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John Steel

 
Artist: John Steel

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Rosario Bourdon, Charles Adams Prince, Art Landry, Henry Burr, Isham Jones & His Orchestra, Paul Whiteman, King Oliver

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  • Born: February 04, 1941, Gateshead, Tyne & Wear, England
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Drums

Biography

The drummer in the original and best lineup of the Animals, John Steel played and recorded with the group until 1966, and has joined them for various live and studio reunion projects. While not as flashy or colorful as other drummers of his generation like Keith Moon, Ginger Baker, and Ringo Starr, Steel gave the mid-'60s Animals a solid swing that owed much to his (and the group's) roots in jazz and blues as well as rock. While his role was more as an anchor than an originator of up-front parts, there were times on Animals records when he devised arresting patterns, as on the stop-start rhythms of "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," the dramatic exclamatory beat that kicks off the verse of "It's My Life," or the propulsive beats of another hit, "I'm Crying."

Although the Animals had only been in the global eye for about a couple of years before Steel's departure, his roots with the Animals stretched back over about a decade. He had first met Animals lead singer Eric Burdon back in 1956 when they, like many future first-generation British rockers, were in art school. They met at the Newcastle College of Art and Industrial Design after Steel asked if anyone in the class liked jazz. Actually, Steel played trumpet, not drums, in the first group in which he and Burdon played together. Over the next few years the pair played in various groups as their interests moved from jazz to R&B and rock.

After the termination of one of them, the Kansas City Five, Steel took various jobs with local Newcastle bands. He came back into the Animals' orbit, though, when the Alan Price Rhythm and Blues Combo asked him to replace Barry Preston in August 1963. Within weeks after joining, he was recording with them on a limited-edition EP; by the end of 1963, the Alan Price Rhythm and Blues Combo was renamed the Animals; and a few months after that, they were on their way to international fame with hit records. Steel was the main force behind putting together the big band that played with the Animals in the summer of 1965 at the Richmond Jazz Festival.

They were not, however, on their way to riches. Disillusioned with their low wages considering their worldwide hit records and concert appearances, Steel (other than Price) was the first of the quintet to leave, giving his notice in February 1966. Steel had recently married and become a father, and was also fed up with a hectic schedule that left him little time to spend with his family. He played his last show with the Animals, in the 1960s at any rate, on March 5, 1966, replaced by Barry Jenkins of the Nashville Teens. He does appear on most of the tracks on their 1966 album Animalisms (titled Animalization in the U.S.), although it didn't come out until a few months after he'd left.

Steel left music for a few years, but started playing again in the early '70s, when he did some gigs with the pub rock band Eggs Over Easy, and also worked in the office of fellow ex-Animal Chas Chandler, by then one of the most successful pop music managers in Britain. He participated in the Animals reunions that generated the mid-'70s album Before We Were So Rudely Interrupted, and then the early-'80s album Ark, accompanied by a worldwide tour. In the early 2000s he was still playing live with a version of the Animals, though the only other original member was guitarist Hilton Valentine. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: John Steel (drummer)
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For other persons named John Steel, see John Steel (disambiguation).

John Steel (born 4 February 1941, Gateshead, England) was the original drummer of the band, The Animals, and is the owner of the rights to the band's name, by virtue of a trademark registration.

Contents

History

Initial Association With Eric Burdon

Steel went to the Gateshead Grammar School. He met the future lead singer of The Animals, Eric Burdon, while they were studying together at the Newcastle College of Art and Industrial Design.

Originally a trumpeter, he and Burdon formed a jazz group in January 1957 called The Pagan Jazzmen. They soon switched instruments and embraced the new rock 'n' roll explosion, when they became The Pagans.

Joining With Alan Price

In March 1959, Steel and Burdon met Alan Price at a church hop in Byker, Newcastle, and joined forces. The band went through many name changes and different personnel until, as The Kansas City 5, they broke up on Friday 18 May 1962.

Alan Price to The Animals

In 1962 Price formed The Alan Price Rhythm and Blues Combo. John Steel then replaced Barry Preston as the drummer of the Alan Price Rhythm and Blues Combo (later to become The Animals) in August 1963.

Steel went on to play and record with them until March 1966. His last charted single with the group was "Inside Looking Out".

Post 1966: Business and Music

Subsequently Steel returned to Newcastle and became a businessman, while also working in former bandmate Chas Chandler's management and publishing organisations. In 1971 Chandler introduced him to Eggs over Easy, with whom he played as they started the pub rock music genre. Over the years Steel has remained active as a part-time local drummer and has joined several Animals' reunion incarnations.

Revisiting The Animals: 1993 - Present

Steel has toured since 1993 as the drummer with variations of The Animals line-up, including Hilton Valentine, Dave Rowberry, Zoot Money and Mick Gallagher. In 1993, Hilton Valentine formed "Animals II" and was joined by John Steel in 1994 and Dave Rowberry in 1999. Other members of this version of the band include Steve Hutchinson, Steve Dawson and Martin Bland. From 1999 until Valentine's departure in 2001. the band toured as The Animals. After Valentine left these Animals in 2001, Steel and Rowberry continued on as "Animals and Friends", with Peter Barton, Jim Rodford and John Williamson. When Rowberry died in 2003, he was replaced by Mickey Gallagher (who had briefly replaced Alan Price in 1965). Animals and Friends continues to perform today, and frequently plays engagements on a Color Line ship that travels between Scandinavia and Germany.[1]

Ownership of Band Name

In 2008, an adjudicator determined that John Steel owned "The Animals" name in England, by virtue of a trademark registration Steel had made in relation to the name. Eric Burdon had objected to the trademark registration, arguing that Burdon personally embodied any goodwill associated with "The Animals" name. Burdon's argument was rejected, in part based on the fact that he had billed himself as "Eric Burdon and The Animals" as early as 1967, thus separating the goodwill associated with his own name from that of the band.[2][3]


References

  1. ^ Details of The Animals, 1993 and following years, taken from The Animals page.
  2. ^ Animal rights The Daily Mail UK
  3. ^ An analogous situation occurred around the same period, when Diana Ross separated herself from The Supremes and the act was billed as "Diana Ross and The Supremes". The Supremes later continued as a separate entity, without Ross, in the same way that several versions of The Animals existed without Eric Burdon. See The Supremes. Details, including footnote, taken from The Animals page.


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