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The Bo Street Runners

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The Bo Street Runners

The Bo Street Runners were an English R&B band formed in Harrow, England during 1963. The band released four singles and a extended play record. They gained prominence in the United Kingdom after winning the Ready Steady Win! band contest and included future Fleetwood Mac drummer, Mick Fleetwood and vocalist Mike Patto.

Early days

The band was formed in 1963 as The Roadrunners, but changed their name to The Bo Street Runners when it was discovered that another British group was already recording with the name. The group's original line-up included Gary Thomas on lead guitar, Bob O' Brien on keyboards, Nigel Hutchinson on drums,[1] Dave Cameron on bass guitar and John Dominic as vocalist. They were heavily influenced by Bo Diddley in both musical style and playing technique, his name also being the inspiration for their name. They built a fanbase by playing on Sundays at the Railway Hotel, Harrow, Middlesex.[2]

Success in competition

In the spring of 1964, the band entered the Ready Steady Win! competition, a contest designed to find "the next Beatles", with a grand prize of £1,000 and a recording contract with Decca Records. The band fit the criteria to enter, which was having no recording history and at least one original composition. On September 8, 1964 the band won the contest with their performance of "I'm a Bo Street Runner".[3] With this success, the band signed to the Decca label for their only single with the company. The single, "I'm a Bo Street Runner" which had a B-side entitled "Tell Me", sold over 20,000 copies in the United Kingdom, but did not chart nationally. Along with the single, 99 copies of an EP were produced for the band to sell at their gigs. By now the group were supporting acts such as The Rolling Stones and Tom Jones.[4]

Singles, change of personnel, and Mick Fleetwood

Following the band's single and EP, Decca sold their contract to Columbia Records in 1965. The band went through many personnel changes as band members did not like the changes in musical direction that the band heading towards. Only Thomas, Dominic and Cameron remained from the original line-up, and they were joined by two London jazzers, Roy Fry on keyboards and Glyn Thomas on drums. This line-up was to record the band's second single, a James Brown track, "Tell Me What You Gonna Do", which had no success. The third line up, in the summer of 1965 brought in Tim Hinkley on keys and Mick Fleetwood in the drum seat. Fleetwood joined when he responded to an ad in the Melody Maker, and performed almost immediately with the band.

Further singles and a final tour

Their next single, more jazz than blues, was "Baby Never Say Goodbye". The song brought favourable reviews from critics and regional acclaim when it reached number 36 on the Radio London Fab Forty.[5] It was expected to reach the UK national charts. However, there was a workers strike at the record plant issuing the band's single so only limited copies were pressed. Fleetwood and John Dominic left the band after that and a final single followed in 1966 with Mike Patto on vocals. The A-side was a soul-orientated cover of The Beatles song "Drive My Car", the only recording to feature Patto.[5]

The band toured one last time, but with a lack of commercial success they decided to disband in October 1966. Fleetwood was the only member to achieve any notable success after the band split, as a member of Fleetwood Mac.

Retrospective album release

A compilation album devoted solely to the band's material "Never Say Goodbye: The Complete Recordings 1964-1966" was released on November 17, 2014, by Cherry Red Records. The album included all of the band's recordings, including the EP single version of "I'm A Bo Street Runner", that won "Ready Steady Win!" competition.[6]

References

  1. ^ Croot, James (2017-03-27). "Goodbye Pork Pie producer Nigel Hutchinson dies, aged 75". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 2017-04-19.
  2. ^ "London remembers". londonremembers.com. Retrieved 2017-04-09.
  3. ^ "Ready Steady WIN". popsike.com. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
  4. ^ "Bo Street Runners Interview". classicbands.com. Retrieved 2015-01-04.
  5. ^ a b "Radio London Fab Forty". radiolondon.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
  6. ^ "Never Say Goodbye: The Complete Recordings 1964-1966 - Bo Street Runners". cherryred.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-01-04.