Wizzard were a Birmingham
-based band formed
by Roy Wood, former member of The Move and co-founder of Electric Light Orchestra.
The Guinness Book of 500 Number One Hits states, "Wizzard
was Roy Wood just as much as
Wings were
Paul McCartney."
Biography
Not long after the release of Electric Light Orchestra's first
album, Wood found himself at odds with
co-leader
Jeff Lynne whom would argue
frequently about the direction of the band. Wood decided he wanted
to head off in a different musical direction and left, taking band
members Bill Hunt (
keyboards and
french horn),
Hugh McDowell (
cello),
and ELO's
sound engineer, Trevor
Smith, with him, to found Wizzard.
Also in the line-up were former Move
bassist Rick
Price, drummers Charlie Grima and Keith
Smart (all taken from Birmingham
group Mongrel), plus saxophone players Mike Burney and Nick Pentelow;
son of actor Arthur
Pentelow. Hunt was later replaced by Bob Brady.
The band
made their live debut at a rock and roll festival at Wembley Stadium
on 5 August 1972, followed by an appearance at the
Reading Festival later that
month. With Wood's distinctive warpaint make-up and
colourful costume,not to mention regular appearances on
BBC Television's
Top of the Pops in which members and
friends variously appeared in pantomime horses, gorilla costumes or
as roller-skating angels, often wielding custard pies for good
measure, they were one of the most picturesque groups in the
British
glam rock era. In January 1973
they scored their first
Top 10 hit with "Ball Park Incident". Although they
released two albums,
Wizzard
Brew, and
Introducing Eddy & The
Falcons, their biggest hit was with their second
single. "
See My
Baby Jive", Wood's faithful and affectionate tribute to the
Phil Spector generated '
Wall of Sound', made No. 1 in the
UK Singles Chart for four weeks. The
follow-up, "
Angel Fingers", also
topped the charts for one week.
The band's
1973 Christmas single "I Wish It Could Be
Christmas Everyday" has become something of an annual fixture
on British
radio and television (along
with Slade's "Merry Xmas Everybody" and, until his
public fall from grace, Gary Glitter's
"Another Rock n' Roll
Christmas"). It was reissued in 1981, and a
12" re-recording appeared in 1984.
During 1973 Wood was simultaneously exploring a
solo career with his album
Boulders,
which produced a Top 20 hit in "Dear Elaine".
The subsequent heavy
working schedule and strain led to health problems, and several
cancelled or postponed live dates on a spring 1974 tour of the
UK
. One highlight of 1974 was a return to the
Top 10 with "Rock 'n' Roll Winter", a song dedicated to a
girlfriend of the time
Lynsey de
Paul, who repaid the honour by
recording a Wizzard
flavoured song "Ooh I Do" a few months later.
A tour of the U.S.
later that year failed to bring them any commercial
success there, but some members guested on a Beach Boys session, which resulted in the
eventual release of the latter group's single "It's OK" in
1976.
Wizzard was an expensive band to maintain, both because of the
large line-up, in terms of recording costs, and Bill Hunt's
capacity to smash the pianos of the venues they were playing at.
According to Price in a radio interview,
"...even when we've
had permission to do so. At one gig they said, 'Oh, go on,
smash it up; it's only worth a fiver.' So Bill smashed it
up, and we got a bill for a hundred and ten quid!" Studio time was an even greater drain on
the band's finances. Price again:
"When we finished recording
"Angel Fingers" it was rumoured that we had spent more time in the
studio than Paul McCartney had with the whole of the Band on the Run album. Whether it
was true or not, this meant that most of the record company's money
was spent in studio time and that the members of the band had to
rely on live touring work for their income. A couple of
tours in the UK and one tour of the U.S. were not enough to ensure
regular wages for the band. One by one the band members
found other, more lucrative, things to occupy their
time."
By autumn 1975 they had split, leaving a farewell single
"Rattlesnake Roll", which failed to
chart, plus a third album
Main Street
which their
record label did not
release as they deemed it too uncommercial. It finally saw the
light of day in 2000. Wizzard had initially intended their second
album to be a
double, with one disc a
set of
rock and roll pastiches, the
other disc jazz-rock. The record label heard the rock and roll set,
and said they intended to release that as a single album, which
appeared in 1974 as
Introducing Eddy and the
Falcons.
Main Street,
which languished in the vaults for around 25 years and was for some
time presumed lost, was the jazz-rock set.
In 1977 Wood and Price formed the shortlived
Wizzo Band, after which Wood reverted to a solo
career in addition to
producing
records for other acts, notably a 1979 Top 10
cover version of "
Duke
of Earl" for British
doo-wop
revivalists,
Darts.
Discography
Albums
Singles
- "Ball Park Incident" (1972); #6 UK
- "See My Baby Jive" 1973); #1 UK
†
- "Angel Fingers " (1973); #1 UK
‡
- "I Wish It
Could Be Christmas Everyday" (1973); #4 UK ¶
- "Rock 'N' Roll Winter (Loony's Tune)" (1974); #6 UK
- "This Is The Story Of My Love (Baby)" (1974); #34 UK
- "Are You Ready to Rock" (1974); #8 UK
- "Rattlesnake Roll" (1975)
- "Indiana Rainbow" (1976) - credited to Roy Wood's Wizzard
- "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" (re-issue) (1981); #41
UK
- "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" (re-entry of re-issue
with 12" re-recording) (1984); #23 UK
- "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" (re-entry) (2007) #16
UK
- "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" (re-entry) (2008) #31
UK
† Vocal backing by The Suedettes‡ Vocal backing:The Suedettes and
the Bleach Boys¶ Wizzard featuring vocal backing by The Suedettes
plus The Stockland Green Bilateral School First Year Choir with
additional noises by Miss Snob and Class 3C
References
- priceandlee.org
External links