This page will contain videos about Murray Head, as they become available.Murray HeadMurray Head (born March 5, 1946) is a British actor and singer. He was born in London, his parents being Seafield Head, a documentary-maker, and Helen Shingler, an actress. His younger brother is "Buffy" star, Anthony Stewart Head. Head began acting and writing songs as a child, and by the mid-1960s had a London recording contract. He had limited success until selected by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber to play Judas Iscariot on the original album version of Jesus Christ Superstar. At around the same time he won a leading role in the Oscar-winning Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971), alongside Peter Finch and Glenda Jackson. Despite these successes, he received little public attention in the next ten years, reappearing in the spotlight in 1984 as the star of the musical, Chess. The song "One Night in Bangkok," from Chess, featuring Head on lead vocal, became a radio hit. This page about Murray Head includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about Murray Head News stories about Murray Head External links for Murray Head Videos for Murray Head Wikis about Murray Head Discussion Groups about Murray Head Blogs about Murray Head Images of Murray Head |
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The song "One Night in Bangkok," from Chess, featuring Head on lead vocal, became a radio hit. Starship:. Despite these successes, he received little public attention in the next ten years, reappearing in the spotlight in 1984 as the star of the musical, Chess. Jefferson Starship:. At around the same time he won a leading role in the Oscar-winning Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971), alongside Peter Finch and Glenda Jackson. Jefferson Airplane:. He had limited success until selected by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber to play Judas Iscariot on the original album version of Jesus Christ Superstar. Record producers who worked with the original band included Greg Edward, Rick Jarrard, Matthew Katz, Ron Nevison, Tommy Oliver and Al Schmitt. Head began acting and writing songs as a child, and by the mid-1960s had a London recording contract. The role of the American Forces Network (AFN) with powerful medium wave radio transmitters situated in West Germany and "pirate radio" ships in the North Sea bringing US hits to the ears of European youth should also be recognised as a force that extended the global reach of West Coast music in the 1964-1972 period. His younger brother is "Buffy" star, Anthony Stewart Head. The Beatles have always stressed the influence that the Beach Boys had on their musical development (especially Pet Sounds) but it seems likely that other music from the west coast also spread eastwards and played a key part in making pop music more symphonic and less predictable than it had been before 1965. The era of trans-Atlantic jet travel ushered in a decade earlier and the ability to send TV broadcasts by satellite also facilitated a faster interplay of musical influences across the Atlantic. He was born in London, his parents being Seafield Head, a documentary-maker, and Helen Shingler, an actress. British bands apparently influenced by the mellow lyricism of the west coast sound included Barclay James Harvest, David Bowie, Curved Air, Family, Fairport Convention, Jethro Tull, King Crimson, the Moody Blues, the Small Faces, Pentangle and Yes. Murray Head (born March 5, 1946) is a British actor and singer. Of all these bands, Jefferson Airplane excelled in the psychedelic domain and in their penchant for pretentious track titles, which came to characterise the 1965-75 era. The original Jefferson Airplane, along with the Byrds, the Doors, the Grateful Dead, the Lovin' Spoonful, the Mamas and the Papas, Tommy James and the Shondells and to some degree Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young will always be associated with the more melodic end of the north American rock spectrum and in due course other groups, such as Steely Dan and the Eagles, continued to blend elements of folk, jazz and rock and bring the results to a global audience. Mangano is an expressive and effective singer, and this revived Jefferson Starship can often capture a good deal of the feeling of the original Airplane. This latter band plays frequent concerts, and on occasion Jack Casady joins them as well. Today, there are two versions of Jefferson Starship — one officially billed as Mickey Thomas' Starship (with Thomas at the forefront), and the revived Jefferson Starship (often called Jefferson Starship: The Next Generation), with Kantner and Balin as leaders, and Diana Mangano replacing Grace Slick as female singer (although Slick did do guest vocals on Jefferson Starship's 1999 album Windows Of Heaven). A self-titled album was released by Columbia Records, but the accompanying tour was everything the album wasn't, a success, but their revival too was short-lived, and thus Jefferson Airplane was officially disbanded for good. But in 1989, during a solo San Francisco gig, Paul Kantner found himself joined by former bandmate (and lover) Grace Slick and two other ex-Airplane members for a cameo appearance. This led to a formal reunion of the original Jefferson Airplane (featuring nearly all the main members, including co-founder Marty Balin, but without Spencer Dryden, who had been kicked out of the band years earlier). Solo careers and the attractions of other bands beckoned throughout. The lineup, however, had disbanded by 1990. The revamped lineup released Love Among The Cannibals in 1989. Like Pete Sears and David Freiberg before her, her career was downsized by the commercial entity Starship was embracing. Grace Slick also left in 1988. The album went gold and featured the hits "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" and "It's Not Over ('Til It's Over)". By the time No Protection was released, bassist Pete Sears had left. In 1987 "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" was featured in the film Mannequin and hit # 1. Starship also had a Hollywood connection. The album went platinum. In 1985, Starship released Knee Deep In The Hoopla and immediately scored two # 1 hits with "We Built This City" and "Sara"; the first time any incarnation of the Airplane had had a # 1 hit. Freiberg, who had been increasingly marginalized in the band, left as well. Kantner won his suit, and the group name was reduced to simply Starship, marking the third incarnation of the band. In 1984, Kantner (the last founding member of Jefferson Airplane remaining) left the group, but not before taking legal action against his former bandmates over the Jefferson name (the rest of the band wanted to continue as Jefferson Starship). Winds Of Change followed in 1982 and Nuclear Furniture appeared in May of 1984. After the 1979 release of Freedom At Point Zero (which spawned the hit single "Jane"), Grace Slick suddenly returned to the band for one song, "Stranger" on their next album, Modern Times in 1981. It didn't help that former Journey drummer Aynsley Dunbar had replaced Barbata, who had been injured in a car accident. Thomas's soaring falsetto steered the band toward a harder rock sound, although critics somewhat unfairly compared the new Jefferson Starship to Journey. Towards the end of 1978, the Starship (now without Grace Slick) recorded Light The Sky On Fire for The Star Wars Holiday Special, after which Balin too left the group, leaving Kantner and company to find a new lead singer in Mickey Thomas (who had sung lead on Elvin Bishop's "Fooled Around And Fell In Love"). After the debacle, she left the band. The following night, Slick, in a drunken stupor, shocked the audience by using profanity and sexual references throughout most of her songs. The first night, fans ransacked the stage after Slick failed to appear. However, Slick's alcoholism became a problem, which led to two nights of disastrous concerts in Germany in 1978. The follow-ups, Spitfire (1976), and Earth (1978), were both big sellers. This line-up, which also included late-Airplane holdovers drummer John Barbata, fiddler Papa John Creach, and bassist-keyboarder-vocalist David Freiberg, along with Pete Sears, also playing bass and keyboards, and guitarist Craig Chaquico, proved to be the band's most commercially successful so far, although some Airplane fans were less than happy with its more mainstream direction. Balin's sophisticated ballad "Miracles" helped 1975's Red Octopus achieve multiple-platinum status. In 1974, the Airplane was formally reborn as Jefferson Starship, with Kantner and Slick as charter members; Balin came on board in time to record the hit single "Caroline" for the first Jefferson Starship album, Dragon Fly. It was while that album was made that Kantner sealed his love affair with Grace Slick, and their daughter China Kantner was born shortly after. The Starship (such as it was) included David Crosby (of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), Jerry Garcia (of The Grateful Dead), and even former members of Jefferson Airplane. During the transitional period of the early 1970s, Paul Kantner recorded the album Blows Against The Empire with an ad-hoc group of musicians whom he dubbed the Jefferson Starship, marking the first-ever use of that name. The live album 30 Seconds Over Winterland (1973) is now best remembered for its cover art, featuring a squadron of flying toasters. Bark and Long John Silver were released on the band's own label, Grunt, with Joey Covington on drums and "Papa" John Creach on fiddle, after which the group effectively disbanded as Casady and Kaukonen converted their side-project Hot Tuna to a full time band. Balin and Dryden left shortly thereafter. The band performed in an early "morning maniac music" slot at the Woodstock festival during this period. In the aftermath of the demise of the San Francisco scene, the band released Volunteers (1969), their most political venture; the title track, "We Can Be Together", "Good Shepherd", and the post-apocalyptic "Wooden Ships" were all highlights. Crown Of Creation (1968) was a transitionary record, more structured than ...Baxters, whereas Bless Its Little Pointed Head (1969) captured their live sound, recorded at concerts at the Fillmore and the Fillmore East. After Bathing at Baxter's (1967) further showed their proficiency in psychedelic rock. The album reached number 6 in the US album charts. The first of these, Surrealistic Pillow (1967), included two classic tracks, "White Rabbit" (inspired by the hallucinogenic drug LSD, then extremely popular in San Francisco, and Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland), and the rousing anthem "Somebody to Love", as well as a reminder of their earlier folk incarnation, Kaukonen's acoustic "Embryonic Journey". Membership remained stable until 1970, by when they had recorded five more albums. Amongst their fans, the group's name was further shortened to "the Airplane". In 1966, Spence was replaced by jazz drummer Spencer Dryden and Anderson by singer Grace Slick, formerly of another San Francisco group, The Great Society. Later in 1965, they signed to Record Corporation of America and recorded an album for release the following year called Jefferson Airplane Takes Off. The band gradually developed a more electric sound which led to Harvey's replacement by Kaukonen's childhood friend, Jack Casady in October 1965. Peloquin was a seasoned musician whose disdain for the others' drug use was a factor in his departure just a few weeks after the group began its career. Skip Spence then took the drum chair. The group made its first public appearance August 13, 1965 at The Matrix club in San Francisco. They drew inspiration from groups such as the Beatles, the Byrds, and the Lovin' Spoonful, and built a local following at the Matrix Club. Singer Marty Balin recruited another folk musician, Paul Kantner, blues guitarist Jorma Kaukonen, jazz and folk vocalist Signe Toly Anderson, drummer Jerry Peloquin, and acoustic bassist Bob Harvey. This rock group formed on the west coast of the USA during the summer of 1965 in what was called the San Francisco Bay folk boom. An urban legend claims this was the origin for the band's name, though according to band member Jorma Kaukonen the name was invented by his friend Steve Talbot as a satire of blues names such as "Blind Lemon" Jefferson [1] (http://www.jormakaukonen.com/bio.htm). The term Jefferson airplane is also slang for a used match bent to hold a marijuana cigarette that has been smoked too short to hold without burning the hands. Jefferson Airplane was inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996. Various successor incarnations of the band have performed under different names, reflecting changing times and performer lineups, known as Jefferson Starship, and later simply Starship. Jefferson Airplane was an American rock band from San Francisco, a pioneer of the LSD-influenced psychedelic rock movement. Love Among The Cannibals (1989). No Protection (1987). Knee Deep In The Hoopla (1985). Nuclear Furniture (1984). Winds Of Change (1982). Modern Times (1981). Freedom At Point Zero (1979). last album w/ Marty Balin. Earth (1978). Spitfire (1976). best-selling album for any incarnation of the Airplane/Starship. Red Octopus (1975). Dragon Fly (1974). Long John Silver (1972) - US position: # 20. Bark (1971) - US position: # 11. first greatest hits collection. The Worst Of Jefferson Airplane (1970) - US position: # 12. Volunteers (1969) - US position: # 13. Crown Of Creation (1968) - US position: # 6. After Bathing At Baxter's (1967) - US position: # 17. breakthrough album featuring "Somebody To Love" and "White Rabbit". Surrealistic Pillow (1967) - US position: # 5. Jefferson Airplane Takes Off (1966) - US position: # 128. Download sample of "White Rabbit" from Surrealistic Pillow. |