Scottish Band You May Have Missed no.1
With just one hit and five weeks on the UK singles chart you'll be forgiven for not knowing or have heard anything by the Poets. The story goes that while he was en route to Gretna Green to marry his girlfriend, without her parent's blessing, Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham was attracted by a photograph of a quaintly dressed group on the front of ‘Beat News’. Complete with black corduroy suits, velvet collars and cuffs, ruffled lace fronted shirts, high-heeled boots and Robbie Burn’s hairstyles, the Glasgow quartet successfully auditioned for him at one of their regular venues the Flamingo Ballroom. Originally formed in ‘61, the line up at the time of their debut single was Hume Paton (b.6.10.45 Bothwell, Lanarkshire) guitar; Tony Myles (b.11.43 Douglas, Isle of Man) guitar; George Gallacher (b.21.10.45 Glasgow) vocals; John Dawson (b.6.5.44 Glasgow) bass and Alan Weir (b.12.9.43 Garcoch, Lanarkshire) drums.
Their first release was originally titled ‘We're Through’ but was changed to 'Now We're Thru' to avoid confusion with the Hollies single of the same name. It became their only hit, reaching No.31 in November ‘64. They released two singles during ‘65, 'That's The Way It's Got To Be' and 'I Am So Blue', but neither made the charts and as the latter was released, Myles left the group to be replaced by Fraser Watson, from another Scottish group - The Arrows. For their fourth single 'Call Again', Oldham switched them from Decca to his new label Immediate but neither that nor the follow up on the same label, Marvin Gaye's 'Baby Don't You Do It' were successful. The latter’s failure was probably due to the fact that Oldham let Ready Steady Go! floor manager Paul Raven re mix the track, which he did rather disastrously. Raven later mutated into Gary Glitter.
By the end of ‘66 Paton, Dawson and Weir had left the group, with Andi Mulvey being weaned as a replacement for Gallacher who left to play with the Alex Harvey Band. With new manager Bob Shaw, they returned to Decca to release 'Wooden Spoon 'in ‘67, the line up then being Mulvey and Watson, with new boys Jim Breakey, drums and guitarist Norrie Maclean and lan McMillan. 'Wooden Spoon' was written by their manager Eric Woolfson, who would later find fame and fortune as the writer behind The Alan Parsons Project, and Unit 4 + 2's Tommy Moeller.
After the failure of the single, Mulvey quit, Breakey left to join Studio Six and Watson joined the Pathfinders, who subsequently became White Trash - they signed to the Apple label. After several more personnel changes, Hugh Nicholson had emerged as the front man by the summer of '68, flanked by McMillan, Johnny Martin on organ and Dougie Henderson on drums. The line up lasted until ‘71, when Nicholson replaced Junior Campbell in Marmalade and McMillan joined Cody. Led by Henderson, the Poets' final single 'Heyla Hola', a track to promote Strike cola and produced by Radio Scotland DJ Tony Meehan - not the Shadows drummer - proved to be their swan song.
Nicholson and McMillan formed Blue, but despite a lot of promise, they had just one hit 'Gonna Capture Your Heart' in ‘77. In ‘87, Nicholson's writing talents and Gary Numan's voice yielded a couple of hits for Numan as Radio Heart. In the mid '80's, George Gallacher and Fraser Watson were working together in the Dead Loss Band.
5 comments:
What an interesting post. I had not heard of this band before.
How do you get their stuff? Is it even available? Sounds interesting. And if Andrew Loog Oldham liked 'em, they had to be pretty far-out and worth listening to.
How do you get their stuff? Is it even available? Sounds interesting. And if Andrew Loog Oldham liked 'em, they had to be pretty far-out and worth listening to.
George Gallacher and Fraser Watson are occasionally gigging as "The Nearlymen" at the Scotia Bar, Stockwell Street, Glasgow, as of May 2008.
Anyone got a contact number for the Nearlymen Band
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