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Toyah

 
Artist: Toyah

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Formal Connection With:

Joel Bogen

Relationship With:

  • Born: May 18, 1958, Kings Heath, Birmingham, England
  • Active: '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "Ophelia's Shadow", "Phoenix", "Best of Toyah

Biography

Toyah Ann Willcox was born in Birmingham on May 18, 1958, and trained as an actress at the Old Rep Drama School. She was launched as an anti-establishment figure when she appeared in two cutting-edge films in the late '70s: Jubilee, the punk rock movie directed by Derek Jarmen in which she played a character named Mad, and the Who's mod film version of their early-'70s rock opera album Quadrophenia, in which she played the equally bizarrely named character, Monkey. She moved on to front a punk rock band named Toyah, which featured Joel Bogen on guitar, Mark Henry on bass, Steve Bray on drums, Peter Bush on keyboards, and Toyah herself on vocals, cutting a very striking visual image at this time with bright orange hair with pink tips. They signed to the independent label Safari Records (a route that many punk bands in the late '70s took as they found the major record companies reluctant to take chances) and released their debut album, Sheep Farming in Barnet, produced by Steve James and Keith Hale. Originally this was just a six-track EP but was later expanded to a full album release.

Although it was critically acclaimed, the distribution network of Safari Records was not up to the job of getting a record into the charts until they signed a deal with Spartan Records, a specialist distribution company, and Toyah's second album, The Blue Meaning, released in June 1980, did manage to sell enough to reach the Top 40. Still a major breakthrough could not be achieved, and a live album, Toyah Toyah Toyah, was released at the beginning of 1981, recorded at the Lafayette Club in Wolverhampton the previous June and featuring many of the live favorites from the first two albums, including "Victims of the Riddle," "Danced," "Race Through Space," and "Ieya." This performed marginally better, but then Safari released a four-track EP with the umbrella title of Four from Toyah, with the songs "It's a Mystery," "Revelations," "War Boys," and "Angels & Demons." By now the band had a totally new lineup of Phil Spalding, Nigel Glocker, and Adrian Lee, only Joel Bogen remaining from the first three albums and of course Toyah herself.

"It's a Mystery" became a radio favorite early in 1981, and along with the follow-up single, "I Want to Be Free," propelled the band into the Top Ten for the first time. Both singles retained Toyah's sense of punk rock mixed with fun pop, and the video shot for "I Want to Be Free" showed her throwing furniture around a room with total abandonment and destroying a several-tiered wedding cake. 1981 was a hot year for Toyah as the album Anthem, featuring the two big hit singles, was released and became her highest-charting album, reaching number two in the summer and would have topped the album charts were it not for the disco-medley craze of Stars on 45 sweeping the country at that time. By 1982, she had teamed up with producer Steve Lillywhite, who produced the follow-up album, The Changling, a much darker affair, more goth than punk, and this would be the last time that Toyah ever hit the Top Ten. Later that year, another live album, Warrior Rock: Toyah on Tour, a double album, was released, and early in 1982 she was voted the Best Female Singer at the British Rock and Pop Awards (The Brits). However, her pop career was already on the wane, and even a 1984 release of her greatest hits, confusing also called Toyah Toyah Toyah, the same as an earlier live album on the TV specialist label K Tel, failed to return her to the upper regions of the chart.

Disbanding her group, she signed to a major label, Portrait (a division of CBS), and released the solo album Minx, which contained several cover versions, not usually heard on Toyah albums previously, including a version of Alice Cooper's "School's Out." When this too failed to resuscitate her singing career, she turned back to acting and went on to perform in straight dramas on television and theater, including an appearance in the remake of Quatermass, with Sir Lawrence Olivier in The Ebony Tower, and as Billie Piper's mother in the 2007 TV drama Secret Diary of a Call Girl. She continued to record and release albums throughout the late '80s and into the 1990s with hardly any sales success at all. In 1986 she married guitarist Robert Fripp, formally of King Crimson, who joined her on her 1991 album Ophelia's Shadow, and she formed a new band along with her husband called Sunday All Over the World. In the 21st century, she continued to work in all areas of the media, signing up as a presenter on the video channel VH1, providing voices for the children's TV series The Teletubbies, performing at the Nottingham Theatre Royal in the role of Cruella de Vil in 101 Dalmatians, and releasing a new album project, In the Court of the Crimson Queen, in the spring of 2008. ~ Sharon Mawer, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Toyah (band)
Top
Toyah
Origin England
Genres Punk rock, Rock music, New wave, Gothic rock
Years active 1977-1983
Labels Safari Records
Associated acts Blood Donor
Members
Toyah Willcox
Joel Bogen
Phil Spalding
Adrian Lee
Nigel Glockler
Former members
Steve Bray
Pete Bush
Charlie Francis
Mark Henry

Toyah is the name of the band fronted by Toyah Willcox between 1977 and 1983. The only other consistent band member throughout this period was Joel Bogen, Willcox's principal co-writer and guitarist.

Contents

Early days

The band began life in June 1977, and played their first gig without a name or a bass player. After several minor line-up changes, and a brief period called Ninth Illusion before recording any music whatsoever, the band began to record early demos in Toyah's converted warehouse Mayhem - which comprised offices, recording and rehearsal rooms for many young bands on the London scene at that point, including the Toyah band themselves, who quickly took their name from their unusual vocalist and figurehead.

Early demos recorded during 1978 included songs called "Mother", "Hunger Hill", "Eyes", "Computers", "Gaoler", "Waiting", "Danced", "Neon Womb", "Problem Child", "Little Boy" and "Israel", several of which would make it onto the band's early releases, and several others would emerge on the later rarities compilation Mayhem in 1985.

The band soon signed to indie label Safari, and their debut single was released in July 1979. Entitled "Victims Of The Riddle", it featured following band line-up:

  • Toyah Willcox - vocals
  • Joel Bogen- guitar
  • Mark Henry - bass
  • Steve Bray - drums
  • Peter Bush - keyboards

Their next release was an extended 33 rpm EP[1] entitled Sheep Farming In Barnet, and was released in August 1979. The band followed this up with another non-album single, "Bird In Flight"/"Tribal Look", and their full-length debut The Blue Meaning.

Commercial success

Following Willcox's appearance as punk musician "Toola" in an episode of the UK TV series Shoestring, ATV[2] filmed the band during this period, both off-stage and on. The result was a hit documentary watched by 10 million viewers, propelling Toyah into the mainstream, and the live album Toyah! Toyah! Toyah!.

The line-up changed in 1981, with only Willcox and Bogen remaining for the band's next set of releases. They were joined by Phil Spalding on bass, Nigel Glockler on drums and Adrian Lee on keyboards, and released the hit EP "Four From Toyah", the lead-track from which is a cover called "Its A Mystery" - originally recorded by Sheep Farming's producer Keith Hale and his band Blood Donor. The song was a major success, and subsequent promotion pushed the EP to #4 in the UK singles charts.

The album it is taken from, the aptly titled Anthem, reached #2 that same year, and also featured the anthemic smash hit "I Want To Be Free", which charted highly in the UK (#8), Ireland (#10) and South Africa (#10). Two more hit singles appeared - "Thunder In The Mountains" featuring an impressively over-the-top video from Godley & Creme, and the "Four More From Toyah" EP, with its lead track "Good Morning Universe". This introduced Simon Phillips on drums, who had replaced Nigel Glockler (who had left to join Saxon).

The band were now a mainstream success across the UK and much of Europe, but hopes of another massive success were not on the minds of Willcox and Bogen, as they went into the studio to record the follow up to Anthem. Now seeing Adrian Lee's keyboard duties taken over by newcomer Simon Darlow and Joel Bogen, the band recorded a much darker gothic album entitled The Changeling. The album was still a success, as was lead single "Brave New World", but neither reached the heights of their predecessors, and a follow up single announced as "Dawn Chorus" never materialised - a new track, "Be Proud, Be Loud (Be Heard)" emerging instead. The album was followed by a highly successful tour, captured for posterity on the double live album Warrior Rock: Toyah On Tour. The live line-up added Keith Hale on keyboards, and the album shows a truly stunning live act at their peak.

End of an era

The final Toyah album, Love Is The Law, followed in 1983, and again saw another line-up change, with only Willcox, Bogen and Darlow remaining. Phillips had been replaced by Andy Duncan, and Spalding shared bass duties with Brad Lang: both Phillips and Spalding had moved on to work with Mike Oldfield. Singles from the album, however, failed to set the charts alight, and the band's final single, "The Vow", peaked only at #50.

Willcox and Bogen parted ways the following year - the pair writing several songs which never reached the recording studio, and Bogen co-writing one song for Toyah's debut solo album Minx in 1985. Toyah herself had left Safari at this point, after being signed to CBS off-shoot Portrait as a solo artist. As a parting gift to the band's fans, Safari raided their archives and released the rarities compilation Mayhem - featuring demos and unreleased songs - however, this was done without Toyah's consent or knowledge - she found out about the album by spotting it on import in a record store in America.

Glockler joined Saxon where he stayed for many years. Phillips was already an extremely in-demand session musician when he joined Toyah and remains so. Phil Spalding became one of the most sought-after session bassists in the world.

There were discussions regarding a Toyah band reunion in the late '90s/early 2000s. For whatever reasons, it never got off the ground.

Toyah goes solo

Toyah Willcox's first attempt at going solo was a drastic change of style - the album Minx, released in 1985, was worlds apart from the angry, opinionated, strong-willed woman who had made her name with ferocious new-wave punk songs. This was more a pop-oriented album, with Toyah employing songwriting teams and stylists to give her a polished new look and style in an attempt to crack America. It failed, and was Toyah's last charting album. As her albums progressed, she became more and more experimental, later collaborating on several records with her husband, Robert Fripp. Her last album to date was the 6-track project Velvet Lined Shell, which many saw as a return to her punk roots.

Toyah Willcox's solo career [though always released under the name Toyah] was dramatically different to the music she made with Joel Bogen and company, though she often revisits songs from this era, including re-recordings spread across three different albums from the mid 1990s. Her recent live sets have been almost entirely made up of Toyah band songs, with only a smattering of later solo tracks and cover versions.

Discography

Albums

Velvet lined Shell In the Court of the Crimson Queen The Humans

Compilations

  • Toyah! Toyah! Toyah![3] (K-tel album) (1984)
  • Mayhem (rare & archive material) (1985)
  • Best Of Toyah (1994)
  • The Very Best Of Toyah (1997)
  • Live & More: Live Favourites & Rarities (1998)
  • Proud, Loud & Heard: The Best Of Toyah (1998)
  • The Safari Singles Collection Part 1: 1979-1981 (2005)
  • The Safari Singles Collection Part 2: 1981-1983 (2005)
  • Mayhem (Expanded Version) (rare & archive material) (2005)
  • Good Morning Universe - The Very Best of Toyah (2008)

Reissues

Singles

For more information on Toyah Willcox's solo recordings, please refer to her individual wikipedia entry.

Band members

  • Toyah Willcox - 1977-1983, vocals
  • Joel Bogen - 1977-1983, guitars
  • David Robin - 1977-1978, drums
  • John Phillips - 1977, guitar
  • Carrie Kotzberg - 1977, vocals
  • Raja Curry - 1977, bass
  • Tony Ollman - 1977-1978, bass
  • Peter Bush - 1977-1980, keyboards
  • John Windy Miller - 1978, bass
  • Mark Henry - 1979, bass
  • Steve Bray - 1979-1980, drums
  • Charlie Francis - 1979-1980, bass
  • Phil Spalding - 1980-1983, bass
  • Nigel Glocker - 1981, drums
  • Adrian Lee - 1981, keyboards
  • Simon Phillips - 1982, drums
  • Simon Darlow - 1982 (studio only) -1983, keyboards
  • Keith Hale - 1982, keyboards
  • Chris Blackwell - 1982, drums
  • Andy Duncan - 1983, drums and percussion
  • Brad Lang - 1983, bass

Notes

  1. ^ Marketed as an "Alternate Play" record by their label Safari Records
  2. ^ ATV was a division of ITV
  3. ^ Sometimes known as Toyah! Toyah! Toyah! All The Hits by including the LP's cover slogan in the name to differentiate it from the 1980 live album of the same name

References

External links


 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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