It was during the early sixties that the popularity of Rock
'n' Roll music was at it's lowest. 1960 saw the media pushing
sloppy Bobbie and Frankie type crap and watered down Elvis
look-alikes, etc., until the explosion of the Liverpool
Beat groups came and everything.
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Amongst
teenagers at this time, to mention even the words
"rock 'n'roll", brought scorn. (Ironic really,
when you consider that even the Beatles and the Rolling
Stones relied on Chuck Berry songs). Teddy Boys were
labelled along with the Greasers and the Ton-up boys
as "Rockers" for their love of the 50's
Rock 'n' roll music, which by now was considered out-dated.
If you went to a dance you saw only beatgroups playing
the charthits of the time. So if you was an "oddball"
who still loved real wild Rock 'n' Roll - it was impossible
to find. The answer, as far as five teenage Teddy
Boys from Newport, South Wales, were oncerned, was
to play it themselves. |
| "Crazy"
Cavan Grogan started out as "Screamin' Count
Dracula & the Vampires", along with Lyndon
Needs, Terry Walley and Gerald Bishop. Although they
loved doing those first early gigs, the band was short-lived
due to their young ages and no one having a driving
licence. It was a good start though and encouraged
by those who went to see them, they knew that, despite
the bastard media who wouldn't play it, Rock 'n' Roll
wasn't dead and forgotten, and there were still thousands
of kids out there who hadn't even heard of Jerry Lee
Lewis, Gene Vincent or Johnny Burnette. |
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Cavan's
sound was first heard of as far back as 1964, when
cavan Grogan, Lyndon Needs and Terry Walley decided
to form a group which at first was called "Count
Dracula and the Vampires" and later for a short
time was known as "The Sundogs". In 1968
Cavan, Lyndon and Terry teamed up with wild boogie
piano player Brian Thomas and bass player Don Kinsella,
as "The Sundogs". They were soon knockin'
'em dead in the local clubs. Cavan and the boys were
out 'n' out Rock 'n' Roll fans before anything! They
played the music because they loved it and not because
it was the "in thing". |
They
got 'Crazy' Cavan Grogan; a dynamic, mean-looking and rubber-legged
singer with the longest pair of drainpipes in the business.
Lyndon Needs, fresh from school and the guitar shop; ready
to play all the flashy leads, and if you gave him an inch
of stage he'd leap miles in every direction. Terry Walley,
who doffed a rhythm guitar and a cowboy hat and hasn't been
seen without either since.
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Mike
Coffey, a tubs man with a fearful backbeat; who,
you might be forgiven for thinking, learned to play
drum by sinking piles in Cardiff dockyard single-
handed. And, of course, a Mr. Bassman. First it
was Don Kinsella, a powerful anchor for six years.
Now new boy Graham Price (a fully paid-up Welshman)
has slotted in neatly as the four-string backman.
A source of inspiration at that time was when Newport
Rock 'n' Roll fan, and editor of "Boppin News",
"Breathless" Dan Coffey, who had for some
time been shipping hundreds of rare, mostly unreleased,
and uptill then unheard of Rockabilly records out
of the USA into Newport.
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When
in 1970 this band was joined by Don Kinsella and Mike
Coffey it was the start of "Crazy Cavan and the
Rhythm Rockers". For four years they build up
fame as a semi- professional unit, playing their own
music, which, influenced by rockabilly, rock 'n' roll
and country music, became known as "crazy rhythm".
By the end of 1973 they had acquired a large following
and there was increasing demand for a record by the
group. It all resulted in the release of a single
and an EP on their own label "Crazy Rhythm".The
demand far exceeded the supply, however, and very
soon these records became collector's items. Even
though they did not perform in many countries, fans
from everywhere responded to their music.
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To
reach more people, the band decided to become fully
professional and soon bookings flowed in thick and fast.
March 1975 stands as a landmark in their development,
for then they were top of the bill at the famous "Lyceum"
in London, England. Fans from all over often travelled
hundreds of miles to this concert, which turned out
to be an enormous succes. |
Thursday,
February 26, 1976: Crazy Cavan 'n' The Rhythm Rockers with
faint, nervous smiles on their faces shuffle awkwardly into
the Finsbury Park office of their manager, Lee Allan. They
congregate in a small room on the first floor, which looks
over the noon bustle of the Seven Sisters Road traffic.
Today
the band will sign their first major British recording contract
with Charly Records.
John
Schroeder, their producer who previously worked with Status
Quo, is already in the room. He's a quiet, softly spoken gentleman
with collar length white hair, and he wears a leather suit.
Bleary greetings are mumbled while the band push wooden chairs
into a cluttered, tight semi-circle. Then they sit down and
nervously wait for their Big Moment. Charly's Chief, Joop
Visser, the guy who snatched up the British rights to Hank
Mizell's 'Jungle Rock' from the King catalogue, places himself
next to the group. On a desk is a thick pile of contracts.
There's
an air of nervous anticipation. Muffled Welsh voices idly
pass the time of day. Feet scratch over the floorboards while
fingers drum relentlessly on knees. Deliberate smiles of reassurance
are passed between the band like comics in a dentist's waiting
room. Then Lee scoops up the contracts and begins to explain
the terms of the deal.
'I
think they're the most dramatic band in the country' Joop
proudly states.
He'd
seen them headlining at the Strand Lyceum, and on numerous
other occasions in pubs and clubs throughout the country.
He was impressed.
Cavan
Grogan is an evil looking dude with a strong, powerful vocal;
Lyndon Needs, a fresh faced young fella, leg splits and slides
all over the stage while snapping out dazzlingly effective
lead licks; Terry Walley (rhythm), Don Kinsella (bass) and
Mike Coffey (drums) quietly position themselves behind the
two front men, firmly laying down steady rhythms. Their style
is simple and direct, influenced by Rockabilly, Country and
Rock 'n' Roll, but interpreted by the individual musicians
to create a unique musical form which they describe as Crazy
Rhythm. Joop has been known to Bop at their gigs. Hopefully,
John comments, I can bring out a lot more in them than has
been found. The problem I have is to take this group, who're
very good live with all the atmosphere and excitement, and
transfer that into a studio and capture it on a record. And
at the same time produce a commercial record that isn't offensive
to their fans. Broaden their appeal without destroying what
they are.
One
by one the band sign on the dotted line. Lee continually pacifying
their last minute qualms.
Pop!
Pop!
The
bubbly's poured into waiting cups. The Welsh voices rise with
cheerful relief. Photos are snapped. Hands shaken. Then somebody
passes round a bowl of peanuts. Now that's got to be a joke,
coz Crazy Cavan 'n' The Rhythm Rockers are on their way! Perhaps
to the top?
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