Difference between revisions of "Stonefeather"
m |
|||
(10 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
! colspan="2" | Members | ! colspan="2" | Members | ||
|- style="background-color: #f9f9f9;" | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9;" | ||
− | | colspan="2" align="center" | Terry Poole<br>John Tout<br> | + | | colspan="2" align="center" | Terry Poole<br>John Tout<br>[[Stewart Copeland]]<br> |
|} | |} | ||
=Band history= | =Band history= | ||
− | [[Stewart Copeland]] played drums for Stonefeather during a tour | + | [[Stewart Copeland]] played drums for [[Stonefeather]] during a tour of France in the summer of [[1970]]. |
− | The band featured former members of Rupert's People, who used to rehearse in the Copeland house in St. John's Wood - with [[Miles Copeland III|Miles Copeland]] being their manager. | + | The band featured former members of Rupert's People, who used to rehearse in the Copeland house in St. John's Wood - with [[Miles Copeland III|Miles Copeland]] being their manager. [[Rod Lynton]] thought of a this new name for Rupert's People as the psychedelic era was gone by then. When [[Miles Copeland III | Miles Copeland]] sacked their drummer Steve Brendell Rod quit the band, too, which left [[Stonefeather]] without a guitarist and a drummer, until Stewart became a member. |
− | Stonefeather started with a | + | [[Stonefeather]] started their French concerts with a performance at the [[Revolution Club]] in Paris. The band's booking agent Jean Besnard travelled with them from Paris to St. Tropez with [[Ian Copeland]] as a driver. In St. Tropez the band played in a night club for two weeks, then performed for another two weeks at a club in Hyeres. They finished the summer in France with another concert at the [[Revolution Club]] in Paris, before returning to London. |
− | Rod Lynton left | + | During guitarist auditions in St. John's Wood Gordon Giltrap and Lez Nichols and a host of other guitarists were playing with the band, but according to Terry Poole's memory they didn't do the French tour. And Rod Lynton may have left before that tour... |
=Band members= | =Band members= | ||
− | * Terry Poole | + | * Terry Poole - bass / vocals |
− | * John Tout | + | * Les Nicol - lead guitar |
− | * [[Stewart Copeland]] | + | * John Tout - keyboards |
− | * | + | * [[Stewart Copeland]] - drums |
+ | * Marsha Hunt - conga drums | ||
+ | * Bobby Stignac - percussion (vanished after the first concert at the [[Revolution Club]]) | ||
+ | |||
+ | * [[Miles Copeland III | Miles Copeland]] - manager | ||
+ | * [[Ian Copeland]] - driver | ||
=Discography= | =Discography= | ||
Line 56: | Line 61: | ||
=External links= | =External links= | ||
− | * [http:// | + | * [http://terrypooleretrorocknroll.com/index.php/london-oct-69 Terry Poole's website] |
+ | * [https://www.psychedelicbabymag.com/2012/09/bakerloo-interview-with-terry-poole.html Terry Poole memories] | ||
+ | * [https://worldradiohistory.com/hd2/IDX-UK/Music/Archive-Melody-Maker-IDX/IDX/70s/Melody-Maker-1970-0718-IDX-33.pdf Melody Maker - July 18, 1970 ad features an early (but bogus) mention of Stark Naked And The Car Thieves] | ||
=References= | =References= | ||
− | sources: various internet pages | + | sources: various internet pages; Terry Poole; [[Stewart Copeland]]; ad in Melody Maker - July 18, [[1970]] |
− | [[Category:Related artists ( | + | [[Category:Related artists (Stewart Copeland)]] |
Latest revision as of 23:55, 4 February 2022
Stonefeather | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin: | London, England, UK |
Years active: | 1970 |
Label(s): | none |
Associated acts: | Rupert's People |
Website: | none |
Members | |
Terry Poole John Tout Stewart Copeland |
Contents
Band history
Stewart Copeland played drums for Stonefeather during a tour of France in the summer of 1970.
The band featured former members of Rupert's People, who used to rehearse in the Copeland house in St. John's Wood - with Miles Copeland being their manager. Rod Lynton thought of a this new name for Rupert's People as the psychedelic era was gone by then. When Miles Copeland sacked their drummer Steve Brendell Rod quit the band, too, which left Stonefeather without a guitarist and a drummer, until Stewart became a member.
Stonefeather started their French concerts with a performance at the Revolution Club in Paris. The band's booking agent Jean Besnard travelled with them from Paris to St. Tropez with Ian Copeland as a driver. In St. Tropez the band played in a night club for two weeks, then performed for another two weeks at a club in Hyeres. They finished the summer in France with another concert at the Revolution Club in Paris, before returning to London.
During guitarist auditions in St. John's Wood Gordon Giltrap and Lez Nichols and a host of other guitarists were playing with the band, but according to Terry Poole's memory they didn't do the French tour. And Rod Lynton may have left before that tour...
Band members
- Terry Poole - bass / vocals
- Les Nicol - lead guitar
- John Tout - keyboards
- Stewart Copeland - drums
- Marsha Hunt - conga drums
- Bobby Stignac - percussion (vanished after the first concert at the Revolution Club)
- Miles Copeland - manager
- Ian Copeland - driver
Discography
Singles
This section needs more information.
Awards & Honors
Summarize major awards here in list format, as well as awards received not specific to a particular album, song, film or other release.
Quotations and Trivia
This section needs more information.
See also
This section needs more information. It should include intra-wiki links to relevant articles that further detail the band's history, including potentially Filmography (BAND NAME), Bibliography (BAND NAME), Performances (BAND NAME). If separate articles on these subjects do not exist, you may wish to add appropriate header sections in this article instead.
External links
- Terry Poole's website
- Terry Poole memories
- Melody Maker - July 18, 1970 ad features an early (but bogus) mention of Stark Naked And The Car Thieves
References
sources: various internet pages; Terry Poole; Stewart Copeland; ad in Melody Maker - July 18, 1970