Their material contained a range of R'n'B material (Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Butterfield Blues Band, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, and later: Jethro Tull, Joe Cocker, Rare Earth, The Band, Savoy Brown). The band encouraged interaction with their audiences and sought to entertain, eschewing the trend at the time for tedious, extended soloing. A feature of their act was their finale for every gig - an explosive rendition of ''Try a Little Tenderness'' in the spirit of Otis Redding.
Drummers came and went. Danny Murphy was replaced by John Hunter, who was replaced by Selwyn Wright (ex-Parade), who was replaced by Trevor Fielding (ex-Einstein's Theory). Laurie Stone (ex- The Touch) who worked with Rickwood joined in 1970 adding keyboards, sax, trombone and vocals, heralding a period of expansion. Shields took up trumpet, Fitzgibbon flute, Peter Evans joined adding vocals, harmonica, flute and sax, Bob Brown joined as percussionist. Carol Lloyd who worked with Fitzgibbon was invited to add vocals, former drummer Selwyn Wright would sit in on bongos and congas and Paul Murphy (ex-Thursday's Children, Light) would guest on vocals and harmonica. Numbers on stage could swell to a dozen and gigs took on the nature of musical "events".
Continuing in this fashion Railroad Gin grew in reputation around Brisbane and its regions, playing most major venues, but in 1971 departures would necessitate a rethink. Rickwood left in mid 1971 followed shortly afterwards by Fitzgibbon. Carol Lloyd stepped up to become the primary vocalist, and the band moved on to a new era and a revised musical direction, with Carol front and centre.
By 1973 the line-up consisted of Gary Evans, Peter Evans, Dimitri Jansons, Carol Lloyd, Phil Shields, Laurie Stone and Bob Brown. They were signed to Polydor Records and recorded their debut album, 'A Matter of Time' (1974). Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described how it, "featured a mixture of Shocking Blue, Jethro Tull and Steely Dan elements with its hard guitar/flute-driven sound." Its title track was issued as a single in June 1974, and reached #1 on the local Brisbane charts. It was co-written by Lloyd and Stone. For the album, seven of nine tracks were written or co-written by Stone. Gary Evans (no relation to Peter) replaced Trevor Fielding on drums.
Two highlights from this period were their concerts in the Brisbane Botanic Gardens which drew record crowds and a Rock Mass performed at Brisbane's St John's Cathedral with the Queensland Youth Orchestra. In May 1974 they supported Suzi Quatro's performance at Brisbane's Festival Hall. In August of the following year Lloyd left to pursue her solo career and was replaced on lead vocals by Judee Ford (ex-Tramway). The group undertook a tour of eastern capital cities and Adelaide. In December 1975 Jansons left and was replaced on bass guitar by Jim Dickson. The group's second album, 'Journey's End', appeared in October 1976, which McFarlane felt, "followed the formula set by the debut, but with a lighter, more polished Adult Oriented Rock (AOR) sound (somewhere between Chicago, Styx and Fleetwood Mac)."
Late in 1976 Roger Murray was on bass guitar and Col Wilson was on drums. Stone left the band early in the next year and they disbanded shortly after. McFarlane observed, "they made an impact with its sweaty, full-tilt gigs and a commercial blend of soul, brassy R&B; and percussion-driven hard rock." Stone formed a duo, Moscos and Stone, with Peter Moscos, which released a self-titled album in 1979. Stone later turned to soundtrack music for TV and films, including The Flying Doctors (from 1986). In the 1990s he relocated to Los Angeles. Founding member Phil Shields died in May 2006. Carol Lloyd died in February 2017 of interstitial pulmonary fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, aged 68.
Drummers came and went. Danny Murphy was replaced by John Hunter, who was replaced by Selwyn Wright (ex-Parade), who was replaced by Trevor Fielding (ex-Einstein's Theory). Laurie Stone (ex- The Touch) who worked with Rickwood joined in 1970 adding keyboards, sax, trombone and vocals, heralding a period of expansion. Shields took up trumpet, Fitzgibbon flute, Peter Evans joined adding vocals, harmonica, flute and sax, Bob Brown joined as percussionist. Carol Lloyd who worked with Fitzgibbon was invited to add vocals, former drummer Selwyn Wright would sit in on bongos and congas and Paul Murphy (ex-Thursday's Children, Light) would guest on vocals and harmonica. Numbers on stage could swell to a dozen and gigs took on the nature of musical "events".
Continuing in this fashion Railroad Gin grew in reputation around Brisbane and its regions, playing most major venues, but in 1971 departures would necessitate a rethink. Rickwood left in mid 1971 followed shortly afterwards by Fitzgibbon. Carol Lloyd stepped up to become the primary vocalist, and the band moved on to a new era and a revised musical direction, with Carol front and centre.
By 1973 the line-up consisted of Gary Evans, Peter Evans, Dimitri Jansons, Carol Lloyd, Phil Shields, Laurie Stone and Bob Brown. They were signed to Polydor Records and recorded their debut album, 'A Matter of Time' (1974). Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described how it, "featured a mixture of Shocking Blue, Jethro Tull and Steely Dan elements with its hard guitar/flute-driven sound." Its title track was issued as a single in June 1974, and reached #1 on the local Brisbane charts. It was co-written by Lloyd and Stone. For the album, seven of nine tracks were written or co-written by Stone. Gary Evans (no relation to Peter) replaced Trevor Fielding on drums.
Two highlights from this period were their concerts in the Brisbane Botanic Gardens which drew record crowds and a Rock Mass performed at Brisbane's St John's Cathedral with the Queensland Youth Orchestra. In May 1974 they supported Suzi Quatro's performance at Brisbane's Festival Hall. In August of the following year Lloyd left to pursue her solo career and was replaced on lead vocals by Judee Ford (ex-Tramway). The group undertook a tour of eastern capital cities and Adelaide. In December 1975 Jansons left and was replaced on bass guitar by Jim Dickson. The group's second album, 'Journey's End', appeared in October 1976, which McFarlane felt, "followed the formula set by the debut, but with a lighter, more polished Adult Oriented Rock (AOR) sound (somewhere between Chicago, Styx and Fleetwood Mac)."
Late in 1976 Roger Murray was on bass guitar and Col Wilson was on drums. Stone left the band early in the next year and they disbanded shortly after. McFarlane observed, "they made an impact with its sweaty, full-tilt gigs and a commercial blend of soul, brassy R&B; and percussion-driven hard rock." Stone formed a duo, Moscos and Stone, with Peter Moscos, which released a self-titled album in 1979. Stone later turned to soundtrack music for TV and films, including The Flying Doctors (from 1986). In the 1990s he relocated to Los Angeles. Founding member Phil Shields died in May 2006. Carol Lloyd died in February 2017 of interstitial pulmonary fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, aged 68.
Phil Shields (guitar, trumpet), Glen Rickwood (guitar), Dimitri Jansons (bass), Geoffrey Fitzgibbon (vocals, flute), Danny Murphy (drums), John Hunter (drums), Selwyn Wright (drums, bongos. congas), Trevor Fielding (drums), Laurie Stone (keyboards, sax, trombone,vocals), Peter Evans (vocals), Bob Brown (percussion), Carol Lloyd (vocals), Judee Ford (vocals), Jim Dickson (bass), Roger Murray (bass), Col Wilson (drums)
''Matter Of Time (#47) / Don't Rile Me'' 1974 Polydor
''Do Ya' Love Me (#59) / The Acadamy Rock'' 1974 Polydor
''The Keeper And The Lord (#89) / A Long Time Coming'' 1975 Polydor
''You Told The World (#53) / The Driver'' 1975 Polydor
''Journeys End / The Best That I Can'' 1976 Polydor
'A Matter Of Time' (#35) 1975 Polydor
'Journey's End' 1976 Polydor
References
Railroad Gin - Wikipedia
http://top100singles.blogspot.com.au/
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