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Electric Light Orchestra
“And it’s raining all over the world It’s raining all over the world Tonight, the longest night”
Glam Rock was ‘over the top’, ‘in your face’ and unabashedly eccentric and that’s why I loved it. With a few exceptions my parents disliked it, there wasn’t the melody or style that they expected in music, and that made me even more determined to enjoy it. When I first saw the Electric Light Orchestra they seemed to be the ultimate glam group – they had an eccentric name, played rock and had classical instruments – ideal for upsetting parents.
I was therefore more than a little surprised when my parents started to talk about the group. They didn’t dig the music but they knew the players and even claimed that they were linked to songs like “Flowers in the Rain” that we heard every Sunday on “Family Favourites”. Of course I didn’t believe them but I did secretly check out what they said with my mate Geoff (he had an older brother who had copies of Melody Maker going back for years). It was only after talking to Geoff and discovering the Move that I realised the horrific truth - for the first time in my short life I had to admit that my parents knew more about trendy music than me!
It’s Birmingham, February 1966 and an after-hours jam session results in the formation of a key sixties group The Move and the start of the Electric Light Orchestra. The jam involves the main players from the city’s music scene – Bev Bevan, Carl Wayne, Chris “Ace” Kefford, Roy Wood and Trevor Burton. As The Move they not only produce some of the most radio friendly pop singles of the era, they also release cutting edge LPs and have a wild, heavy stage show – three different personalities within one group.
While The Move made an immediate impact in the Birmingham scene it wasn’t until they joined forces with manager Tony Secunda that success in London, and nationally, became a possibility. He was the marketing and image maker that supported the creativity within the band.
Their first release “Night of Fear” hit number two in the charts (‘promoted’ by the group towing a fake H-Bomb around Manchester) and began a string of chart hits and publicity stunts. With hits including “Flowers in the Rain”, “I Can Hear The Grass Grow” and “Blackberry Way” alongside stunts such as sending out promotional blackberry pies and champagne the group appeared to be a manufactured band.
The truth was however much more complex, their publicity was contrived, but the hits were penned by the writing genius Roy Wood and live the group were totally different. It was the mixture of attitudes and approaches that made The Move so dynamic, volatile and ultimately short-lived. The end began when Secunda went too far with his publicity stunts and released, fake, pornographic postcards of the Prime Minister - the group ended up in court and shortly after Secunda and The Move parted company. This was followed by the departure of Ace Kefford and a single “Wild Tiger Woman” that wasn’t a hit. Shaken by this, perceived, failure Carl Wayne threatened to split the group unless the next song was a hit; Roy delivered in style with “Blackberry Way” but the writing was on the wall for the group and, as their live performances became a series of greatest hits, Trevor Burton left.
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