The Groove | |
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Also known as | Eureka Stockade |
Origin | Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
Genres | R&B, pop |
Years active | 1967 | –1971
Labels | EMI, Columbia |
Past members | |
Geoff Bridgford Jamie Byrne Tweed Harris Rod Stone Peter Williams |
The Groove were an Australian R&B, pop group which formed in early 1967 with the lineup of Geoff Bridgford on drums, Jamie Byrne on bass guitar, Tweed Harris on keyboards, Rod Stone on guitar and Peter Williams on lead vocals and guitar. In December 1967 their single, "Simon Says", peaked at No. 17 on the Go-Set National Top 40 Singles Chart. They followed with "Soothe Me", which peaked at No. 14 in April 1968. Also in April they released their self-titled debut album. In July that year they won the national final of the Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds competition with the prize including a trip to London. They relocated there in March 1969, and early the following year they changed their name to Eureka Stockade, they disbanded in 1971. On 13 October 2004 Tweed Harris died of throat cancer, aged 63.
Contents |
The Groove were an R&B pop group formed in Melbourne in early 1967 – all members had some experience in other bands.[1] The original line-up was Geoff Bridgford (ex-Steve & the Board) on drums, Jamie Byrne (Black Pearls, Running Jumping Standing Still) on bass guitar, Tweed Harris (Levi Smith Clefs) on keyboards, Rod Stone (The Librettos, Normie Rowe & The Playboys) on guitar and Peter Williams (Max Merritt & The Meteors) on lead vocals and guitar.[1][2] They were gathered together by artist manager and booking agent, Garry Spry (The Twilights).[1] The Groove played Stax Soul and 1960s R&B in the style of Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, Sam & Dave, Arthur Conley and The Isley Brothers. The Groove's repertoire was tailored to the vocal style of Williams, who had gained experience in this genre when with Max Merritt & The Meteors, one of its earliest exponents in Australasia.[2]
The Groove scored early national chart breakthrough with their second single "Simon Says" – previously recorded by both The Isley Brothers and The Platters.[3] The Groove's version was a Top 10 hit in Sydney and Melbourne and peaked at No. 17 on the Go-Set National Top 40 Singles Chart in December 1967.[4][5] The group undertook a national tour in February 1968 and in April their most successful single and second national Top 20 hit – a cover version of Sam Cooke's "Soothe Me" – peaked at No. 14.[4][6][7] That same month they issued their debut self-titled album, The Groove, on EMI and Columbia Records.[1] In July they won the grand final of a national band competition, Hoadley's Battle of the Sounds – their prize was a trip to London.[1][2]
Their next single, "What Is Soul?", was a cover of Ben E. King's song, it was a No. 13 hit in Melbourne, reached the Top 40 in Brisbane, and peaked at No. 36 on the national Top 40.[4][8][9] They released a further single, "You Are the One I Love", which made the lower reaches of the Melbourne and Brisbane charts but did not reach the national Top 40.[1][2][10] In March 1969, using their Hoadley's competition prize, the band relocated to the United Kingdom. Later that month their single, "Relax Me", reached the Go-Set Top 40.[11] In the UK they worked and recorded for two years. In June 1969 they released a last single, "The Wind", as The Groove – it did not chart.[1] In early 1970 the group changed their name to Eureka Stockade and issued another single, "Sing No Love Songs", in February.[1] The group recorded an album for Decca Records which was not released, then, early in 1971, they disbanded.[2]
After the break up of The Groove, Harris and Stone toured the UK and the rest of Europe backing Cliff Richard and playing with The Echoes behind John Rowles. Stone also toured in the backing band for comedians Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise, which he considers one of the enjoyable moments of his career.[2] Bridgford joined the Bee Gees (replacing Colin Petersen) while Williams teamed up with female vocal trio, The Cookies (also managed by Spry) to become The Spirit of Progress and toured the UK. Later on he joined The Mixtures and toured Europe and Australia.[2]
Harris became an arranger and producer in Australia from the mid-1970s. His credits include Sherbet (he orchestrated their single "Cassandra" and its parent album), Daryl Braithwaite, production for Renee Geyer, Bobby Bright, Kush, and folk artist Lionel Long. He performed as second keyboardist with the reformed version of The Groop for its 1988–89 reformation tour, and undertook TV soundtrack commissions. In later years he had a career writing music for TV and advertising both in Australia and Singapore. Harris was diagnosed with throat cancer in the late 1990s and underwent surgery, he died on 13 October 2004, aged 63.[12]
Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Album | |||||||||||
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Go-Set [4] |
KMR [13][14] |
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1967 | "Love It's Getting Better" | — | — | 'Non-album single' | ||||||||||
"Simon Say" | 17[5] | 16 | The Groove | |||||||||||
1968 | "Soothe Me" | 14[6] | 10 | |||||||||||
"What Is Soul?" | 36[8] | 35 | ||||||||||||
"You Are the One I Love" | — | 39 | 'Non-album single' | |||||||||||
1969 | "Relax Me" | 38[11] | 34 | |||||||||||
"The Wind" | — | 82 | ||||||||||||
1970 | "Sing No Love Songs" (by Eureka Stockade) | — | — | |||||||||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that country. |
Groove or Grooves may refer to:
The Groove is the name of Sirius XM Radio's Old School R&B channel, located on channel 50. The service signed on September 25, 2001 as part of XM Satellite Radio's offerings, broadcasting on channel 64. It was one of the three remaining Sirius XM-owned channels (along with Pop2K and The Village) that was not featured on Sirius's lineup until 2011. As part of XM Radio Canada simulcasting the U.S. service (with the exception of Clear Channel's channels) on April 1, 2007, The Groove was added to XM Radio Canada. As of February 9, 2010, it was heard on DirecTV channel 844, but all of Sirius XM programming was dropped in favor of going to Sonic Tap by DMX.
The Groove focuses mostly on classic R&B, Funk and Old School Dance party tracks from the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. The channel is also commercial-free and features DJs, most of them veterans of the early days of Urban Contemporary radio, where most of its core music came from. For Sirius listeners, some late-1970s music through the 1990s can be found on its sister The Strobe, Soul Town and Heart & Soul channels, which are also heard on XM.
And these are
The bruises
On me
From all of the nights when
We were
Limbs and
We crawl out and
I can't
I say
I see
You aren't what you want
You aren't what you want
I have it wrong
You turned me down
I have it wrong
You say it's gone
We can't
You say
It's all wrong
You won't even listen
I can't
Break this
You make all the
I can't
I say
I see
You aren't what you want
You aren't what you want
Every time it's over and
Every time I can't let go
I can feel the marrow