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Artist:

The Walker Brothers

The Walker Brothers

Formed:
1964 in Los Angeles

Disbanded:
1967

Representative Songs:

"Make It Easy on Yourself," "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine (Anymore)," "My Ship Is Coming In"

Representative Albums:

After the Lights Go Out: The Best of 1965-1967, Take It Easy with the Walker Brothers, Greatest Hits

Similar Artists:

Performed Songs By:

Followers:

  • Genre: Rock
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Major Members: John Maus, Gary Leeds, Scott Walker

Biography

They weren't British, they weren't brothers, and their real names weren't Walker, but Californians Scott Engel, John Maus, and Gary Leeds were briefly huge stars in England (and small ones in their native land) at the peak of the British Invasion. Engel and Maus were playing together in Hollywood when drummer Leeds suggested they form a trio and try to make it in England. And they did -- with surprising swiftness, they hit the top of the British charts with "Make It Easy on Yourself" in 1965. "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" repeated the feat the following year, and the group also had U.K. hits with "My Ship Is Coming In," "(Baby) You Don't Have to Tell Me," "Another Tear Falls," and others. For a few months they experienced frenzied adulation almost on the level of the Beatles and the Stones, though in the U.S. (where they rarely performed) only "Make It Easy on Yourself" and "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" entered the Top 20.

While the Walkers looked the part of British Invaders with their shaggy mop-top hairstyles, they were far more pop than rock. Nor did they play on most of their records. With producer Johnny Franz and veteran British arrangers like Ivor Raymonde (who also worked with Dusty Springfield) and Reg Guest, they favored orchestrated ballads that were a studied attempt to emulate the success of another brother act who weren't really brothers: the Righteous Brothers. Not as soulful as the Righteous Brothers, lead singer Scott Walker's deep croon betrayed strong debts to non-rock vocalists like Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra. While their biggest hits were covers of songs by American pop songwriting teams like Bacharach-David and Mann-Weil, Scott (and occasionally John Walker) could write brooding originals in a more personal, less overblown style when given the chance.

In the intensely competitive days of 1967, the Walkers' brand of pop suddenly become passé, and the group disbanded in the face of diminishing success and Scott's increasingly fruitful solo career. Scott ran off a series of Top Ten British solo albums in the late '60s, which have attracted a sizable cult with their idiosyncratic marriage of Scott's brooding, insular songs and ornate orchestral arrangements. Gary Walker released a few singles and an album with his group the Rain in a much harder-rocking guitar-oriented format. The Walkers reunited for a while in the mid-'70s, which produced a final British hit ("No Regrets"). Much of the Walkers' story is retold in the biography Scott Walker: A Deep Shade of Blue, published only in Britain. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
 
 
Wikipedia: The Walker Brothers
The Walker Brothers
Cover of Images (1967)
Cover of Images (1967)
Background information
Origin Los Angeles, USA
Genre(s) Rock, pop
Years active 1964 to 1967
1976 to 1978
Label(s) Philips Records
GTO Records
Associated
acts
Scott Walker
Gary Walker
John Walker

The Walker Brothers were a 1960s and 1970s pop group, originally a rock band, founded by three Californians, who became most successful in the UK. They were not related, and adopted the "Walker Brothers" name as a show business touch.

Band members

Biography

The Walker Brothers formed in Los Angeles in 1964. John Maus’ band, in which Scott Engel played bass, had a residency at Gazzari’s Club, and were seen one night by local drummer Gary Leeds. All three had played in other bands – Engel had played, for example, with the Routers, and Leeds with the Standells. Leeds had recently returned from touring the UK as a member of P. J. Proby’s backing band and – along with club regular Brian Jones[1] - thought that the band’s rock'n'roll and blues style would go down well in “swinging London”, where Proby had already succeeded. Before leaving, they appeared in a film, Beach Ball, and they sent demo recordings to record companies in England.

With Leeds’ stepfather as sponsor, the three moved to London in February 1965. When they landed, producer Johnny Franz was keen to sign them up. In a short time they had played several prestigious venues around Britain and secured a recording contract with Philips Records. Their first single, "Pretty Girls Everywhere", with Maus as lead singer, had little initial success, but after radio stations started playing the B-side, "Love Her" , with Engel’s baritone vocals, it made the UK Top 20 in June 1965.

Philips then quickly recorded and rush-released the group's version of "Make It Easy on Yourself", a Bacharach and David ballad previously recorded by Jerry Butler. The record was sung by Engel (by now called Scott Walker), arranged by Ivor Raymonde and produced by Johnny Franz, with a full orchestra augmented by session musicians, very much in the style of Phil Spector’s productions. Session musicians on the record included Alan Parker and Big Jim Sullivan - some later Walker Brothers’ records may also have involved Jimmy Page. By August 1965, "Make It Easy on Yourself" had entered the British Top 10 eventually reaching the Number One spot. Later in the year it also made #16 in the US charts.

The # 3 UK hit "My Ship Is Coming In" followed, and then in March 1966, The Walker Brothers hit #1 for the second time in six months with "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore". At that point, the Walker Brothers’ popularity in Britain – particularly that of Scott – reached a new high, especially among teenage girls, and their fan club in the country was said to have been larger than The Beatles’. Although "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" also made the US top twenty, they had much less success in their home country.

The Walker Brothers continued to have chart hits in the UK in 1966 and 1967, with Scott taking a more prominent role in their song choices and arrangements, but with diminishing commercial success. As pop music moved on, the Walker Brothers began to sound dated. By the end of 1967, the pressures of stardom, internal tensions and “artistic differences” led to the group splitting up, though they did tour Japan together in 1968.

All three continued to release solo records, with Scott being by far the most successful. In 1976 the group unexpectedly reformed, scoring another UK top ten hit with Tom Rush's "No Regrets". However, the three albums that followed sold poorly. The final album, Nite Flights pointed the way to Scott Walker's later solo career.

UK chart discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Pretty Girls Everywhere" (1965) - did not chart
  • "Love Her" (1965) - UK Singles Chart High - No. 20
  • "Make It Easy On Yourself" (1965) - No. 1 (also #16 in the U.S.)
  • "My Ship Is Coming In" (1965) - No. 3 (also #63 in the U.S.)
  • "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore" (1966) - No. 1 (also #13 in the U.S.)
  • "(Baby) You Don't Have To Tell Me" (1966) - No. 13
  • "Another Tear Falls" (1966) - No. 12
  • "Deadlier Than The Male" (1966) - No. 34
  • "Stay With Me Baby" (1967) - No. 26
  • "Walking In The Rain" (1967) - No. 26
  • "No Regrets" (1976) - No. 7
  • "Lines" (1976) - did not chart
  • "We're All Alone" (1977) - did not chart
  • "The Electrician" (1978) - did not chart

See also

References

  • Guinness Book of British Hit Singles - 16th Edition - ISBN 0-85112-190-X
  • Guinness Book of British Hit Albums - 7th Edition - ISBN 0-85112-619-7
  • The Great Rock Discography - 5th Edition - ISBN 1-84195-017-3
  • Guinness Rockopedia - ISBN 0-85112-072-5
  • The Book of Golden Discs - 2nd Edition - ISBN 0-214-20512-6
  • Everything Under the Sun (box set) Universal Records Cat. no. 983 984-4

External links


 
 

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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 "The Walker Brothers" Read more

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