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Top Topham

 
Artist: Top Topham

Performed Songs By:

  • Born: July 03, 1947, Southall, Middlesex, England
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "On Top (1963-1969)", "The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions

Biography

Anthony Topham, better known professionally as Top Topham (or Anthony "Top" Topham), had the good fortune to be a founding member of the Yardbirds, one of the most respected rock acts to come out of mid-'60s England. He had the bad fortune, however, to have been born in 1947, and to be only 15 years old at the time of the group's formation. Topham was a student at Epsom Art School when he and a good friend, singer/harpist Keith Relf, recruited drummer Jim McCarty, and from there assembled what was first called the Metropolitan Blues Quartet. They soon expanded their lineup and changed their name to the Yardbirds, and they seemed to have a promising enough future, especially after they attracted the interest of Giorgio Gomelsky, a club owner who became their manager. In a way, their future looked too promising, for the tastes of Topham's parents -- the other band members, encouraged by Gomelsky, wanted to turn professional, and Topham didn't have that option; his parents had always expressed misgivings about his involvement in music, and wouldn't consider letting their 15-year-old son leave school to pursue a career as a guitarist. So he gave up his spot in the band to a schoolmate who seemed fairly promising, named Eric Clapton, who had no such misgivings, from family or anyone else, about his future as a guitarist. Ironically, Topham continued in music, forming bands in college during the psychedelic era, but never straying too far from the blues. He went to work for producer Mike Vernon at the latter's Blue Horizon label at the end of the 1960s, playing a lot of session work and also producing, and recorded one album of his own, Ascension Heights, which was big-band blues, quite removed from the Yardbirds' old sound or much of the prevailing style of British blues of the time. Health problems forced him out of music in the early '70s, and it wasn't until the 1980s that Topham returned to music, when he joined forces with the Yardbirds' former drummer to form the Top Topham-Jim McCarty Band. He had, by then, found success as an art dealer -- proving that staying in school did have its up side -- and has continued to work intermittently in music since, giving occasional live performances. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Top Topham
Top
Top Topham
Birth name Anthony Topham
Also known as Rasjid Topham
Born 3 July 1947 (1947-07-03) (age 62)
Southhall, Middlesex, England
Genres blues, blues-rock
Occupations Musician
Instruments guitar
Years active 1963-1970, 1988-present day
Labels Blue Horizon
Associated acts The Yardbirds
Topham-McCarty Band
Website toptopham.com

Anthony "Top" Topham (born 3 July 1947, Southall, Middlesex), is a rock guitarist from England.

Contents

Background

In 1963, a very young guitarist, Anthony "Top" Topham and his friend at secondary school, Chris Dreja, visited the Railway Hotel in Norbiton. The hotel's entertainment featured traditional jazz music in the uptairs lounge, and allowed budding musicians to play during the breaks. It was a time when young British lads like Topham were inventing a distinctively British version of the gutsy urban American blues known as R&B. There, they met singer and harmonica player Keith Relf, bassist Paul Samwell-Smith, and drummer Jim McCarty deciding to form a group called the Yardbirds. Two weeks later they played their first gig at the Eel Pie Island, supporting the Cyril Davies All-Stars.

The local R&B heroes were the Rolling Stones, and as they were to go on tour with Bo Diddley, were to vacate the Crawdaddy Club at Richmond. Two months after the formation of the Yardbirds, Giorgio Gomelsky offered them to assume the residency at the Crawdaddy and became their manager. As the Yardbirds had to turn professional, Topham faced parental disapproval coupled with the anxiety of abandoning his art studies. He couldn't devote himself to the Yardbirds full-time, and thus he had to leave. His replacement was a fellow art student from the same secondary school, Eric Clapton.

Topham recalls, "I was only 15 then, three or four years younger than the rest, and there was no way my parents would let me go out five or six nights a week to play music, even though I was already bringing home double what my father was earning. I was going on to Epsom Art School and they wanted me to take it seriously. Eric Clapton was the obvious person to replace me. Later on I didn't regret leaving because they'd moved away from the blues music that I was interested in. Even if I'd stayed with them to become professional I think I would have left later for the same reasons Eric left."

He went on to Art College where he formed bands with his friend Duster Bennett. But eventually his urge to play music proved too strong and he joined Winston G and the Wicked (later renamed The Fox), once again finding himself at a pivotal point in British rock as the band crossed from heavy rock to psychedelia, playing alongside Marc Bolan, early Yes and Captain Beefheart.

After a final gig with Winston G at London's Roundhouse, Top subsequently revived his association with Duster Bennett, recording a live album with him - this in turn introducing him to Mike Vernon and his Blue Horizon label, that became the premier British blues record label in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He did a great deal of session and production work for Blue Horizon, playing with the likes of Peter Green and Christine Perfect who later became known as Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac.

Topham recorded a solo album for Blue Horizon, "Ascension Heights", as plans went underway for him and Duster Bennett to form an eagerly anticipated blues band. But while Bennett was touring with John Mayall in 1970, Topham fell seriously ill --contracting a blood disorder and was close to dying-- and had to abandon the music business once more.

Upon his recovery two years later, he entered the fine arts business in Chelsea and converted to Islam and assumed the identity, "Rafjid Topham". By the mid-Eighties, Top had left London for rural Wales, rearing eight children with his wife Lydia (nee Hamilton) a former volunteer teacher in Tanzania and former partner of a South African liberation general but a chance meeting with his old mate from the Yardbirds, Jim McCarty, convinced Top to pick up his guitar and dust off his blues once more in 1988. Back in the London circuit, the Top Topham-Jim McCarty Band was formed and played for two years until Top decided to characteristically leave once again in July 1990, wishing to pursue country blues. He sessioned on 12-string guitar for the track "Broken Waltz Time" on the Bill Morrissey album, "Night Train" (Philo Records). Later, Topham and Jim McCarty teamed again up for Pete Brown's double album, "Rattlesnake Guitar" (Coast-to-Coast Records) as a tribute to help Fleetwood Mac's founder, Peter Green.

In the 2000s, Top continues to revisit the blues circuit in his unpredictable and mysterious fashion, including guestings with the latest edition of the Yardbirds under the co-leadership of Jim McCarty and Chris Dreja, and performing with vocalist-bassist John Idan (the new star addition to the prestigious Yardbirds roster) in various sporadic gigs of his own.

Discography

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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