The Pleazers Explained

The Pleazers
Background:group_or_band
Alias:G-Men
Origin:Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Years Active:
Label:Zodiac
Past Members:see Members

The Pleazers were an Australian-formed rhythm and blues musical group which were popular in New Zealand. They began in Brisbane as the G-Men in 1964. They released a sole studio album, Definitely Pleazers, in 1966, before disbanding in the following year.

History

The Pleazers began in Brisbane in 1964 as the G-Men with the line-up of Jim Cerezo on lead guitar, Dennis Gilmore on drums, Vince Lipton on bass guitar, Billy London on vocals and Peter Newing on rhythm guitar.[1] They soon moved to Sydney, changed their name to the Pleazers, with the line-up of Gilmore, London and Newing joined by Bobby Bacon (a.k.a. Bob Cooper, a.k.a. Bob London: Billy's brother) on lead vocals, Bruce "Phantom" Robinson on lead guitar, and Ronnie Peel (ex-Mystics, the Missing Links) on bass guitar.[1] [2] [3]

The Pleazers were signed by Eldred Stebbing of Zodiac Records, who brought them to his home base in Auckland, New Zealand in 1965.[1] [2] They soon appeared on a local TV show, Let's Go. Their initial single, "Last Night", did poorly, while its follow-up, a cover version of Them's "Gloria" (February 1965),[1] broke into the national singles chart. Richie Unterberger of AllMusic described the band as "one of the only New Zealand groups competently playing tough, British Invasion/R&B-styled rock & roll."[4]

Early in 1966 Bacon was replaced by English-born vocalist Shane Hales (a.k.a. Trevor Hales).[1] [2] They issued a five-track extended play, A Midnight Rave with the Pleazers, in March with the line-up of Gilmore, Hales, London, Newing, Peel and Robertson.[1] [2] One of its tracks, "Bald Headed Woman", was included on a various artists' compilation CD, (October 1999).[1] [5]

The Pleazers released their debut studio album Definitely Pleazers in 1966 on the Zodiac label,[2] which was produced by John Hawkins. They returned to Australia later that year with Gus Fenwick (ex-Layabouts) replacing Peel on bass guitar.[2] The group disbanded in 1967.[1] [2] Raven Records issued a compilation album A Midnight Rave with the Pleazers in 1987.[2] Unterberger rated it as three out of five stars and opined that the compilation was "focusing mostly on their original material. Competent British Invasion-style rock, usually in a Stonesy style, though sometimes in a poppier vein."[6]

Members

Discography

Albums

Extended plays

Singles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pleazers . Sergent . Bruce . New Zealand Music of the 60's, 70's and a bit of 80's . 7 July 2017 .
  2. Book: McFarlane . Ian . Ian McFarlane . . Encyclopedia entry for 'The Pleazers' . https://web.archive.org/web/20040813101017/http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=637 . http://www.whammo.com.au/encyclopedia.asp?articleid=637 . 1999 . . . 13 August 2004 . 1-86508-072-1 . dead.
  3. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20121002145240/http://hem.passagen.se/honga/database/p/peelronnie.html . Ronnie Peel/Rockwell T. James . hem2.passagen.se . Australian Rock Database (Magnus Holmgren) . Holmgren . Magnus . 2 October 2012 . 7 July 2017 .
  4. Web site: The Pleazers | Biography & History . Unterberger . Richie . . 14 July 2017 .
  5. Web site: Pebbles, Vol. 12: The World – Various Artists . Unterberger . Richie . AllMusic . 22 July 2017 .
  6. Web site: A Midnight Rave with the Pleazers – The Pleazers . Unterberger . Richie . AllMusic . 22 July 2017 .