Tower | |
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Origin | Leiden, Netherlands |
Genres | Symphonic rock, pop |
Years active | 1981–1984, 2012–present |
Labels | Dureco Benelux, CNR Records |
Members | Marian Pijnaker Cor van der Hoogt Ben Peterzen Frans Wisse Ton Hoogenboom Ruth Jochems |
Past members | Roy Poncin Bob Poncin Hans Hollestelle Henk van Loon Dimitri Versteeg Inge Rijnja Katinka van der Harst |
Tower is a symphonic rock pop band from Leiden, Netherlands. The band was formed in 1976-1977 and began performing in 1981, but disbanded in 1984, before reuniting in 2012. They became best known for their hit singles "See Me Tonight" and "Goin' Home", which respectively reached the 11th and 20th places of the European charts in 1982, including Belgium and the Netherlands.
The band was formed in 1976-1977, initially consisting of bassist Roy Poncin, drummer Bob Poncin, violinist Hans Hollestelle, keyboardist Henk Van Loon, and an unknown lead singer. [1] [2] In 1980, bassist Ben Peterzen, guitarist Coor van der Hoogt and drummer Ton Hoogenboom joined the band. When the band's lead singer left, the band held auditions for a replacement, and Marian Pijnaker was chosen. [3] [4] [5] In 1981, the band rehearsed in The Jam in Leiden. Someone at the restaurant put them in touch with Cat Music, a studio formed in Rijnsaterwoude by Catapult musicians Aart Mol, Cees Bergman, Elmer Veerhoff, Erwin van Prehn and Geertjan Hessing. The musicians wrote and produced a song named "See You Tonight", which the band themselves performed. It was released as a single by Dureco Records on 13 January 1982. [6] [3] [7] [8] [9] The single became a major hit in the charts on Hilversum 3 upon release; it reached the No. 12 position in the Nationale Hitparade in early 1982 and the No. 11 position in the Dutch Top 40, and peaked at the No. 9 position in the TROS Top 50. [10] [11] [12] "See Me Tonight" was chosen as the 178th NOS Support Record of the week by Frits Spits and Tom Blomberg in De Avondspits on 18 January 1982, [3] the former of whom would say every night, "Tower, wat een Power!" ("Tower, what a Power!"). [13] [14] In 1982, the band released their debut album Titan. [15] [3] [16] The band's songs, which were reminiscent of the Electric Light Orchestra, featured original and atypical instrumentation and classical elements, including Hollestelle's violin. Pijnaker's vocals have often been compared to those of British singer Kim Wilde. [3] [16] Their next single, "Goin' Home", [17] reached No. 20 in the Nationale Hitparade in August 1982, and No. 15 in both the Dutch Top 40 and TROS Top 50. In Belgium, the single reached the No. 19 position in the charts, staying there for three weeks. [18] [19] [20] In Germany, the single was in the charts for one week. [21] It was included in the compilation album High Life – Unkürzte Original Top-Hits Winter 82/83, released by Polystar Records. [22]
Prior to Tower's success, Pijnaker and Van der Hoogt had already performed the vocals of the duos Fantastique and Gazuzu at Cat Music, with Dick Van Dam and Astrid Leuwener (Fantastique) and Annelies Graave and René Portegies (Gazuzu) as the faces of the projects. Pijnaker also performed for other artists, projects and demos by Cat Music, such as André Hazes and Digital Emotion. [4] [5] [23] Fantastique's single "Mama Told Me" was particularly successful in British discos, having several rereleases and reaching No. 84 on the UK Singles Chart in 1986. [24] [25]
Following their initial success, the band released two more songs from the album as singles, "Titan/Spaceman" and "Get Back". [26] [27] In 1983-1984, "Spaceman" was included in the compilation album Stolen From Madhouse-Axel, released by Polydor Records, [28] and the band released "Hey Amigo" and "It's Allright", [29] [30] both of which did not make it into the charts. The group split up due to the rise of house music, which their symphonic-oriented pop music did not fit. [3] The members performed in other groups and bands; Pijnaker and Van Hoogt formed a new group called Split Decision to continue the success of Tower in 1985. The group released only one single, "Action", written and produced by Robert Pot from Future World Orchestra. [31] [32] [4] [5] Pijnaker performed in Utility from 1991 to 2007, formed Second Avenue with Ben Schutte Jr., toured with Harry Slinger from Drukwerk, [4] and played with Dimitri Versteeg in cover bands. [33] Van der Hoogt became the lead singer and guitarist of De Stevige Staartmannen. [3]
In 1999, "See You Tonight" and "Goin' Out" were included in the compilation albums Pop Van Eigen Bodem - Tachtiger Jaren, released by PolyGram TV, [34] and Cat Nuggets, released by Red Bullet. [35] In 2010, Edwin Evers asked listeners of Radio 538 which band from the 1980s they would like to hear again. Most of them voted for Tower. [3] The album Titan was released by Fonos and CNR Records that year. [36] [37] On 15 September 2012, Tower gave a reunion concert at De Meester in Zoeterwoude. [3] [38] Van Loon was replaced with Frans Wisse. [3] [14] [39] The following day on 16 September 2013, they performed at the Legends Festival in Apeldoorn. [3] As a result of the reunion, the band released a new song, "Show Me", to YouTube in 2013. [40] [41] In 2015, they released "Rainfall (Special Edition - Dedicated to Michel)". [42] In November 2024, the band performed during the opening concert "Het echte geluid van de jaren '80" ("The Real Sound of the 80s") in de Vlijt in Zevenhoven, joined by guitarist Dimitri Versteeg (replacing Van der Hoogt due to a long-term injury [33] ), bassist Ruth Jochems, and guest backing singers Inge Rijnja and Katinka van der Harst. [43]
Pijnaker worked as a teacher at The Rockschool, HIP School in The Hague, and Sport en Welzijn in Leidschendam-Voorburg. In January 2014, she founded her own studio in Stompwijk, Zangstudio The Voice, where she gives singing lessons. [4] [5] [44]