Results for Stackridge
On this page:
 
Artist:

Stackridge

Formed:
1969

Representative Albums:

Friendliness, Do the Stanley, Purple Spaceships Over Yatton: Best of Stackridge

Similar Artists:

Influences:

Performed Songs By:

Mutter Slater, James Warren, Jim Crun Walter, Rod Bowkett, Andy Davis
  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '70s, '90s, 2000s
  • Major Members: John Miller, Michael Evans, James Warren, Jim Crun Walter, Peter Van Hooke, Billy Sparkle

Biography

Stackridge, one of the most singular rock bands that grew up in the soil sown and enriched by the British Invasion of the '60s, coalesced in late 1969. Andy Davis and Jim "Crun" Walter were playing together in the Bristol blues band Griptight Thynne when Davis began seeking new band mates. Mike Tobin (who became Stackridge's first manager) introduced Davis to Mike "Mutter" Slater, then playing in the folk duo Mick & Mutter. James Warren answered a newspaper ad, connected very well with Davis, and they began writing songs together. Billy Bent showed up, listened to them developing "Dora, the Female Explora," and invited them to practice at his home studio, and they invited him to drum. Mike Evans was playing violin with traditional ballad groups in Bristol (the Westlanders and the Moonshiners). On Davis' 21st birthday, the band was celebrating at a pub when Mike Evans walked in. He was invited to join, as Davis knew him slightly and Walter agreed that a violin would fill out their sound. Meanwhile, Walter had proposed the latest absurd band name, Stackridge Lemon, which was quickly shortened to Stackridge.

The gigs were sparse at first, and Walter left. Tobin moved to London and began securing more plentiful bookings, while around Bristol, Stackridge began developing their eclectic, whimsical repertoire, a given with stated influences and preferences encompassing Zappa, the Beach Boys, Flanders & Swann, Syd Barrett, Igor Stravinsky, the Marx Brothers, J.S. Bach and very significantly, the 1965-1966 Beatles. Their rummage sale stagewear, Slater's exuberant, witty patter (and his development of dustbin lids as a percussion instrument), Warren's wry, rambling story/introductions (contemporaneous with Peter Gabriel's development of same with Genesis) and the almost unique (in a rock group) inclusion of both a flutist and violinist led Stackridge to develop an enthusiastic, loyal following.

They signed to MCA and with Fritz Fryer producing, they recorded Stackridge in the spring of 1971, sharing Martin Birch as engineer with Deep Purple. Warren wrote four songs alone and three with Davis, establishing him as the group's main lyrical voice. Stackridge was highlighted by the boisterous "Dora, the Female Explorer," "Percy the Penguin" (the first of their laments for misunderstood animals) and a 12-minute-plus version of live favorite "Slark," a mythical beast that scoops the hapless narrator out of his car and flies him "beyond the fields we know." Walter was persuaded to rejoin on bass, allowing Warren to move to guitar permanently, while Davis continued to switch between guitar and keyboards.

After releasing two singles in support of the first LP (including a single version of "Slark" and the live instrumental favorite "Purple Spaceships over Yatton") and touring with Wishbone Ash, the six returned to the studio in August 1972 to record Friendliness, perhaps the classic Stackridge album. It was recorded in just 70 hours of off-peak studio time, with 30 more hours of mixing. There were five songs (including the two-part title track) from Warren, a piano instrumental from flutist Slater, three Walter/Davis compositions (including "Syracuse the Elephant" and "Keep on Clucking," preceding animal rights activism by at least a decade) and the opening instrumental galloper "Lummy Days." MCA released Friendliness Stateside as well (unlike the first album), but without promo or performances. Despite modest sales (again), Stackridge had shed the "novelty item" tag and created, as reviewer Chas Keep put it in 1996, "A sort of children's favorites with attitude; a compendium of tuneful melodies performed without the now dated excesses of [their] contemporaries." The release of Friendliness in November 1972 was followed by a tour with friends the Pigsty Hill Orchestra, and a new single, "Do the Stanley" b/w "C'est La Vie," in February 1973. Despite its being a catchy and an easy sing-along single, DJs failed to pick up on "Stanley" and the BBC hierarchy restricted its airplay due to a lyrical reference to the Queen. Conversely, since 1971, Radio One and the Beeb had been recording and broadcasting Stackridge in session and in concert, as they faithfully did with rock and pop acts of all stripes. (Some of these recordings finally emerged on CD in the '90s.)

When a third LP was planned, Stackridge received a boost. George Martin's son had played Friendliness for his legendary father, and colleagues at Air Studios had pestered him to work with the band. Reluctant, until he heard some demo tapes for the new album, Harrison agreed to produce what became The Man in the Bowler Hat, easily Stackridge's most financially successful and well-known album. Reviewer Chas Keep reveals that Martin worked on the melodic and rhythmic patterns (especially the vocal harmonies), supervised the orchestration and even contributed piano on "Humiliation." Andy Mackay of Roxy Music added sax to "Dangerous Bacon," an infectious tip-o'-the-hat to the Beatles. "Bacon" was passed over for first single release in favor of "The Galloping Gaucho," a brilliant poke at glitter rockers and the absurdity of "being cool." Yet "Gaucho" strengthened the public's perception of Stackridge as an oddity, a bucolic rock troupe with dancehall leanings. They were warm when the public wanted cool, intricate when brash was praised, illuminating when obscurity was in vogue. The Man in the Bowler Hat contained some of the finest hybrid rock music ever. Most of the lyrics were group efforts (under the unlikely pen name of Smegmakovitch), while composition fell chiefly to Davis, Slater and Warren, in that order. "God Speed the Plough," the remarkable instrumental closer, is attributed to Wabadaw Sleeve (again, a full group effort). The band's musicianship and creative talents were brilliantly showcased, and the fact that "Hat" failed to win over record buyers probably contributed to the dissolution of Stackridge.

Watching Martin at work, Slater hated the idea of trying to reproduce the album onstage, and further felt Stackridge was just dabbling in music. Wanting to study music seriously and not get sucked into the commercial aspect of it all, he quit. Billy Sparkle left also and became Martin's personal assistant for several years, as well as a professional photographer. Davis' restlessness was abated temporarily by recruiting Keith Gemmell (formerly with Audience) on sax, flute and clarinet, and Rod Bowkett on keyboards, which allowed Davis to switch to drums. This new lineup toured during the 1973-74 winter with new material as well as songs from The Man in the Bowler Hat, which wasn't released until February 1974. Within a few months, Warren and Walter were both asked to leave. Gordon Haskell, who had contributed vocals and bass to King Crimson's Lizard, joined for a couple weeks then exited amicably, leaving the band with the song "(No One's More Important Than) The Earthworm." Paul Karas replaced him. Rod Bowkett composed some brilliant instrumentals and both he and Gemmell began to move Stackridge into jazzier territory. Mike Evans, always an outsider, also left, leaving Davis in charge at last. Roy Morgan was added on drums, with Davis returning to guitar. Thus, it was a very different Stackridge that recorded Extravaganza in late 1974 for Elton John's Rocket Records. Released in January 1975, the fourth album had fine songs ("The Volunteer," "Spin 'Round the Room," "Earthworm" and "Happy in the Lord") and clever instrumentals ("Who's That up There with Bill Stokes?," "Pocket Billiards"), but the essence of Stackridge was gone.

In 1975, Bowkett gave way to Dave Lawson (ex-Greenslade) and Pete Van Hooke replaced Roy Morgan. Slater had rejoined somewhat earlier, freeing Gemmell to focus on sax and clarinet, and joining Davis in the vocals once again. Finally, Walter was asked to rejoin, replacing Karas on bass. This final lineup created Stackridge's only true concept album, Mr. Mick, released in March 1976. Unfortunately, the released version was a far cry from what Stackridge submitted. Davis recalled, 20 years later, that "Rocket hacked the tapes to pieces, rendered the whole thing unintelligible, and precipitated the bands demise." Mr. Mick wasn't very popular with concert reviewers either, who either couldn't follow the story (narrated by Slater), yearned for the exuberant antics of yore, or both. Despite a marvelous cover of the Beatles' "Hold Me Tight," two remarkable instrumentals composed by Slater ("The Slater's Waltz" and "Coniston Water"), and good Walter/Davis material, Stackridge disbanded.

Do the Stanley, a fond retrospective issued in late 1976, gathered all the non-LP tracks, the live fiddle fest, "Let There Be Lids" and a few signature album tracks. Stackridge's practice of melding clever, often sympathetic lyrics, and complex but hummable melodies with innovative mixes and crisp arrangements paved the way into the pop rock charts in the '70s for the likes of Queen, 10 CC and Sparks; in the '80s for Split Enz, Squeeze, They Might Be Giants and Prefab Sprout; and in the '90s for Bare Naked Ladies, Trashcan Sinatras, the Bats and Divine Comedy. Davis and Warren returned to mainstream music in 1979 as the Korgis. Finally, they achieved the singles success they'd sought in Stackridge with "If I Had You" from their debut LP, The Korgis (number 13 U.K.), and especially "Everyone's Got to Learn Sometime" (number five U.K., number 18 in the U.S.) from the followup, Dumbwaiters. After two more LPs (Sticky George and This World's for Everyone) escaped notice, they again parted ways. Davis released a solo LP, Clevedon Pier in 1989, and has remained active in both performance (with the Andy Davis Band, which made an eponymous, limited edition CD in 1994, and a trio with Stuart Gordon (Korgis) and Peter Allerhand, named Los Caballeros) and production through 1998. Warren released a solo LP in 1986, but was rarely heard from musically, for many years.

Beginning in 1992, with the issue of Stackridge: BBC Radio 1 Live In Concert, interest in the band was rekindled. By 1997, everything was available on CD, including Radio 1 Sessions, a second BBC live offering. Warren and Walter, noting this and the lively interest coalescing on the Internet, thought perhaps the world was ready for Stackridge again. Warren put together a four-track demo called Stackridge: More in Late '98, featuring three songs he wrote or co-wrote, plus one by old friend Roger Cook, with Andy West. According to Mike Evans' wife Jennie, now their business manager, all original band members were approached by Warren and invited to "do it again." Slater, Sparkle and Davis declined for varying reasons, but Evans, who remained active in folk music after leaving Stackridge, came back on board. The new Stackridge full-length CD, tentatively titled Sex and Flags, is slated for release in the spring of 1999, and the reborn group has agreed to be the opening act on the folk stage at the annual Glastonbury Festival in June 1999. ~ Elessar Tetramariner, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: Stackridge
Stackridge
Origin Flag of England London
Genre(s) folk rock
Years active 1969 - present
Website stackridge.net

Stackridge are a British folk, pop and progressive rock group who were at the height of their success during the early 1970s. Characterized by quirky humour and rhythmic catchy sing along tunes the band gained a cult following which continues to this day.

Stackridge's characteristically English mix of clever lyrics and hummable melodies with innovative arrangements helped to pave the way for the success of '70s superstars such as 10cc, Supertramp, Sparks and Queen. In the '80s groups like XTC, Split Enz, Squeeze, They Might Be Giants and Prefab Sprout would cover similar musical territory.

The Stackridge sound is rather hard to categorize. According to the liner notes of the Demon Records CD re-issue of their self-titled debut album Stackridge, the group claimed a wide range of influences including The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Frank Zappa, Syd Barrett, Robin Williamson, The Marx Brothers, Flanders and Swan, Bing Crosby, Tom Lehrer, Gilbert & Sullivan, Frederick Delius, J.S. Bach and Igor Stravinsky. All of these influences can identified in their music. This may be about the best description of their style as one is likely to find.

History

Classic period

Stackridge Lemon was formed from the remains of Griptyght Thynn by Andy Davis and James "Crun" Walter during 1969. After initial experimentation and very lofty aims the music began to arrive and the Lemon was dropped from the band's name. The band played its first London gig at The Temple on 6 February 1970 and the last addition to the lineup took place to arrive at the classic band.

They are an historical group if only in that they

During 1971 Stackridge began serious gigging and Crun left to take up bricklaying. The group embarked on a UK tour supporting Wishbone Ash. Later in the year they signed to MCA Records and recorded their first album Stackridge, at De Lane Lea Studios, London. They toured the UK as headliners with Renaissance supporting and played their first John Peel session for the BBC which included a version of The Beatles Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown). Their first single Dora the Female Explorer later inspired the popular children's television show Dora The Explorer.

The group continued on a year of touring, again with Wishbone Ash and Forever More (members of which would later form the basis of The Average White Band.) The second album Friendliness was quickly recorded in August of 1972 and released in November. By this time Crun rejoins the band.

In February 1973 was the band's first appearance on "The Old Grey Whistle Test". They then toured during February and March with Camel in support. The Third album The Man In The Bowler Hat was recorded during 1973 at AIR Studios, London with producer George Martin. The album was released in February 1974 to excellent reviews, but failed to sell in large quantities. This was their highest charting album in the U.K., reaching #23. A different version of the album was released in the U.S. under the title Pinafore Days and became their only U.S. chart entry, peaking at #191. Almost as soon as the album was finished James and Crun were replaced by Paul Karas (bass) from the band Rare Bird, Keith Gemmell fom the band Audience and Roy Morgan (drums). The group that went on tour to support the album sounded quite different than the one on the record.

The fourth album Extravaganza on Elton John's Rocket Records label was recorded at AIR Studios with Tony Ashton producing. With more touring and an appearance at Wembley Stadium concert with Elton John and The Beach Boys, 1975 saw the eventful recording of the band's fifth outing in the studio, Mr. Mick was eventually recorded at Ramport Studios, Putney.

On something of a downward slide by this time Mr. Mick suffered at the hands of the record label Rocket Records. They performed a final show in April of 1976 and shortly after the band was no more. MCA Records released the compilation Do The Stanley late in 1976 which contained songs from the first three albums along with singles and a previously unreleased song.

Revival period

Stackridge Live In Concert was released by Windsong, which raised renewed interest in the band. John Sherry, Roy Morgan and Rod Lynton proposed a reunion tour, which never materialized.

During 1996 talks were held between original members about possible reunion and recording started. And the following year, 1997 Stackridge - The Radio One Sessions was released by Strange Fruit Records.

By 1999, after a slow start, Something For The Weekend, featuring the line-up; James Warren, Jim "Crun" Walter, Mike Evans, Richard Stubbings, John Miller, and Tim Robinson. Then in 2001 Live At Cropredy and The Original Mr Mick were released on Stackridge's own DAP Records.

2005 saw the release of the album Sex and Flags on Angel Air records, a collection of songs from 'Something For The Weekend', the 2003 limited edition 'Lemon' EP, and several new recordings. The album was the first since 1973 to feature the core foursome of Warren, Davis, Walter and Michael 'Mutter' Slater.

A Spring 2007 tour was announced featuring this line-up, along with additional musicians. A show at The Rondo Theatre, Bath, on April 1st was filmed for a DVD release.

Band members

Classic lineup

that is - Stackridge II (1971 - 1973)

  • Andy Cresswell-Davis - guitar/keyboards/vocals
  • James Warren - guitar/vocals
  • Mike Evans - violin/vocals
  • Mike "Mutter" Slater - flute/vocals
  • Jim "Crun" Walter - bass
  • Billy Bent aka Billy Sparkle - drums

Reunion line-ups

These were:-

Stackridge 1999

  • James Warren - guitar/vocals
  • Mike Evans - violin/vocals
  • Jim "Crun" Walter - bass/mobile telephone
  • Richard Stubbings - flute/accordion/keyboards/guitar/pennywhistle/vocals/whistling
  • Tim Robinson - drums
  • John Miller - keyboards/vocals

Stackridge 2000

  • James Warren - guitar/vocals
  • Mike Evans - violin/vocals
  • Jim "Crun" Walter - bass
  • Richard Stubbings - flute/accordion/keyboards/guitar/pennywhistle/vocals/whistling
  • Tim Robinson - drums
  • Ian Towers - keyboards/vocals/guitar

(both 1999 and 2000 line-ups occasionally augmented by:

The Stackettes

  • Ruth Evans - violin/backing vocals
  • Nina Smith - violin/backing vocals

Present lineup

Stackridge 2007:

  • James Warren - guitar/vocals. Also been in The Korgis, The Blue Meanies, The Beat Brothers, The Next Best Thing, and James Warren & Friends
  • Jim "Crun" Walter - bass/spoken word. Formerly in Sunken Rake, The Mike Gray Quartet, The Next Best Thing, James Warren & Friends.
  • Andy Davis - guitar/keyboards/vocals. Used to be in The Korgis as well.
  • Mike "Mutter" Slater - flute/vocals/harmonica/tambourine. Still touring/recording concurrently with his two R&B bands, Little Dixie and The Scrotes.
  • Glenn Tommey - keyboards/trombone/vocals/sticks. Engineer/Producer for many Bath-based acts, including The Korgis, Peter Gabriel, XTC, and Graduate. Member of Blue Meanies, The Next Best Thing, and James Warren & Friends.
  • Andy 'Codge' Marsden - drums. He has also been in the band Graduate, which featured Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith of Tears for Fears fame, and is currently in The Blue Meanies, a function band based in the Bath area. He has been playing drums for around 30 years and currently resides near Bath. Also formerly in The Next Best Thing, and James Warren & Friends.
  • Sarah Mitchell - violin/vocals/whistle/tambourine/enthusiasm/dancing. Sarah was also in K-Passa and the 2005-6 aggregations, The Next Best Thing and James Warren & Friends.
  • Nigel Newton - guitar. In later version of James Warren & Friends.
  • Rachel Hall - Young violin prodigy.

Also formerly in Stackridge 2007 (one gig only each):

  • Katy Salvidge - violin. In latter incarnation of James Warren & Friends.
  • Eddie John - drums. Played one gig when Codge was indisposed, due to a prior commitment.

Discography

Chronological releases

  • Something For The Weekend (1999)
  • Pick of the Crop : Live At Cropredy 2000 (2001 live)
  • (2001)
  • The Original Mr Mick (2001 what 'might have been')
  • Lemon 2002 (2003)
  • Sex And Flags (2005 compilation of 'Weekend' and 'Lemon' plus 2 Andy Davis demos)
  • Purple Spaceships Over Yatton: The Best Of [19 track compilation, with new recording of title track - October 2006]

See also

  • The Korgis - another band for James Warren and Andy Cresswell-Davis

External links


 
 

Join the WikiAnswers Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "Stackridge" at WikiAnswers.

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Stackridge" Read more

Search for answers directly from your browser with the FREE Answers.com Toolbar!  
Click here to download now. 

Get Answers your way! Check out all our free tools and products.

On this page:   E-mail   print Print  Link  

 

Keep Reading

Mentioned In: