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Roger Ruskin Spear

 
Artist: Roger Ruskin Spear

Worked With:

Legs Larry Smith, Rodney Slater, Gus Dudgeon, Dennis Cowan, Dave Clague, Gerry Bron, Vivian Stanshall, Neil Innes
  • Born: June 29, 1943, Hammersmith, London, England
  • Active: '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Saxophone
  • Representative Albums: "Electric Shocks," "Electric Shocks Plus," "Unusual"

Biography

Vivian Stanshall and Neil Innes are usually credited as the prime creative forces in the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band, but founder-member Roger Ruskin Spear also made substantial contributions. In addition to playing several instruments (most prominently saxophone) and devising imaginative robots and stage props for their live performances, Spear wrote a couple of their wittiest early tunes, "Trouser Press" and "Shirt." He released a few solo records in the early 1970s, even opening for the Who on a 1971 European tour. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Roger Ruskin Spear (born 29 June 1943 in Hammersmith, London), the son of satirical artist and lecturer Ruskin Spear, he was a founding member of the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, staying with it until its end. A talented multi-instrumentalist (saxophones, clarinet, piano, guitars, percussion) Roger also wrote some of the band's wittiest songs such as 'Shirt', 'Tubas in the Moonlight' and 'Trouser Press'. Roger was perhaps best known for his robot creations, that graced the stage with the Bonzos, creating much hilarity and havoc. He is also rightly famed for his virtuosity on the theremin leg - in 'Noises for the Leg', amongst other tunes. Many of Roger's songs have clothing/wardrobe related themes, such as 'Trouser Freak', 'Trouble with my Trousers' and 'Waiting for the 'Wardrobe', as well as the aforementioned 'Shirt' and 'Trouser Press'. We don't know why. Roger was once quoted as saying, "Trousers. Trousers. It's such a stumbling word. In America they have pants and jeans, but in England we still have trousers".

After the Bonzos parted company Roger was part of the short-lived band biGGrunt, with Vivian Stanshall. He released a 4-track EP 'Rebel Trouser' ('Trouser Freak/'Trouser Press'/'Release Me'/'Drop Out' United Artists UP 35221) and two solo albums, 'Electric Shocks' in 1972 (United Artists UAG 29381, re-released 1997 on DJC Records DJC005) , and 'Unusual' in 1974 (United Artists UAS 29508), from which were taken the singles 'On Her Doorstep, Last Night/Frank the Ripper' (United Artists UA 35683) and 'I Love To Bumpity-Bump/When Yuba Plays The Rhumba On The Tuba Down in Cuba' United Artists UP 35720) Roger also toured extensively (and tirelessly) with his solo show Roger Ruskin Spear and his Giant Kinetic Wardrobe (aka Giant Orchestral Wardrobe). A feature of this was a female tailor's dummy fitted with proximity switches, which produced increasingly high-pitched screams when a hand neared her chest (or 'sensitive zone'). In 1979, Roger formed Tatty Ollity with Dave Glasson, former Member of Bob Kerr's Whoopee Band, Sam Spoons and Dave Knight (now deceased). They released a single, 'Punktuation' on Rough Trade. In 1982 (from November 3), Roger took part in the new Channel 4's 'Cut Price Comedy Show', a weekly confection of corny sketches and ironic, end-of-the-pier fun - as the IMDB database puts it, 'the Cut Price Comedy Show was an (intentionally) corny sketch series with a heavy dependence on the kind of 'jokes' you'd find on an ice cream stick and a budget that seemed to have been scraped together from copper coins found in the gutter outside the studio. But that was the point - the title made it clear that it was going to be penny-pinching, barrel-scraping stuff, right? Trouble is, that didn't make it as critic-proof as you might think, and the tabloid scribes fell over themselves to scold the then-new channel for squandering airtime on something so bereft of invention. Some people just don't get irony.' The show ran for six programmes and was then dropped.

In 1985, Roger and Dave Glasson formed The Slightly Dangerous Brothers, producing a single, 'Let's Talk Basic', with a great video featuring some of Roger's robot creations. Roger also helped in the production and the provision of robots in a video for 'Face Dances Part 2' by Pete Townshend of The Who, who attended Ealing Art College at the same time as Roger in the 1960s. In 1991, Roger played saxophone in Vivian Stanshall's show 'Rawlinson Dog Ends' at the Bloomsbury Theatre, London. Roger had also played on Stanshall's album 'Teddy Boys Don't Knit' (1981 Charisma CAS 1153) and has appeared on albums such as the Scaffold's John Gorman's 1977 album 'Go Man Gorman' (DJM REcords DJF 20491). Roger was also a member and co-founder of Bill Posters Will Be Band. This band still plays on the first Thursday of each month at the Bull's Head pub in Barnes, London, but no longer includes Roger (or very rarely).

Now (2009) Roger is performing regularly with Three Bonzos and a Piano, which is made up of former Bonzos Rod Slater and Sam Spoons, together with Dave Glasson (the piano), and occasionally includes 'Legs' Larry Smith and Vernon Dudley Bohay Nowell; they are also often supported on guitar by Andy Roberts (the Liverpool Scene and the Scaffold etc). They have an excellent website www.threebonzosandapiano.co.uk, where their upcoming gigs are listed, and includes blog reviews by Roger of some of the gigs.

His solo career is described in Doo Dah Diariesas are his current activities.

Roger's elder son "Professor" Justin Spear has a regular slot in the Stuart Maconie 'Freak Zone' show on BBC6 Music where he delves into the weird and wonderful world of European jazz (among other things). His younger son, Tim, is a successful web creative entrepreneur and also plays drums with epic instrumental post-rock band The Winchester Club www.thewinchesterclub.org

Roger Ruskin Spear taught 3D design part-time at the Chelsea College of Art. Now retired.

Solo discography

  • Electric Shocks LP. United Artists (UK) UAG 29381, 1972.
  • Unusual LP. United Artists (UK) UAS 29508, 1973.
  • Rebel Trouser EP (UK) UP 35221.
  • Electric Shocks Plus CD. DJC (i.e. Dave Clague) DJC005, 2002. Contains Electric Shocks and Rebel Trouser.

 
 

 

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