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The Action

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The Action
Also known asAzoth (1968)
OriginKentish Town, North London, England
GenresBlue-eyed soul, folk rock, psychedelic rock, Freakbeat
Years active1963–1969 (Reunion: 2000)
LabelsParlophone (UK), Capitol (US), Hansa (France)
Past membersAlan "Bam" King
Mike "Ace" Evans
Roger Powell
Reg King
Peter Watson
Ian Whiteman
Martin Stone
Websiteactionmightybaby.co.uk

The Action were an English band of the 1960s, formed as The Boys in August 1963, in Kentish Town, North West London.[1] They were part of the mod subculture,[2] and played soul music-influenced pop music.

Career

The band was formed as The Boys in August 1963, in Kentish Town, North West London. The original members were Reg King (lead vocals), Alan 'Bam' King (rhythm guitar, vocals), Mike "Ace" Evans (bass guitar, vocals) and Roger Powell (drums).[1] They had a brief spell as a bar band in Germany, and then as a backing band for Sandra Barry, (sometimes referred to as Sandra Barry and the Boyfriends) playing on her single "Really Gonna Shake" in 1964.[3] After the stint with Barry, Pete Watson was recruited as lead guitarist, and in 1964 they changed their name to The Action.[1]

Shortly after their name change, they signed to Parlophone with producer George Martin. "Land of a Thousand Dances" b/w "In My Lonely Room" was well received by critics, but sold poorly.[1] None of The Action's singles achieved success in the UK Singles Chart.

Dissatisfied with the stewardship of their manager Rikki Farr, Pete Watson left the band in late 1966.[1] The Action continued as a quartet but were dropped by Parlophone in mid-1967, by which time they had also parted ways with Rikki Farr. They then assumed control of their own affairs, and soon afterwards keyboardist Ian Whiteman joined the band in an effort to expand their sound in order to help secure a new recording contract. By November, guitarist Martin Stone had also joined the band.[1]

The Action now set about gathering original new material for a projected LP, but recording demos in a radically different Byrds-influenced psychedelic style failed to secure them their hoped-for recording deal (the 1967/68 demos were eventually released in the 1990s under the title Rolled Gold). With the band seemingly having reached an impasse vocalist Reg King's behaviour became increasing unpredictable, and he departed the band in mid-1968.[1] King's exit left Ian Whiteman and Alan King to share vocal duties, and at this point The Action decided on a brief change of name to Azoth. However the band soon reverted to their old name to record a new set of five demos, where they moved toward a more mid-tempo West Coast-influenced psychedelic ballad style and then into folk rock (these demos were eventually released in 1985 as The Action Speaks Louder Than Words). By January 1969 however, upon signing to Head Records (a fledgling independent label run by their former roadie John Curd), The Action was finally and permanently re-christened Mighty Baby.[1]

Alan King later went on to form Ace, who had a US hit in 1975 with “How Long”.

A 1980 compilation of the Action's Parlophone tracks came with sleeve notes by Paul Weller ("The Action had it in their soul") and did much for their profile, while the Rolled Gold album demos were hailed as lost classics when they were reissued in the 1990s. In 1998, the original lineup of The Action reformed for a concert on the Isle of Wight. The band then played regularly over the next six years.

They are one of the favourite bands of Phil Collins, who performed with the reunited band in June 2000.[4] "For me it was like playing with the Beatles", he later commented on the experience.[5]

Discography

Singles

as Sandra Barry and The Boys
  • "Really Gonna Shake" / "When We Get Married" (R. King) (March 1964, Decca)
as The Boys
  • "It Ain't Fair" (R. King/Evans) / "I Want You" (R. King/Evans) (November 1964, Pye)
as The Action

Compilation albums

The Ultimate! Action
(singles and other material recorded by the original run of the band, 1964–1967)
  1. "I'll Keep Holding On"
  2. "Harlem Shuffle"
  3. "Never Ever"
  4. "Twenty Fourth Hour"
  5. "Since I Lost My Baby"
  6. "In My Lonely Room"
  7. "Hey Sha-Lo-Ney"
  8. "Wasn't It You?"
  9. "Come On, Come With Me"
  10. "Just Once in My Life"
  11. "Shadows and Reflections"
  12. "Something Has Hit Me"
  13. "The Place"
  14. "The Cissy"
  15. "Baby You've Got It"
  16. "I Love You (Yeah!)"
  17. "Land of a Thousand Dances"
Brain/Rolled Gold
(Tracks recorded in late 1967 and 1968, but released only in 1995):[6][7]
  1. "Come Around"
  2. "Something to Say"
  3. "Love is All"
  4. "Icarus"
  5. "Strange Roads"
  6. "Things You Cannot See"
  7. "Brain"
  8. "Look at the View"
  9. "Climbing Up the Wall"
  10. "Really Doesn't Matter"
  11. "I'm a Stranger"
  12. "Little Boy"
  13. "Follow Me"
  14. "In My Dream"
  15. "In My Dream" (Demo)
Action Speaks Louder Than (EP)
(tracks recorded circa. 1968, released by Castle Music in 1985):
  1. "Only Dreaming"
  2. "Dustbin Full of Rubbish"
  3. "An Understanding Love"
  4. "My Favourite Day"
  5. "A Saying for Today" (all tracks written by Whiteman)
Uptight and Outasight
(radio and TV recordings, CD bonus: 1998 live recording) (Circle Records):
  • CD1 – The Action on Television and BBC Radio 1966–1967
  1. "I'll Keep Holding On"
  2. "Land of 1000 Dances"/"Uptight"
  3. "Mine Exclusively" (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1966)
  4. Reg King Interview (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1966)
  5. "Baby You've Got It "(BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1966)
  6. "Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me A While)" (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1966)
  7. "Going to a Go Go" (BBC Radio's Pop North 1966)
  8. "Never Ever" (BBC Radio's Pop North 1966)
  9. "Love Is All" (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1967)
  10. "I See You" (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1967)
  11. "India" (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1967)
  12. "Shadows and Reflections" (BBC Radio's Saturday Club 1967)
  • CD2 – The Boston Arms, London 1998
  1. "Meeting Over Yonder"
  2. "The Monkey Time" (Curtis Mayfield)
  3. "Baby Don't You Do It"
  4. 'In My Lonely Room"
  5. "I Love You (Yeah!)"
  6. "Girl (Why You Wanna Make Me Blue)"
  7. "Ooo Baby Baby"
  8. "Crazy About You Baby"
  9. "Heatwave"
  10. "People Get Ready"
  11. "The Memphis Train"
  12. "Since I Lost My Baby"
  13. "Harlem Shuffle"
  14. "Baby You've Got It"
  15. "I'll Keep Holding On"
  16. "Land of 1000 Dances"

In addition to this in 1980, Edsel released a compilation of all The Action's original UK singles called The Ultimate Action (Edsel ED101) and after that four singles using the same material:

  • "I'll Keep on Holding On/Wasn't It You?" – E5001 1981
  • "Since I Lost My Baby/Never Ever/Wasn't It You?" – E5002 1981
  • "Shadows and Reflections/Something Has Hit Me" – E5003 1982
  • "Hey Sha-Lo-Ney/Come On, Come With Me" – E5008 1984

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. pp. 14/5. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  2. ^ Du Noyer, Paul (2003). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music (1st ed.). Fulham, London: Flame Tree Publishing. p. 36. ISBN 1-904041-96-5.
  3. ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Sandra Barry Artist Biography". allmusic.com. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  4. ^ Phil Collins. Not Dead Yet. London, England: Century Books. ISBN 978-1-780-89513-0.
  5. ^ Hodgkinson, Will (15 November 2002). "Home entertainment: Phil Collins". The Guardian.
  6. ^ The Action: Brain (The Lost Recordings) at Discogs (list of releases)
  7. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Further reading

  • Ian Hebditch, Jane Shepherd: The Action – In the Lap of the Mods (2012, with Mike Evans and Roger Powell, foreword by George Martin); ISBN 978-0957345706