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THE
HONEYCOMBS (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
The
Honeycombs were a English pop group of the 1960s. Their most
distinguishing mark was their female drummer, Honey Lantree.
One night the group, known then as The Sheratons, was playing in a
London pub, The Mildmay Tavern in the Balls Pond Road. In the
audience were Ken Howard and Alan Blaikley, a very prolific British
songwriting team, who later wrote hits for such artists as Lulu,
Elvis Presley, Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich and Petula
Clark. Howard and Blaikley, then working in production for BBC TV,
liked what they saw and suggested the band might like to hear some
of their material. The band had an upcoming audition with legendary
indie producer Joe Meek who most notably had produced The Tornados,
and composed their number one hit “Telstar” in 1962 and were eager
for some new material. At the audition in Meek’s studio in Holloway
Road, they played Howard and Blaikley’s “Have I the Right?” which
Meek immediately recorded. The Sheratons were renamed The Honeycombs
and were signed to the Pye record label. After proving a ‘sleeper’
for seven weeks the record took off in the summer of 1964 reaching
the number one spot around the world and selling over 2 million
records. It was Meek’s final hit in America, where it was issued on
the Interphon label. The Honeycombs were managed by Howard and
Blaikley who went on to write more successes for them.
“Have I The Right?”, the Honeycombs’ first recording, took off -
going to number one in the UK and number five in the U.S. in the
Autumn/Fall of 1964, shortly after the start of the British Invasion
in pop music. They were especially successful in Sweden (four
consecutive number ones) and in Japan (“Love in Tokyo” went to
number one and they issued a Japan only released live album). Honey
Lantree was an accomplished drummer and the star attraction of the
group, as she was one of very few female drummers at the time. The
unique and heavily compressed bass drum sound on “Have I The
Right?”, which many other drummers of the period tried to replicate,
was augmented by the group stamping on the stairs of Meek’s studio.
Meek achieved this by placing four microphones under the stairs,
attached with bicycle clips. The Honeycombs also recorded the song
in German.
They made many appearances on music-television-shows such as Top of
the Pops, Ready Steady Go! (UK) and Beat-Club (Germany). They also
recorded their second album entitled All Systems - Go! in 1965. A
fine dubbed performance appears in the 1965 British film Pop Gear, (US-title:
Go Go Mania!).
Todays line up consisits of Founder member Martin Murray guitar…Tony
Harte…Lead Vocals…Jim Green …Drums…Colin
Fox Bas Guitar…Paul Green Lead Guitar…Kelly Walsh
guest vocals.
This line up is acredited as being the best line up since the 1994
cast. |