The Collectors debuted in Vancouver, British Columbia, in 1961 as a house band (the C-FUN Classics)
for CFUN radio, and renamed itself The Collectors in 1966. The band featured Howie Vickers (Howard Vickberg) on lead vocals, Bill Henderson on lead guitar, recorder, keyboards, and lead vocals (these last mostly on Grass and Wild Strawberries), Claire Lawrence on tenor saxophone, harmonica, keyboards, flute, organ, recorder, and vocals, Glenn Miller on bass and vocals, and Ross Turney on drums and percussion.
In the spring of 1967, Howie Vickers was asked to put together a house band at the Torch Cabaret in Vancouver. Along with Claire Lawrence on horns, they recruited guitarist Terry Frewer, drummer Ross Turney and Brian Newcombe on bass. Within a couple of months, fellow Classics member Glenn
Miller replaced Newcombe on bass and Bill Henderson, a student at UBC, replaced Frewer on guitars, and with Vickers now handling vocals, they matured their sound, they gradually replaced the R&B sounds and the covers with their own material, and graduated out of that one club and began playing the rest of the west coast, on both sides of the border. They did particularly well in California, where audiences were warm to the complex arrangements mixed with harmonies and extended solos and musical ad-libs.
The Collectors' biggest hit was their first single, 'Looking at a Baby', released in March 1967 on the
Valiant label in the U.S. and on New Syndrome in Canada. It reached #4 on Toronto's CHUM-AM on April 24, 1967. Valiant was then acquired by Warner Bros. Records. In 1967 the group released its first album, The Collectors, on the Warner Bros.-Seven Arts label and appeared on sessions for the US group The Electric Prunes' album Mass in F Minor.
During this time, they’d by now contributed to the soundtracks of three Canadian films, “Don’t Let The Angels Fall,” “Canada The Land,” and “The Land.” After parting ways with Warner Bros, they landed a
new deal with London Records by late ’69. But by this time Vickers was spending much of his time doing solo shows, and decided to leave the group. Henderson took over the vocal duties, and their new label released a pair of singles by the summer of 1970, “I Must Have Been Blind” and “Sometimes We’re Up.” The b-sides were parts one and two of “Beginning,” and the proposed new album was set to be an epic saga concept type record, which never materialized.
In 1987 a renewed interest in The Collectors came about after Edsel Records in the UK released a
compilation of the band’s two albums, mixed in with their pre-lp singles, 17 tracks in all. Four years later, they were featured on a compilation documenting the West Coast scene’s evolution – The History of Vancouver Rock & Roll. In 2008 the original two albums were re-released on compact disc through Universal Music.
THE COLLECTORS - THE COLLECTORS 1967
The Collectors’ self-titled album hit the shelves in the fall of ’67 and featured the first single “Lydia Purple,” penned by Don Dunn and Lynda McCashen, which got huge airplay at home. But a mix of experimental studio techniques and attempts at translating the California flowers and beads scene to a Canadian flowers and sea shells vibe didn’t necessarily make for great album sales, according to the
label reps. With “What Love (Suite)” taking up the whole second side, some people just didn’t get it and the record stalled before cracking Billboard’s top 40. This is despite the fact the song was actually a hit in parts of Europe. Still, the album mixed a good deal of classical influences into the melodies and with good vocal harmonies, later became recognized by the critics as a groundbreaking record that attempted to cross several musical boundaries.
The Collectors – The Collectors
Label: Linea Records – LECD 9.01009, Line – LECD 9.01009 O
Format: CD, Album, Reissue 1991
Country: Germany
Released: 1967
Genre: Rock
Style: Psychedelic Rock
TRACKS
01. What Is Love 3:51
02. She (Will-O-The-Wind) 3:51
03. Howard Christman's Older 5:08
04. Lydia Purple 2:47
05. One Act Play 3:42
06. What Love (Suite) 19:06
LINE - UP
Bass, Vocals – Glenn Miller
Cello – Jesse Ehrlich (tracks: 4)
Drums, Percussion – Ross Turney
Guitar, Recorder, Vocals – Bill Henderson
Lead Vocals – Howie Vickersll Henderson
Piano, Harpsichord – Larry Knechtel (tracks: 4)
Tenor Saxophone, Organ, Flute, Recorder, Vocals – Claire Lawrence
Vibraphone – Norm Jeffries (tracks: 4)
Written-By – Don Dunn (tracks: 4), The Collectors, Tony McCashen (tracks: 4)
Flac Size: 239 MB
THE COLLECTORS - GRASS AND WILD STRAWBERRIES 1968
Their follow up, again recorded in LA came in the form of GRASS AND WILD STRAWBERRIES in
the fall of ’68. A collaboration with the poet and playwrite George Ryga, the album was based on his stage play of the same name. The songs were shorter, more plentiful, a little more toned down and slightly less out in left field,making them more palatable to the general public. The single “Early Morning” was on the stands early the next year and other cuts like the title track, “Teletype Click,” and “Seventeenth Summer” showcased the band’s development and maturity.
The Collectors – Grass And Wild Strawberries
Label: Linea Records – LECD 9.01013 O
Format: CD, Album, Reissue 1991
Country: Germany
Released: 1968
Genre: Rock
Style: Psychedelic Rock
TRACKS
01. Prelude 4:46
02. Grass & Wild Strawberries 2:08
03. Things I Remember 2:46
04. Don't Turn Away (From Me) 3:09
05. Teletype Click 2:55
06. Seventeenth Summer 3:28
07. The Long Rain 2:56
08. My Love Delights Me 2:23
09. Dream Of Desolation 2:34
10. Rainbow On Fire 2:52
11. Early Morning 3:32
12. Sheep On The Hillside 4:16
LINE - UP
Bass, Vocals – Glenn Miller
Drums – Ross Turney
Lead Vocals – Howie Vickers
Lead Vocals, Guitar, Keyboards – Bill Henderson
Lyrics By, Liner Notes – George Ryga
Saxophone, Flute, Keyboards, Harmonica, Vocals – Claire Lawrence
I have, a very nice band, haven't played for a long time.
ReplyDeleteAll the best for the new year.
I wish you Merry Christmas 🎄 and Happy New Year 🎊
DeleteSeason’s Greeting from the UK, Kostas and here’s wishing you all the best for the coming year and thanks for all you make available to us my friend x
ReplyDeleteΚαλά Χριστούγεννα. Thanks for this wonderful site and all the work you put into it. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteThank you very 😊 much. Merry Christmas and a better New Year. I wish you all the best.
DeleteHuge thanks for these Collectors albums. Being a Canadian I am embarrassed to say I have never heard either of them. I guess this is a Christmas gift to myself?
ReplyDeleteBrian
Ha! Ha! Merry Christmas Brian ⛄.
DeleteEUROPEAN often know US/ Can. music or culture better than their own people. I have had this experience often. And vice versa ? Almost never ! It's amazing
ReplyDeleteViacomclose...i haven't forgotten about the list of unknown horror films. Only i personally don't go to the national library, i would have to become a member. ( i have thousands of books myself and like with the music only the best of the best haha...) And a friend who was supposed to make the copies has also been deregistered as a member. Please excuse me.
ReplyDeleteHi Josef, Just getting caught up from holidays as I only check blogs at the office since my ripping computer is off the grid at home and I am not as capable as you on using my cell phone instead. I think this year I should do a post of my mp4 movie list that I made all of them myself from my Pinacle stream capture device. Problem is I am so behind on labeling all the files from the past three years so maybe a very small portion is missing from the list. Would love to make some money off them since now Googleplay, Amazon and the rest all sell mp4 movies for $5-6 on the web seemingly with no copyright concerns anymore like what kicked both my channels off of youtube. Would love to sell all my data for millions someday to get back my retirement as my mp4's have a special aspect ratio that is quite rare and usually the VHS or DVD qualities are very good. Of course you all can get my music files but I keep the WAV higher quality which is same as CD 1400 kb/sec
DeleteΓειά σου Κώστα και καλά Χριστούγεννα. Αργά σε ανακάλυψα, αλλά τί να πώ; Είσαι καταπληκτικός, όχι μόνο όσον αφορά στην μουσική αλλά-και για μένα προσωπικά, κυρίως- όσον αφορά στις ιδέες σου, φανταστικός.
ReplyDeleteΕυχαριστώ και πάλι για την φανταστική σου δουλειά. Νάσαι καλά παληκάρι.
Σ' ευχαριστώ αγνωστε για τα συγκινητικά σου λόγια, σου εύχομαι Καλή χρονιά και τουλάχιστον πες μου το όνομα σου.
DeleteΓιώργος απο Γερμανία. Απο το 1973 μετά απο το γυμνάσιο και με ενα διάλειμμα 28 μηνών για την θητεία, αδιάλειπτα στη Γερμανία. Στο στρατό είχα τον φίλο μου τον Φώτη που είχε και την Underground Records στα Εξάρχεια. που με μύησε στην Ψυχεδέλεια και όχι μόνο.
DeleteΜεγάλη Ιστορία...Τί να πω; Καλή χρονιά και πάλι Κώστα.
Γειά σου Γιώργο, ευχαριστώ πολύ και ανταποδίδω. Για την καινούργια χρονιά ετοιμάζω μία ΜΠΑΝΤΑΡΑΑΑΑ του 1969 που είχε παντρέψει το πρώιμο Progressive με την Ψυχεδέλεια των 60ς.
DeleteHere they are performing "What Love (Suite)" 1968. It's great!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9h82BB6yfg