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The Hollies

 
Artist: The Hollies
The Hollies

Group Members:

Tony Hicks, Allan Clarke, Graham Nash, Bobby Elliott, Terry Sylvester, Bernie Calvert, Eric Haydock, Mikael Rickfors, Don Rathbone, Anna Maria Mühe

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Viva Braun, The Minders, Ronnie Bird, The Spongetones, The Raspberries, The Posies, Let's Active, The La's, Delays, Great Lakes Myth Society, The Playmates, La Ruta, Leusemia, We Are Vikings, The Springfields, Happy Man, Poverty Stinks, Tearaways, The Merrymakers, The Mockers, Biff Bang Pow!, Ross, Ric Menck, The Three O'Clock, The Records, Flo & Eddie, The Bears, The Kids, Prabir & the Substitutes, Army Navy, The Silents, Bronze, The Telegraph Roadsign, Twin Princess, Sugarbuzz, The Milk and Honey Band, Ken Stringfellow, Phil Angotti, Mortimer, Episode Six, Kirka, Moving Pictures, Taoist Cowboys, International Pop Overthrow, Captain Soul, Badfinger

Performed Songs By:

Charles Silverman, Tony Macaulay, Gregory Carrol, Bobby Scott, B. Russell, Bob Russell, Doris Payne, Kenny Lynch, Colin Horton Jennings, Tony Hicks, Roger Greenaway, Harold Clarke, Terry Sylvester, Albert Hammond, Graham Gouldman, Allan Clarke, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Chuck Berry

Formal Connection With:

See The Hollies Lyrics
  • Formed: 1962, Manchester, England
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "On a Carousel, 1963-1974: The Ultimate Hollies," "Epic Anthology," "In the Hollies Style"
  • Representative Songs: "The Air That I Breathe," "Bus Stop," "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Broth"

Biography

One of the best and most commercially successful pop/rock acts of the British Invasion, when the Hollies began recording in 1963, they relied heavily upon the R&B/early rock & roll covers that provided the staple diet for countless British bands of the time. They quickly developed a more distinctive style of three-part harmonies (heavily influenced by the Everly Brothers), ringing guitars, and hook-happy material, penned by both outside writers (especially Graham Gouldman) and themselves, eventually composing most of their repertoire on their own. The best early Hollies records evoke an infectious, melodic cheer similar to that of the early Beatles, although the Hollies were neither in their class (not an insult: nobody else was) nor demonstrated a similar capacity for artistic growth. They tried, though, easing into somewhat more sophisticated folk-rock and mildly psychedelic sounds as the decade wore on, especially on their albums (which contain quite a few overlooked highlights).

Allan Clarke (lead singer) and Graham Nash (vocals, guitar) had been friends since childhood in Manchester, and formed the nucleus of the Hollies in the early '60s with bassist Eric Haydock. In early 1963, EMI producer Ron Richards signed the group after seeing them at the famous Cavern Club in Liverpool. Guitarist Vic Steele left before the first session, to be replaced by 17-year-old Tony Hicks. Drummer Don Rathbone only lasted for a couple of singles before being replaced by Bobby Elliott, who had played with Hicks in his pre-Hollies group, the Dolphins. The lineup changes were most fortuitous: Hicks contributed a lot to the group with his ringing guitar work and songwriting, and Elliott was one of the very finest drummers in all of pop/rock. Although their first singles were R&B covers, the Hollies were no match for the Rolling Stones (or for that matter the Beatles) in this department, and were much more at home with pop/rock material that provided a sympathetic complement to their glittering harmonies. They ran off an awesome series of hits in the U.K. in the '60s, making the Top 20 almost 20 times. Some of their best mid-'60s singles, like "Here I Go Again," "We're Through," and the British number one "I'm Alive," passed virtually unnoticed in the United States, where they couldn't make the Top 40 until early 1966, when Graham Gouldman's "Look Through Any Window" did the trick. In 1966, Eric Haydock left the group under cloudy circumstances, replaced by Bernie Calvert.

The Hollies really didn't break in America in a big way until "Bus Stop" (1966), their first Stateside Top Tenner; "On a Carousel," "Carrie Ann," and "Stop Stop Stop" were also big hits. Here the Hollies were providing something of a satisfying option for pop-oriented listeners that found the increasingly experimental outings of groups like the Beatles and Kinks too difficult to follow. At the same time, the production and harmonies were sophisticated enough to maintain a broader audience than more teen- and bubblegum-oriented British Invasion acts like Herman's Hermits. Their albums showed a more serious and ambitious side, particularly on the part of Graham Nash, without ever escaping the truth that their forte was well-executed pop/rock, not serious statements. Nash, however, itched to make an impression as a more serious artist, particularly on the "King Midas in Reverse" single (1967). Its relatively modest commercial success didn't augur well for his influence over the band's direction, and their next 45s were solidly in the more tried-and-true romantic tradition. By 1968, though, Nash really felt constrained by the band's commercial orientation, and by the end of the year he was gone, left for the States to help found Crosby, Stills, & Nash. His departure really marked the end of the group's peak era.

In 1969, the band tried to have its cake and eat it too by doing a whole album of Hollie-ized Dylan songs, which was received poorly by some critics, although it was a decent seller in Britain. Nash was replaced by Terry Sylvester (formerly of Liverpool bands the Escorts and Swinging Blue Jeans), and the hit streak continued for a while. "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother," in fact, was one of their biggest international singles. But the group was really reaching a cul de sac; they'd managed a remarkably long run at the top considering that they hadn't changed their formula much since the mid-'60s, adding enough sophistication to the lyrics and arrangements to avoid sounding markedly dated. It was apparent they really weren't capable of producing long-playing works striking enough to appeal to the album audience, though, and their singles, though still hits on occasion, weren't as memorable as their best '60s work. A modest slide in the early '70s was arrested by "Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress," a Creedence Clearwater Revival-type rocker that made number two in the States in 1972. The timing wasn't ideal; by the time it became a smash, Clarke, who had sung lead on the single, had left to go solo, to be replaced by Swedish vocalist Mikael Rickfors. Clarke rejoined in mid-1973, and the group had one last international monster, "The Air That I Breathe," which made number six in the U.S. in 1974. The group went on to record a string of further albums in the second half of the 1970s.

Curiously, mostly thanks to Clarke, they did pick up on Bruce Springsteen's work as a songwriter earlier than a lot of other acts, but not even their beautiful rendition of "Sandy" could avert their slide from the public's consciousness. Most of their late-'70s releases were heavily influenced by the prevailing disco and dance-rock sounds of the era, although they never entirely abandoned their harmony vocal sound. Under other circumstances they might have pulled off a career conversion similar to that achieved by the Bee Gees after 1974, but luck wasn't with them and their output in this period was ignored, passed over by fans of their old sound and the disco audience alike. This coincided with a decision by their American label, Epic Records -- apparently conceding that the Hollies would never sell large numbers of LPs regardless of how big their hits ever were -- to minimize the marketing efforts invested in the band's records, essentially running out the clock on their contract. Ironically, the label ended up passing on the one LP the group issued in the late '70s that would have reached out to old and new audiences, the concert album originally titled Hollies Live. It ended up getting reviewed enthusiastically in numerous American magazines and newspapers as a Canadian import. The group seemed to reach a dead end in the early '80s, with Sylvester and Calvert exiting suddenly during that period.

The Hollies received a boost in press interest in America during 1983, however, when Graham Nash rejoined for one LP (What Goes Around... on Atlantic Records), but even this proved a false start. A new generation of rock music critics, accustomed to looking askance at longtime acts such as the Hollies attempting to bring their sound into the 1980s, proved especially hostile to the group's British invasion-style gambit of re-interpreting a Motown standard like "Stop! In the Name of Love," which became the single off the album. In a sad piece of irony, What Goes Around... received more press attention than any long-player they'd ever released in America, but most of the reviews were lukewarm or outright negative; worse still, this was a dozen years past Crosby, Stills & Nash's heyday, and even Graham Nash's star had faded considerably by then. Additionally, it turned out that a lot of his remaining American CSN fans were simply not prepared to accept -- or, at least, get excited by -- the idea of his returning to the Hollies. They got lots of print and radio exposure, but the public just didn't care that much; as an example, an autograph signing at Tower Records in New York's East Village was ended an hour earlier than its scheduled 90 minutes when hardly anyone showed up to meet the band. And the tour by this lineup had to be hastily rebooked into smaller halls when ticket sales didn't meet promoter expectations.

The group continued to play concerts and make beautiful records, but there was no public demand for new releases, and by the 1990s they'd ceased making new studio recordings. As the 21st century beckoned, Allan Clarke -- after nearly 40 years as the lead vocalist for the band -- found that his singing didn't come to him as strongly or as well as he was used to, and he decided to retire, leaving Hicks and Elliott as the last two core members of the group. Clarke's first successor was Carl Wayne, the onetime lead singer of the 1960s Birmingham-spawned band the Move, who fronted the band on-stage for the next couple of years. In 2003, EMI Records recognized the Hollies' musical significance with a huge (and hugely satisfying) six-CD box set, The Long Road Home: 1963-2003, covering every era and major lineup in the group's history, and containing a huge number of previously unreleased and unanthologized tracks.

Wayne's death in 2004 led to another shift in their lineup, but in 2006 the group bounced back with its first new studio album in 23 years, appropriately entitled Staying Power, which featured Hicks and Elliott at the core of a lineup that included Peter Howarth on lead vocals, with Ian Parker on keyboards, Steve Laurie on guitar, and Ray Stiles on bass. Although not widely distributed outside of England, the record -- ironically, their first CD-original studio album -- proved to be a very fine updating of the group's sound, retaining enough of their traditional pop/harmony elements to satisfy longtime listeners. A live DVD derived from a December 2006 concert in Belgium was issued in 2007, a year that also saw a big chunk of their vintage catalog get further CD re-releases, principally through EMI. And as of 2008, the group was preparing another album of new material, with a U.K. tour tentatively planned for 2009. ~ Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: The Hollies
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Reunion

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Distant Light [Bonus Tracks]

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Butterfly [Bonus Tracks #2]

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Archive Alive!

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On a Carousel, 1963-1974: The Ultimate Hollies

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Hollies Sing Dylan [Bonus Tracks]

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Platinum [Capitol]

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5317704

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Taking a Bow

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1963-1979

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Butterfly [Bonus Tracks]

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Dear Eloise/King Midas in Reverse

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French Singles A's & B's 1966-1983

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Crazy Steal [Bonus Track]

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Crazy Steal [Bonus Track]

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Hollies [Remastered Bonus Tracks]

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Another Night [Bonus Tracks] [Remastered]

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Finest

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Staying Power [Enhanced]

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Basic Original Hits

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Basic Original Hits

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20 Great Love Songs

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Centenary Collection: The Best of the Hollies

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A's, B's & EP's

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Epic Anthology

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Best of the Hollies Live

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Butterfly [Butterfly Plus]

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For Certain Because... [Japan]

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Hollies [Magic]

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Mikael Rickfors Years

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Out on the Road [France Bonus Tracks]

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Here I Go Again [Disky]

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Hollies/Would You Believe?

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Would You Believe [Bonus Tracks]

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All the World Is Love

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Best of the Hollies [Toshiba EMI]

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Long Cool Woman [Single]

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Classic Masters

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Essential Collection

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Dutch Collection

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What Goes Around... [Bonus Track]

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What Goes Around... [France Bonus Tracks]

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Take Two

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Take Two

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Hollies [Platinum Disc]

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Greatest Hits [EMI]

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Collection, Vol. 2

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Collection, Vol. 1

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Collection, Vol. 3

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Evolution [UK]

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If I Needed Someone [EP]

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Very Best of the Hollies [1997]

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Staying Power

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Best of the Hollies [Collectables]

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Original Gold [2 Disc]

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At Abbey Road 1963-1966/At Abbey Road 1966-1970/At Abbey Road 1973-1989

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Another Night [Bonus Tracks]

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Long Road Home: 1963-2003

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Hollies [Third Album-Japan Bonus Track]

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Midas Touch

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Midas Touch

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Abbey Road Decade 1973-1989

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Greatest Hits...Live!

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Best of the 70's

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Buddy Holly [Expanded]

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Romany [EMI Bonus Tracks]

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Evolution [Evolution Plus]

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Hollies Sing Dylan [Hollies Sing Dylan Plus]

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Confessions of the Mind [Bonus Tracks]

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Super Hits

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Air That I Breathe [Disky]

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For Certain Because... [France Bonus Tracks]

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Hollies' Greatest Hits [Bonus Track]

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Orchestral Heaven

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Romany [Magic Bonus Tracks]

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Sing Hollies

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Original Gold [CD 1]

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Original Gold [CD 2]

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Buddy Holly

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At Abbey Road 1966-1970

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Hollies [EMI Compilation]

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At Abbey Road 1963-1966

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Hollies [EMI UK #1]

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French '60s EP Collection, Vol. 1

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Four Hollies Originals

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30th Anniversary Collection 1963-1993

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All Time Greatest Hits

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EP Collection

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Best of the Hollies, Vol. 1

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Best of the Hollies, Vol. 2

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What Goes Around...

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Other Side of the Hollies

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20 Golden Greats

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Live Hits

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Write On

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Russian Roulette

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Another Night

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Hollies [1974]

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Hollies' Greatest Hits

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Hollies' Greatest Hits

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Hollies' Greatest Hits

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Out on the Road

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Romany

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Distant Light

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Distant Light

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Confessions of the Mind

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Moving Finger

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Evolution

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Evolution

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Would You Believe?

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For Certain Because...

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In the Hollies Style

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Stay with the Hollies

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Stay with the Hollies [Magic]

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20 Years

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Hollies Sing Hollies

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Hollies Sing Dylan

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Wikipedia: The Hollies
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The Hollies

Background information
Origin Manchester, England
Genres Beat music, psychedelic rock, rock
Years active 1962–present
Labels Parlophone
Website hollies.co.uk
Members
Tony Hicks
Bobby Elliott
Ray Stiles
Steve Lauri
Ian Parker
Peter Howarth
Former members
Graham Nash
Allan Clarke
Terry Sylvester
Eric Haydock
Allen Coates
Vic Steele
Don Rathbone
Bernie Calvert
Mikael Rickfors
Carl Wayne

The Hollies are an English rock group from Manchester formed in the early 1960s. Known for their distinctive vocal harmony style (which influenced many other groups) they became one of the leading British groups of the era, and they enjoyed considerable popularity in many other countries although they did not achieve major US chart success until 1966. Like the Rolling Stones and Steeleye Span, they are also notable as one of the few British pop groups of the 1960s that has never officially broken up and which continues to record and perform to the present.

Contents

History

Formation

Member Graham Nash told Public Radio International (Bob Edwards show; 15 February 2009) that the group decided just prior to a performance to call themselves the Hollies because of their admiration for Buddy Holly. The original lineup included Allan Clarke as lead vocalist, Graham Nash as guitarist and vocalist, Vic Steele (real name Vic Farrell) on guitar, with Eric Haydock and Don Rathbone rounding out the group on bass guitar and drums. Steele left in May 1963 shortly before they signed to Parlophone in 1963 as label-mates of the Beatles. The group released their first album in the United States in 1964 as part of the first wave of British Invasion releases. They are commonly associated with Manchester, as some of the original Hollies grew up in the city. Tony Hicks then Bobby Elliott who both played in a Nelson-based band, the Dolphins, joined the band in quick succession in 1963. Bernie Calvert who replaced Haydock in 1966 was also a Dolphin member.

1960s

The Hollies had a squeaky-clean image, and were known for their bright vocal harmonies. Their EMI debut single "Ain't That Just Like Me," released 1 May 1963, hit #25 on the UK Singles Chart. Their second single, a cover of The Coasters' "Searchin," hit #12.

They scored their first British Top 10 hit in early 1964 with a cover of Maurice Williams and The Zodiacs' "Stay", which reached #8 in the UK. It was lifted from the band's Parlophone debut album "Stay With The Hollies", released on 1 January 1964, which went to #2 on the UK album chart. A version of the album was released in the US as Here I Go Again, on The Hollies' then-U.S. label Imperial. They followed up with a cover of Doris Troy's "Just One Look." During the mid-1960s the cover versions were supplanted first by written-to-order songs provided to them by such writers as Graham Gouldman and then by songs written by the group's in-house songwriting trio of Clarke, Hicks and Nash, who soon began providing the hits.

By one measure, The Hollies were the third most successful British 'singles' group of the 1960s, scoring twenty UK Top 40 placings between 1963 and 1969. This would place The Hollies behind only The Shadows (24 UK hits from 1960, not counting their appearances backing Cliff Richard), and The Beatles (21 UK hits, 1962-1969, counting double A-sides as one hit).

However, despite their numerous chart placings, The Hollies scored only one #1 UK hit in the 1960s ("I'm Alive" (1965)), placing them well behind consistently chart-topping acts such as The Beatles (17 number-ones) and The Shadows (5 number ones) in terms of successful British chart groups. Other "British Invasion" acts such as The Rolling Stones (15 chart entries, 8 number-ones), The Kinks (18 chart entries, 3 number-ones) and Manfred Mann (17 chart entries, 3 number-ones) also lead The Hollies in terms of #1 hits. The Hollies had considerable chart success in Europe and also scored numerous hits in Australia through the sixties and into the early 1970s[1], but they were only moderately successful in North America.

Nonetheless, by most commercial measures The Hollies were one of the top dozen or so UK bands of the 1960s and they scored a remarkable run of success in their home country: of the 29 singles they released between 1963 and 1974 only one failed to make the UK charts.[2]. The Hollies were regularly referred to in the British music media as the "third group" after the Beatles and the Stones. When asked about this in a contemporary interview Allan Clarke commented "We realise, although we'll never admit it to ourselves that it's an impossible task to attain the sames status as the Beatles and the Stones did, but that doesn't stop us trying."[3].

The hits continued with "Here I Go Again" (May 1964, UK #4); the group's first self-penned hit "We're Through" (Sep. 1964, UK #7); "Yes I Will" (Jan. 1965, UK #9); the Clint Ballard, Jr.-penned "I'm Alive" (May 1965, UK#1, US #103); and "Look Through Any Window" [Sept. 1965, UK #4] which also broke The Hollies into the US top 40 for the first time [#32, Jan. 1966]. However "If I Needed Someone" (Dec. 1965), the George Harrison song originally recorded by the Beatles on Rubber Soul, charted significantly lower, only reaching #20 in the UK.

They returned to the UK Top 10 with "I Can't Let Go" (Feb. 1966, UK #2, US #42) and "Bus Stop" (UK #2, US #5, 1966) (written by future 10CC member Graham Gouldman). Their only non-charting single in this period was the Burt Bacharach-Hal David song "After The Fox" (Sep. 1966), the theme song from the Peter Sellers comedy film of the same name, which was issued on the United Artists label.

From this point until Nash's departure, the single A-sides were all Clarke-Hicks-Nash collaborations; "Stop Stop Stop" (Oct. 1966, UK #2, US #7), known for its distinctive banjo arrangement; "On a Carousel" (Feb. 1967; UK #4, 1967, US #11, Australia #14,[4]), "Carrie Anne" (May 1967, UK #3, US #9, Australia #7[5]) (the song from which actress Carrie-Anne Moss got her name, having been born when the song was on the charts). The last Hollies single of the '60s to feature Graham Nash was "Jennifer Eccles" (Mar. 1968, UK #7, US #40, Aust. #13[6]).

The rhythm section included drummer Bobby Elliot and bass guitarist Eric Haydock. Bernie Calvert replaced Eric Haydock in 1966.

Drummer Bobby Elliot in the 1960s

Some of their songs had folk rock elements (e.g., Would You Believe?), but psychedelic influences were clearly evident by the time of the albums Evolution and Butterfly. "King Midas in Reverse" (Sep. 1967, UK #18), another Clarke-Hicks-Nash song, was influenced by prevailing trends in psychedelia, and backed with a lavish orchestral arrangement by John Scott featuring strings, brass and flutes.

Like most British groups' during this period, The Hollies' US releases almost always featured different track listings from their original UK albums. The Hollies second album "In The Hollies Style" (1964) did not chart and none of its tracks were released in the US. The Hollies’s third album simply called Hollies hit number 8 in the UK in 1965. Their fourth Would You Believe made it to #16 in 1966. Released in the US as Hear Here and Beat Group, they failed to crack the top 100. Meanwhile a US Imperial Bus Stop album made of songs clipped from earlier albums climbed to #75, the group's first US album to enter the Top 100.

While all their albums included original compositions, these were usually listed under the pseudonym "L. Ransford". Released in October 1966, For Certain Because (UK #23, 1966) was the group's fifth album, their first album consisting entirely of original compositions by Clarke, Hicks and Nash. Released in the U.S. as Stop! Stop! Stop! it reached U.S. #91 and spawned a U.S. release only single "Pay You Back With Interest" which was a modest hit reaching U.S. #28. Another track "Tell Me To My Face" was a moderate hit by Mercury artist Keith and would also be covered a decade later by Dan Fogelberg and Tim Weisberg on their "Twin Sons Of Different Mothers" album.

Their next album Evolution was released on 1 June 1967, the same day as The Beatles' Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. It was also their first album for their new U.S. label Epic. It reached UK #13 and U.S. #43. The U.S. version included the single "Carrie Anne". The Hollies' psychedelic sound experiments continued through their next album Butterfly, released in the U.S. as Dear Eloise/King Midas In Reverse but neither version charted. It would be the last album that featured Graham Nash until the 1980s. A Parlophone collection of some of the group's earliest singles was released as The Hollies Greatest and went to #1 on the UK charts in 1968. An Imperial Hollies Greatest Hits was a #11 hit in the U.S. a year earlier.

On Valentine's day 1968 the Hollies played a gig at the Whisky A Go Go in Los Angeles which attracted a lot of fellow musicians and would be instrumental in Graham Nash's leaving the group later that same year. Stephen Stills remembered, "Then David and I went to the Whiskey A Go-Go in Sunset Strip [Los Angeles] to see the Hollies doing a benefit showcase. We saw Graham Nash and we were thinking whether we should steal him. I thought he was fantastic, but Jesus, that band was so good, I thought they're never going to want to part with Nash." [7]

Graham Nash's departure

When Nash left in 1968 due to creative differences, in particular over the plan to record a full album of Bob Dylan songs, he relocated to Los Angeles, where he joined forces with former Buffalo Springfield guitarist Stephen Stills and ex-Byrds singer David Crosby to form one of the first supergroups, Crosby, Stills & Nash. A newspaper reported on his departure, "His decision to split from the band [...] centers on the question of touring, and on artistic disagreements; specifically whether The Hollies were to record an album of Dylan songs." [8]. Nash had told Disc magazine, "I can't take touring anymore. I just want to sit at home and write songs. I don't really care what the rest of the group think." [9]

He was replaced by guitarist-singer Terry Sylvester, formerly of The Swinging Blue Jeans. This lineup had a hit in 1969 with "Sorry, Suzanne", which reached #3 in the UK. In time, too, Sylvester proved a capable substitution for Nash as part of the group's songwriting team.

Their next single after Nash's departure was the Tony Hazzard-penned "Listen To Me" (Sep. 1968, UK #11, which was backed by "Do The Best you Can", the last original Nash-Clarke-Hicks song to appear on a single. Their next album was Hollies Sing Dylan which soared to the #3 position on the UK chart while the U.S. version Words And Music By Bob Dylan was ignored. The next album Hollies Sing Hollies did not chart in the UK, but the U.S. version called He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother included the hit single by the same name and reached U.S. #32.

Nash's departure saw The Hollies again turn to outside writers for their single A-sides, but the group's British chart fortunes rallied during 1969 and 1970 and they scored four consecutive UK Top 20 hits (including two consecutive Top 5 placings) in this period, beginning with the Geoff Stephens / Tony Macaulay song "Sorry Suzanne" (Feb. 1969) which reached #3 in the UK, followed by the emotional civil rights–themed ballad "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother", which featured the piano playing of Elton John, and which reached #3 in October 1969.

1970s

Their next single, "I Can't Tell The Bottom From The Top", reached UK #7 in April 1970. The UK hits continued with "Gasoline Alley Bred" (Sep. 1970, UK #14, Australia #20[10]) and the hard edged rocker "Hey Willy" (UK #22 1971).

Group member Allan Clarke left the group in 1971 for a solo career. With the end of their EMI/Parlophone contract they signed with Polydor and Swedish singer Mikael Rickfors sang lead on the single "The Baby" (UK #26, 1972). Meanwhile EMI lifted a track from their album Distant Light, which had Clarke on lead vocal and lead guitar, the Creedence Clearwater Revival-inspired song, "Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress"; EMI released it as a rival single, and although it fared relatively poorly in the UK (#32) it reached #2 in the US and #1 in Australia[11]. Clarke rejoined in 1973 and they returned to the UK Top 30 with another swamp rock-style song penned by Clarke, "The Day That Curly Billy Shot Down Crazy Sam McGee" (UK #24, 1973).

In 1974 they scored what was to be their last major hit with the love song "The Air That I Breathe" (previously recorded by Phil Everly on one of his solo albums) which reached #2 in the UK and Australia[12] and made the Top 10 in the US. It was their last UK hit for over a decade and subsequent singles like "Son of a Rotten Gambler", "I'm Down", "Boulder to Birmingham" and "Sandy" failed to chart in the UK.

1980s–2000s and beyond

In 1980 the Hollies returned to the UK charts with the stirring single "Soldier's Song" which was a mild hit in 1980 reaching number 58 in the UK. They also released an album of Buddy Holly covers aptly named "Buddy Holly". In 1981 Calvert and Sylvester left. The Hollies released "Holliedaze", a medley edited together from their hit records, which returned them to the UK Top 30. Nash and Haydock briefly rejoined to promote the record on Top of the Pops. They continued to record and tour throughout the mid-1980s, last hitting the US Top 40 with a remake of The Supremes' "Stop in the Name of Love", which reached No. 29 in 1983, from the album What Goes Around. A live album featuring the Clarke-Hicks-Elliott-Nash re-grouping, Reunion, followed that same year.

After its use in a TV beer commercial (for Miller Lite lager) in the summer of 1988, "He Ain't Heavy" was reissued in the UK and reached No. 1, thus establishing a new record for the length of time between chart-topping singles for one artist of 23 years. By this time bassist Ray Stiles, formerly a member of 1970s chart-topping glam rock group Mud, had joined the permanent lineup. A re-issue early in 1989 of "The Air That I Breathe" only made No. 60. During the same year, the group wrote and recorded the title song to the ITV charity series Find a Family; the single (named "Find Me a Family") peaked at No. 79. In 1993 another new single, "The Woman I Love", written by Nik Kershaw, reached No. 42 in the UK.

The Hollies still tour with two original members, Hicks and Elliott. After Clarke's retirement in 1999, he was replaced by Carl Wayne, former lead singer of The Move. Wayne only recorded one song with them, "How Do I Survive?", the last (and only new) track on the 2003 Greatest Hits. After his death from cancer in August 2004, he was replaced by Peter Howarth. The Hollies' first new studio album since 1983, Staying Power was released in 2006.

The group released their new album Then, Now, Always, in late March 2009. The album featured 11 new tracks, featuring Peter Howarth on lead vocals on all but the title track, where Tony Hicks sang, and "Coming Home" which was sung by Steve Lauri. The Hollies embark on a new tour in spring and summer 2010, taking them to England, Norway and Germany. Coinciding with a possible inclusion in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March 2010, a new greatest hits 2-CD is sheduled.

The Hollies in the USA

Because of their lack of interesting image, coupled with their first singles being covers of songs that had already hits in the US, The Hollies were one of the last of the major UK "British Invasion" groups to have significant chart success. As you can see from the discography (see below), the first single wasn't issued in the US and it took until "Look Through Any Window" to crack the top 30. Excellent singles like 'I'm Alive", "Yes I Will" and "We're Through" were virtually ignored in the US. From 1965 until they signed to Epic in 1967, the band had their most concentrated success in the US. After the initial Epic single, "Carrie-Anne" reached #9, the band struggled under Epic's poor promotion techniques and with the exception of "He Ain't Heavy", "Long Cool Woman" and "The Air That I Breathe", The Hollies continued to sell poorly in the US.

On September 24, 2009, the Hollies were nominated for induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, based in Cleveland, Ohio.[13] The band has been eligible for the honor since 1989.

Band members

1962–73

1973–86

1986-present

Discography

See The Hollies discography

Notes

  1. ^ Go-Set Charts site search, accessed 19 July 2009
  2. ^ The Hollies Official Website
  3. ^ Press articles reproduced in The Hollies 2004 Tour Book
  4. ^ Go-Set national Top 40, 12 Apr. 1967
  5. ^ Go-Set national chart, 9 Aug. 1967
  6. ^ Go-Set national Top 40, 8 May 1968
  7. ^ Zimmer, Dave. 2008. Crosby, Stills & Nash: The Biography. p. 69
  8. ^ Press article reproduced in The Hollies tour Book 2004
  9. ^ DISC magazine article reproduced in The Hollies tour Book 2004
  10. ^ Go-Set national chart, 20 Feb. 1970
  11. ^ Go-Set National Top 40, 20 September 1972
  12. ^ Go-Set national Top 40, 1 June 1974
  13. ^ Graff, Gary (2009-09-23). "Kiss, Genesis, Chili Peppers Rock hall contenders". Reuters. http://www.reuters.com/article/entertainmentNews/idUSTRE58M77320090923. Retrieved 2009-09-28. 

References

  • Artist Profile. (2004). The Hollies. Retrieved 1 September 2006, from Rockphiles Web site: www.rockphiles.com
  • Rock and Roll Biographies. (2000). The Hollies. Retrieved 31 August 2006, from Classicbands Web site: http://www.classicbands.com/hollies.html

External links


 
 

 

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