de Castro by James MacMillan in 1997. He also played the lead roles in Alban Berg's Wozzeck and Verdi's Falstaff, Beckmesser in Wagner's Meistersinger, Tonio in Leoncavallo's Pagliacci and Balstrode in Britten's Peter Grimes. [18] He also sang in a television commercial for fruit drink Um Bongo. [19]

Harvey Brough followed the dissolution by scoring John Godber's Shakers with his brother Rex, providing what the Times described as "blues, country and Bananarama-ish tunes". [20] But like Purves, he later went in a more serious direction, including composing and performing Requiem in Blue, a composition with elements of jazz, folk, and classical music, in tribute to his dead brother. [21] [22] He was married to jazz singer Jacqui Dankworth. [23]

Harvey and the "New" Wallbangers

The members of the band worked together occasionally after the split. Harvey Brough was joined by the reunited Wallbangers for a 2004 concert at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh. [24]

In 2016 Clara Sanabras asked Harvey to reform the Wallbangers to appear on one song (Travellers Never Did Lie) on her album "A Hum About Mine Ears". The CD was launched at the Barbican, London in March 2016, by Clara with the new Harvey and The Wallbangers, Britten Sinfonia, Jacqueline Shave, Violin and two choirs – Chorus of Dissent and Harvey's Vox Holloway conducted by Harvey.[ citation needed ]

In 2017, after a 30-year hiatus, three of the original Wallbangers (Harvey Brough, Jeremy Taylor & Richard Allen) plus two new Wallbangers (Clara Sanabras & Naomi Hammerton) decided to reform the band. [25] They were joined by a rhythm section Andy Hamill and Roy Dodds to perform in three sold-out gigs in London and Southampton, followed by an appearance at the Bury St Edmunds music festival.

At the London shows the Wallbangers were joined on stage by original pianist "Reg Prescott", for the song Blue Skies.[ citation needed ]

Film and TV

Show TitleProgram Details
Six Fifty-Five
  • Released: Tuesday 9 August 1983
  • Channel: BBC 2
  • Cast: Lenny Henry
  • Editor: Peter Hercombe
  • Songs: Stranded in the Jungle & Right next door to an Angel
At Last -It's 1984!
  • Released: Sunday 1 January 1984 (New Year Show)
  • Channel: BBC 1
  • Cast: Michael Barrymore
  • Director: Bach Tony
  • Songs : Schboom & Paper Moon
Folio – TV Arts Show
  • Released: 1984
  • Channel: Anglian TV
  • Cast: Paul Barnes
  • Songs : Grazing in the grass, Allez bananes, Who put the Bomp, Schboom, Nobody, Ain't nobody here but us chickens, Sea Cruise, Boogie Nights
Royal Variety Performance
Cabaret (TV series) [26]
The Laughter Show (TV series)
  • Released: Saturday 2 March 1985 – (repeated Thursday 25 July 1985)
  • Channel: BBC 1
  • Cast: Les Dennis and Dustin Gee with Slither Spook and Roy Jay
  • Director: John Bishop
The Laughter Show (TV series)
  • Released: Saturday 23 March 1985 – (repeated Thursday 29 August 1985)
  • Channel: BBC 1
  • Cast: Les Dennis and Dustin Gee with Greg Rodgers
  • Director: John Bishop
Kelly's Eye
  • Released: 1985 – 6 episodes
  • Channel: TVS (Television South)
  • Cast: Matthew Kelly
  • Songs: 523423, Someday soon somehow, Needle in a Haystack, Cool Dog, Falling Rain, Breakaway
Summertime Special [27]
Minstrel of the Dawn
  • Released: Monday 21 March 1988
  • Channel: BBC 1
  • Cast: Mary O'Hara
  • Director: Alan Tongue

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">PJ Harvey</span> English musician (born 1969)

Polly Jean Harvey is an English singer-songwriter. Primarily known as a vocalist and guitarist, she is also proficient with a wide range of instruments.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cleo Laine</span> English jazz singer and actress (born 1927)

Dame Cleo Laine, Lady Dankworth is an English singer and actress known for her scat singing. She is the widow of jazz composer and musician Sir John Dankworth and the mother of bassist Alec Dankworth and singer Jacqui Dankworth.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Dankworth</span> English jazz composer and musician (1927–2010)

Sir John Phillip William Dankworth, CBE, also known as Johnny Dankworth, was an English jazz composer, saxophonist, clarinettist and writer of film scores. With his wife, jazz singer Dame Cleo Laine, he was a music educator and also her music director.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gwyneth Herbert</span> Jazz musician, singer-songwriter and composer

Gwyneth Herbert is a British singer-songwriter, composer, multi-instrumentalist and record producer. Initially known for her interpretation of jazz and swing standards, she is now established as a writer of original compositions, including musical theatre. She has been described as "an exquisite wordsmith" with "a voice that can effortlessly render any emotion with commanding ease" and her songs as being "impressively crafted and engrossing vignette[s] of life's more difficult moments".

<i>The Chronicle of the Black Sword</i> 1985 studio album by Hawkwind

The Chronicle of the Black Sword is the fourteenth studio album by the English space rock group Hawkwind, released in 1985. It spent two weeks on the UK albums chart peaking at #65. The album is based upon the adventures of Elric of Melniboné, a recurring character in the novels of science fiction author Michael Moorcock, a long-standing associate of the group, who contributes lyrics to one track on the album.

Back Door were a British jazz-rock trio, formed in 1971.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin France</span> English jazz drummer (1964–2024)

Martin France was a British jazz drummer. He recorded on over 100 albums and was a professor at the Royal Academy of Music in London. He was sponsored by Paiste cymbals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alisha Sufit</span> Musical artist

Alisha Sufit was the English singer-songwriter with the 1970s Magic Carpet, whose eponymous first album was released on the UK Mushroom label in 1972. The Mushroom label is not to be confused with the Australian label of the same name, and was led by Vic Keary from the late 1960s from Chalk Farm Studios in Belmont Street, London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">YolanDa Brown</span> British saxophonist, composer, and broadcaster

YolanDa Faye Brown is a British saxophonist, composer, and broadcaster. Her musical sound is a fusion of reggae, jazz and soul. In 2022 she was appointed chair of the British Phonographic Industry (BPI).

Malcolm Edmonstone is a British jazz pianist and pop arranger. He studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where he became Head of Jazz. Edmonstone provided orchestral arrangements for Gary Barlow’s 2020 album Music Played by Humans. He has conducted and arranged for the BBC Concert Orchestra numerous times for BBC Radio 2, featuring vocalists Rick Astley, Katie Melua, Mark King, Ruby Turner, Tommy Blaize, Tony Momrelle and Heather Small. In 2020 he was Music Director at the National Theatre for Tony Kushner’s adaptation of The Visit (play). In 2016 he made his BBC Proms debut, arranging and conducting for Iain Ballamy and Liane Carroll.

Simon Richard Spillett is a British jazz tenor saxophonist. He has won the BBC Jazz Awards Rising Star (2007), Jazz Journal's Critics' Choice album of the Year (2009), the British Jazz Awards Top Tenor Saxophonist (2011), and Services to British Jazz award (2016).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Words That Maketh Murder</span> 2011 single by PJ Harvey

"The Words That Maketh Murder" is a song by English musician PJ Harvey. It is the fourth track and lead single from her eighth studio album, Let England Shake, and was released on 6 February 2011 on Island Records. Dealing with diplomacy, the ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan and world wars, "The Words That Maketh Murder" was produced by Flood, John Parish, Mick Harvey and PJ Harvey. It was Harvey's first single since 2008's "The Devil" and uses similar dynamics of song-writing to its predecessor, including folk influence and instrumentation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dry the River</span> English alternative rock band

Dry the River were an English alternative rock band, formed in the Stratford district of East London in 2009.

This is a summary of 2008 in music in the United Kingdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frank Holder (musician)</span> British musician

Frank Holder was a Guyanese jazz singer and percussionist. He was a member of bands led by Jiver Hutchinson, Johnny Dankworth and Joe Harriott.

This is a summary of 2010 in music in the United Kingdom.

<i>First Songs</i> 2003 studio album by Gwyneth Herbert and Will Rutter

First Songs, initially credited to "Gwyn and Will", is the debut album of British singer-songwriter Gwyneth Herbert and composer and acoustic guitarist Will Rutter. Comprising both original songs and standards, it was launched at London's Pizza Express Jazz Club in September 2003. The Herbert/Rutter song "Sweet Insomnia" featured guest vocals from Jamie Cullum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rebecca Hollweg</span> Musical artist

Rebecca Hollweg is an English singer-songwriter. She has been described as "a talented songsmith" who "combines old-school craftsmanship with Joni Mitchell's perspectives on relationships and environment" and "a silky-voiced jazz-influenced songwriter" who "laces her low-key arrangements with exquisite vocals".

<i>Rattle That Lock</i> 2015 studio album by David Gilmour

Rattle That Lock is the fourth solo studio album by English musician David Gilmour. It was released on 18 September 2015 via Columbia Records. The artwork for the album was created by Dave Stansbie from The Creative Corporation under the direction of Aubrey Powell, who has worked with Gilmour and Pink Floyd since the late 1960s.

Harvey Brough is an English tenor, instrumentalist, composer, producer and arranger. Starting at the age of six as a chorister at Coventry Cathedral, and achieving greatest prominence as founder, leader, musical director and producer of Harvey and the Wallbangers, he has worked in a wide range of musical genres including classical, early music, pop and soul, jazz, folk and world music.

References

  1. "Reviews:The Simon Rattle Jazz Album". Gramophone. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  2. Miles Kington, "Just dying to be noticed." Times [London, England] 30 August 1983: 8. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  3. "Theatre." Times [London, England] 29 December 1984: 16. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  4. Miles Kington. "Reckoning up Auld Reekie." Times [London, England] 19 August 1986: 10. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  5. Website : genome.ch.bbc.co.uk – Radio Times Archive
  6. Website : epguides.com – Radio Guests and Airdates guide
  7. Mitchell, Tony (2014). Dario Fo: People's Court Jester. A&C Black. ISBN   9781408148648.
  8. Peter Waymark. "Publishers in conflict." Times [London, England] 8 March 1986: 19. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  9. Requiem in Blue – Harvey Brough biography
  10. Richard Williams. "Classic jazz." (Review of Simon Rattle/London Sinfonietta: The Jazz Album.) Times [London, England] 7 November 1987: 19. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  11. "Christopher Purves, From Rocker to Choir Boy to Opera Singer on Stage in HGO's Peter Grimes". Houston Press. 18 October 2010.
  12. From the LP album sleeve, Allez Bananes
  13. From the LP album sleeve, Wallbangers A – GoGo
  14. From the EP album sleeve, Park The Tiger
  15. From the Tape sleeve, Someday Soon Somehow
  16. From Gramophone Review
  17. From the CD sleeve, Early Days
  18. "Christopher Purves interview: From doo-wop to new opera". The Daily Telegraph. 2 March 2013.
  19. Emma Pomfret. "In the red – and loving it." Times [London, England] 18 September 2009: 9[S]. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  20. Kate Bassett. "Happy hour not quite on song." Times [London, England] 17 May 1994: 39. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 25 July 2017.
  21. Walters, John L (22 June 2004). "Harvey Brough". The Guardian.
  22. "Album: Harvey Brough, Requiem in Blue (Smudged Discs)" . The Independent. 17 June 2010. Archived from the original on 9 May 2022.
  23. "Acclaimed jazz artist Jacqui Dankworth brings her talent to Oxford". Oxford Mail. 8 January 2015.
  24. "The Wallbangers bounce back". The Scotsman. 10 November 2004.
  25. "In Tune", BBC Radio 3, 11 January 2017
  26. From IMDB website, Harvey and the Wallbangers
  27. Website: tvpopdiaries.co.uk/1986