From ''
The Distance Between ''
Label: (1)
Orange Twin Records -- OTR008, (2)
Track & Field -- heat 08
Format: CD,
Album
Country: (1)
US, (2) UK
Released:
2002
Tracklist
01.
Free Scene
02.
Sister City
03.
Ever So Over
04. Now Is When
05. Some Of
Shelly's
Blues
06. Bead By Bead
07. This Wil Be Our Year
08.
Tugboat Sailor
09. The
Sparkle
10.
Morning Of
My Life
11.
Conquistadors
------------------------
The Zombies are an
English rock band.
Formed in
1961 in
St Albans and led by
Rod Argent on piano and
Colin Blunstone on vocals, the band scored US hits in the mid- and late-1960s with "
She's Not There", "
Tell Her No", and "
Time of the Season".
Their
1968 album Odessey and Oracle, comprising twelve songs by the group's principal songwriters,
Argent and
Chris White, is ranked 80 on
Rolling Stone magazine's list of the
500 Greatest Albums of All
Time.
History
1961--1968
The group formed in 1961 in
St Albans, England, and gained their initial reputation playing the Old Verulamians
Rugby Club in that city.
The group was formed while the members were at school.
Some sources state that Argent,
Atkinson and
Grundy were at
St Albans School, while Blunstone and
White were students at St Albans
Boys'
Grammar School (since renamed
Verulam School).
Argent was a boy chorister in
St Albans Cathedral Choir.
After winning a beat-group competition sponsored by the
London Evening News, The Zombies signed to Decca and recorded their first hit, "She's Not There" (Argent's second song, written specifically for this session), which was released in mid-1964 and peaked at number 12 in the UK, where it was their only
UK Top 40 hit.
This minor-key, jazz-tinged number, distinguished by its musicianship and Blunstone's breathy vocal, was unlike anything heard in
British rock at the time. It was first aired in the
United States in early
August 1964 on
New York City rock station
WINS by
Stan Z.
Burns, who debuted the song on his daily noontime "
Hot Spot". The tune began to catch on in early fall and eventually climbed to #2.
Like many other
British Invasion groups, The Zombies were sent to the United States to tour behind their new hit single.
Among their most memorable early
U.S. gigs were
Murray the K's
Christmas shows at the
Brooklyn Fox Theatre, where the band played seven performances a day.
Hugh Grundy later recalled also contributing to the sets by the Shangri-Las — not as a musician, but by revving a motorcycle brought backstage as a sound effect for their performance of "
Leader of the Pack".
In
January 1965 the band was set to make their first in person appearance on
U.S. television. The Zombies were to appear on the first episode of
NBC's Hullabaloo. They played "She's Not There" to a screaming hysterical audience full of teenage girls.
After the follow-up single "
Leave Me Be" stiffed in the UK (and not issued as an "A" single in the US), Rod Argent's "Tell Her No" became another big seller in the United States (in
1965), but failed to make the
Top 40 in the band's native UK.
Subsequent recordings such as "
I Love You" (which became a hit for
People! in 1968), "Indication", "
Whenever You're Ready", and "Is This the
Dream" failed to achieve the success of the previous two
singles (although they had continued success in
Scandinavia and the
Philippines).
Their first UK LP,
Begin Here (1965), was a collection of early singles, featuring half a dozen original songs combined with several
R&B; covers.
In 1967, The Zombies signed to
CBS Records, for whom they recorded the album Odessey and Oracle.
Because the band's budget could not cover session musicians, they used a
Mellotron, a device designed to imitate orchestral sections.
By the time Odessey and Oracle was released in
April 1968, the group had disbanded.
The album sold poorly and was only given a U.S. release because musician
Al Kooper, then signed to
Columbia Records, convinced his label of the album's merits.
An album track, "Time of the Season", written by Argent, was released as a single and eventually (
1969) became a nationwide hit (
Billboard #3).
The band's original lineup declined to regroup for concerts, so various concocted groups tried to capitalize on the success and falsely toured under the band's name.
Another such group toured in
1988, going so far as to trademark the group's name (since the band had let the mark lapse) and recruit a member named
Ronald Hugh Grundy, who was passed off as being an original member.
Solo careers
Rod Argent formed a band called Argent, with Chris White as a non-performing songwriter (it should be noted here that the Chris White who had a hit in
1976 with the single "
Spanish Wine" is a different person).
Colin Blunstone started a solo career after a brief period outside the music business, including working in the burglary claims section of an insurance company.
Both Argent and White provided him with new songs. He also did studio vocals for
The Alan Parsons Project.
- published: 29 Mar 2011
- views: 1045