This article needs additional citations for verification .(September 2014) |
Nektar | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Hamburg, West Germany |
Genres | |
Years active |
|
Labels | Current:
Former: |
Members | Nektar (US-based band) Derek "Mo" Moore Ryche Chlanda Kendall Scott Mick Brockett Randy Dembo New Nektar (Germany-based band) Klaus Henatsch Alexander Hoffmeister Holger Trull Norbert "Panza" Lehmann |
Past members |
|
Website | nektarband nektarsmusic |
Nektar (German for nectar) is an English progressive rock band formed in Hamburg, West Germany in 1969, by guitarist and lead vocalist Roye Albrighton, keyboardist Allan "Taff" Freeman, bassist Derek "Mo" Moore, and drummer Ron Howden.
The band formed in Hamburg, West Germany in 1969. The founding members were Englishmen Roye Albrighton on guitars and lead vocals, Allan "Taff" Freeman on keyboards, Derek "Mo" Moore on bass, Ron Howden on drums and artists Mick Brockett and Keith Walters on lights and "special effects". Though the concept of non-performing bandmembers was not unprecedented (e.g. lyricist Keith Reid in Procol Harum), it was unusual that a third of Nektar's lineup had no role in performing or writing their music. Throughout their early existence the band's songwriting was credited to all six members on the album sleeves, but BMI records show that the music was written by the four performing members. Brockett did however co-write the lyrics with Moore, and invented or contributed to the original album titles.
The band's debut album, Journey to the Centre of the Eye (1971), consisted of a single song running over 40 minutes, with the last 100 seconds of the first side repeated at the beginning of the second side to maintain continuity. It was a concept album, following an astronaut who is given overwhelming knowledge by extraterrestrials, with sonic textures reminiscent of psychedelic rock. The follow-up, A Tab in the Ocean (1972), drew on more conventional rock and blues influences. Walters had left by the time of their third album, the heavily improvised double album ...Sounds Like This (1973), though the band would continue to use his art in their shows and album designs for a time. A cult following grew for the band, based largely on word of mouth.
Nektar's U.S. release, Remember the Future (1973), propelled the band briefly into mass popularity. A concept album revisiting Journey to the Centre of the Eye's theme of extraterrestrials granting a human enlightenment, but with a blind boy as the protagonist. It demonstrated a more melodic sound than previous albums and shot into the Top 20 album charts in the U.S. The follow-up, Down to Earth (1974), was another concept album (this time with a circus theme); it also sold well, breaking into the Top 40 album charts and including their only song to chart on the Billboard singles charts, "Astral Man". The next album, Recycled (1975), was stylistically close to bands like Gentle Giant and carried on the band's close connection with progressive rock.
Albrighton left the band in December 1976, just prior to the studio sessions for Nektar's first major-label release, Magic Is a Child (1977). The remaining members were joined by guitarist/vocalist Dave Nelson at this point. The album was more eclectic, although with shorter songs and fairly straightforward rhythms. Lyrically the album covered a wide range of subjects from Norse mythology and magic to more down to earth subjects like railroads and truck drivers.
In 1978 the band dissolved; however in 1979 Albrighton and Freeman reformed the band with bassist Carmine Rojas and drummer Dave Prater and released a new album, Man in the Moon (1980), before the band dissolved once again in 1982.
Ian Curtis of Joy Division was a fan of the band and was photographed before he joined the band in a Nektar T-shirt.[ citation needed ]
Nektar regrouped in 2000 with a line-up consisting of Albrighton, Freeman, and drummer Ray Hardwick, and in 2001, they released The Prodigal Son (2001). The following year, the band headlined NEARfest with the full classic line-up including Moore on bass, Howden on drums, and Larry Fast guesting on synthesizers. [4] In 2003, Moore departed the band and was replaced by Randy Dembo. Nektar cut one more album, Evolution (2004), before Freeman was replaced by Tom Hughes. Dembo and Hughes left in August 2006, citing communication problems, money issues, personality issues, and trust in the management issues. Dembo was briefly replaced by a returning Carmine Rojas, before the band settled on a line-up that consisted of Albrighton, Howden, guitarist Steve Adams, bassist Desha Dunnahoe, and keyboardist Steve Mattern. However, this line up never performed live on stage.
Later in 2006, the band found new management in Roy Clay to replace The Eclectic Records staff, and performed at progressive rock-themed festivals worldwide on a part-time basis, and occasionally appearing in some of their old haunts in the New Jersey/New York area. Clay was released from management duties early 2007 after a dispute over financial matters, and the band made an official complaint which exposed further fraudulent acts. Clay was ultimately convicted for fraud, lying, and forgery, and was jailed for 2 years and 11 months. [5]
In mid-2007, a solo tour was undertaken by Albrighton. A full band tour of Europe (primarily Germany) was scheduled by a European-based promoter, but they had to postpone as extra funds were needed to complete the new album, Book of Days , which was not released until the following year, by which time Adams, Dunnahoe, and Mattern had departed the band. Book of Days featured more of Roye Albrighton's guitar work than previous Nektar albums. [6]
In late 2007, the band embarked on a tour for which they performed Remember the Future in its entirety, the line-up now including Klaus Henatsch on keyboards and Peter Pichl on bass. In this formation they toured extensively through Europe in 2008. These concerts resulted in the highly acclaimed live double album Fortyfied (2011), which was released in 2009 under Roye's own Treacle Music label. In 2009, the band also played their first gig in the US again, appearing as headliners at the Rites of Spring Festival and a week-long tour along the East Coast.
In mid 2011, Lux Vibratus joined the band on bass for the Cleopatra Records' Space Rock Invasion Tour in the U.S. [7] By the time the band came to record the covers album A Spoonful of Time , bass duties were shared by session musician Jürgen Engler, Mr. Big bassist Billy Sheehan, and former Yes member Billy Sherwood, who also served as the album's producer. [8] The Albrighton-Howden-Henatsch-Sherwood line-up recorded and released Time Machine . [9] A special post-recording show was put together at the Coach House in South Orange County, California. Returning to Nektar in 2013, Vibratus was on bass for the Cruise to the Edge voyage, followed by The Virada Cultural Festival in São Paulo, Brazil. In June, this line-up went on the road again for a U.S. tour billed as the U.K. Legends of Classic Rock. [7] [10] In January 2014, bassist Tom Fry joined the band for a European tour. On this tour Che Albrighton, Roye's son, made his first appearance as a drummer because Howden had a different engagement. Che had previously worked as tour manager for Nektar on several tours.
On 26 July 2016, Roye Albrighton died after an unspecified illness, at the age of 67. [11] Following his death, Henatsch, Howden, and Fry decided to move on with the production of a new album with On Stage Records, the label they worked with since 2015. The first release was the double live album Live in Bremen (2017), which documents the last tour with Albrighton. After an audition in 2017, Henatsch, Howden, and Fry agreed to continue Nektar with Alexander Hoffmeister as their new frontman and guitarist. [12]
In early 2018, Howden left the band to found his own group, also named Nektar, and based in the US. He asked former bass player Moore to join, to which he agreed, which was followed by the addition of former members Randy Dembo, Mick Brockett (lights, projections and atmosphere), and Ryche Chlanda (guitar and vocals), and newcomer keyboardist Kendall Scott, a friend of Chlanda's.
The US line-up assembled a set of previously unrecorded tracks from Chlanda's time in the band, which were released on The Other Side as Nektar. [13]
Original Nektar keyboardist Allan "Taff" Freeman died in August 2021 at the age of 76. [14]
On 29 September 2023, Ron Howden died at the age of 78 after years of numerous health issues, including cancer. [15] This album would ultimately see a release in 2024 under the title "Mission to Mars".
The Germany-based Nektar has operated under a new name, New Nektar, to create some distinction and distance from old successes. In 2018, New Nektar recorded the concept album Megalomania (2018), featuring Che Albrighton on drums, and completed the Megalomania Release Tour in December 2018. Che Albrighton was unavailable to participate, so he was replaced by Norbert "Panza" Lehmann.
|
|
Note: bold indicates a line-up change; (*) indicates returning member
1969–1972 | 1972–1975 | 1975–1976 | 1976–1977 |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
1977–1978 | 1978 | 1978 | 1978–1979 |
|
|
| Disbanded |
1979–1980 | 1980–1982 | 1982–2000 | 2000–2002 |
|
| Disbanded |
|
2002–2003 | NEARfest 2002 Reunion | 2003–2004 | 2004–2006 |
|
|
|
|
2006–2007 | 2007–2011 | 2011–2014 | 2014–2016 |
|
|
|
|
2017–2018 | 2018–2019 | 2019–2021 | 2021–present |
| as "New Nektar" (Germany-based band)
| as "New Nektar" (Germany-based band)
| as "New Nektar" (Germany-based band)
|
2018–present | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
Year | Album | United States | Canada [16] | Australia [17] |
---|---|---|---|---|
1971 | Journey to the Centre of the Eye | – | – | – |
1972 | A Tab in the Ocean | 141 | – | – |
1973 | ...Sounds Like This | – | – | – |
Remember the Future | 19 | 23 | 72 | |
1974 | Down to Earth | 32 | 37 | 93 |
1975 | Recycled | 89 | – | – |
1977 | Magic Is a Child | 172 | – | – |
1980 | Man in the Moon | – | – | – |
2001 | The Prodigal Son | – | – | – |
2004 | Evolution | – | – | – |
2008 | Book of Days | – | – | – |
2012 | A Spoonful of Time | – | – | – |
2013 | Time Machine | – | – | – |
2018 | Megalomania (released as New Nektar) | – | – | – |
2020 | The Other Side (released as Nektar, the US-based band) | – | – | – |
2024 | Mission to Mars (released as Nektar, the US-based band) | – | – | – |
Year | Album |
---|---|
1974 | Sunday Night at London Roundhouse (5 tracks) |
1977 | Live in New York |
1978 | More Live Nektar in New York |
2002 | Sunday Night at London Roundhouse Expanded version (10 tracks) |
2002 | Unidentified Flying Abstract - Live at Chipping Norton 1974 |
2004 | Greatest Hits Live |
2005 | 2004 Tour Live |
2005 | Door to the Future - The Lightshow Tapes Volume 1 |
2005 | Live in Germany 2005 |
2008 | Live in Detroit 1975 |
2011 | Fortyfied |
2011 | Complete Live In New York 1974 (compiles Live in New York + More Live Nektar in New York) |
2011 | Greatest Hits Volume 1 (Re-release of CD 1 of Greatest Hits Live) |
2011 | Greatest Hits Volume 2 (Re-release of CD 2 of Greatest Hits Live) |
2014 | Live at the Patriots Theater (re-release of Greatest Hits Live) |
2015 | Up Close (Roye Albrighton) |
2017 | Live in Bremen |
2019 | Live Anthology 1974-1976 |
2021 | Sounds Like Swiss |
Year | Album |
---|---|
1976 | Nektar |
1978 | Thru the Ears |
1978 | Best of Nektar |
1994 | Highlights |
1998 | The Dream Nebula: The Best of 1971–1975 |
2008 | The Boston Tapes |
2011 | Retrospektiv 1969–1980 |
Year | Title | Billboard Hot 100 | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1973 | "Do You Believe in Magic?" | - | ...Sounds Like This |
1974 | "What Ya Gonna Do?" | - | |
"Remember the Future (Edit)" | - | Remember the Future | |
"Fidgety Queen'" | - | Down to Earth | |
"Astral Man" | 91 | ||
1975 | "Flight to Reality" | - | Recycled |
2005 | "Always" | - | Evolution |
Year | Title |
---|---|
2003 | Live |
2005 | Pure: Live in Germany 2005 |
2016 | Up Close (Roye Albrighton) |
The Strawbs are an English rock band founded in 1964 as the Strawberry Hill Boys. The band started out as a bluegrass group, but eventually moved on to other styles such as folk rock and progressive rock.
William Wyman Sherwood is an American multi-instrumentalist, songwriter, singer, record producer and mixing engineer. He is best known for his tenures in the English progressive rock band Yes as guitarist and keyboardist in 1994 and from 1997 to 2000 and as bassist since 2015, following the death of original bassist Chris Squire. He is also known for working with former and current Yes members on other projects.
The Babys are a British rock group best known for their songs "Isn't It Time" and "Every Time I Think of You". Both songs were composed by Jack Conrad and Ray Kennedy, and each reached No. 13 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No. 8 on the Cashbox chart in the late 1970s. "Back on My Feet Again" also reached the U.S. Top 40 in 1980. The original Babys line-up consisted of founding member keyboardist/guitarist Michael Corby, and in order of joining the group, vocalist/bassist John Waite, drummer Tony Brock and guitarist Wally Stocker.
Man are a rock band from Wales.
Climax Blues Band are a British blues rock & pop band that has released 22 albums. "Couldn't Get It Right" reached No. 10 on the UK Singles Chart and No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1977. "I Love You" peaked on the Billboard chart at No. 12 in 1981.
Thinking Plague is an American avant-garde progressive rock group founded in 1982 by guitarist/composer Mike Johnson and bass guitarist/drummer Bob Drake. Based in Denver, Colorado, the band has been active off and on since 1982, taking on a number of musicians over the years. They have made seven studio albums between 1984 and 2017, and released one live album recorded at NEARfest in 2000.
Journey to the Centre of the Eye is the debut album from English progressive rock band Nektar which came out in November 1971. Though formally divided into 13 tracks, the entire album consists of a single continuous piece of music, with some musical themes that are repeated throughout the work. Because of its narrative nature, it has been called a rock opera and/or dense concept album. The story follows an astronaut who, while on a voyage to Saturn, encounters aliens who take him to their galaxy, where he is suffused with knowledge and wisdom. It is usually interpreted as a commentary on the nuclear arms race.
A Tab in the Ocean is the second album from German-based English progressive rock band Nektar.
...Sounds Like This is the third album from English progressive rock band Nektar, released in 1973. It was the first Nektar album to be released in their home country of the United Kingdom. An attempt to recreate the band's live sound, ...Sounds Like This was largely improvised and dominated by extensive instrumental jamming, in contrast to their usual concept and composition-driven albums. The different approach to recording, combined with a number of difficulties with the mixing, resulted in it being the band's heaviest work.
Remember the Future is the fourth album from English progressive rock band Nektar. Much like their debut album Journey to the Centre of the Eye, it is a concept album which is formally divided into ten tracks but in fact consists of one continuous piece of music.
Down to Earth is the fifth album from English progressive rock band Nektar. A snippet of the song "Show Me the Way" was featured in an episode from the first season of the sitcom The Jeffersons.
Recycled is the sixth album from English progressive rock band Nektar. It is a concept album addressing the band members' concerns about the environment. There are only two songs on the album, one for each side, titled simply "Part One" and "Part Two". "Part One" tells the tale of a nightmarish future in which only "recycled energy" remains, while "Part Two" revolves around more present-day concerns about tourism despoiling untouched wilderness.
Magic Is A Child is the seventh album from English progressive rock band Nektar. This album is one of only two studio albums released by Nektar without Roye Albrighton on guitar and lead vocals, instead featuring Dave Nelson; the other is The Other Side (2020).
Man in the Moon is the eighth studio album by Nektar and was originally released in 1980 in Germany. This album continues the commercial hard rock with elements of progressive rock explored on their previous effort Magic Is a Child. This album features the return of founding member Roye Albrighton. The album was expanded to include previously unreleased tracks and re-issued by Voiceprint in Europe.
Sunday Night at the London Roundhouse was the first live album by the English progressive rock band Nektar. It was released on vinyl in 1974 by Bacillus Records, and re-released with partially different content on CD in 2002.
Evolution is the tenth album by progressive rock band Nektar, released in 2004. It was the first Nektar album since 1977's Magic Is a Child to feature original drummer Ron Howden, who rejoined other founding members Roye Albrighton and Taff Freeman.
Book of Days is the eleventh studio album by the progressive rock band Nektar, released in 2008. It saw the departure of founding keyboardist Alan "Taff" Freeman, leaving only two original band members in guitarist/frontman Roye Albrighton and drummer Ron Howden.
Time Machine is the thirteenth studio album by the progressive rock band, Nektar. It was their first album of new material in over four years following Book of Days. Their previous release A Spoonful of Time had only covers. It is final studio album to feature Roye Albrighton before his death in July 2016.
The Other Side is the fourteenth album by progressive rock band Nektar, released in 2020. It was the first studio album since 1977's Magic Is a Child to feature original bassist Derek "Mo" Moore. It also features the return of Mick Brockett on special effects, Randy Dembo on rhythm guitar, and Ryche Chlanda on lead guitar. Dembo had previously appeared on Evolution and Chlanda had briefly played with the band in 1978. It is also the last studio album by longtime drummer Ron Howden who died on September 29, 2023.