Artist: Caravan
Genre(s):
ROck: Alternative
Blues
Rock
Other
Discography:
Liv'canterbury Comes To London
Year: 1999
Tracks: 10
The Battle Of Hastings
Year: 1995
Tracks: 11
Back To Front
Year: 1983
Tracks: 8
The album
Year: 1980
Tracks: 9
Cool Water
Year: 1977
Tracks: 11
Blind Dog At St. Dunstans'
Year: 1976
Tracks: 9
Cunning stunts
Year: 1974
Tracks: 7
Caravan and The New Symphonia
Year: 1974
Tracks: 5
For girl who grow plump in the night
Year: 1973
Tracks: 7
Waterloo Lily
Year: 1972
Tracks: 6
In The Land Of Grey And Pink
Year: 1971
Tracks: 5
In the land of Gray and pink
Year: 1971
Tracks: 5
If I Could Do It All Over Again I'd Do It All Over You
Year: 1970
Tracks: 8
If I Could Do It All Over Agai
Year: 1970
Tracks: 8
Caravan
Year: 1968
Tracks: 8
Caravan was one of the more formidable reformist rock acts of the Apostles to come out of England in the 1960s, though they were ne'er much more than a very successful cult banding at home, and, apart from a brief second in 1975, scantily a cult band anyplace else in the world. They only ever charted ane album in their first sextet years of activity, merely they made a lot of haphazardness in the English john Rock squeeze, and their undermentioned has been sufficiently loyal and full to maintain their ferment in print for extended periods during the 1970s, the 1990s, and in the new c.
Van grew out of the breakup of the Wilde Flowers, a Canterbury-based grouping formed in 1964 as an R&B-based outfit with a jazzy-edge. The Wilde Flowers had a card of Brian Hopper on guitar and sax, Richard Sinclair on rhythm method guitar, Hugh Hopper playing freshwater bass, and Robert Wyatt on the drums. Kevin Ayers passed through and through the lineup as a vocaliser, and Richard Sinclair was succeeded on rhythm method guitar by Pye Hastings in 1965. Wyatt later became the lead vocaliser, succeeded by Richard Coughlan on drums. Hugh Hopper left and was replaced by Dave Lawrence and then Richard Sinclair, and Dave Sinclair, Richard's full cousin, came in on keyboards. Finally, in 1966, Wyatt and Ayers formed Soft Machine and the Wilde Flowers dissolved. In the wake of the earlier group's breakup, Hastings, Richard Sinclair, Dave Sinclair, and Richard Coughlan formed Caravan in January of 1968.
The grouping stood at first slightly in the trace of Soft Machine, which became an straightaway favorite on the London club prospect and in the press. This worked in Caravan's favour, withal, as the press and club owners began taking a long seem at them because of the members' previous connections. A gig at the Middle Earth Club in London lED to their existence patched by a music publishing administrator named Ian Ralfini, which resulted in a publishing deal with Robbins Music and and then, by extension, a recording shrink with MGM Records on their Verve Records imprint, which the American label was trying to launch in England. Their self-titled debut album was a loanblend of jazz and psychedelia, just likewise enough of a superstar endeavour to rate as a serious reform-minded rock album at a clip when that genre wasn't so far amply established; along with the the Nice albums on Immediate and The Cheerful Insanity of Giles, Giles & Fripp, it deep-seated the roots of progressive rock.
The Caravan record album never sold in serious numbers game, and for a good deal of 1968 and early 1969, the members were scantily able to live -- at unrivalled spot they were literally surviving in tents. And and then, to add insult to injury, the record disappeared as MGM's British operation close down in late 1968. Out of that chaos, withal, the grouping got a new handler in Terry King and, with the facilitate of a newbie producer named David Hitchcock (who'd seen the band in concert), a contract with England's Decca Records, which was a major judge at the time. Their Decca debut album, If I Could Do It All Over Again, I'd Do It All Over You, released in early 1970, was a major stride ahead and, indeed, a milestone in their story, establishing the mix of wit and progressive sounds, including classical, jazz, and traditional English influences that would characterize the best of their work over the succeeding sextet years. Moreover, with Decca's then-formidable distribution behind it, the album got into stores and was heard and regular sold well on university campuses.
Of a sudden, Caravan was an energetic success on the college concert circuit, even making an appearance on British television's Top of the Pops. With national exposure and a growing audience, the grouping was at a make-or-break present moment in their history. They blush wine to the occasion with their indorsement Decca LP, In the Land of Grey and Pink, which showed off a keen melodic signified, a subtly droll brainpower, and a seductively smooth mix of hard tilt, folks, classic, and jazz, intermingled with elements of Tolkien-esque fantasy. The songs ranged from abstemious, easy-to-absorb pieces such as "Golf game Girl" to the quietly majestic "Ennead Feet Underground," a 23-minute suite that filled the face of an LP. One of the hardest-rocking as yet musically hardihood extended pieces to come out of the early progressive rock era, "Nine Feet Underground" didn't appear half as long as its 23 transactions and it was a glary show window for Pye Hastings' searing confidential information guitar and Dave Sinclair's eminent harmonium and pianissimo forge. Although few observers completed it at the time, the suite's length pointed up a problem that the radical faced pretty systematically -- in contrast to well-nigh progressive john Rock outfits of the earned run average, Caravan was imaginative sufficiency to rationalise extending fifty-fifty the comparatively simple songs in their repertoire to running times of 6 or seven transactions, and they were as well extremely prolific. Those deuce situations meant that they were often strained to leave behind perfectly right songs sour their albums and to cut those that they did issue. Most listeners didn't find this out until a undulation of Caravan reissues arrived in 2001 with their running times prolonged 10-25 transactions each by the presence of perfectly good, previously unissued songs and unedited edgar Lee Masters of antecedently released songs.
Keyboard participant and singer Dave Sinclair left the group's lineup in 1971, connexion his ex-Wilde Flowers bandmate Robert Wyatt in the latter's new mathematical group, Matching Mole, and he was succeeded by Stephen Miller of the jazz-based band Delivery, world Health Organization lasted through one album, Waterloo Lily (1972), moving them in a much more bluesy direction. Friction between the members resulted in Miller's deviation and the exit of Richard Sinclair, world Health Organization afterward put together Hatfield and the North. When the smoke exculpated, Caravan was back as a five-piece which included Geoff Richardson on the electric viola, which added a new and rich tone to their overall profound. By the time they cut their next album, For Girls Who Grow Plump in the Night, Dave Sinclair was back on keyboards. The album was a success, as was its followup, Caravan & the New Symphonia, a hot 1973 public presentation attended by a good orchestra, released the following year.
The group was poised to try for a breakthrough in America and, toward that end, took on Miles Copeland as their handler. They ended up on a 50-date tour of duty of the United States and Canada where the response was positive. They besides released a new album, Cunning Stunts, that became their number 1 chart LP, not only in England merely too in America (albeit at number 124) and almost of Europe as well. Unfortunately, Cunning Stunts, for all of its gross sales succeeder, was an conclusion rather than a new beginning -- the group parted ship's company with Decca Records afterwards its release. They recorded Blind Dog at St. Dunstan's for the Copeland-owned BTM Records the following year, and Better by Far for the Arista label the year after that, only by that time, their moment seemed to feature passed, and they seemed increasingly out-of-step with the burgeoning spunk rock gold rush. Caravan ceased bodily function in the early '80s, next the release of The Album and Back to Front, both recorded for Kingdom Records, owned by their other manager Terry King.
Their history seemed to hold concluded, and then in 1990, the original quadruple of Pye Hastings, Richard Sinclair, Dave Sinclair, and Richard Coughlan were reunited for what was supposed to be a one-off concert for a television system special. The performance and the sales of an concomitant live record album proven so encouraging that Caravan came together in one case more for a arcsecond vocation. The group has been back together in peerless lineup or some other of all time since, (generally filled out by ex-members of Camel, among other latter-day staff office), with new recordings rising steadily. Equally authoritative, soul at English Decca (by then part of Polygram, which became division of MCA) took it upon themselves to raid the vaults in 1999-2000 and prepare immensely expanded reissues of the group's entire Verve/Decca catalogs. The issue was the availableness of more Caravan music and more of their classic '60s and '70s recordings than had been in print at whatsoever time in their history.
Ladyhawke for Club NME Barcelona