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The Searchers

 
Artist: The Searchers
 
The Searchers

Group Members:

John McNally, Billy Adamson, Mike Pender, Frank Allen, Spencer James, Johnny Sandon, Norman McGarry, John Blunt, Tony Jackson, Chris Curtis

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

The Blue Things, The Smithereens, Rob Aldrich, Brambles, The Zombies, The Records, The Silents, The Springfields

Performed Songs By:

Formal Connection With:

Mike Pender's Searchers
  • Formed: 1957, Liverpool, England
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Greatest Hits," "Sire Sessions: The Rockfield Recordings," "30th Anniversary Collection"
  • Representative Songs: "Needles and Pins," "Sugar and Spice," "What Have They Done to the Ra"

Biography

Founded in 1957 by John McNally (guitar/vocals), the Searchers were originally one of thousands of skiffle groups formed in the wake of Lonnie Donegan's success with "Rock Island Line." The Searchers' immediate competitors included bands such as the Wreckers and the Confederates, both led by Michael Pender (guitar, vocals), and the Martinis, led by Tony Jackson (guitar/vocals). By 1959, McNally and Pender were working together as a duet; later in the year, Jackson joined as the lead vocalist. After drummer Norman McGarry left the Searchers he was replaced by Chris Crummy, who quickly renamed himself Chris Curtis. Other changes were in the works as Jackson built and learned to play a customized bass guitar. Learning his new job on the four-stringed instrument proved too difficult to permit him to continue singing lead, and McNally and Pender brought in a fifth member, Johnny Sandon (born Billy Beck). Johnny Sandon & the Searchers lasted from 1960 through February of 1962, and were extremely popular on the dance hall and club circuit in Liverpool. Sandon cut out for a career on his own, with another band called the Remo Four in early 1962.

Meanwhile, the Searchers, now a quartet with Jackson once again lead singer, became one of the top acts on the Liverpool band scene, playing textured renditions of American R&B, rock & roll, country, soul, and rockabilly. The group was signed to Pye Records in mid-1963 and their first single, a cover of the Drifters' "Sweets for My Sweet," was released in August of 1963, hitting number one on the British charts. While the Beatles quickly outdistanced all comers, the Searchers did, indeed, go to the top of the charts with two of their next three singles, "Needles and Pins" and "Don't Throw Your Love Away." Another record, "Sugar and Spice," written by their producer Tony Hatch under the pseudonym Fred Nightingale, stalled at the number two spot. Over the next nine months, the band staked out a sound that was one of the most distinctive in a rock scene crawling with hundreds of bands. Their music was built around the sound of a crisply played 12-string guitar, coupled with strong lead vocals and carefully, sometimes exquisitely arranged harmonies, so that they could credibly cover American R&B standards like "Love Potion No. 9" or Phil Spector-based girl group pop like "Be My Baby." Their 1964 singles included a venture into folk-rock before the genre had been "invented" in the press, in the form of a cover of Malvina Reynolds' "What Have They Done To the Rain." Interestingly, their 12-string guitar sound would become a key ingredient in the success of the Byrds, who even took the riff from "Needles And Pins" and transformed it into the main riff of "Feel A Whole Lot Better."

In July of 1964, with the group riding the upper reaches of the British charts, and with their third album in nine months in release, it was announced that Tony Jackson was leaving the Searchers to form his own band, and would be replaced by Frank Allen, who had been playing bass with Cliff Bennett & the Rebel Rousers. The turning point for the band came in 1965, as the British and international fascination with the Liverpool sound faded away. The Searchers began casting their net wider for material to cover, in addition to coming up with one original hit, the Curtis/Pender-authored "He's Got No Love." By the beginning of 1966, the group's string of chart hits seemed to have run out, and Chris Curtis exited in early 1966, claiming to have become exhausted from the group's constant touring. The Searchers, with Johnny Blunt on drums, continued working and had their last hit, "Have You Ever Loved Somebody," which barely cracked the Top 50 in October of 1966. The group continued working, however, playing clubs and cabarets in England and Europe. Blunt exited at the end of the 1960s, but was replaced by Billy Adamson, and this line-up of the Searchers continued intact until the mid-1980s, working for 35 weeks a year throughout Europe with an occasional U.S. visit. Although they played as part of Richard Nader's "Rock 'n Roll Revival" shows, they never became an "oldies" act, always adding new material, including originals and covers of work by songwriters such as Neil Young to their sets, and in 1972, the band cut an album for British RCA.

At the end of the 1970s, their recording fortunes were revived once again as Seymour Stein, the head of Sire Records, signed the Searchers for two albums. Those records, The Searchers and Love's Melodies, were the best work the group ever did, highlighted by achingly beautiful yet vibrant and forceful playing and singing, and an unerring array of memorable hooks and melodies. Those two albums were followed by a series of tracks recorded for their original label, Pye Records, in the early 1980s. The group held their audience well into the 1980s, playing before crowds of as large as 15,000 along one U.S. tour. In 1985, after playing together for 26 years, Pender and McNally split up, with McNally continuing to lead the Searchers (with Adamson and Allen, with Spencer James added on second guitar and vocals), while Pender formed Mike Pender's Searchers, consisting of Chris Black (guitar, vocals), Barry Cowell (bass, vocals), and Steve Carlyle (drums, vocals). Both groups have toured extensively and the Searchers under McNally have recorded on occasion. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: The Searchers
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Needles & Pins [Pulse]

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20 Fabulous Hits of the 60s

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Very Best of the Searchers [Silverline]

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Best of British Pop

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Pye Anthology 1963-1967 [Reissue]

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Very Best of the Searchers [Universal]

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Very Best of the Searchers [Sanctuary]

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Searchers at the Star-Club

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At the Iron Door: Their Earliest Recordings

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Definitive Pye Collection

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Meet the Searchers/Sounds Like the Searchers

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Meet the Searchers/Sounds Like the Searchers

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Meet the Searchers [Japan Bonus Tracks]

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Sounds Like Searchers [Japan Bonus Tracks]

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Sugar & Spice [Japan Bonus Tracks]

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Take Me for What I'm Worth [Japan Bonus Tracks]

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It's the Searchers [Japan Bonus Tracks]

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BBC Sessions

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BBC Sessions

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British 60's

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Second Take: The Complete RCA/UK Recordings

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Sire Sessions: The Rockfield Recordings

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Greatest Hits [Prime Cuts]

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Very Best of the Searchers [DualDisc]

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Definitive Collection

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That Was Then, This Is Now

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Sweets for My Sweet

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40th Anniversary Collection

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Collection [Audio Fidelity Hybrid]

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Sugar & Spice [Expanded]

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Sounds Like the Searchers [Expanded]

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Meet the Searchers [Expanded]

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It's the Searchers [Expanded]

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Greatest

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It's the Searchers/Take Me for What I'm Worth

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Most of the Searchers

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30th Anniversary Collection

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Don't Throw Your Love Away

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Collection [Castle]

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Greatest Hits [Rhino]

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Greatest Hits [Rhino]

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Love's Melodies

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Searchers

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Needles & Pins [RCA]

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Second Take

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Take Me for What I'm Worth

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Sounds Like the Searchers

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It's the Searchers

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Sugar & Spice

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Meet the Searchers

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Sweets for My Sweet [EP]

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Wikipedia: The Searchers (band)
Top
The Searchers
Origin Liverpool, England
Genre(s) Merseybeat, Pop, Rock
Years active 1959 - present
Label(s) UK Pye Records, Philips Records, Liberty Records, RCA Records, Sire Records; US Mercury Records, Liberty Records, Kapp Records, RCA Records, Sire Records
Associated acts Mike Pender's Searchers
Website the-searchers.co.uk
Members
John McNally
Frank Allen
Spencer James
Eddie Rothe
Former members
Tony Jackson
Mike Pender
Chris Curtis
Billy Adamson
John Blunt

The Searchers are an English rock band who emerged as part of the 1960s Merseybeat scene along with The Beatles, The Swinging Blue Jeans, and Gerry & The Pacemakers.

The band's hits included a remake of the Drifters' 1961 hit, "Sweets for My Sweet"; remakes of Jackie DeShannon's "Needles and Pins" and "When You Walk In The Room"; "Sugar and Spice"; "Don't Throw Your Love Away"; and a remake of The Clovers' "Love Potion No. 9". They were the second group from Liverpool after the Beatles to have a hit in America when "Needles and Pins" charted during the first week of March 1964.

Contents

Band history

Originally founded as a skiffle group in Liverpool in 1959 by John McNally and Mike Pender, the band took their name from the classic 1956 John Wayne western The Searchers. Prendergast claims that the name was his idea,[1] but McNally ascribes it to 'Big Ron' Woodbridge (born Ronald Woodbridge, 1938, ın Liverpool, Lancashire), their first lead singer. The genesis remains unresolved.

The band grew out of an earlier skiffle group formed by McNally, with his friends Brian Dolan (guitar) and Tony West (bass). When the other two members lost interest McNally was joined by his guitarist neighbour Mike Prendergast. They soon recruited Tony Jackson (born Anthony Paul Jackson, 16 July 1938, The Dingle, Liverpool, Lancashire — died 18 August 2003, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire) with his home-made bass guitar and amplifier and styled themselves 'Tony and the Searchers' with Joe Kelly on drums. Kelly soon left to be replaced by Norman McGarry (born 1 March 1942, Liverpool, Lancashire), and it is this line-up — McNally, Pender (as he soon became known), Jackson and McGarry — that is usually cited as the original foursome.

McGarry did not stay long, however, and in 1960 his place was taken by Chris Crummey (who later changed his name to Curtis). Later that year Big Ron had a successful audition with Mecca and became a ballroom singer. He was replaced by Billy Beck, who changed his name to Johnny Sandon (born Wıllıam Beck, ın 1941, Lıverpool dıed 23 December 1996). The band had regular bookings at Liverpool's Iron Door Club as 'Johnny Sandon and the Searchers'.

Sandon left the band in late 1961[2] to join The Remo Four in February 1962[3]. The group settled into a quartet sharing the vocal lead and billed simply as 'The Searchers'. They continued to play at the Iron Door, The Cavern, and other Liverpool clubs. Like many similar acts they would do as many as three shows at different venues in one night. They negotiated a contract with the Star-Club in the St. Pauli district Hamburg for 128 days, with three one-hour performances a night, starting in July 1962.[2]

The band returned to a residency at the Iron Door Club and it was there that they tape-recorded the sessions that led to a recording contract with Pye Records with Tony Hatch as producer. Their first single was issued in US on Mercury, the second on Liberty without success and then a deal was arranged with U.S. based Kapp Records to distribute their records in America.

Hatch played piano on some recordings and wrote "Sugar and Spice"—the band’s second number one record—under the pseudonym Fred Nightingale; a secret he kept from the band at the time.

After scoring with their hit "Needles and Pins", bassist Tony Jackson was fired from the band and was replaced by Hamburg pal Frank Allen (born Francis Renaud McNeice, 14 December 1943, Hayes, Middlesex) from Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers.

Chris Curtis left the band in 1966 and was replaced by the Keith Moon-influenced John Blunt, who in turn was replaced by Billy Adamson in 1970. In 1967, Curtis formed a new band called Roundabout with keyboard player Jon Lord and guitarist Ritchie Blackmore. Although Curtis's involvement in the project was short-lived, Roundabout would eventually evolve into Deep Purple the following year.

As musical styles evolved, the Searchers could not keep up and as a result, the hits ran out. While they continued to record for Liberty Records and RCA Records, they ended up on the British "Chicken in a Basket" circuit, although they did score a minor US hit in 1971 with "Desdemona".

The group continued to tour through the 1970s and were rewarded in 1979 when Sire Records signed the band to a multi-record deal. Two albums were released: The Searchers and Play for Today (retitled Love's Melodies outside the UK). Both records garnered critical acclaim but did not break into the charts. They did, however, revive the group's career.

According to John McNally, the band were ready to head into the studio to record a third album for Sire when they were informed that due to label reorganization, their contract had been dropped. It was, in fact, because so few people bought the second album, although it was beloved by fans.

In 1981, the band signed to PRT Records (formerly Pye, their original label) and began recording an album. But only one single, "I Don't Want To Be The One"[4] backed with "Hollywood", ended up being released. The rest of the tracks would be included as part of 2004's 40th Anniversary collection.

Soon after the PRT release, Mike Pender left the group amidst great acrimony and now tours as Mike Pender's Searchers. McNally and Allan recruited former First Class vocalist Spencer James to fill Pender's shoes.

In 1988, Coconut Records signed The Searchers and the album Hungry Hearts was the result. It featured updated remakes of "Needles and Pins" and "Sweets For My Sweet" plus live favorite "Somebody Told Me You Were Crying". While the album was not a major hit, it did keep the group in the public eye.

The band continues to tour with Eddie Rothe replacing Adamson on drums and is considered to be one of the most popular 1960s bands on the UK concert circuit. The Searchers incorporate full band electric performances with an acoustic set as well. Creating ample amounts of confusion, former Searchers lead singer Mike Pender also tours, but with his new full band electric outfit Mike Pender's Searchers, as they perform hits of the Searchers and some new material of their own.

Hit singles

Release date Title Chart Positions
UK Singles Chart[5] US Charts VG-lista, Norway[6] Kvällstoppen ("The Evening Top"), Swedish Sales Chart[7]
1963 "Sweets for My Sweet" 1 - 8 5
1963 "Sweet Nothins" 48 - - -
1963 "Sugar and Spice" 2 44 - -
1964 "Needles and Pins" 1 13 8 6
1964 "Ain't That Just Like Me" - 61 - -
1964 "Don't Throw Your Love Away" 1 16 - 3
1964 "Some Day We're Gonna Love Again" 11 34 - -
1964 "When You Walk in the Room" 3 35 - 20
1964 "Love Potion No. 9" - 3 - -
1964 "What Have They Done to the Rain" 13 29 - 13
1965 "Bumble Bee" - 21 - 20
1965 "Goodbye My Love" 4 52 - -
1965 "He's Got No Love" 12 79 - -
1965 "When I Get Home" 35 - - -
1965 "Take Me For What I'm Worth" 20 76 - 14
1966 "Everybody Come Clap Your Hands" - - - 18
1966 "Take It Or Leave It" 31 - - 16
1966 "Have You Ever Loved Somebody?" 48 94 - -
1967 "Popcorn Double Feature" - - - -
1967 "Western Union" - 115 - -
1967 "Second Hand Dealer" - - - -
1968 "Umbrella Man" - - - -
1971 "Desdemona" - 94 - -

Cover versions of songs by The Searchers

The Searchers timeline

1957-1959

  • John McNally: Guitar, Vocals
  • Ron Woodbridge: Vocals
  • Brian Dolan: Guitar
  • Tony West: Bass
  • Joe Kennedy: Drums

1960-Feb 1962

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Mike Pender: Lead Guitar, Vocals
  • Chris Curtis: Drums, Vocals
  • Tony Jackson: Bass, Vocals
  • Johnny Sandon: Lead Vocals

Feb 1962-July 1964

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Mike Pender: Lead Guitar, Vocals
  • Chris Curtis: Drums, Lead Vocals
  • Tony Jackson: Bass, Lead Vocals

August 1964-April 1966

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Mike Pender: Lead Guitar, Vocals
  • Chris Curtis: Drums, Lead Vocals
  • Frank Allen: Bass, Lead Vocals

May 1966-December 1969

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Mike Pender: Lead Guitar, Vocals
  • Frank Allen: Bass, Lead Vocals
  • John Blunt: Drums

January 1970-December 1985

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Mike Pender: Lead Guitar, Vocals)
  • Frank Allen: Bass, Lead Vocals
  • Billy Adamson: Drums

January 1986-November 1998

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Frank Allen: Bass, Lead Vocals
  • Billy Adamson: Drums
  • Spencer James: Lead Guitar, Lead Vocals

November 1998-present

  • John McNally: Rhythm Guitar, Vocals
  • Frank Allen: Bass, Lead Vocals
  • Spencer James: Lead Guitar, Lead Vocals
  • Eddie Roth: Drums

Trivia

Beside The Beatles, The Searchers were the only British group of the era who had most of the records issued in stereo at the time. Although a number of the UK Pye albums were issued in mono only, the US Kapp label issued all of their albums in stereo, and were almost completely in true stereo. Subsequent UK Castle and Santuary CD reissues have been very sloppy in using stereo masters. [Although others may say credit is due to the reissue companies for using the original (and better known) mono mixes.]

References

  1. ^ Band founder Mike Pender, "The Band was founded by myself and John McNally. In 1957 John and I went to see the movie "The Searchers" starring John Wayne. I was an ardent Western Fan and so I dragged John along with me to see it. I take the credit for choosing the name 'The Searchers' and for co-founding the Band in its original form." Quoted in http://www.rickresource.com/searchers/searchershistory.html
  2. ^ a b http://www.the-searchers.co.uk/ The Searchers Official Site
  3. ^ Fabgear, 'Tommy Quickly and The Remo Four', The British Beat Boom
  4. ^ http://www.stmedia.org/searchers.htm "I Don't Want To Be The One" single
  5. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 486. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  6. ^ "http://lista.vg.no/artist_info.php?ArtistOp=show&artistId=712">Searchers at VG-lista
  7. ^ Hallberg, Eric (1993). Kvällstoppen i P3 (1th ed.). Sweden: Drift Musik. ISBN 91-630-2140-4. 

External links


 
 

 

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