Harvey and the Wallbangers | |
Origin: | Cambridge, England |
Years Active: | 1980–1987 |
Current Members: | Jeremy Taylor Jonny Griffiths Harvey Brough Neil "Reg" McArthur Christopher Purves Richard Allen |
Past Members: | Andrew Huggett |
Harvey and the Wallbangers were a 1980s jazz vocal harmony group, playing major festivals and the main concert halls in Europe and the UK, such as the Royal Albert Hall, Sadler's Wells, The Forum, Ronnie Scotts and the Berlin Tempodrom. The group also appeared on the Royal Variety Show and scores of other television programmes including Wogan, Russell Harty and Carrott's Lib.
Harvey and the Wallbangers recorded four albums on their own label (Hubbadots) and also The Jazz Album with Simon Rattle (EMI).[1]
Each year the Wallbangers would put together a new stage show, normally premiered at the Edinburgh Festival[2] [3] [4] (the only time they missed performing in Edinburgh was 1985). The shows were produced by a selection of inspiring Directors.
Performance Year | Show Name | Director |
---|---|---|
1983 | Hep Cats Go Ape | Jude Kelly (Royal National Theatre) |
1984 | Allez Bananes | Rod Natkiel |
1985 | Like men Possessed | James Runcie (TV series Grantchester) |
1986 | Park the Tiger | David Gilmore (Daisy Pulls It Off) |
On 26 June 1985, the Wallbangers appeared on BBC Radio 2 (at 22.15) for the first of a series of six 15-minute Wednesday night shows of "music & mirth". The series was produced by Paul Mayhew-Archer and featured additional material by comedy writer James Hendrie.[5] The short series was repeated again in April the following year.
This was followed in 1987, when the Wallbangers had their own half-hour Tuesday night radio show on BBC Radio 2.[6] Produced again by Paul Mayhew-Archer and written by James Hendrie, the series ran for 6 episodes, hosting a number of special guest celebrities.
Episode No. | Original Air Date | Guests | |
---|---|---|---|
Episode 1 | 20 January 1987 | Jeremy Hardy, Roger McGough, Pete McCarthy. | |
Episode 2 | 27 January 1987 | Paul Merton, John Irwin. | |
Episode 3 | 3 February 1987 | John Dowie, Nick Revell. | |
Episode 4 | 10 February 1987 | Jeremy Hardy, Roger McGough, Pete McCarthy. | |
Episode 5 | 17 February 1987 | Norman Lovett, John Dowie. | |
Episode 6 | 24 February 1987 | Paul Merton, John Irwin. |
In 1986 the band also provided music for an adaptation of Dario Fo's Archangels broadcast on BBC Radio 3.[7] [8]
After Griffiths left the band, the band decided to break up after a final tour.[9] The band performed with Simon Rattle and the London Sinfonietta, later released on Rattle's Jazz Album.[10]
The final show, on Sunday 3 May 1987, was originally booked at the Duke of York's Theatre in the West End, but having sold out in just a morning, it was finally moved to the Sadler's Wells Theatre in Clerkenwell, London, where the Wallbangers performed for the last time.
Stephen Grater (the band's manager for the past four years) had contracted a brain tumor, and died a few days before the final concert. According to Purves, this partly inspired the band members to stop.[11]
Album Cover | Album Title | Album Details | Tracks | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Allez Bananes[12] |
| (1) Five Guy's Named Moe, (2) Who Do You Know in Heaven, (3) My Baby's Gone, (4) Jailhouse Rock, (5) Shine, (6) Your Feet's Too Big, (7) I'll Be Forever Loving You, (8) Boogie Nights, (9) Sweet Talkin' Guy, (10) Sixteen Tons, (11) Traffic Jam, (12) Nutrocker, (13) Right Next Door to An Angel, (14) Sh Boom, (15) Blue Skies. | ||
Wallbangers A – GoGo[13] |
| (1) Make Your Mind Up, (2) Lets Make It Today, (3) Sea Cruise, (4) Ain't Nobody Here But Us Chickens, (5) Breakaway, (6) The Falling Rain, (7) Someday Soon Somehow, (8) Needle in a Haystack, (9) Anything (You Want Me To Do), (10) 523 423, (11) Sometimes Ali, (12) Got The Woo-Woos, (13) Cool Dog, (14) Every Second Every Minute Every Hour of Every Day (I Need Your Love). | ||
Park The Tiger (EP)[14] |
| (1) I Ain't Got You, (2) Tons & Tons of Sunshine, (3) Dancing in the Ballroom, (4) Devil Went Down To Georgia, (5) Like I Should. | ||
Someday Soon Somehow[15] |
| (1) Here Comes Leroy, (2) We're Heading for the Poorhouse, (3) False Alarm, (4) Traffic Jam, (5) Baby Don't Drink, (6) Out of the Shadows, (7) The Concept, (8) Inflation Blues, (9) I Think You're Something Else, (10) Sometimes I Feel like A Motherless Child, (11) Marie, (12) Occapella, (13) Cool Jerk, (14) Let Me Down, (15) Life Is Easy, (16) Since I Don't Have You, (17) Lipstick Traces on a Cigarette, (18) High School Confidential, (19) Who's Fooling Who? (20) Someday Soon Somehow, (21) Breaths. | ||
Simon Rattle Jazz Album[16] |
| (3) After You've Gone, (8) Sweet Sue, (10) Makin' Whoopee!, (11) My Blue Heaven. | ||
Final Concert |
| |||
Early Days[17] |
| (1) Five Guy's Named Moe, (2) Who Do You Know in Heaven, (3) My Baby's Gone, (4) Jailhouse Rock, (5) Shine, (6) Your Feet's Too Big, (7) I'll Be Forever Loving You, (8) Boogie Nights, (9) Sweet Talkin' Guy, (10) Sixteen Tons, (11) Traffic Jam, (12) Nutrocker, (13) Right Next Door to An Angel, (14) Sh Boom, (15) Blue Skies, (16) Glad To Be Here, (17) Paper Moon, (18) Deacon Jones, (19) Atom & Evil, (20) Mr Paganini, (21) Old Man River, (22) Don't You Worry 'bout A Thing, (23) Sunny Side of the Street. |
Christopher Purves, who left the band due to the pressures of touring, trained as an operatic baritone and his first major role was in Inés de Castro by James MacMillan in 1997. He also played the lead roles in Alban Berg's Wozzeck and Verdi's Falstaff, Beckmesser in Wagner's Meistersinger, Tonio in Leoncavallo's Pagliacci and Balstrode in Britten's Peter Grimes.[18] He also sang in a television commercial for fruit drink Um Bongo.[19]
Harvey Brough followed the dissolution by scoring John Godber's Shakers with his brother Rex, providing what the Times described as "blues, country and Bananarama-ish tunes".[20] But like Purves, he later went in a more serious direction, including composing and performing Requiem in Blue, a composition with elements of jazz, folk, and classical music, in tribute to his dead brother.[21] [22] He was married to jazz singer Jacqui Dankworth.[23]
The members of the band worked together occasionally after the split. Harvey Brough was joined by the reunited Wallbangers for a 2004 concert at the Usher Hall in Edinburgh.[24]
In 2016 Clara Sanabras asked Harvey to reform the Wallbangers to appear on one song (Travellers Never Did Lie) on her album "A Hum About Mine Ears". The CD was launched at the Barbican, London in March 2016, by Clara with the new Harvey and The Wallbangers, Britten Sinfonia, Jacqueline Shave, Violin and two choirs – Chorus of Dissent and Harvey's Vox Holloway conducted by Harvey.
In 2017, after a 30-year hiatus, three of the original Wallbangers (Harvey Brough, Jeremy Taylor & Richard Allen) plus two new Wallbangers (Clara Sanabras & Naomi Hammerton) decided to reform the band.[25] They were joined by a rhythm section Andy Hamill and Roy Dodds to perform in three sold-out gigs in London and Southampton, followed by an appearance at the Bury St Edmunds music festival.
At the London shows the Wallbangers were joined on stage by original pianist "Reg Prescott", for the song Blue Skies.
Show Title | Program Details | |
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Six Fifty-Five |
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At Last -It's 1984 |
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Folio – TV Arts Show |
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Royal Variety Performance |
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Cabaret (TV series)[26] |
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The Laughter Show (TV series) |
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The Laughter Show (TV series) |
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Kelly's Eye |
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Summertime Special[27] |
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Minstrel of the Dawn |
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