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The
new trio called themselves the Empty Vessels, after the proverbial
saying that, "empty vessels make the most noise". Soon
afterward, they changed that name to Tanglewood and moved from their
native Devon to London. They didn't have much luck initially. In
fact, they were on the verge of disbanding when they were booked
into the Country Club in Hempstead, opening for former Yardbirds
vocalist Keith Relf. Into that gig wandered Miles Copeland, a young
man new in town and impressed by what he heard.
Miles
was an expatriate who had been brought up in Beirut by a Scottish
mother and an American father, and his experience with rock music
was minimal. The London scene was totally new to him, and Tanglewood
had a very English sound. Steve was a jazz-oriented drummer, and
Martin Turner's bass was very far out in front of the mix. In
fact, Martin played as if he were the lead guitarist, in the style
of Jet Harris(The Shadows), Paul McCartney, and Sting.
Copeland
was impressed enough with the group, however, that he invited
Tanglewood to rehearse in his father's house in St.John's Wood,
and offered to manage the band. Guitarist Glen Turner opted to
return to Exeter, but Martin and Steve decided to keep trying.
Miles
started running advertisements in the music papers, and two young
guitarists answered the ad in Melody Maker. Ted Turner (no kin
to Martin) had been playing in a Birmingham band, and Andy Powell
had been gigging with soul and R&B bands around London. Both
were so good that Steve and Martin couldn't make a choice between
them. Instead of hiring a keyboard player as they'd originally
planned, they took both guitarists into the band.
With
two new members, the band searched for a new name. Miles came
up with a number of strange ones (among them Third World War and
Jesus Duck), but in the end they wound up picking "one from
Column A and two from Column B" one word from each
of two lists. The result was Wishbone Ash, which Andy later remarked
was "intriguing actually, it sounded like more than
it was."
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The
new group reflected a variety of influences. Andy was a veteran
of various blues and soul outfits, who happily listened to bands
from Fairport Convention to the Who. In fact, he credited his
experience in soul bands, working with horn section harmonies,
for the dual lead guitar format that he and Ted Turner developed.
Ted had also played blues, and was influenced by American players
such as B.B. King. The rhythm section, Martin and Steve, was into
more progressive groups. They were "hugely impacted"
by Led Zeppelin, and Martin was influenced by the Who's John Entwhistle.
All of these elements went into the distinctive sound of Wishbone
Ash.
The
members of the band were determined to succeed. As provincial
boys coming to London, they were strongly committed to making
a go of it, although in the face of considerable obstacles. One
flat that Ted and Andy lived in for six months was technically
condemned; their manager lived around the corner from Paul McCartney.
Naturally, the band spent as much time at the Copeland house as
possible. Ted recalled that "Miles had a healthy supply of
crumpets for us, and we lived on crumpets in those days."
"We
had only one place to go, and that was up," Andy agreed.
"I was playing a home-made guitar, Martin was playing a home-made
bass, and we built our own speaker cabinets in a garage. We were
literally existing on about 15 dollars a week. One flat that I
lived in had a gas heater that I kept going by recycling the same
shilling through the coin box for a month. But we didn't even
give ourselves the license to think that it wouldn't work."
The band rehearsed from eleven in the morning until eleven at
night, writing and performing completely original material. They
weren't always happy with all of it, but they knew that they were
creating a distinctive sound.
Meanwhile,
Miles tried to find work for the band. He was, as Powell later
recalled affectionately, a slow starter. "We were the first
band that Miles had ever managed. He was clueless, completely
at odds with the music business as it was practiced in London.
In hindsight, that was probably to everyone's advantage."
In
November of 1969 the band played its first gig, as the opening
act for Aynsley Dunbar's Retaliation at Dunstable Civic Hall.
Since they were getting little interest at home, the increasingly
inventive Copeland used his contacts to land the group work in
Europe. Paris became the kind of developing ground for them that
Hamburg had been for the Beatles.
Wishbone's
first big break resulted from a gig they did with Deep Purple.
Ritchie Blackmore jammed with Powell during a sound check, and
was impressed enough to mention the group to Purple's producer,
Derek Lawrence. Lawrence, in turn, was impressed enough to convince
the "powers that be" at Decca Records(US) to sign the
band. As a result, the Ash had a record deal in the United States
before they had one in England.
"Blind
Eye" was the band's first single. Andy described it as "a
jazz, blues, riffing kind of thing written by Ted and myself.
The riff for the twin lead guitar parts was a very specific continuation
of some horn parts I'd been writing in soul bands." When
Ted Turner heard it on the radio for the first time, he said,"It
was very exciting. It was also the first time I heard myself sing
after that I always tried to get the others to sing!"
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The
band's following multiplied, and they released their first album,
Wishbone Ash, in 1970. It contained the song "Phoenix",
arguably Wishbone's masterpiece. Ted described it as "just
an elongated, structured, jam", but it was a perfect showcase
for their dual lead guitar work. The only other British band using
twin lead guitars at the time was the obscure Blossom Toes (now
memorable mainly as the breeding ground for longtime Rod Stewart
guitarist Jim Cregan). Wishbone didn't learn of any others for
some time. "We didn't become aware of the Allman Brothers
until we came to the States. Then, years later, we were very surprised
to hear Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Free Bird". It struck us as
very much the same sort of thing as "Phoenix"."
That
first album was followed by Pilgrimage (1971), and Argus (1972).
Melody Maker awarded Argus the accolade of "The Best British
Album Of The Year", and Andy appeared in the guitar poll
of many British music papers in the 1970's. In fact, both he and
Ted were voted among the top 20 guitarists of all time by Rolling
Stone magazine. "Blowin' Free", the Argus signature
tune, was described by Ted as "a rip-off of a bit in "Tommy"
that I put in a different time. We toured with the Who on their
"Won't Get Fooled Again" tour, and you can imagine how
inspiring that was." Andy said that "Time Was",
from the same album, was another Who-inspired song; "there
was a lot of Keith Moon in Steve's drumming."
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In
1973 the band produced Wishbone Four and their first concert album,
Live Dates. The Wishbone Four album sounded very different from
its predecessors. A lot of bands were going into the country to
write Traffic did it, Led Zeppelin did it. Wishbone put
everything into the back of a truck and moved to a cottage on
the island of Anglesey off the Welsh coast. All four of them and
two others were crammed into a six-room cottage miles from anywhere,
with no phone, TV, or radio. There was a sign on the gate that
said "Pen Y Bonc", which they took to be the name of
the cottage. Years later they found out that it was the Welsh
for "Close the gate"! Ted recalled, "We all brought
air pistols and tried to shoot rabbits and birds and things. We
wound up spending more time on that than on putting the album
together. I hit a robin, and haven't fired a shot since."
In
1973, Andy and Ted were invited to record with John Lennon on
his song "Imagine". Andy declined, but Ted accepted
the offer. In June of 1974 he left Wishbone. "I was going
through different phases musically", he explained, "and
wasn't satisfied with what I was doing with Wishbone Ash. We had
done very well but I was only 24." He wandered from Spain
to Peru to California over the next few years in search of personal
fulfillment.
Ted
was replaced by Laurie Wisefield. Laurie was a founding member
of the band Home, which played with Al Stuart. Andy saw them in
New York and was impressed by Laurie's guitar work. The two played
together, and developed a rapport. When Andy returned to England
and got the news that Ted was leaving the band, he immediately
thought of Laurie. He invited Wisefield to come to London for
rehearsals, and everyone decided that the arrangement would work.
It worked so well, in fact, that Laurie stayed with the band for
12 years.
Of
the change in guitarists, Andy said, "The contrast was quite
marked. I was always the more frenetic player, and Ted was bluesier
and more laid-back. Laurie didn't really come from a blues background
so much as a country-rock background. He was into finger-picking,
a very rhythmic player." Indeed, when Wisefield left Wishbone,
he went on to play first with Tina Turner and then with Joe Cocker.
Ash's
next album, 1974's There's The Rub, was recorded in the United
States, under the supervision of Eagles and Joe Walsh producer
Bill Szymczyk. Between this studio work and their increasing American
tours, not to mention the UK tax laws, the band decided to settle
in the US at least part-time. They found places in Connecticut
Martin's had a studio and went to work on their
next project.
In
1975 the band toured Japan for the first time. To say they were
a success would be a wild understatement, as the following excerpt
from a contemporary letter shows:
"All
the dates were sold out, and the fans were marvelous. Martin made
a mistake in Osaka, where he kissed one of the many girls crowding
around him for autographs. When the others saw the kiss, they
all pushed forward, screaming, and almost pushed Mart through
a plate glass window! It took four of us to fight them off and
get him into the hotel. We're still reeling under the impact."
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Still
signed to MCA in England, Wishbone moved to the Atlantic label
in the United States for their next two albums. Locked In (1976)
contained several new departures for the band. It featured keyboards,
female backup singers on some of the tracks, and Laurie's first
vocals on vinyl. It was followed by New England late in the year,
which some critics hailed as "a return to Argus". The
tours in support of these albums generally went very well (they
continued to be mobbed in Japan), although there were some incidents.
In Germany in the fall of 1976, the boys were only halfway through
their set when the promoter informed the crew that he wanted the
show finished by 10:30 and proceeded to turn off the house
lights! He insisted that if the band didn't come offstage, he
would turn out every light in the house leaving an already
excited young audience in darkness and chaos, with the danger
of injury or worse. It was a time for quick action, and the tour
manager found the power supply and adjusted the lights himself
so that the show could go on. That caused the promoter to blow
an internal fuse, and he set about the crew with a broomstick,
screaming madly. There was nothing to do but grab a roll of gaffer
tape and bind the promoter's hands and mouth with kindly firmess.
Meanwhile, the band had resumed playing, sublimely unaware of
the drama taking place backstage and a thousand or so kids
had their money's worth and went home happy and in one piece.
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By
the early spring of 1977, the band was back in Connecticut, writing
and rehearsing for their next album. For this one, Front Page
News, the band returned to the MCA label, where they remained
for their next two albums, No Smoke Without Fire (1978) and Just
Testing (1979). 1980 saw the release of the very successful live
album Live Dates II, but was memorable chiefly for a major change
in the Wishbone line-up. After ten years with the band, founding
member Martin Turner decided to leave. He had been interested
in production for some time, and wanted to devote himself to that
craft. He was replaced by the respected British bassist John Wetton,
whose background included membership in King Crimson, Roxy Music,
Uriah Heep, and his own band, UK.
Wetton
worked with the Ash on Number the Brave, recorded at Miami's Criteria
Studios in the winter of 1980-81. (As an aside, the song "Number
the Brave" was inspired by the Stephen King novel, "The
Stand". These boys were nothing if not eclectic!) He didn't
tour with them, however. After the recording was completed John
went on to found the band Asia. His successor was Trevor Bolder,
who had worked with Uriah Heep and David Bowie.
1981
also saw the release of Wishbone's last MCA album, Hot Ash. This
was a collection of live tracks that had appeared on various albums,
with the addition of the very poplular "Bad Weather Blues",
which had never before been released on an album.
In
September of 1981 Wishbone headlined on the Rock stage of Chicagofest,
a huge music festival run by that city.
The
stage was actually a huge barge floating in Lake Michigan, and
the audience sat on the pier. It was a beautiful evening, and
Wishbone took the stage just as night was falling. We saw the
illuminated Chicago skyline to one side and the lake to the other.
While they were onstage, there was a fabulous laser show, topped
off by a fireworks display. The band looked incredible with all
that behind them the only trouble was that they kept turning
round to see what was happening!
The
Ash broke the attendance record for the Rock stage, cramming more
than ten thousand fans into the area.
Later in the year the band toured India for the first time, and
were both stunned at the beauty of the country and saddened by
its hopeless poverty. The trip influenced at least one of the
songs on their next album. "Streets of Shame", from
1982's Twin Barrels Burning, is a reflection of what they saw
around them in Madras and Bombay.
By
the end of 1982, Wishbone had three British tours, a European
tour, and an album to their credit. One of the British tours covered
2,292 miles in 21 days, enough to disorient anybody without further
provocation. However, at the last stop "one of the audience
was observed to be waving a dead goose above his head as a sign
of appreciation"! The European tour also produced a memorable
experience; at a gig in Yugoslavia:
The security men laid into the fans, who were trying to climb
the front barrier to avoid being crushed by the 8,000-strong crowd.
Andy and Trevor leapt from the stage, armed only with guitars,
to tackle the security men! Andy used his Flying V as an assault
weapon, and Trevor deserted his bass to haul fans to safety
only to find himself the target of the security zealots. Intervention
by the road crew led to an away win for the visiters, but the
Flying V required medical attention.
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In
1983 Trevor left the band to return to Uriah Heep. His decision
came right on top of a scheduled US tour, so finding a replacement
was a crash priority. In the event, the bass/vocalist spot was
taken by Mervyn "Spam" Spence, an Irish musician who
had played with the English band Trapeze, and done some writing
and recording on his own. Three days after joining the band, Spence
was jetting over the Atlantic, but it was a near thing. He did
not have a work permit for the States, and had to wait at the
airport hoping that someone from the Embassy would turn up with
the proper documents. As it turned out, the papers did come
so close to flight time that he had been booking a later ticket!
It
was on that tour that Andy threw his back out and needed the services
of a chiropracter. The tour bus driver was late, and in his haste
to make up time turned right into a "No right turn"
lane (Americans drive on the wrong side of the road anyway). They
were spotted by a policewoman, who was so charmed by the band's
combined eloquence that she ended up phoning the chiropracter
to say they'd be late and giving them an escort across town!
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In
1986 Andy and Ted Turner were contacted by Miles Copeland, who
had become a major success in the industry by that time. Miles
was managing The Police and running his own record label, I.R.S.
Records. He was about to launch a series of all-instrumental albums,
and wanted Wishbone to participate in the project. The result
was the re-formation of the original Ash line-up for the recording
of 1987's Nouveau Calls & 1988's Here To Hear. Martin Turner
said of the reunion, "When we got together, it was obvious
that the rapport, the magic, was still there. The magic was there,
but it wasn't complete. Ted was living in the States, and he had
immigration problems. He arrived very late in the game, and we
didn't get enough time to work together. It didn't feel like a
band, it felt like the three of us with Ted playing on top. So
we decided to do another album, including vocals - that became
Here to Hear."
The
reunion line-up lasted three years, but during the work on 1991's
Strange Affair problems surfaced. Steve was having marital diffculties,
and his playing suffered. Finally he left the band after more
than twenty years, and left the music industry as well. He took
on the management of a chateau in southern France; there are rumors
that he sometimes sits in at the local cafe.
Steve's
departure created problems for the band. Martin Turner recalled:
"We ended up recording most of Strange Affair with a drum
machine. Eventually we got Robbie France and then Ray Weston into
the studio, but by then the tracks had been laid down. When you
super-impose a drummer over a pre-existing track, you don't get
the interaction between musicians that is so important to the
energy of a piece. Andy and Ted were living in the United States,
and things went on for so long that they ended up having to pop
back and forth. Things got very messy indeed, and it was definately
a 'Strange Affair'."
It
was also the band's last recording for the I.R.S. label. Martin
left the band in 1991, to pursue a solo career in writing, recording
and producing. The new line-up consisted of Andy and Ted on guitars,
Ray Weston on drums, and Andy Pyle on bass. This group recorded
Live in Chicago for the Griffen label.
In
1994 Ted Turner decided that he too had other interests to pursue.
As the only remaining member of the original band, Andy decided
to put together a completely new line-up. It consisted of Roger
Filgate, Tony Kishman, and Mike Sturgis, a well-respected drummer
who came to Wishbone from Asia. This group debuted with a European
tour that culminated in the recording of the album Live in Geneva.
On their return to the States Roger and Andy began work on the
material that would become Illuminations, the first Wishbone Ash
studio album since Strange Affair.
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Illuminations
was released in late 1996, and the accompanying tour took the
band through England and Scotland. Andy said of the album, "We
took a lot of time to look back and examine Wishbone's early influences.
There was a lot of loving care involved. The album has power and
melody, everything that people know and love about the band."
He's right, Ash's trademark harmony guitar work is in beautiful
evidence, and it's a great return for "the best-known unknown
band in the world."
1997
saw the release of a four-CD box set, "Distillation",
that showcases Wishbone's work over the years from 1970 to 1995.
1998
saw the release of Wishbone's first venture into the dance market
with "Trance Visionary" & "Psychic Terrorism".
Both albums were a bold experiment that most stodgy classic rock
band would never attempt. Amazingly, both "Trance" &
"PT" were warmly received by this new audience of listeners
who had never heard of the band before.
In
1999, the line-up of Andy Powell, Bob Skeat, Mark Birch and Ray
Weston released it's first "Unplugged" album, "Bare
Bones". Taking familiar songs by the band and stripping them
down to their acoustic roots. In doing so "Bare Bones"
has turned out to be the surprise Wishbone Ash album that has
their fans raving for more.
In
2000 the band embark on their 30th anniversary tour and historic
celebration concert at the Shepards Bush Empire in London England.
This event was captured on video and has since been released on
DVD & VHS. 2000 also saw the much anticipated release of the
third "Live Dates" album featuring the "Powell,
Birch, Skeat & Weston" line-up.
2001
saw the departure of Mark Birch who decided to hang-up his guitar
to pursue a career in computer programming. This came at a very
bad time for the band as they were getting ready to embark on
a huge european tour. Andy called on his old friend, Finnish guitarist,
Ben Granfelt to fill the void. Ben's band had previously tour
with and opened for Wishbone Ash on many European and American
dates. After much consideration Ben agreed to give it a go and
as they say, "The Rest Is History."
The
addition of Ben Granfelt has breathed new life, energy and creativity
into this legendary band. Andy and Ben have restored the famous
"Dueling Guitars" that had been missed since the departure
of Ted Turner while at the same time turning up the focus on the
"Harmony" parts that made the band famous.
In
2002 Wishbone Ash is on the road and doing what they do best,
entertaining their huge legion of fans all around the world. This
year also marks the 30th Anniversary of the release of their classic
ARGUS album. To help celebrate this landmark event, MCA has reissued
ARGUS in a special Re-mixed & Re-mastered format that also
contains the complete "Live From Memphis" promo album
as a bonus.
In
May of 2002 the band released their latest studio album, "Bona
Fide", to glowing reviews from fans and critics alike. If
you enjoy great songs, dueling guitars, harmony guitars, and songs
with a purpose, then his album is one for your collection.
This
new combination of Powell, Granfelt, Skeat and Weston is now considered
as one of the finest line-ups ever to carny the moniker of Wishbone
Ash. (To be continued..... )

Wishbone
Ash 2003
For
more information on Wishbone Ash, be sure to visit their official
website at www.wishboneash.com
Wishbone
Ash Discography
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