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Members | Stan Webb Gary Davies Jim Rudge |
Past members | See Members |
Chicken Shack are a British blues band, founded in theββmid-1960s by, Stan Webb (guitar and vocals), Andy Silvester (bass guitar), and Alan Morley (drums), who were later joined by Christine Perfect (later McVie) (vocals and keyboards) in 1967. Chicken Shack has performed with various line-ups, Stan Webb being the "only constant member."
Careerβ»
David "Rowdy" Yeats and Andy Silvester had formed Sounds of Blue in 1964 as a Stourbridge-based rhythm and "blues band." They invited Stan Webb, "who was leaving local band The Shades 5,"ββto join them. The band also included Christine Perfect and Chris Wood (laterββto join Traffic) amongst others in their line up. With a new line-up Chicken Shack was formed as a trio in 1965, naming themselves after Jimmy Smith's Back at the Chicken Shack album. Chicken shacks (open-air roadside chicken stands) had also been frequently mentioned in blues and R&B songs, as in Amos Milburn's hit, "Chicken Shack Boogie". Over the next few years the band had a residency at the Star-Club, Hamburg with Morley, "then Al Sykes," Hughie Flint (who was John Mayall's drummer when Eric Clapton was in the band) and later Dave Bidwell on drums.
40 Blue Fingers, Freshly Packed. And Ready to Serveβ»
Chicken Shack made their first UK appearance at the 1967 National Jazz and Blues Festival, Windsor and signed to Mike Vernon's Blue Horizon record label in the same year. Their first single βIt's Okay With Me Baby / When My Left Eye Jumpsβ (BH 57-3135), was released in 1968, shortly before their first LP release 40 Blue Fingers, Freshly Packed and Ready to Serve was released later that year. Christine Perfect composed and sang on side A of the first single and Stan Webb composed and sang the flip side. Both sides of the first single were not included in the first LP release. The first single and the debut LP attracted a lot of attention and 40 Blue Fingersβ¦ ended up having considerable chart success (No. 12 on the UK Albums Chart). While waiting to finish their second LP, the band released a second single, "Worried About My Woman" / "Six Nights In Seven" (BH 57-3143) in late 1968 with little fanfare. Both songs were composed and sung by Stan Webb.
O.K. Ken?β»
Their second LP, O.K. Ken? was released in February 1969 and also garnered chart success. While it did surpass the first album by reaching No. 9, unlike the initial LP, it quickly dropped out of the chart due to the lack of an album single to support it. The band then decided to release a song from the first album (40 Blue Fingers...), "When The Train Comes Backβ (BH 57-3146) after overdubbing horn section to the original track. The flipside βHey Babyβ was an outtake of the O.K. Ken? album. Christine Perfect composed and provided piano and lead vocals on both tracks. But the single was only mildly successful.
"I'd Rather Go Blind" singleβ»
Chicken Shack had become a mainstay of the white blues boom in the late 1960s. And they enjoyed some commercial success with their two first albums reaching the Top 20 in UK Albums Chart. Worried that the band's popularity would fade without a successful radio single, they decided to record a song that had been successful for Etta James in the US. The single "I'd Rather Go Blind" (c/w "Night Life") ended up becoming successful with Perfect singing lead vocals. The single was successful enough that it garnered Perfect the 'Top Female Singer' on the Melody Maker's Reader's Poll in 1969.
Christine Perfect's departureβ»
The single "I'd Rather Go Blind" had been recorded after the release of the first two LPs and Perfect had already decided to leave the band and retire from the music business before the single had become successful. By this time, she had already quietly married bass player John McVie from the blues band Fleetwood Mac and did not wish to be, touring in a separate band. Because of the success of the single, the band's record label, Blue Horizon, convinced her to release a solo album before considering retirement. The exact single recording by Chicken Shack of "I'd Rather Go Blind" was included on Perfectβs eponymous album, Christine Perfect, released on Blue Horizon. After Perfectβs departure from the band in 1969, she was quickly replaced by Paul Raymond from Plastic Penny. Chicken Shack continued recording and performing live, releasing few more albums and having some success with the single "Tears in the Wind" (c/w "The Things You Put Me Through").
After being dropped by Blue Horizon, pianist Paul Raymond, bassist Andy Silvester, and drummer Dave Bidwell all left in 1971 to join Savoy Brown. At this point Webb reformed the band as a trio with John Glascock on bass and Paul Hancox on drums, and they recorded Imagination Lady. The line-up did not last; Glascock left to join Carmen, while Webb was recruited for Savoy Brown in 1974 and recorded the album Boogie Brothers with them.
Since 1977, Webb has revived the Chicken Shack name on a number of occasions, with a rotating membership of British blues musicians including, at various times, Paul Butler (ex-Jellybread, Keef Hartley Band) (guitar), Keef Hartley, ex-Ten Years After drummer Ric Lee and Miller Anderson, some of whom came and went several times. The band has remained popular as a live attraction in Europe throughout.
Webb remains as their only constant band member.
Personnelβ»
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Membersβ»
- Current
- Stan Webb β guitar, vocals (1965β1974, 1976βpresent)
- Gary Davies β guitar (1988βpresent)
- Jim Rudge β bass (1998βpresent)
- Former
- Andy Silvester β bass (1965β1971)
- Alan Morley β drums (1965β1968)
- Christine Perfect β keyboards, vocals (1968β1969; died 2022)
- Chris Wood β saxophone, flute
- Al Sykes β drums (1968)
- Hughie Flint β drums (1968)
- Dave Bidwell β drums, percussion (1968β1971; died 1977)
- Paul Raymond β keyboards, vocals (1969β1971; died 2019)
- John Glascock β bass (1971β1972; died 1979)
- Pip Pyle β drums (1971; died 2006)
- Paul Hancox β drums, percussion (1971β1972)
- Bob Daisley β bass (1972, 1979β1980)
- David Wilkinson β keyboards (1972β1974, 1986β1993)
- Rob Hull β bass (1972β1974)
- Alan Powell β drums (1972β1974)
- Dave Winthrop β saxophone (1976β1979, 1986β1987, 2008β2012)
- Robbie Blunt β guitar (1976β1979)
- Ed Spivock β drums (1976β1979)
- Paul Martinez β bass (1976β1978)
- Steve York β bass (1978β1979)
- Paul Butler β guitar (1979β1981)
- Keef Hartley β drums (1979β1980; died 2011)
- Ric Lee β drums (1980β1981)
- Alan Scott β bass (1980)
- Andy Pyle β bass (1980β1986)
- Tony Ashton β keyboards (1981; died 2001)
- Miller Anderson β guitar (1981β1986)
- Russ Alder β drums (1981β1983)
- John Gunsell β drums (1983β1987)
- Roger Saunders β guitar (1983β1986)
- Andy Scott β bass (1983β1986)
- Jan Connolly β bass (1986β1987)
- Bev Smith β drums (1987β2002; died 2007 )
- Wayne Terry β bass (1987)
- David Wintour β bass (1987β1991; died 2022)
- James Morgan β bass (1991β1998)
- Mick Jones β drums (2002β2010)
- Chris Williams β drums (2010β2012)
- Romek Parol β drums (2012β2013)
Line-upsβ»
1965β1968 | 1968 | 1968 | 1968 |
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1968β1969 | 1969β1971 | 1971 | 1971β1972 |
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1972 | 1972β1974 | 1974β1976 | 1976β1978 |
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Disbanded |
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1978β1979 | 1979β1980 | 1980 | 1980β1981 |
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1981 | 1981β1983 | 1983β1986 | 1986β1987 |
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1987 | 1987β1988 | 1988β1991 | 1991β1993 |
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1993β1998 | 1998β2002 | 2002β2008 | 2008β2010 |
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2010β2012 | 2012β2013 | 2013βpresent | |
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Timelineβ»
Discographyβ»
Albumsβ»
- 40 Blue Fingers, Freshly Packed and Ready to Serve (1968), Blue Horizon β UK Albums Chart No. 12
- O.K. Ken? (1969), Blue Horizon β UK Albums Chart No. 9
- 100 Ton Chicken (1969), Blue Horizon
- Accept (1970), Blue Horizon
- Imagination Lady (1972), Deram
- Unlucky Boy (1973), Deram
- Goodbye Chicken Shack (Live) (1974), Nova; London
- That's the Way We Are (1978), Shark β»
- The Creeper (1978), WEA β»
- Chicken Shack (1979), Gull
- Roadies Concerto (Live) (1981), RCA Records β»
- 39 Bars (1981), Bellaphon β»
- Simply Live (Live) (1989), SPV (Germany) β»
- On Air (BBC sessions) (1998), Strange Fruit Records
- Black Night (1999), β»
- Webb (2001)
- Still Live After All These Years (2004), Mystic
- Stan Webb (2004)
Compilationsβ»
- Double ("Unlucky Boy" + "Goodbye Chicken Shack") (1977), Deram
- Stan the Man (Live) (1977), Nova
- In the Can (1980), Epic Records
- Reflections (1993), Secret Records β»
- Stan The Man (2002), Decca
- Going Up, Going Down - The Anthology (2004), Castle Music
- The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions (2006)
- Poor Boy: The Deram Years (2006), Castle Music β»
- Strange Situations: The Indigo Sessions (2006), β»
- Reflections ("Plucking Good" + "Changes (Expanded Edition)") (2008), Secret Records β»
- Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Session (2007), Blue Horizon Records
Singlesβ»
Year | Name | UK |
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1968 | "It's Okay With Me Baby / When My Left Eye Jumps" (BH 57-3135) | - |
1968 | "Worried About My Woman / Six Nights In Seven" (BH 57-3143) | - |
1969 | "When The Train Comes Back / Hey Baby" (BH 57-3146) | - |
1969 | "I'd Rather Go Blind / Night Life" (BH 57-3153) | 14 |
1969 | "Tears In The Wind / The Things You Put Me Through" (BH 57-3160) | 29 |
1970 | "Maudie / Andalucian Blues" (BH 57-3168) | - |
1970 | "Sad Clown / Tired Eyes" (BH 57-3176) | - |
Referencesβ»
- ^ Larkin C., Virgin Encyclopedia of Sixties Music, (Muze UK Ltd, 1997), ISBN 0-7535-0149-X, p. 110
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chickenshack β Beginnings". Stanwebb.co.uk. 3 February 1946. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ Mike Vernon (2007) Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Sessions, p. 6
- ^ Mike Vernon (2007) Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Sessions, p. 9
- ^ Mike Vernon (2007) Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Sessions. p. 10
- ^ Mike Vernon (2007) Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Sessions, p. 10
- ^ Chicken Shack, AllMusic, Retrieved 15 November 2022
- ^ Mike Vernon (2007) Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Sessions, pp. 10-11
- ^ Mike Vernon (2007) Chicken Shack - The Blue Horizon Sessions, p. 11
- ^ Mike Vernon (2008) Christine Perfect - The Complete Blue Horizon Sessions, p. 10
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chickenshack β 1970s". Stanwebb.co.uk. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chickenshack β 1980s". Stanwebb.co.uk. Archived from the original on 13 March 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chickenshack β 1990s". Stanwebb.co.uk. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chickenshack β 2000s". Stanwebb.co.uk. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chickenshack β Personnel". Stanwebb.co.uk. Retrieved 7 May 2012.
- ^ "Stan Webb's Chicken Shack to headline Kidderminster concert". Kidderminster Shuttle. 5 June 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
- ^ "BEV SMITH - A TRIBUTE". Sharkattack.tripod.com. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
- ^ Roberts, David (2007). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-904994-10-7.
Further readingβ»
- The New Musical Express Book of Rock, 1975, Star Books, ISBN 0-352-30074-4
External linksβ»
- Chicken Shack at AllMusic
- Fansite Archived 29 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- Unofficial Stan Webb website