Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Stone the Crows

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Genres
  
Blues-rock

Genre
  
Years active
  
1968–1973

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Past members
  
Leslie HarveyMaggie BellColin AllenJohn McGinnisJim DewarSteve Thompson (bass, 1971)Ronnie Leahy (keyboards, 1971)Jimmy McCulloch (guitar, 1972)

Origin
  
Glasgow, United Kingdom (1969)

Members
  
Maggie Bell, Leslie Harvey, Jimmy McCulloch, Colin Allen, James Dewar

Albums
  
Teenage Licks, Ontinuous Performance, Ode to John Law, Stone the Crows, Live in Montreux 1972

Stone the crows stone the crows full album


Stone the Crows were a blues-rock band formed in Glasgow in late 1969.

Contents

Down stone the crows live


History

Stone the Crows Stone The Crows la douche cossaise

The band were formed after Maggie Bell was introduced to Les Harvey by his elder brother, Alex Harvey. After playing together in the Kinning Park Ramblers, they rejoined in a band named Power, later renamed Stone the Crows (after a British/Australian English exclamation of surprise or shock) by Led Zeppelin's manager, Peter Grant. The band was co-managed by Grant and Mark London. London was associated with Lulu as the co-writer of her signature song, "To Sir With Love" and was also married to Lulu's manager, Marion Massey. London had also managed the predecessor band Cartoone, which featured Les Harvey on guitar, and in which Peter Grant had a financial interest.

Original line-up

Stone the Crows Stone The Crows Live Crows CD amp DVD Just Listen To This

  • Maggie Bell, vocals (born Margaret Bell, 12 January 1945, Maryhill, Glasgow, Strathclyde, Scotland).
  • Les Harvey, guitar (born Leslie Cameron Harvey, 13 September 1944, Govan, Glasgow; died 2 May 1972).
  • Colin Allen, drums (born Colin Eric Allen, 9 May 1938, Bournemouth, Dorset; ex-Zoot Money's Big Roll Band and John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, later performed with Focus)
  • James Dewar, bass (born James Dewer, 12 October 1942 Glasgow; died 16 May 2002; later performed and sang with Robin Trower's band)
  • Steve Thompson bass (born 17 October 1950, Wimbledon, South West London)
  • John McGinnis, keyboards
  • The band's first two albums were recorded by the above line-up, with Bell's vocals "reminiscent of Janis Joplin".

    Second line-up

    Stone the Crows Stone The Crows Discography at Discogs

    McGinnis and Dewar left in 1971, to be replaced by Ronnie Leahy and Steve Thompson. Jimmy McCulloch would subsequently replace Harvey as lead guitarist following Harvey's accidental on-stage death by electrocution at Swansea's Top Rank Suite in May 1972. The band's primary songwriter as well as Maggie Bell's romantic partner, Harvey's death nearly led to the Crows' breakup.

    Stone the Crows Stone The Crows la douche cossaise

    Stone the Crows ultimately broke up in June 1973. Peter Grant would continue to manage Maggie Bell's career following the band's breakup, with Bell subsequently recording two solo albums under Grant's tutelage, Queen of the Night (1974) and Suicide Sal (1975), and a 1981 album with the Grant-managed band Midnight Flyer. Bell may be best known, however, for her session work on Rod Stewart's 1971 album Every Picture Tells a Story, in particular her co-lead vocal with Stewart on the album's title track (credited as "vocal abrasives"). Jimmy McCulloch joined Paul McCartney's group, Wings, in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1974.

    Studio albums

  • Stone the Crows (1970)
  • Ode to John Law (1970)
  • Teenage Licks (1971)
  • 'Ontinuous Performance [sic] (1972) - UK Number 33
  • Live albums

    Stone the Crows Stone the Crows album Wikipedia

  • The BBC Sessions - Volume 1 - 1969-1970 (1998)
  • The BBC Sessions - Volume 2 - 1970-1971 (1998)
  • Live Montreux 1972 (2002)
  • Radio Sessions 1969-1972 (2009) (2CD)
  • BBC Sessions 1969-1972 (2014) (2LP)
  • Songs

    Sunset CowboyOntinuous Performance · 1972
    Penicillin BluesOntinuous Performance · 1972
    Danger ZoneOde to John Law · 1970

    References

    Stone the Crows Wikipedia