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Thursday, 12 September 2013

HEADBAND



Headband formed in February 1971 in Adelaide with Chris Bailey (ex-Red Angel Panic) on bass guitar, Joff Bateman (ex-Resurrection, W.G. Berg, War Machine) on drums, Peter Head (ex-Johnny Mac and the Macmen, Peter Beagley Trio, Boz) on keyboards and Mauri Berg (ex-Silhouettes, Ides of March, Resurrection, W.G. Berg, War Machine) on guitar, harmonica and lead vocals. They were managed by Hamish Henry who also managed rivals, Fraternity, with Bon Scott. Headband played progressive blues rock with symphonic, country and pop influences. They had a strong work ethic, rehearsing and performing constantly, including three shows a week in high schools across Adelaide. "We did modern jazz at nightclubs, rock'n'roll for discos, J.S. Bach for pleasure, barbershop quartet stuff for laughs, electronic music at jam sessions, blues when feelin' low, and country and folk for interest. A combination of these influences comes out in our original material." explained Peter Head.

The band practised "group indoctrination" in all types of music, even attending chamber music concerts together. On 22 October 1971, they supported Elton John's Adelaide show at the Memorial Drive Tennis Centre. Their debut single, "Scratch My Back" was released locally by RCA and did not reach the charts. It was straight forward pop and was followed by their second single, "Land of Supercars", which was issued nationally in 1972. "Country Lady" was also released that year. In July, the band finished third in the 1972 Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds – a national performance competition between the best groups representing each state – having been a finalist in the previous year.

Headband supported The Rolling Stones on their Sydney performances in February 1973 and issued "A Song for Tooley" as their next single. Their debut album, 'A Song for Tooley', was released in September on Polydor. Its "sound was more adventurous but it was erratic, with the material ranging from Uriah Heep-styled heavy rock to psychedelic pop and progressive jazz". It featured Sydney Symphony players and an 110-piece children's choir. The album spent five weeks in the charts, making the Top 50. The album featured stunning hand drawn cover art by internationally renowned Adelaide artist Vytas Šerelis, and a fold-out poster with photos and biographical details of band members. Šerelis created promotional posters and photos for Headband, Fraternity, The Mount Lofty Rangers and Chequers. Headband relocated to Sydney in 1973, where they played the pub circuit with residencies including at the Whisky a Go Go. They had toured Australia supporting international acts The Rolling Stones, Elton John and John Mayall. In 1974 they returned to Adelaide and disbanded. After Headband had separated, Bailey joined the Australian rock group The Angels in January 1977, he was later a founding member of GANGgajang. Headband was inducted into the South Australian Music Hall Of Fame on April 1, 2016 at The Goodwood Institute, Adelaide, South Australia. Chris Bailey died in 2013.

Members

Chris Bailey (vocals, bass), Joff Bateman (drums), Peter Beagley [Peter Head] (keyboards), Mauri Berg (guitar)




SINGLES 
''Scratch My Back / Musical Man'' 1972 RCA
''Land Of Supercars (#80) / Oh, How I Miss The Country'' 1972 RCA
''Country Lady (#48) / Stay With Me'' 1973 Polydor 
'A Song For Tooley / Brand New Morning'' 1973 Polydor

 ALBUMS 
'A Song For Tooley' (#44) 1973 Polydor




References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headband_%28band%29

http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/


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