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Ellis, Beggs, & Howard |
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Ellis Beggs & Howard were an English rock band (1987–1990).
The original demo tapes for the group were recorded in North
London at their management's building, the PARC tower. PARC were a
leading management company, being the sole representatives of
Originally, EBH were made up of Simon
Ellis (keyboards and programming), Nick
Beggs (bass guitar and Chapman
stick), and
Although they experimented with several other guitarists,
including
EBH started in late 1987 by playing a few low-key gigs in London. They featured in the NME-sponsored shows at The Greyhound in Fulham, and a high-powered performance at the nightclub Heaven, but it was in the big arenas that they rose to the occasion with a combination of programming live performance.
Initially, the press were sceptical about the merits of the band, simply because of Nick Beggs' link with Kajagoogoo, the iconic pop band of several years before. Also, because the band were managed by PARC Management, the critics mistakenly hinted that it was built more on hype than on substance.
EBH quickly found success in Continental Europe. Their first single, "Big Bubbles, No Troubles", was a hit in 1988, receiving several awards in many of countries, though without much success in England (it reached number 41 in the UK charts).
After they appeared on the Night
Network television show, the press was
inundated with critical mail, often accusing them of miming.
After the failure of their first album, Homelands, in the United Kingdom, and despite it success elsewhere in Europe, tensions in the band became overwhelming. Their record company, BMG, seemed to be ignoring the band's several major touring and recording successes, and it was rumoured that EBH and PARC were looking for a way out of the contract in favour of a more supportive label. Nevertheless, from 1989 they recorded the basic tracks of what was to have been their second album with the Fleetwood Mac Mobile, at the Easi Hire rehearsal complex in London.
With the band and record company tearing each other apart, the album was never released by a label, although Beggs made it available several years later as a "home-grown" CD release entitled "The Lost Years Vol. 1". The album is notable for contributions from musical luminaries Warren Cuccurullo and Robert Fripp.
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