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The Idle Race |
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| The Idle Race | ||
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| Background information | ||
| Origin | ||
| Years active | 1967 - 1971 | |
| Associated acts |
The Nightriders The Move |
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The Idle Race were an
Contents
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The core of the group -- Nightriders rhythm guitarist Dave Pritchard, bass guitarist Greg Masters and drummer Roger Spencer -- went relatively unchanged from 1959 until February 1972. The band went through several incarnations, lead guitarists and lead singers -- first Billy King and later, more successfully, with Mike Sheridan, with whom they first rose to prominence and, in 1964, to a record deal with EMI.
While Mike Sheridan and The Nightriders failed to crack the charts, the band's lineup during this period included a young lead guitarist and composer named Roy Wood, whose first commercial song "Make Them Understand," appeared on one of the band's B-sides in 1965.
Wood jumped ship to join the then
The Nightriders soldiered on with a new lead guitarist, Johnny Mann, for a few months. When they placed an advert in May 1966 for a younger replacement, the winning applicant was Lynne, then an unknown guitar prodigy from the Birmingham district of Shard End. The Nightriders recorded one single for Polydor, "It's Only The Dog/Your Friend," released in November 1966 with Lynne on lead guitar. Spencer sang lead on the former; the latter was written and sung by Pritchard.
Eager to showcase Lynne's vocal and guitar skills as well as his growing cache of psychedelic songs, the group changed its name -- first to Idyll Race, then Idle Race. Wood, now a national superstar as the Move stormed the charts, helped arrange for his old bandmates a partnership with pop producers Eddie Offord and Gerald Chevin. In 1967, The Idle Race were the first major rock signing by the new British arm of Liberty Records (which would soon merge with United Artists).
The group were well-received by the music press for their
melodies, whimsical lyrics, and inventive production. They often
appeared on the same bill with such bands as
During this period, Idle Race was also -- as one member later
termed it -- a very "schizophrenic" band. While their records were
awash in pop hooks, acid backdrops and lilting harmonies, they were a
much heavier act in a live setting. Lynne's early trademark around the
clubs and colleges was his ability to coax an unusual "violin" sound
out of his guitar, while Masters would occasionally take a bow to his
Hofner bass. In addition to original material, their set list included
extended covers of
Influential BBC disc jockeys such as
Bad luck sabotaged efforts from the start. The debut single on Liberty, a cover of Wood's "Here We Go 'Round The Lemon Tree," was scheduled for release and heavily promoted in September 1967. When the Move's version began getting national in airplay around England as the B-side of the hit "Flowers In The Rain," Liberty abruptly pulled the single and replaced it with Lynne's crunching "Impostors of Life's Magazine" in October. With no promotion, "Impostors" never got out of the starting gate, drawing praise but little chart buzz.
"The Skeleton And The Roundabout" (February 1968) and "The End of the Road" (June 1968) suffered similar fates. Work continued throughout the year -- the band commuted in from Birmingham to London on Sundays, when they were granted free studio time at Advision -- on the Idle Race's debut album, "The Birthday Party," released in October of that year to strong reviews but tepid sales.
Lynne and Wood's mutual respect and friendship deepened. The demo for the Move hit "Blackberry Way" was recorded in Lynne's front room. "Way" borrowed motifs from the Idle Race; the chorus of Lynne's 1969 rocker "Days of the Broken Arrows" lifted part of a riff from the Move's "Wild Tiger Woman." Wood and Lynne spoke often of working together on a project that would integrate classical instruments in a pop/rock idiom.
Lynne received an offer to replace Trevor Burton in the Move in February 1969 but declined with hopes of piloting The Idle Race onto the hit parade.
As a perk, Liberty allowed him to produce the band's second
album, the self-titled "Idle Race," eventually released in November
1969. When the two Lynne-penned, Lynne-produced singles that presaged
the LP, "Days of the Broken Arrows" (April 1969) and "Come With Me"
(July 1969) also failed to chart, their composer's frustration mounted.
Despite more good reviews, "
In January 1970, Lynne accepted Wood's second offer to join
the Move, on condition that they would retire the band and concentrate
on a new venture --
Lynne made two albums ("Looking On" and "Message From The Country") and a handful of superb singles with the Move -- including the first version of "Do Ya" -- as work on the first ELO album continued in the studio throughout 1970 and '71. The Move, now comprising just Wood, Lynne and drummer Bev Bevan, ceased touring in 1970 and adopted its ELO alter ego permanently in 1972.
Meanwhile, Mike Hopkins (guitar) and
In 1971 the band produced their final album, "
After Masters quit the group in 1972, the remnants became the Steve Gibbons Band.
1 The Imposters Of Life's Magazine/Sitting In My Tree (Liberty LBF 15026) October 1967
2 The Skeleton And The Roundabout/Knocking Nails Into My House (Liberty LBF 15054) February 1968
3 The End Of The Road/Morning Sunshine (Liberty LBF 15101) June 1968
4 I Like My Toys/Birthday (Liberty LBF 15129) 1968 *Unissued*
5 Days Of Broken Arrows/Worn Red Carpet (Liberty LBF 15218) April 1969
6 Come With Me/Reminds Me Of You (Liberty LBF 15242) July 1969
7 Dancing Flower/Bitter Green (Regal Zonophone RZ 3036) 1971
Tracklisting:
| Jeff Lynne |
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Discography
Solo:
With
the The Idle Race:
With
The
Move: With
Electric Light Orchestra:
With
the |
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