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Alan Clayson about TJ in Record Collector (1998) Meanwhile, Tony recovered from having his nose remodelled. Looking less pugnacious, he conducted auditions for a racking combo in Soho's Roaring 20s club. Though Johnny Kidd's Pirates were meant to accompany him for one cancelled engagement, the ex-Searcher wasn't comfortable with an established group, functioning better with previously unattached individuals, "who I felt could live in the cauldron of travelling together, rehearsing . . . We didn't want friction or any disruptive element within the group. We wanted four guys who would gell socially as well as musically." |
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Southerners all, they turned out to be organist Martin Raymond from the Westminster Four; ex-Hot Gang guitarist Ian Buisel (later Ian Leighton); and Paul Francis, who'd drummed for Rolf Harris and the Kangaroos.4th September 1964 marked he concert debut of Tony Jackson and the Vibrations. Significantly no Searchers items were considered for their repertoire Tony was aware that "the Small Faces, the Who and all the Mod groups were coming in, so we took that path � a lot of crash, bang, wallop". With keyboards and a female chorale framing an aggressive lead vocal, the first single, "Bye Bye Baby", was also a radical departure from what Searchers' fans might lave anticipated. While Jackson wasn't exactly starting from scratch, its climb into he Top 40 was no mean feat. |
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above: promo of TJ's 1st single No sooner had they started to rehearse than
they were rushed into the studio - ironically because The Searchers had
cancelled a session at short notice because Mike Pender was ill. "We were
very lucky," Tony explained later. "The Vibrations and I hit it off right
from the start, both musically and as friends. When we went into the studios
to cut 'Bye Bye Baby', we'd only had a couple of days' rehearsals, but
things worked out very well. People couldn't believe I hadn't used
sessionmen. That's how quickly the group knitted together."
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| Above: label of both sides - UK release from September 1964, his only chart entry in his home country. |
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| above: Swedish release below: German cover (Vogue DV 14212) | above: envelope cover from Holland below: German label, b-side |
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