Label: Repertoire Records (UK), REPUK 1088
Style: Garage Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Beat, Rhythm & Blues
Country: Carlisle, England
Time: 49:11, 44:55
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 184, 208 Mb
The
V.I.P.'s were a British R&B musical group formed in Carlisle,
Cumberland, England in late 1963, out of an earlier outfit known as The
Ramrods, who had formed in Carlisle in 1960. From a musical
reorientation the band changed their name to Art in 1967, and released
the album Supernatural Fairy Tales.
The band members at various times
were: Mike Harrison (lead vocals) (ex Dino and the Danubes, The
Dakotas, The Ramrods); Greg Ridley (bass guitar) (ex Dino and the
Danubes, The Dakotas); Frank Kenyon (rhythm guitar) (1963–67) (born 12
October 1945, Carlisle) (ex The Teenages, The Ramrods); Jimmy Henshaw
(lead guitar) (1963–67) (born James Henshaw, 20 October 1941, in
Newarthill, near Motherwell, North Lanarkshire, Scotland died 1 May
2007, Carlisle) (ex The Ramrods); Keith Emerson (organ) (ex-Gary Farr
& The T-Bones) (1966–1967); Luther Grosvenor (lead guitar) (1967);
Walter Johnstone (drummer) (1963–67) (born 11 March 1943, Carlisle) (ex
The Teenages, The Ramrods); and Mike Kellie (drummer) (1967).
When
Emerson left in early 1967 to form The Nice, Harrison, Ridley, Grosvenor
and Kellie changed their name to 'Art', and released one album,
Supernatural Fairy Tales, produced by Guy Stevens, covering Stephen
Stills' "What's That Sound (For What It's Worth)" and Felix Cavaliere's
"Come on Up". The group then disbanded, with all four members of the
group's final line-up forming Spooky Tooth, with the addition of the
American musician Gary Wright, later that same year.
They also
participated in a psychedelic album entitled Featuring The Human Host
and the Heavy Metal Kids by a collective known as Hapshash and the
Coloured Coat, formed by Guy Stevens and an influential British graphic
design and avant-garde musical partnership between Michael English and
Nigel Waymouth. The musicians involved in that project were Mike
Harrison on keys and vocals, Luther Grosvenor on guitars, Greg Ridley on
bass and Mike Kellie on drums, as well as Stevens, English and
Waymouth. It was the first time that the term 'heavy metal' was ever
used in music, even though that album had nothing to do with heavy metal
music, being closer to psychedelic music. The album was issued in 1967
by Liberty Records, and contained only five songs from two minutes to
more than 15 minutes of psychedelic and almost meditative state kind of
music.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_V.I.P.%27s_(band))
CD1: FilesPayout UploadyIo KatFile
CD2: FilesPayout UploadyIo KatFile



No comments:
Post a Comment